So beautiful. I prefer my patio garden with exotic fruit trees dragon fruit cactus, Moringa, jackfruit, avocado. Love the green but I enjoy the adventure growing food.
Absolutely love it. I cant stand fussy colourful gardens. The stunning structural green gardens are the gardens that really speak to me. Shame I probably can’t afford you to come do my lol
There's no chance only a day a week keeps this garden looking like this. A day a week would only keep the veg garden. It would probably take a team of people a couple of days to trim the hedging and it looks like it gets done more than once or twice per year.
Hunners a Hings - Maybe she does trimming and planting and all the hard work at the beginning of the growing season and then it just takes one day a week to maintain the rest of the summer? That's the only way I can explain it.
@@ejohnson3131 I hear what your saying. I spend a day a week in clients gardens working non stop with a colleague and I'm sure this is unachievable. It might just be a way she sells her garden designs to clients. Everyone wants low maintenance gardens. Lawns and loads of topiary isn't low maintenance.
Yes, we will! We work on many small gardens too. Will try and tailor our videos to requests from our subscribers so really pleased you have mentioned this.
Crazy about the many environments that you designed, lots of variety and diversity, guess you can enjoy the gardens all year round! Love your gardens! No pun intended ;)
What a lovely place and I so enjoy following you around and hearing about it. I would have guessed that the hedges and topiaries take a lot of time to keep clipped.
Many thanks, yes the hedges do take a fair bit of time - this year Dave who normally helps me one day a week has been doing other things, so I got a local tree surgeon in to help me out. Tree surgeons are not always that busy in the summer, so I fall back on them if I’m struggling. 🐇
I have also stumbled across your channel and have subscribed as your videos are full of very useful information, as well as just being a pleasure to watch. Loved the pigs!
No question in my mind. Everybody should live like that. Thanks for the enlightening tour. Now I've got to figure out how I can reproduce that in Tucson, Arizona, USA.
I would love to see more on your cattle and the sheep, like you did with hte pigs. You have inspired me to get a small plot and have a lovely formal garden around it.
Wow, you have a stunning garden, you have done a wonderful job there ,also lucky lady in a way , I wish I could live this way, but I can dream..love to watch you. Great tips too. Thanks for charing.
Your garden is amazing!!! First time viewer and I'm really glad this video is my introduction to you. Makes me wonder who you are to bravely change the microclimate so expertly - like did u utilize what you learned from your parents or are you professionally taught or self taught with years in the profession? The two tiered topiaries that create both shade and privacy is inspiring!!! I really love that design and most have taken forever! And I really love your orchard path... it's so woodsy and purposeful and (most importsntly!) natural. Curious about your mud building too. Did ur kids do this? At what age would u say this is a kids project if that's the case? What inspired the project and what's the use of the building? Thanks for sharing again.
Such a beautiful garden. I love your esthetic and vision but I must ask. Can you do an episode of your cool Mud Hut. I'm curious about its construction. Many thanks!🌻🐦🌻
Your property is absolutely beautiful!!!! Would you mind sharing the type of trees, one thousand, that you mentioned that you planted when you first moved there to help with the wind. Trying to solve a wind issue as well. Thanks so very much!
I love your Pleached hornbeams. May I ask how much space you give them between the trees? I am going to buy some small trees and train them up.any thanks.
I must admit that I love watching your videos so much and have watched them even more than once. Thank you for sharing the videos and thoughts behind the designs. May I ask which veriaty of the quence tree you used and what are the thoughts behind using quence tree than other trees for your courtyard garden? I am also interested in knowing your thoughts behind choosing hornbeam trees for pleaching as compared to other popular trees for pleaching. Looking forward to hearing from you.
Thanks for great comments much appreciated. I designed it and got a stone mason to make it for me. It is actually made from reconstituted stone ie stone dust with cement do he made a mould and then poured mix in. I first did that design for a garden at Chelsea flower show in the 90’s and have done it in wood with box plant balls instead of stone balls and other variations.🐇
@@bunnyguinness so a bit like Haddonstone . Very beautiful,a cheeky question is he still in business and would he make another one thank you for coming back to me regards.
A charming garden. Where did you buy your super metal armchairs? They look French, but much more generous than the average French metal chair. I presume you had them acid etched (if that's the right expression)?
Absolutely gorgeous ! I was so happy about the animals too until I heard that "the meat tasted great". Such a shame that they're not there to enjoy their life forever. Beautiful place to establish a sanctuary for the farm animals in the future :)
Lovely garden. Can you kindly recommend a small, neat tree that would suit a courtyard garden? Ideally one neat stem and a roundish top. I have seen trees like this in images of courtyard gardens with white bark however do not know the name and wouldn't want the tree to grow much more than 3m in height.
Sorbus aucuparia is a small tree with elegant leaves, white flowers in spring, red berries and colored foliage in autumn. It naturally grows with a straight stem and a roundish canopy so it takes little pruning to keep it in perfect shape. Also clerodendrum trichotomum is a shrub often grown on a single stem with a dome shaped canopy. It produces suckers that have to be cut at the base but a part from that it keeps the shape easily and stays around 3 meters. Dark leaves, white scented flowers end of summer and beautiful berries, metallic blue and magenta that last long on the naked branches in winter.
I love the tall, stately, manicured trees in the courtyard that flank the water feature. Would you please write the name of them here? I caught the first of the name, but not the second part...’Beeches...?
Oh sorry wrong video, ah I know the ones you mean, the hornbeams or Carpinus betulus, they are pleached ie like a hedge on stilts. I planted them when they were transplants about 30 cm high and they cost about 20 pence each.🐇
@@bunnyguinness Hi Bunny, Why yes, that's exactly the ones I am referring to. I'd love to incorporate those in our garden, however, we live in the states. I hope we can find them here, as they add such beauty and privacy to the garden. Thank you for your kind response to me.
Two man days per week, in total , I do a ‘man’ day and Dave who helps me in the garden does the other. have a look at my video ‘my top time saving gardening hacks’. 🐇
This is sort of an off-topic question... but I love how british gardens have Wisteria and Euphorbia (Wulfenii) in them. I live in a zone 5, I can grow Wisteria, but I can’t grow Euphorbia Wulfenii... do you have any ideas of a similar looking plant that would work in a zone 5? No worries if you don’t, just thought I’d ask. I so appreciated you answering my last question regarding no-dig! Thanks!
Bunny Guinness no worries! Thanks for trying! I just realized yesterday that you wrote Highgrove! I love that book for inspiration!! It’s a beautiful! Again, thank you for your videos! Really enjoy your channel!
What a joy to watch you in your beautiful garden. More please!
You are a national treasure. I'm so happy I found your channel. What an inspiration you are!
You're a natural, please keep your TH-cam posts up
Enthusiastic, erudite, charming, brilliant and can get more things done than 10 people. Bunny you are fantastic!
I loved this video, so inspirational. I’d been struggling to chose a characterful tree until I saw your quince trees, perfect!
A beautiful garden, and outdoor living spaces. Thanks for sharing!
I want to be one of your sheep!
Your home and garden are impeccable. Thank you!
OMG - this is exactly what i want. EXACTLY - what an absolutely amazing property - just lovely! Thank you!
I love everything you do. Such a stylish lovely garden and your animals are blessed to have the life they have.
Lovely and peaceful courtyard! Love all that green and boxwoods! Love the sheeps. So so cute :D
How beautiful. I love to see your spectacular garden every season of the year. 😊
So beautiful. I prefer my patio garden with exotic fruit trees dragon fruit cactus, Moringa, jackfruit, avocado. Love the green but I enjoy the adventure growing food.
Absolutely love it. I cant stand fussy colourful gardens. The stunning structural green gardens are the gardens that really speak to me. Shame I probably can’t afford you to come do my lol
I Totally enjoyed my visit to this lovely garden- each one of them!
Stunning!! Full of inspiration!! Even in my small patch.
I just discovered your channel (through your video with Mary Berry) and I can’t get enough of it! It is so beautiful!
Impresive garden! Very beautiful though and gardening, pristine ! Congratulations Bunny!
I am in love with your garden! Specially those hedges! Thank you for sharing!
Simply stunning! Thank you for sharing, cheers!
Your garden is absolutely amazing and inspiring... thank you for sharing its beauty with us!!
I love the place,thanks for showing.
Absolutely stunning, I’m so glad I stumbled across your channel. I now have something to binge watch 😂 Coral from Australia 🐨
Absolutely my favorite youtube channel. Looking forward yo visiting the chelsea flower show next year. 2023
Beautiful garden , thanks for showing us around.
Absolutely breathtaking. So inspirational. I would love to be able to create a little bit of this type of beauty in my garden.
Beautiful! It's hard to believe this is considered low maintenance!
There's no chance only a day a week keeps this garden looking like this. A day a week would only keep the veg garden. It would probably take a team of people a couple of days to trim the hedging and it looks like it gets done more than once or twice per year.
Hunners a Hings - Maybe she does trimming and planting and all the hard work at the beginning of the growing season and then it just takes one day a week to maintain the rest of the summer? That's the only way I can explain it.
@@ejohnson3131 I hear what your saying. I spend a day a week in clients gardens working non stop with a colleague and I'm sure this is unachievable. It might just be a way she sells her garden designs to clients. Everyone wants low maintenance gardens. Lawns and loads of topiary isn't low maintenance.
I love your channel ! Thank you!
I just learned a bunch of stuff! Thanks Bunny
This is lovely. Please can you do videos for the average garden. 100sq meters etc.
Yes, we will! We work on many small gardens too. Will try and tailor our videos to requests from our subscribers so really pleased you have mentioned this.
That would be great. Ours is 30sqm and I can’t find hardly any videos where it shows me how to scale these massive ones down.
Would love to see a tour of your greenhouses as we are hoping to make one next year.
Beautiful 💚
What a wonderful place you have made
How in the world do you get that Wisteria to flower so much?!! 🤭 Give me ALL the tips and tricks!! 📝🤓
Absolutely love your garden.
Beautiful garden - in terms of planting - less is more and works wonderfully.
Lovely garden Bunny Guinness. Really gorgeous.
Crazy about the many environments that you designed, lots of variety and diversity, guess you can enjoy the gardens all year round! Love your gardens! No pun intended ;)
What a lovely place and I so enjoy following you around and hearing about it. I would have guessed that the hedges and topiaries take a lot of time to keep clipped.
Many thanks, yes the hedges do take a fair bit of time - this year Dave who normally helps me one day a week has been doing other things, so I got a local tree surgeon in to help me out. Tree surgeons are not always that busy in the summer, so I fall back on them if I’m struggling. 🐇
I have also stumbled across your channel and have subscribed as your videos are full of very useful information, as well as just being a pleasure to watch. Loved the pigs!
No question in my mind. Everybody should live like that. Thanks for the enlightening tour. Now I've got to figure out how I can reproduce that in Tucson, Arizona, USA.
Love your videos, and your beautiful garden, I’m wondering if you would do a video on starting your own box from cuttings ? Thankyou
Yes good idea, will try and do that before too long, thank you!
@@bunnyguinness My goodness! How many cuttings did you use and how long did it take to get it like that in the video? Absolutely beautiful!!!
I would love to see more on your cattle and the sheep, like you did with hte pigs. You have inspired me to get a small plot and have a lovely formal garden around it.
I love this Bunny.
Beautiful!
Stunning.
Love it
Wow, you have a stunning garden, you have done a wonderful job there ,also lucky lady in a way , I wish I could live this way, but I can dream..love to watch you. Great tips too. Thanks for charing.
Your garden is amazing!!! First time viewer and I'm really glad this video is my introduction to you. Makes me wonder who you are to bravely change the microclimate so expertly - like did u utilize what you learned from your parents or are you professionally taught or self taught with years in the profession?
The two tiered topiaries that create both shade and privacy is inspiring!!! I really love that design and most have taken forever! And I really love your orchard path... it's so woodsy and purposeful and (most importsntly!) natural. Curious about your mud building too. Did ur kids do this? At what age would u say this is a kids project if that's the case? What inspired the project and what's the use of the building?
Thanks for sharing again.
Beautiful.
Such a beautiful garden. I love your esthetic and vision but I must ask. Can you do an episode of your cool Mud Hut. I'm curious about its construction. Many thanks!🌻🐦🌻
Amazing.
Beautiful 😍
Beautiful garden !
Your property is absolutely beautiful!!!! Would you mind sharing the type of trees, one thousand, that you mentioned that you planted when you first moved there to help with the wind. Trying to solve a wind issue as well. Thanks so very much!
Lovely gardens
LOVE
That wisteria is beautiful
I love your Pleached hornbeams. May I ask how much space you give them between the trees? I am going to buy some small trees and train them up.any thanks.
Truly wonderful....
I love most of your gardens especially flowers but too much lawn in these times.
Nice 👍
I must admit that I love watching your videos so much and have watched them even more than once. Thank you for sharing the videos and thoughts behind the designs. May I ask which veriaty of the quence tree you used and what are the thoughts behind using quence tree than other trees for your courtyard garden?
I am also interested in knowing your thoughts behind choosing hornbeam trees for pleaching as compared to other popular trees for pleaching.
Looking forward to hearing from you.
The yard I’ve always dreamed of
Wow. You are so rich!
Can you share the type of boxwood you use to get them so compact? So beautiful!
This is extremely impressive
A beautiful courtyard garden may I please ask where you purchased the three ball bench from again love your gardens.
Thanks for great comments much appreciated. I designed it and got a stone mason to make it for me. It is actually made from reconstituted stone ie stone dust with cement do he made a mould and then poured mix in. I first did that design for a garden at Chelsea flower show in the 90’s and have done it in wood with box plant balls instead of stone balls and other variations.🐇
@@bunnyguinness so a bit like Haddonstone . Very beautiful,a cheeky question is he still in business and would he make another one thank you for coming back to me regards.
Wow!!!
i like
A charming garden. Where did you buy your super metal armchairs? They look French, but much more generous than the average French metal chair. I presume you had them acid etched (if that's the right expression)?
They are from Gedding Mill Forge and come acid etched . Thanks for your comments 🐇
Just...Dream
Loved this! What is the name of the trees that form a hedge? Looks like they are sheared to shape. Thank you
Bleached horn beems
Please do a tour of your house
Absolutely gorgeous ! I was so happy about the animals too until I heard that "the meat tasted great". Such a shame that they're not there to enjoy their life forever. Beautiful place to establish a sanctuary for the farm animals in the future :)
Same here Paulina. She tried making things better by saying the animals hopefully lead a good and peaceful life there.
🎀🎀🎀♥♥♥♥
Lovely garden. Can you kindly recommend a small, neat tree that would suit a courtyard garden? Ideally one neat stem and a roundish top. I have seen trees like this in images of courtyard gardens with white bark however do not know the name and wouldn't want the tree to grow much more than 3m in height.
What part of the world are you from please then I'll have a think
Bunny Guinness Hi, that would be great, thank you:) Im in the UK, Buckinghamshire.
Sorbus aucuparia is a small tree with elegant leaves, white flowers in spring, red berries and colored foliage in autumn. It naturally grows with a straight stem and a roundish canopy so it takes little pruning to keep it in perfect shape.
Also clerodendrum trichotomum is a shrub often grown on a single stem with a dome shaped canopy. It produces suckers that have to be cut at the base but a part from that it keeps the shape easily and stays around 3 meters. Dark leaves, white scented flowers end of summer and beautiful berries, metallic blue and magenta that last long on the naked branches in winter.
I love the tall, stately, manicured trees in the courtyard that flank the water feature. Would you please write the name of them here? I caught the first of the name, but not the second part...’Beeches...?
Do you mean the cork oak, Quercus suber? They are not manicured though, they are multi stems and were planted at quite a size. 🐇
Oh sorry wrong video, ah I know the ones you mean, the hornbeams or Carpinus betulus, they are pleached ie like a hedge on stilts. I planted them when they were transplants about 30 cm high and they cost about 20 pence each.🐇
@@bunnyguinness Hi Bunny, Why yes, that's exactly the ones I am referring to. I'd love to incorporate those in our garden, however, we live in the states. I hope we can find them here, as they add such beauty and privacy to the garden. Thank you for your kind response to me.
That is one serious large bunny hole
Stunning!
One day a week for two people!!!!
Two man days per week, in total , I do a ‘man’ day and Dave who helps me in the garden does the other. have a look at my video ‘my top time saving gardening hacks’. 🐇
Por favor, subtitulos en español. Gracias
1 day a week to manage all that lol
This is sort of an off-topic question... but I love how british gardens have Wisteria and Euphorbia (Wulfenii) in them. I live in a zone 5, I can grow Wisteria, but I can’t grow Euphorbia Wulfenii... do you have any ideas of a similar looking plant that would work in a zone 5? No worries if you don’t, just thought I’d ask. I so appreciated you answering my last question regarding no-dig! Thanks!
Cant think of good plant substitute - sorry!
Bunny Guinness no worries! Thanks for trying! I just realized yesterday that you wrote Highgrove! I love that book for inspiration!! It’s a beautiful! Again, thank you for your videos! Really enjoy your channel!
:
All anyone cares about is their family. That's why the world is a selfish trash hole