When did you decide to be a plantswoman?
My grandmother was a great horticulturalist and we used to visit her often in Oxfordshire. She taught me a lot of the names of the plants In her garden and in the wild. She would introduce us to them almost a touch theatrically. "Here is a Bird-foot trefoil...” And then she would tell us if we could eat it or it had medicinal properties. Their names never stuck until I had a garden of my own. I really do love plants, I find them endlessly fascinating and I've
always had a tiny patch to watch them grow whether that was a windowsill or a balcony. But I suppose it really took off when I moved in with my boyfriend in West Sussex and introduced more plants into my life. I've been doing the flowers for weddings for the past few years but on a very small scale. I trained as an actor and a side hustle was as an
archivist for a private photographic collection as well as Battersea Power station. I juggled all three until Covid hit.
WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES AND FRUSTRATIONS OF BEING A GARDENER?
(Laughs) The time a deer came in two weeks before a wedding and decimated the entire crop of flowers that I had been nurturing for almost 9 months. I had to think on my feet and figure out a way round it because brides usually want specific flowers and nature often has her own ideas. You can't ask a flower to open up and be perfect on a specific day, the way that I grow. What I do tell brides now is that I can't promise exactly what will flower on their wedding day, but I can promise it will be beautiful.
HOW DO YOU PLAN YOUR GARDEN? ARE YOU INTENTIONALLY VERY RESTRAINED WITH YOUR PALETTE... THERE'S A QUIETNESS TO WHAT YOU GROW, LIKE A PAINTING.
Oh that is good to hear as I would love to be more restrained. I really love colour, it’s one of the most fun things about the garden for me. I grew up in a family of artists: my mum was my art teacher at school and my brother is a painter who went to the RA and my father is a curator and bookmaker. So in many ways I have been surrounded with this consistent extracurricular learning schedule about colour and form and I think that has definitely informed the way that I plant. I'm not afraid of colour or idiosyncratic plants. There is a certain freedom and I don't follow rules but just grow things I'm drawn to. Also, I'm a hopeless romantic so I also like to be quite playful. I like it when there are unexpected moments which is frankly better than anything I could have planned. It’s the same as when I create a bouquet or a vase arrangement, I'll have a sense of the drama I want to create in my head, but I won't know necessarily how It's going to turn out.