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AUCHINCRUIVE
The
mild climate of south-western Scotland is most advantageous for gardening.
Hydrangeas and Myrtles flourish, Fuchsias grow into bushes eight to ten feet
high. Mr. Oswald's garden lies upon the river Ayr, a few miles distant from the
town of Ayr. The house stands boldly on a crag just above the river, which
makes its music below, tumbling over rocky shelves and rippling over
shingle-bedded shallows. For nearly a mile the garden follows the river bank,
in free fashion as befits the place. Trees are in plenty and of fine growth,
both on the garden side and the opposite river shore. Here and there an opening
in the trees on the further shore shows the distant country. The garden
occupies a large space; the grouping of the shrubs and trees taking a wilder
character in the portions furthest away from the house, so that, mingling at
last with native growth, garden gradually dies away into wild. Large undulating
lawns give a sense of space and freedom and easy access. That
close, fine turf of the gardens of Britain is a thing so familiar to the eye
that we scarcely think what a wonderful thing it really is. When we consider
our flower and kitchen gardens, and remember how much labour of renewal they
need — renewal not only of the plants themselves, but of the soil, in the way
of manurial and other dressings; and when we consider all the digging and
delving, raking and hoeing that must be done as ground preparation, constantly
repeated; and then when we think again of an ancient lawn of turf, perhaps
three hundred years old, that, except for moving and rolling, has, for all
those long years, taken care of itself; it seems, indeed, that the little closely
interwoven plants of grass are things of wonderful endurance and longevity. The
mowing prevents their blooming, so that
they form but few fresh plants from seed. Imperceptibly the dying of the older
plants is going on, and the hungry root-fibres of their younger neighbours are
feeding on the decaying particles washed into the earth. AUCHINCRUIVE From the picture in the possession Mr. R. A. Oswald But
whether lawns could exist at all without the beneficent work of the earthworms
is very doubtful. Every one has seen the little heaps of worm-castings upon
grass, but it remained for Darwin, after his own long experiment and exhaustive
observation, partly based upon and comprehending the conclusions of other
naturalists, to tell us how largely the fertility of our surface soil is due to
the unceasing work of these small creatures. Worms swallow large quantities of
earth and decaying leaves, and Darwin's observations led him "to conclude
that all the vegetable mould over the whole country has passed many times
through, and will again pass many times through the intestinal canals of
worms." This, indeed, is the only way in which it is possible for a person
with any knowledge of the needs of plant-life, to conceive the possibility of
any one closely-packed crop occupying the same space of ground for hundreds of
years. The soil, as it passes, little by little, through the bodies of the
worms, undergoes certain chemical changes which fit it afresh for its ever-renewed
work of plant-sustenance. There
are some who, viewing the castings as an eyesore on their lawns, cast about for
means of destroying the worms. This is unwise policy, and would soon lead to
the impoverishment of the grass. The castings, when dry, are easily broken down
by the roller or the birch-broom, and the grass receives the beneficent
top-dressing that assures its well-being and healthy continuance. The
only part of the garden at Auchincruive that is obedient to rectangular form,
is the kitchen garden and the ground about it. The kitchen garden lies some way
back from the house and river, and, with its greenhouses, is for the most part
hidden by two long old yew hedges which run in the direction of the river. One
of these appears in the picture, with its outer ornament of bright border of
autumn flowers. Here are Tritomas, Gypsophila in mist-like clouds, tall Evening
Primrose and Campanula pyramidalis, both purple and white, with many other good
hardy flowers. The
red-leaved tree illustrates a question which often arises in the writer's mind
as to whether trees and shrubs of this coloured foliage, such as Prunus
Pissardi and Copper Beech and Copper Hazel are not of doubtful value in the
general garden landscape. Trees of the darkest green, as this very picture
shows by its dark upright yews, are always of value, but the red-leaved tree,
though in the present case it has been tenderly treated by the artist, is apt
to catch the eye as a violent and discordant patch among green foliage.
Especially is this the case with the darker form of copper beech, which, in
autumn, takes a dull, solid, heavy kind of colour, especially when seen from a
little distance, that is often a disfiguring blot in an otherwise beautiful
landscape. The
same criticism may occasionally apply to trees of conspicuous golden foliage,
but errors in planting these, though often made, may easily be avoided by suitable
grouping and association with white and yellow flowers. Indeed it would be
delightful to work out a whole golden garden. |