Thank you .. ‘Dirt du Jour’

for the glowing review! "Go ask Alice ... where all the best vineyard gardens are. She's an erudite charmer; you'll have fun!"

California Wine Country

Wine and Roses! Chateau St. Jean

Destination:  Chateau St. Jean Winery – Sonoma Valley

Chateau St Jean  © Alice Joyce

A perfect day in Wine Country:  Stroll the formal gardens at Chateau St. Jean in Kenwood – Garden Plan designed by Olin Partnership – followed by wine tasting, and a tasty light lunch from the winery’s charcuterie.

Clytostoma callistegiodes Chateau St Jean © Alice Joyce

The garden layout draws inspiration from the Chateau, a Mediterranean-style villa built in the 1920, while the landscape, with its graceful proportions and symmetry, distinctively echoes traditional gardens of Italy and southern France. Fountains, statuary, and a classic pergola draped in blooming vines enhance the setting.

Chateau St. Jean Reserve Wine Tasting

Reserve Tasting – Chateau St. Jean

Reserve Tasting …

Chateau St. Jean

Chateau St Jean Statuary © Alice Joyce

Handcrafted by winemaker Margo Van Staaveren, Chateau St. Jean’s  Reserve wines include brilliantly complex, award-winning reds and lively whites:  To savor on their own or pair with summery meals, Chateau St Jean Fume Blanc, Lyon Vineyard, or the buttery Chardonnay, Sonoma County: Both wines are elegant and focused.

Tasting the deeply satisfying Chateau St. Jean Reserve Merlot is truly memorable. You may well be tempted to take home a bottle. And not-to-be missed, Chateau St. Jean’s celebrated Cinq Cepages Cabernet Sauvignon presents a captivating blend, with its soupcon of  Merlot, Cab Franc, Malbec, and 1 % Petite Verdot.

Chateau St Jean parterres Photo: Alice Joyce

Italian stone pine, London plane and windmill palm trees provide order and structure in the central parterre, and adjoining garden rooms. American arborvitae hug metal arches to establish transitions between spaces. Look for decorative highlights like potted Citrus specimens, especially ‘Dwarf Satsuma Mandarin.’ The heady scent of  frothy, profusely blooming ‘Iceberg’ roses will stay with you.

AGTB Wine Country Fountain © Alice Joyce

Many showy shrubs reach their peak bloom in summer: Hydrangea ‘Lanarth White’ and H. ‘Mariesii Variegata’ thrive in a shady haven beneath California sycamores.

Chateau St Jean Pergola  © Alice Joyce

Visitors can enjoy self-guided tours of the gardens during open hours.

England

A Pastoral, Paradise Garden - Hestercombe

               Hestercombe Wisteria Archway © Alice Joyce

I may suggest, among the cognoscenti most any conversation about garden touring in England will surely touch upon a visit to Hestercombe.

                                                                  Hestercombe Rill  © Alice Joyce

                    Hestercombe Round Stone Window  © Alice Joyce

                                                                             Hestercombe Pergola © Alice Joyce

A vast landscape taking in some fifty acres, the Hestercombe gardens present a fascinating example of 3 eras: the earliest garden plan attributed to Coplestone Warre Bampfylde (such a melodious name). Bampfylde conceived the property’s earliest 35-acre landscape in the mid-1700s.

Cutleaf Maple – Spring Photo © Alice Joyce

Maple Gold-Green Copyright © Alice Joyce

Situated in the sublime countryside of Somerset’s Quantock Hills, the Hestercombe property acquired a terrace (photo below) during the Victorian epoch. Yet, garden devotees tend to focus on the design partnership springing from Sir Edwin Lutyens and gardening doyenne, Gertrude Jekyll.

Hestercombe Overview    © Alice Joyce

At Hestercombe, these two famous Edwardian figures devised a classical plan on an ambitious scale, a garden embellished by artful plantings: The framework here is less intimate than the Arts and Crafts gardens Lutyens and Jekyll are known for, such as Jekyll’s own garden at  Munstead Wood, where the two first collaborated.

                    Hestercombe Water Feature .. Alice Joyce

Hestercombe Yellow Roses © Alice Joyce

A “Paradise restored,”  to quote the Hestercombe pamphlet. Indeed, the notion of the ‘paradise garden’ comes to life as one follows the pathways from Pear Pond to Great Cascade to Box Pond. I’m able to imagine the stir and flutter one experiences when a visit coincides with peak bloom among the landscape’s myriad roses. In spring, my desire for a harmonious vision took the form of alluring foliage – the juxtaposition of mature cutleaf maples – one burnished citron, the other, bright melon tones – combined with architectural elements constructed of local mort slate, and buttery-yellow Ham stone.

     Hestercombe Parterre in Bloom  © Alice Joyce

At Hestercombe the softening effects of Jekyll’s perennial combinations are evident, complementing Lutyens’ plan: We see brilliant stonework throughout, in the architect’s semi-circular staircases and meticulously crafted retaining walls; paired rills; and surely one of the most famous of all pergolas, with its round piers playing off square. A note: how odd it is to see Lutyens-designed benches in context, since the form has been so widely copied as to be ubiquitous.

Steps – Pergola to Orangery Photo © Alice Joyce

Over and over again, Lutyens delights, as one’s eye rests upon a simple circular shape within a wall that opens onto pastoral view. A pretty line etched in stone breaks up an expanse of lawn alongside the Orangery, or a more emphatic circle is used to demarcate sections of a water feature. Hestercombe embraces the Arts & Crafts aficionado in its spell.

Hestercombe Carved Mask  Photo © Alice Joyce

Hestercombe Orangery – Lutyens Bench (Alice Joyce photo)

England

Picturesque Gardens of Mapperton .. West Dorset

A West Dorset Landscape of exceptional beauty:  Mapperton House and Gardens

Mapperton Fountain Court Staircase and Urn Photo © Alice Joyce

The West Dorset landscape of Mapperton is especially wondrous on a late-spring or summertime ramble, but you may choose to visit from March through October (always check website or phone for Open Hours).

Mapperton cherry blossoms  © Alice Joyce

Mapperton Fountain Court Tiered Topiary © Alice Joyce

Considered to be one of Britain’s outstanding manor houses, Mapperton is distinguished by a warm, honeyed Ham stone facade; hearkening to the Elizabethan era, the architecture was altered to a grander scale in the late 1600s.

Mapperton Gardens, Lawn, Topiary  © Alice Joyce

A highlight of the entrancing grounds: The formal Italianate layout constructed in the 1920s when Ethel Labouchere presided over the property, having created the garden in memoriam to her husband, Charles. Grand staircases punctuated by clipped topiary converge upon a terraced expanse, centered upon an octagonal water feature. Perennial plantings meld hellebores, pulmonarias, potentillas and salvias, emerging along with the ‘Kiftsgate’ rose and ‘Wyevale’ clematis.

Mapperton Pool Garden © Alice Joyce

Presently the family estate of the Earl and Countess of Sandwich, Mapperton gives rise to this Fountain Court of exquisite beauty, surrounded by seemingly endless pathways into leafy surroundings: a woodland hillside allied with ornamental trees and shrubs; an allee of horse chestnuts; a neo-classical Orangery built in the 1960s; and a stunning pergola linking the Court to the Summer House.

Beyond the Fountain Court, picturesque rectangular pools shape the space. If you can prey yourself away, you’ll encounter a shrub garden adjacent to a secret garden. Ascend to arrive at the 17th century summer house.

Mapperton Rhodies in Bloom © Alice Joyce

Mapperton’s varied landscape satisfies a garden lover’s appetite for picturesque tableaux, as well as a desire for quiet strolls through both wild woodland and colorfully conceived plantings.

Mapperton Spring Bluebells © Alice Joyce