January

Snug in

January

When structure counts most

Kitchen Garden: Box balls, standard bay trees and rose arches stand out in the January snow

Spotted laurel shines out in mid-winter, adding colour and a structure

Anglesey Abbey is an easy choice, famous for its winter walk which shows how much colour and interest January can offer.

We’re hunkered down for most of January , largely leaving the garden to its own devices.

The Kitchen Garden

...best place to enjoy the snow

The box balls, pyramids and spirals that complement the low network of hedges in the kitchen garden are an asset all year, but a snow dump turns them into a fluffy white playground.

...January Garden to visit

Anglesey Abbey

Just northeast of Cambridge is the unlikely setting for Anglesey Abbey.
It was the first National Trust property to make a dedicated winter walk to extend the season and has become the template for many similar seasonal plantings, offering winter colour and scent.
The shrubs are the main providers of both with the stems of cornus, tassels of Garrya Elliptica, and early flowering viburnums and mahonias delivering. 
However, there’s plenty of invention before the refreshed grove of Himalayan Silver birch stems provides the walk’s finale. 
The nearly 100 acres includes parkland, woodland, a lake, a stretch of the river Quy and a Jacobian house (pictured). Traditional planting classics offer: a dahlia bed organised by colour, an old-fashioned rose garden and a spectacular perennial garden set in a ‘D’ backed by a beech hedge (pictured).

Frosted leaves

The crisp edges of leaves caught in a frost always seem to attract the attention of my camera on winter walks.

Wild spectacle: leaves carpeting our countryside

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