May 18, 2010
Temple Garlands & Country Gardens — Your Proud Heritage
As a gardener we’ll find you considering buying garden accessories or maybe checking out that Alan Titchmarsh garden fork — but let’s not forget, only over centuries have we come to this level. Rakes and secateurs are relatively late developments, but let’s not forget, the concept of gardens is as old as humanity. Your leisure occupation had its humble origins within the cradle of civilization itself.
Gardens at that time were tended to for pleasure, for spirituality, and we shouldn’t leave out practical reasons. Typically enclosed by stone walls, green spaces were seeded with grapes, flowers, vegetables, fruit and nut bearing trees, and from time to time pools for fish. Some of this was set aside, holy plant life grown and tended for use in religious ceremonies. Priests also looked after other plants on nearby land.
They weren’t the only nation to landscape primitive farmsteads. Also gardeners were the Persians, the Assyrians, and the Babylonians, and they often incorporated building projects of noteworthy scope into this landscaping. The Romans were another culture who went in for tranquil gardens, unlike their antecedents the Greeks. Only food flourished in their plantations. Though they had no access to forks or rakes, these cultures had innovated quite the selection of primitive contrivances similar to today’s spades and hoes. They were made from bronze, iron, copper, stone… the historical eras obviously named for the primary materials in use.
The pandemonium after the fall of Rome led many nations to set down the elementary hoe and the rest of the garden tools — except for the priests, who planted some herbs and flowers. Slowly we returned to growing gardens for pleasure. Rules began to evolve, a formal structure overseeing how the garden should eventually appear. Some great exemplars include hedge mazes, which were drawn from labyrinthine textures and patterns.
Should you happen to be investigating ways to get rid of some bothersome garden spades deformity or studying some informative lawn rake reviews, don’t forget that in the 18th century visionaries such as Lancelot “Capability” Brown, Humphry Repton, not to mention William Kent picked up a spade and other garden implements to construct astonishing designs. Rather than abiding by these rules which were rigorously observed for generations, Humphry Repton and those like him cunningly mingled structure and instinct by bringing together modern decorative pieces like columns with a natural looking landscape. In the present, gardens may look quite different but nonetheless we cultivate plants for many of the same reasons. You won’t find a more relaxing area than a garden paradise.











