Packwood House
Lapworth, Solihull, West midlands, B94 6AT
This is one of the great topiary gardens of
England with it's separate Yew Garden receiving much acclaim. Although
a plan of 1723 indicates the potential positions of some of the giant
specimens the majority were planted in the Nineteenth Century.

The sunken pond garden near the house

Packwood disciples

Serried ranks
Tradition has it that this area is known as the Sermon
on the Mount. There is certainly a Mount where you walk up a spiral
path surrounded by Box edging to view the assembled multitude of Yew
specimens, some over 50 feet high, from the shade of a large umbrella-ed
Yew. There is also a story that when asked by a visitor during the Victorian
period what the garden meant, as it surely must have a meaning, a gardener
is said to have quickly made up the story to keep his guest happy. Whichever
is true you'll find more yew trees per square inch here than almost
anywhere else in the country. All of which is a testament to the gardener's
skill as the soil here is clay which Yew does not like when it is continually
wet in the Winter. You will find that this section is closed off in
particularly wet months as the many feet of visitors compacting the
earth around the roots of the major specimens can have a detrimental
effect on their health. Cutting of the specimens is done with a hydraulic
hoist but ladders are still used for the more inaccessible parts. The
whole edge of the garden has a massive undulating hedge of Box.

"Christ" on the Mount of Olives

View of the back of Packwood House
As you enter the main walled garden before arriving
at the "Sermon" there is a sunken garden created in a section
away to the left. This is surrounded by a high yew hedge which gives
it a tranquility and provides a strong backdrop for the herbaceous borders
which thrive around the edge of the pond.

Box Hedging next to the yew specimens

Tall pillars
All photographs by Anthony Blagg.
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