

We have a treat in store for you today: a Quick Takes column with Arthur Parkinson, everyone’s favorite gardening wunderkind who famously befriended the late Duchess of Devonshire (when he was just seven!) after he wrote to her about their shared passion for keeping chickens. Arthur never grew out of his obsession, and a couple years ago, he poured all his learned wisdom into the book, his fourth, Chicken Boy: My Life With Hens.
His prior books? They were about the other love of his life: gardening. (See our story on The Flower Yard here.) Arthur is known for planted pots bursting with, as he described it on his Substack, “Venetian colours jam-packed full of nectar for bees and butterflies.” His next book will focus on cut flowers.
Today Arthur, who calls his Instagram account “a romp of flowers, hens, bees, flamingos, & pouting characters,” shares his favorite gardening hack, a controversial opinion regarding dogs and kids in the garden (nothing against them, but…), and more.
Getting lost in vivid beds of Russel hybrid lupins at Chatsworth House when I was 3.
The Garden by Deborah Devonshire.
Demanding, engulfing, bees.
Foxgloves, honeysuckles, peonies, dahlias, waterlilies, mints, soft fruit, roses, scabious, violas, cosmos, nasturtiums, herbs, geums. Poppies.
Begonias, Laurel, photinia yucca, phormium, busy Lizzies, bedding geraniums. Conifers.
Geums.
That the garden you love today won’t always be yours tomorrow.
I hate the idea of the garden being domesticated into an outdoor room with facilities to accommodate barbecues and the like. I also think dogs and children often cripple a garden!
Fences. We need as many native hedges our garden boundaries can accommodate because they are vital habitat for songbirds and insects.
Prune the roses.
A deck chair in the summer plonked—make yourself have time in the garden. Don’t be a slave to the work. Embrace it and enjoy being in it when the weather is good.
I cut flowers from the garden every few days and bring pots in, and out, too.
Bird bath.
As little as possible.
Florist scissors they are great for pruning and cutting.
Unfortunately almost everything I own.
Gooseberry bushes.
Coton Manor, Northamptonshire.
Emotional connection to the earth. I suppose also it’s good to be God to a packet of seeds. Love the magic of growing and nurturing something.
Thanks so much, Arthur! (You can follow him on Instagram @arthurparkinson_.)
For our full archive of Quick Takes, head here.
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