Guernsey and Horticulture

Guernsey in Bloom

From Chelsea to the Channel Islands, there’s a heady floral aroma gently sweeping the length and breadth of Britain. For hayfever sufferers it’s time to head in doors with the Kleenex but for the rest of us it’s an enticing, exciting concoction, a call to arms (a.k.a. spades, forks, watering cans…), a flurry of sweet pea and geranium a veritable vegetable garden of runner bean and radish.

Gardeners of Great Britain, Your Country Garden Needs You!

Of course, with 449 flowering plants recorded in January alone, the islands of Guernsey are in bloom year round. But we needed very little excuse to wax lyrical about the floral, horticultural, bloomin’ marvellous appeal of Guernsey! So, without further ado…

The Guernsey Tom

Some say it all began with the tomato…Guernsey’s horticultural origins go back over 200 years when the first greenhouses were erected. Locals dabbled in grape growing but it wasn’t until the advent of the humble tomato that things really took off. In the mid 19th Century Guernsey’s growers were quick to respond to news from medical practitioners that the decorative plant was not only edible but good for your health, and by the 1870s the tomato had overtaken the vine in the island’s glass houses.

The ”Guernsey Tom” dominated the island’s growing industry throughout the 20th Century, with special tomato trains laid on at Southampton and Weymouth during peak periods to cope with the influx. Guernsey became a “glass island”, with 7% of its total surface area under green house by 1950. By the 1970s hundreds of acres of glasshouses were dedicated to tomato growing, with nine million trays per annum exported.

Wicker baskets used to transport tomatoes were reused by growers

Sadly, increased competition from Dutch producers and changes in the British railway system eventually made the export of the tomato less profitable, and Guernsey growers were forced to diversify. But the seeds had been sown for those green fingered islanders!

How does your garden grow

Freesias, roses, carnations, clematis…the combination of Guernsey’s clement climate and horticultural heritage has resulted in a blooming bounty.

Guernsey floral facts:

• At just 25 square miles Guernsey is home to the largest producer of clematis in the world

• Guerney’s Bridget Ozanne Fields are home to an area of very rare wild orchids.

• The island also provides two thirds of all the freesias sold in UK

• In 1998 319,000 boxes of roses and 223,000 boxes of freesias were exported

• South African amaryllis “Nerine sarniensis” or Guernsey Lily was named after Guernsey – ‘Sarnia’ being the name the Romans gave to the island of Guernsey. The bulb is indigenous to South Africa and grows in the wild on Table Mountain and other south western mountains of the Cape Province of South Africa. Local legend states that the first bulbs were washed ashore on the west coast of Guernsey from a Dutch ship wrecked whilst en route from Japan

• Candie Gardens boasts two of the earliest examples of greenhouses in the British Isles, believed to be built around 1792

• Camellias and magnolias often grow to be huge in Guernsey, not least in the public gardens of Saumarez Park. These exotic species were originally planted by a Guernsey diplomat who had served as the British Ambassador to Japan

• The gardens of Victor Hugo’s exile home, Hauteville House, have been faithfully renovated and include a kitchen garden, fruit trees and Hugo’s United States of Europe Oak – a living link with this great visionary.

Victor Hugo at Hauteville House

Visitors to Guernsey can head to the Guernsey Flower Centre in the parish of Vale to the see the various growing stages of freesia, the planting of corms, the picking, bunching and boxing of this exotic plant.

Fletchers Freesias at the Guernsey Freesia Centre in the parish of St Sampsons – who despatch two million stems each year – also opens its doors to visitors.

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