Last week’s grassy wand-waving, aided by your kind well-wishes, seemed to pay off. Despite the iffy weather forecast and localised heavy downpours, Brockweir Common stayed dry for Sunday afternoon’s garden visitors. This year, we have a lot both to be thankful for, and, to think about ….

Mia the cat inspecting the happy troops at the end of the afternoon.
A dry day was a relief to our furry meeters and greeters, as garden visitors are much more inclined to make a fuss of dry dogs 😉.

Here comes Brian with his camera.
Nearly two hundred visitors raised lots of money for the National Garden Scheme, Gwent Wildlife Trust, Alzheimer Society and Brockweir Moravian Church. Among the more familiar faces was a lovely surprise – fellow garden blogger Brian and his wife of Our Garden@19.

86 tickets sold to date, paws crossed, many more to come from small groups over the next few months ….
Visitor numbers were a little lower than last year, but this gave us more time to chat with people. Happily, as a newer garden, Greenfields enjoyed the lion’s share (114). The straw poll taken at the gates shows that most visitors are still attracted by what used to be called ‘The Yellow Book” as well as the county booklets.

Mia, our furry foreman, testing the signs – the old corrugated ones seem sturdier.
Despite the rebranding, which I wrote about back in March here, proportionally fewer visitors seem to find gardens via the attractive new website or social media. Speaking to other NGS garden owners and our trusty Assistant County Orgainsers, the new stationary may be less effective than we’d like it to be. The feedback seems to be that due the new poster’s background colour and quirky font the lettering is less visible from the roadside, plus there’s less information available to browsers of notice boards. For instance, both Greenfields and Barn House gardens are open by appointment, yet, this is no longer advertised on the posters. Another local NGS garden owner thinks that this sort of thing could be addressed if garden owners had access to the unique font and so were able to create/customise their own publicity material.

The hay meadow we use for parking on big NGS days, small groups park on the property or in neighbouring lay-bys.
Maybe it’s going to take a while longer for garden visitors to switch to using the internet, yet, having set up a garden website in 2015 my experience is that this isn’t the whole story. Following the garden’s feature on Gardener’s World in August 2016 Hitesh noticed that our sleepy little WordPress website stats hit the roof causing us to fear ensung gridlock on the lane not to mention mayhem in the parking field. Luckily, the virtual interest translated into a far more manageable 85 visitors spread over the 8 weeks after the programme was aired.

Designed as doggie air-locks, two sets of double gates, one shown above, provide parking on occasional days.
Hitesh also pointed out that it’s a bit odd that this is the first year that Askimet hasn’t shown any referrals from the new NGS website.

The maze of tranquil lanes criss-crossing the commons were designed for ponies and traps ….
One way or another, hundreds of intrepid garden visitors have found their way to us since we first opened the gates in July 2013. Over the last 5 years we have hosted an NGS Open Day 8 times, in addition to which 20 groups will have visited by appointment by the end of September 2017. While there has been keen interest in the garden from further afield, such as from Swansea or Bath, it seems unlikely that many regional groups, with a sensible preference for travel by coach, would as happily brave longer journeys by car. Maybe they’ve heard that the secluded Lower Wye Valley’s winding lanes are charmingly pretty but prohibitively narrow?

This year’s plant sales area helped disguise the Portaloo. So far BH takings for Brockweir Moravian Church are £196.
This may be a blessing in disguise. Never mind the country lanes, our country drains wouldn’t cope with large parties without creating an almighty fuss.

The village hall : an alternative venue for teas as suggested by another NGS garden owner. BH teas on the big day were £80, also for BMC.
I’m considering a low-key opening of the garden in 2018 on a set day for a local charity while offering the garden to groups of 10-30 by appointment on behalf of the NGS. (Interested individuals or organisers considering a group visit are always most welcome, contact details are given on the website’s Visit page.)

Calystegia sepium 😉
For the last 3 years we’ve deliberately opened early in the summer, to show that a naturalistic garden doesn’t look too bad in June, months before ornamental grasses are ‘supposed’ to look good. Why, even the hedgerow bindweed winding its way up the bamboo canes looked rather marvellous to me ….
Update : On the afternoon of Friday 30th June, NGS garden owners received an email from Chief Executive George Plumptre reassuring us that teething problems with the new website, posters etc. would be addressed for 2018.
Gorgeous planting in the image with Brian and his camera. I love the rounded form of the box balls softened and accentuated by the tall frothy grasses, Then the colour of those blue salvias (?) livens up the whole bed..
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Thanks, Sue, the terraces of Calamagrostis, Karl Foerster and, here, Overdam, do look good in Wimbledon colours. The purple haze is a hedge of dwarf lavender but salvia would work just as well. The old box balls are worth their weight in gold for the structure and contrast they provide.
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Well, I am glad that you had a good show of people and were able to chat with them. I am sure that that was very much appreciated (at Wimpole I find that gardening visitors love to discuss any and all things to do with gardens – I learn a lot too). How nice to meet up with Brian too. I do use the NGS website, but only when I am looking for visits for a particular date. With the paper version I guess I used to browse more and mark ideas for future visits. Blimey, it hadn’t occurred to me to think about toilet facilities!
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Thanks Allison, it was a most enjoyable afternoon. How right you are about the exchange of information etc.. One visitor, a meadow ecologist, ID’d a few meadow grasses I’ve been struggling with for yonks in under 10 minutes. On the facilities front, I can see why some folk set up tearooms in old outbuildings ….
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I would love to visit your garden if only you weren’t on the other side of the country. Your lucky visitors must have had a real treat. How nice that Brian came.
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It would be lovely to visit your beautiful garden too, maybe one day. Meanwhile I count myself lucky to enjoy the online snapshots that blogging provides.
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Fame at last!
Quizzing our garden visitors several had looked on the website to see which gardens were open, dedicated followers had the yellow book.
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From the visitors we’ve met, I think you’re right about there being a core of ‘dedicated followers’ Brian. I find such guide books very useful, especially if they’re kept in the car’s glove compartment 😉.
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This was so interesting to read Kate, particularly coming just after our own opening, and I imagine each year will bring its own reasessment. I would say that most visitors to ours were as a result of the Yellow Book and not the website or local signs
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Your blogposts about opening your garden for the first time have been fascinating, Cathy. The story would have made good viewing.
I’m looking forward to this new TV series featuring a few NGS gardens http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2017-05-06/miranda-harts-mum-is-fronting-a-new-gardening-show–with-a-little-help-from-her-famous-daughter
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Thanks Kate – I just told it how it was as I know I learned such a lot from bloggers like you and Brian who have opened before. Perhaps it will encourage others to open too. The programme looks interesting…
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That’s a good point Cathy, I’m sure that given the popularity of your blog your posts are excellent publicity for the NGS.
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And it was interesting to read what you said about links and referrers – I rarely think to look at these on my blog so I don’t know what contact readers have had with the NGS, either way round
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Web-wizzardry stuff is way beyond me, Cathy. What I’m pretty sure of is that, despite a few glitches this year, the NGS is unbeatable when it comes to publicising private gardens open for charity.
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Yes, the amount raised just by visiting gardens never ceases to amaze me. I also find the book useful for finding lesser known gardens that are open to the public at other times too
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Our numbers doubled when we were thrown out of the NGS and have stayed high. So it’s not just the Yellow book or NGS website that brings garden visitors. I do notice an increase in casual visitors (as opposed to coach parties) in August – presumably because lots of NGS gardens focus on June/July? Coach parties don’t come in August though, apparently because grandparents are on childcare duty then. Good to see all is well up the lanes there! Xxxxx
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