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The Porter's Garden > Annual reports Annual reports2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 20032008Eighth Annual General Meeting 24 April 2008, 7.30pm Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust, 19 College Road, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Seventh Annual ReportIn sowing and setting, good housewives delight. To have in their gardein, or some other plot To trim up their house, and to furnish their pot. VisitorsGreenfinches have been seen and a wren is almost a resident as is ‘our’ (probably) blackbird. Gill Dawe reported that a tame white dove visited the garden and took crumbs from Chris Lovatt’s hand. We have also had pied wagtails.Volunteers had a chat with three visitors who used to work at Pembroke Dock and remembered Warrior being used there as a storage vessel. VisitsThe Friends visited the Rare Plant Sale at Selborne on 17 June 2007, Highdown Gardens on 15 August 2007. They attended the Orchard Close Garden Party on 22 June 2007 and the HGT talk on West Dean through the Seasons at Petersfield Physic Garden (MJ and PEP) on 2 April 2008. On 10 February 2008, PEP, John Scott and cousins, MJ and a friend and PH visited Brandy Mount for the snowdrops.EventsOn 1 December 2007 the Friends enjoyed running their stall at the Festival of Christmas, serving up Cristine’s mulled wine recipe and mince pies. After a shaky start (it was too far back from the main drag), the stall was dragged nearer by stalwart helpers (Peter Lambert’s team) and they never looked back. They had to send out for more supplies and made a handsome sum by the time the weather closed in. Apart from having to be imprisoned in their stall (to stop the door blowing open) and getting back ache from bending over the mulled wine pot it was an enjoyable few hours of slicing, simmering and banter.On 13 December 2007 the PG Christmas party was held in the Taste of China in Cosham, an inspired choice by PEP and the food was excellent. Thanks to Peter Goodship for his generosity. At our Midsummer Garden Party on 22 June 2007 the Friends once more excelled themselves in producing superb cream teas and their famous fruit punch, served by China Rose and Aislinn. It was opened by Deputy Lord Mayor Robin Sparshatt and Deputy Lady Mayoress Mrs Felicity Sparshatt. Councillor Terry Hall also attended. Weather well and truly assailed us, but Frank Nowosielski and his staff in Action Stations coped with the influx of 80-odd guests superbly. Peter Goldie of Nauticalia, the Mary Rose Shop and Chris Arkell of the Royal Naval Museum Bookshop generously gave raffle prizes to boost sales of our raffle tickets. Con Brio singers, continuing our anti-slave trade theme of the year, projected spirituals brilliantly in the enclosed space. This year, to commemorate the 300th anniversary of the Porter’s Lodging and the tenth anniversary of starting to plan the garden, our new feature is a border of herbs that could have been used by the Porter and his family designed by Friends Gill Dawe, Margaret Judd and Pauline Powell. Ann is attempting to pinpoint the exact date of the building of the Porter’s Lodge in the National Archive. New in the GardenA new botanic illustration of Prunus cerasus - Morello cherry - was made by June Mary Huckerby from Bentley in Yorkshire during her visit to the Porter's Garden on a lovely day in June 2007. It will be made into a card.Our jars of Morello cherry jam and chutney are now enhanced by our own label featuring Morello cherries and our web address. The website now has a new address http://www.portersgarden.hampshire.org.uk and a new feature: What’s looking good in the Garden this Month. Each month we post photos of what is in bloom and looking good and give its location in the garden. Our thanks to John Scott the web master. Two more old Cotswold stone troughs, one D-shaped and one rectangular, were bought to partner our previous two, from the same supplier, delivered on 26 March 2008. Jean Flack-Munday is sketching and roughing out two or three ideas for a 300th anniversary painting of the garden. A giant subtropical Echium pininana is growing in the William III bed. One self-seeded near BH6 Cinema but was ‘weeded’. Development of the BH6 area has been an ongoing development. Discussions were held with the Trustee architects in summer 2007, the Friends suggesting a pergola, replacement railings for BH6 and cypress trees. None of these ideas were taken up. Instead Sir Colin Stansfield Smith has designed some steps and more walnut trees will extend the current planting along the road. A container will grow greenery trailing over the new retaining wall running down to the mast pond, and Peter Goodship is hopeful of obtaining an interesting engineering feature for display in the open space. Sickness in the Garden (Phyllis Heard and Pauline Powell) reduced the workforce somewhat, and Margaret Judd had an extended holiday to Mexico and Jamaica. But we have gained new Friends Joan Munro and volunteer Angie Stafford. TalksAnn gave illustrated talks at the Maritime Club to the Portsmouth Association of Wrens on 10 July and to the Friends of Old Portsmouth Association in the Square Tower on 16 July 2007, making £50 in fees and sales of jam and cards.Gardening Tips
DonationsFor gifts in 2006-2007 the Friends wish to thankMr & Mrs Brain for continuing to donate plants in such generous quantities, which keep our Plant Stand stocked with unusual and beautiful varieties. Most importantly, thanks to the Porter’s Garden ‘digging’ FriendsThanks especially to Pauline Powell for her indefatigable work as Secretary and to John Scott for updating our beautifully designed and illustrated website. Also to Cristine as Treasurer, who has kept us fully informed as to our finances, and is happy to approve Pauline’s spending. More thanks to the other Committee members for their valuable input to meetings, and last but not least to Peter Goodship, Lorraine Carpenter, Karol Jefferies and the PNBPT staff for their support. We have had much help in the Garden from Peter Lambert’s Maintenance Team, for which we are very grateful. Both the Strawberry and the Judas Tree were blown over in gales this winter but seem to have survived and are now staked with their help.To the rest of the ‘Diggers’, thanks for hundreds of hours spent digging, watering, propagating, composting, lawn care, historical and horticultural research, designing, use of petrol to collect plants, emails and telephone calls, administration, photographs, plants, tools, fertiliser and sundries. Dr Ann Coats
2007Seventh Annual General Meeting 17 April 2007, 7.30pm Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust, 19 College Road, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Sixth Annual ReportWurts
This year has seen new members adding fresh ideas and contributing valuable work and knowledge. We now have twenty-three Friends. The youngest, China-Rose Pennycook, has designed new 'Best wishes' cards depicting the Porter's Garden. She helps in the garden on half terms and holidays. Wildlife seen in the garden includes a wren and our resident blackbirds. A blue tit was observed on the Judas Tree recently (which flowered twice this year), a greenfinch in the walnut trees and wagtails on several occasions. At our Midsummer Garden party on 25 June 2006 our home made food was enhanced by ice cream kindly donated by Minghella Ice Cream and our famous fruit punch. Peter Goldie of Nauticalia, the Mary Rose Shop and Chris Arkell of the Royal Naval Museum Bookshop generously gave raffle prizes to boost sales of our raffle tickets. Con Brio singers sang and the Webb & West Jazz Duo, Vincent and Ben from Portsmouth Grammar School, played hazy summer music. The Friends held a Plant sale at the Christmas Festival. It was more profitable than previous Festivals, but still not really worth our time. They also manned a stall throughout the day at the very successful Volunteers' Fair on 22 February in Boathouses 4 and 6, Val and Ann being interviewed on Community Radio. The Donations Box is still gratefully receiving useful sums. As a new venture at Christmas 2007 ten Friends attended a Dinner at the Pizza House. It was thoroughly enjoyable and a nice way to end the year. The Property Trust featured a photo of our berried holly tree on their Christmas card: 'The holly bears a berry...', which was also included in Ditty Do, the Naval Base Newsletter. VisitsOn 27 April 2006 Margaret Judd and Pauline Powell attended a reception at the House of Lords held by Onyx Environmental trust as a thank you for their grant recipients.On Sunday 18 June 2006, three Friends of the Porter's Garden committee and an accompanying friend visited the Unusual Plants Fair at Gilbert White's House in Selborne, Hampshire. There were about 40 exhibitors and a dazzling array of unusual plants. The visit proved very educational with many opportunities to purchase superb and interesting plants. The Fair is held every year and is well worth attending. www.gilbertwhiteshouse.org.uk On 6 September 2006, five Friends of the Porter's Garden committee visited Denmans Garden, near Fontwell, West Sussex. It was an evening visit; part of the Yellow Book Gardens Open for Charity programme. The Friends happily wandered around the four-acre garden with a glass of wine on a beautiful September evening, enjoying some unusual plants. They purchased plants for the Garden and for themselves from the well-stocked nursery. On 27 September 2006, two Friends of the Porter's Garden committee attended a Plantsman's Day at Bury Court, Bentley, near Farnham. There was a conducted tour around the walled garden designed by Piet Oudolf and the front garden designed by Christopher Bradley-Hole. The pergola has inspired our own design for a pergola near Boathouse Six. New in the GardenHighlights of the summer of 2006 were our two giant subtropical Echium pininanas. They were donated to us in 2004 as seedlings and had taken a while to reach their height of 12 feet in full bloom. Also known as the 'Tower of Jewels' or 'Pride of Tenerife', their flower spikes were festooned with purple-blue, funnel-shaped flowers. After flowering the plants died, but we are now waiting to see if they scattered their seeds. Native to the Canary Islands, they are common in Cornwall, the Scilly Isles and Ireland. They may be seen locally in the Crescent Garden, Alverstoke and on the Isle of Wight.Among our latest purchases are a wooden water butt and a sandstone bird bath, intended to help out with the watering and to improve the facilities for our bird visitors. The bird bath was set in place on 18 October 2006, surrounded by a new bed planted with spring bulbs. It has been much enjoyed by our bird visitors. To ease the volunteers' workload we purchased a shredder, a grass trimmer and a hedge cutter. We recently completed the planting up of a stone trough with a collection of sempervivums, finished off with golden gravel. It looks very fine on the step in front of Boathouse Six. We have also added trellis to the Shady Bed for two evergreen honeysuckle plants to add colour, height, interest and scent and added pine cone finials to the Cardoon stakes. On 15 February 2007 the Strawberry Tree, which had its first strawberry fruits in 2006, was pruned by John Scott. Due to strong prevailing winds from the south west, it needed two thirds of growth to be removed, mainly from the leeward side, to even up its shape. It has also been staked to counteract future winds and encourage it to grow upright. The recently re-designed Porter's Back Garden, created by the 'digging' Friends led by Margaret Judd, is a small space of simplicity, charm and tranquillity. Composed of golden gravel and punctuated with welsh slate, drift wood, rocks and ferns, the mossy flagstones arched over by a canopy of sweet smelling jasmine lead to a door to the Porter's Lodge. This year our new feature was the Anti-Slave Trade Border, opened on Sunday 25 March 2007. Forty guests joined the Friends in celebrating this acknowledgment that in the 21st century all people must be free and equal. They stood facing a display of replica manacles set off by red, navy and gold ribbons. The colour red symbolises the blood of the Africans, gold the sugar, tobacco and sun, and navy the Royal Navy. The planting scheme will feature tobacco Nicotiana Tabacum, sugar cane Saccharum officinarum, crops grown on the plantations, the dahlia Bishop of Llandaff (red flowers and black foliage), gold lace primulas (dark red laced with gold), red Pasque flowers, black iris and black grasses and cowslips. As it was too cold in March to plant the tobacco, sugar cane and Bishop Llandaff, they will be planted for our Garden Party in June when the weather is warmer. The border was designed by Friends Margaret Judd and Pauline Powell. Dr Colin White, Director of the Royal Naval Museum, whose exhibition, 'Chasing Freedom - The Royal Navy and the Suppression of the Transatlantic Slave Trade', began on 3 February 2007, opened the Border. Alisa Vanlint of the 2nd Augustan Legion Living History Society, dressed as an enslaved Roman farm worker, presented 'The Origins of Slavery', which showed that many elements of what we think of as African slavery have been present since prehistoric times, to deny people their identity and freedom. Simon Vanlint was dressed as an American plantation overseer, his costume inspired by an American banknote. Anne Carpenter from the Anti-Slavery Organisation said that we must not think that slavery is something elsewhere and in the past, it still exists in Britain today. Marie Costa of the African Women's Forum ended the ceremony by saying that slavery in the Americas only ended when it was no longer economically profitable. She believed today would be the start of a new awareness of individual freedom and dignity: 'We can only be free when all people are free.' Afterwards everyone warmed up with a cup of tea. The Bury Court pergola has inspired our thinking for an iron pergola near Boathouse Six. Peter Clutterbuck, designer blacksmith of Southsea, has produced a concept design of a pergola based on the design of the beams within the Boathouse. The design is being discussed by the Friends and the Trustees. DonationsFor gifts in 2006-2007 the Friends wish to thank:
Most importantly, thanks to the Porter's Garden 'digging' FriendsThanks especially to Pauline Powell for her indefatigable work as Secretary and to her and John Scott for updating our beautifully laid out and illustrated website. To Cristine, as Treasurer, who has kept us fully informed as to our finances, and occasionally questions us when we want to spend money, but not often. Thanks also to the other Committee members for their valuable input to meetings, and last but not least to Peter Goodship, Lorraine Carpenter and the PNBPT staff for their financial support and helpful attention. To the rest of the 'Diggers' thanks for hundreds of hours spent digging, watering, propagating, composting, lawn care, historical and horticultural research, designing, petrol used to collect plants, emails and telephone calls, administration, photographs, plants, tools, fertiliser and sundries.Dr Ann Coats
2006Sixth Annual General Meeting 25 April, 2006, 7.30pm Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust, 19 College Road, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Fifth Annual ReportWho can blend usefulness and sweetness wins everyAs urged in Horace's poetry, the right proportion between the useful and the beautiful was much debated in eighteenth century garden design. (Ars Poetica, 343-344) This last year has seen a subtle change in our membership, with some original members like Jean Flack Munday, and Charlotte Frost and John Gunn, who gave so much of their time and expertise, leaving. Taking their place, new members are adding new ideas and contributing valuable work and knowledge. In particular, Kay Gilmore contributed an article about the Garden which the Portsmouth Friends of the Earth published in full in their February Newsletter. A note also appeared in the Portsea Post. Further publicity and funds were obtained from Ann Coats' talk to the Cosham Conservative Ladies Luncheon Club on 11 January. Gill Dawe was instrumental in the purchase and release of 200 Lumbricus terrestris worms for the benefit of the William III bed. Other wildlife in the garden included a wren and of course, our resident blackbirds. 2005 was busy for the Dockyard and the Porter's Garden because it was Trafalgar 200, the Year of the Sea, with 1 million visitors (P Goodship 24 April). The Nelson Border in the Porter's Garden, whose opening launched Trafalgar 200 in 2005, flowered beautifully all through the summer. The violas were cut back in late August to produce a second flush for 21 October 2005, the anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar. New in the GardenOur three granite seats were installed on 24 May, the fruit of three years of research and planning by Jean Flack Munday and Pauline Powell and careful attention by the sculptor, Roger Stephens throughout, completed after the Friends were awarded £11,000 by Onyx Environmental Trust. Our Knot Garden was finally completed with the addition of four standard holly bushes on 21 June. In the last year we have benefited from a plant sales stand, made by John Gunn, who also installed a Red Mason Bee nest box, an interpretation board designed by Dick Davis, an updated brochure, seven new wooden tubs and three antique Cotswold stone tubs and in May two new oak benches hand made by Paul Pinnington. In addition, Michael Howell donated and fixed up our Blue Tit nest box and drilled and added some more rows of wire to support the Morello Cherries which are growing apace. Lights have now been provided for the potting shed, courtesy of Mark Meatcher and the Mary Rose Trust.In 2005 we had a more ambitious Midsummer Garden Party than usual: a Soirée, which although was great fun and delicious and as well attended as ever, did not make so much money as the Strawberry Teas, and involved the Friends in much more work. Con Brio gave us some rousing sea shanties and St Ann's Hand Bell Ringers provided beautiful music too. Roger Stephens and his wife were our special guests and the Sculptured Seats and Knot Garden were formally opened by Tom Blair, the Lord Mayor of Portsmouth, with children from St George's Beneficial School and Meon First School, who had taken part in the competition to design the Knot Garden. This year our new feature was the Brunel Border, designed by Margaret Judd in the colours of Brunel's great ships (black Ophiopogon planiscapus and white and red pansies). 2006 is the bicentenary of the birth of Isambard Kingdom Brunel, our great nineteenth century engineer, in Portsea. It was opened on 9 April Lord Mayor of Portsmouth Councillor Robin Sparshatt, who cut through coloured ribbons and ceremonially watered the border. He also unveiled our plaque for best landscape garden from the Portsmouth Society. VisitsThe Friends had an extremely interesting and enjoyable visit to Prince Charles's estate and garden at Highgrove House on 1st August, eagerly awaited for over two years. Gill Jarrett presented a pot of our cherry jam (we do not know if HRH enjoyed it), but we were thanked. On 19 August they visited Selborne, the eighteenth century garden of Gilbert White, the first naturalist to study nature in situ, which had some very exciting points of similarity with our garden. We also enjoyed a fascinating tour of the Porter's Lodge cellar on 5 November, complete with wine and apple racks.DonationsFor gifts in 2005-2006 the Friends wish to thank
Most importantly, thanks to the Porter's Garden 'digging' FriendsThanks especially to Pauline Powell for her indefatigable work as Secretary. As Jean Flack-Munday writes (1 April):'Nothing but good news from the Porter's Garden. Particularly pleasing is the [Onyx Environmental Trust] invitation to the House of Lords [Thursday 27 April]. Few projects are completed on time and within budget. I think Pauline deserves a medal, for her skills in guiding the project through.'To Cristine, as Treasurer, who has kept us fully informed as to our finances, and occasionally questions us when we want to spend money, but not often. Thanks also to the other committee members for their valuable input to meetings, and last but not least to Peter Goodship, Lorraine Carpenter and the PNBPT staff for their financial support and helpful attention and for Peter's excellent barbecue in June. To the rest of the 'diggers' thanks for 771 hours spent digging, watering, propagating, composting, lawn care, historical and horticultural research, designing, petrol used to collect plants, emails and telephone calls, administration, photographs, plants, tools, fertiliser and sundries. Dr Ann Coats
25 April 2006 2005Fifth Annual General Meeting April 26, 2005, 7.30pm Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust, 19 College Road, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Fourth Annual ReportLandmarks17-18 July 2004 Gardens in the CityDespite visitors expecting more garden displays and the Porter's Garden to be bigger, we had a lot of interest, sold a lot of plants and took four tours around the Garden. It was a very happy atmosphere. 20 June 2004 Annual Garden Party
On 19th June Pauline, Eileen and Ann were picking strawberries at Bedhampton and almost decided to go elsewhere because they were so scarce, but then worked out that we had nearly picked the required amount (all of us being severely arithmetically challenged) and needed only more box to complete our total. Amazingly, ripe strawberries suddenly seemed to be everywhere, as though they had ripened in a matter of 20 minutes. We can only attribute these miracles to St Ann. However this good luck did not last long enough to see us through the garden party itself. After everything had been laid out beautifully the weather got too windy and cold and we made a last minute switch to the top floor of Boathouse Six, Friends and guests all helping to take up plates and food. The picture I wish I had photographed was Peter wheeling a wheelbarrow full of crockery into the top floor of Boathouse Six, grinning. Everyone was eventually fed and watered and entertained by Con Brio and had a wonderful view looking down on the Garden. Onyx Environmental Trust Reports sent by Pauline Powell17 June 2004
New in the Garden21 March 2005. The Nelson Border was opened by Dr Colin White of Royal Naval and National Maritime Museums. The two winners of the Knot Garden competition attended.21 April 2005. The Breedon Gravel was laid, making the
whole garden look wider and defining each element more distinctly. It is
a beautiful soft colour. The Nelson Border is now in full flower and frames
that lawn bed clearly.
ThanksAs well as the thanks expressed below I would like to express particular gratitude to Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust for funding us, Chief Executive Peter Goodship, Design Manager Lorraine Carpenter and their office staff for administrative support, Karol Jeffrey for certifying our accounts and Property Manager Mark Meatcher for overall care. On the Friends committee, my especial thanks to Pauline Powell for managing the Onyx Environmental Trust grant, ordering and distributing bulbs and seeds and keeping on top of everything; Eileen Brooks for keeping the books and introducing new ideas; John Scott for maintaining our web page; John Gunn for keeping our lawn and hedges beautiful and Charlotte Frost for attendance through wind and rain and for constantly finding new ways to advertise the Garden; Margaret Judd and Christine Kervin for managing the Nelson Border from start to finish. Liz Stoner for cherries pruning & tying in 17 June 2004 and pruning the Lime Trees on 27 October 2004.DonationsFor gifts in 2004-2005 the Friends wish to thank Mr & Mrs Brain for plants for Gardens in the City Sat 17-Sun 18 July 2004.Most importantly, thanks to the Porter's Garden 'digging' Friends:For digging, watering, propagating, composting, lawn care, hurdle cutting and weaving, historical and horticultural research, petrol used to collect plants, emails and telephone calls, administration, photographs, plants, tools, fertiliser and sundries.Dr Ann Coats
26 April, 2005 2004Fourth Annual General Meeting 4 May, 2004, 7.30pm Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust, 19 College Road, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Third Annual ReportWhen, thou shalt visit, in the Moneth of May, A garden is 'a Monopolie of al the pleasure and delights that are on the earth, amassed togeather'. ProgressOur third year in operation has become less intensive physically and has taken on more administrative and interpretative aspects. We are continuing to introduce new plants, but managing its seasonal régimes has fallen into a more regular pattern. However, one strenuous job was the cutting and weaving of a new main hurdle as a salt and wind break. As well as maintenance funds supplied by the Property Trust, we have moved from raising other money through car boot sales and to our very successful built-in donations box and on-site plant sales.LandmarksAt our Strawberry Tea Garden Party on 22 June 2003 we fed around 100 guests while acapella Con Brio entertained them. We made a profit of over £500, enabling us to pay our share of the second wrought iron garden gate. Although this involved a day picking 88 pounds of strawberries (not unpleasant!) and a few hours making scones, this formula seems to have hit the jackpot.Publicity has been increased through coverage of our events by the News, articles in Solent Forum newsletter Solent News, 16, (Spring 2004) and First Base newsletter, and of course on BBC South Radio Solent's popular gardening programme, Topsoil, which on 28 February broadcast an interview (recorded on 11 February) with Pauline and Ann and composting hints from Charlotte. Alan Titchmarsh was in the garden, attracting about 40 people, to publicise the Mary Rose rose on 11 October. Our web site has been updated by John Scott and we now have a donation box in the wall under the distinctive sign provided by the dockyard support group. Ann gave a talk on 'Portmouth Dockyard Porter and the Porter's Garden' to Portsmouth Horticultural Society at Hilsea on 10 September, a thoroughly enjoyable evening which has led to further bookings. On 21 February we visited St Ann's Church (built 1785-1787), to advise the congregation on ways to redesign their own eighteenth century garden. On 4 April Councillor Elaine Baker unveiled a plaque to mark her opening of the garden in 2001 during her term as Mayor, and her continuing support. She and June Parkinson also planted our latest acquisition, a Koelreuteria paniculata (Pride of India), gift from Mrs Gilly Drummond of Hampshire Gardens Trust. Sculptor Roger Stephens brought his designs for the new garden seats, and was able to review his plan now we have the grant from Onyx under its landfill tax rebate scheme. On 27 February we gave about 60 Solent Forum delegates garden leaflets and some came for a short walk through a very wet garden. To continue learning from other gardens we visited Exbury Gardens and Cadland Gardens on Sunday 11 May 2003 and Hillier's Arboretum on Saturday 7 February 2004. We continue to liaise with Greenfingers horticultural centre at St James's to provide a learning context for their students and support for us. On 23 October their students helped split and replant the cardoons and plant the step-over apples. We have also gained the regular expertise of Iain Barnes, who joined us last autumn, and has been regular and helpful. Trained professionally at Cadlington House and Stansted Park, he became an honorary Friend earlier this year. Thanks to Pauline's determination our Land Fill grant application has been successful, so sculptor Roger Stephens' designs for the new garden seats are now much nearer to being realised. We were also awarded £900 from the Community Chest Children's Fund to develop our knot garden and eighteenth century pots. We shall liaise with St George's School Portsea and three other schools. We have lost Sally Hocking to Canada for at least three years, but not as a Friend. Sadly Mrs Helene Burroughs, a Friend who was born in Long Row in the Dockyard and played on the garden site as a child and had recently returned to the area, died on 1 March. She and her husband attended our garden party last year. Our horticultural work was again recognised by being awarded a 1st Prize in the Most Attractive Historic Garden section by Portsmouth & Southsea in Bloom judges in November 2003. Other rewarding moments include seeing blackbirds nesting in one of the cardoons and eventually producing young (we hope) in their third nest in the farthest cherry tree. In August Pauline saw a Hummingbird Hawkmoth in the Garden around the pink turtle heads in the lawn bed. New in the GardenIn the square lawn: crocus and fritilliary bulbs sown in the grass for early spring interest; two rosa officinalis (gallica), one Shailer's white moss and one 'Petite de Hollande' roses; a Pride of India tree, Koelreuteria paniculata, in the centre to give flowers in spring, shade in the summer and seed cases in the autumn.William III bed: Camelia rubra imbricata, winter aconites in front of the box hedge Along top box hedge: blue squills and both box hedges yellow meconopsis Lawn bed: two Hunthouse stepover apple trees; various alliums Strawberry tree bed: Primula vulgaris Woodland bed: Primula x polyantha 'Gold Lace' ThanksAs well as the thanks expressed below I would like to express particular gratitude to Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust for funding us, Chief Executive Peter Goodship, Design Manager Lorraine Carpenter and their office staff for administrative support, Karol Jeffrey for certifying our accounts and Property Manager Mark Meatcher for overall care. On the Friends committee, my thanks to Pauline Powell especially for achieving the Onyx Environmental Trust grant of £11,000, taking over bulb and seed ordering and distribution and keeping track of the detail; Jean Flack-Munday and Henry Munday for their careful husbandry of the books and Eileen Brooks for volunteering to take them over and introducing our monthly Diary of tasks and planting ideas; Sally Hocking, Pauline, Jean and Gill Jarrett for steadfastly 'manning' our sales pitch at Craneswater School and Southsea Common; John Scott for maintaining our web page; John Gunn for keeping our lawn beautiful and Charlotte Frost (our 'compost queen').DonationsFor gifts in 2003-2004 the Friends wish to thankPortsmouth Naval Base Property Trust for an annual grant of £750.00 Conbrio, for entertaining our guests at the Strawberry Tea for no charge (just lots of strawberries) Pat and John Cheetham for an oak half tub Portsmouth City Councillor Elaine Baker for £176.25 to have the plaque carved Alex and Rosemary Hazlerigg for the slate slab for the plaque Mrs Gilly Drummond for Koelreuteria paniculata (Pride of India) Staunton Park for hazel hurdles in exchange for coppicing work David Austin Roses Ltd for two rosa officinalis (gallica), one Shailer's white moss and one 'Petite de Hollande' roses R V Roger Ltd for various replacement bulbs Mr and Mrs Brain for propagating unusual plants for sale Gilly Drummond and June Parkinson of Hampshire Gardens Trust for their continuing support Roger Young of Portsmouth City Council Parks Department for plants, practical support and advice Greenfingers, St James's Hospital Milton, for advice and help Peter Goldie, manager of Nauticalia, Jacquie Shaw of the Mary Rose Trust and Chris Arkell, manager of the Royal Naval Museum Bookshop for Garden Party raffle prizes. Friends of the Porter's Garden whose subscriptions have helped us throughout the year Most importantly, thanks to the Porter's Garden 'digging' Friends:For digging, watering, propagating, composting, lawn care, hurdle cutting and weaving, historical and horticultural research, petrol used to collect plants from Hampshire and Sussex, emails and telephone calls, administration, photographs, plants, tools, fertiliser and sundries. At least 719.50 person hours were donated 6 May 2003 - 3 May 2004.Dr Ann Coats
4 May, 2004 2003Third Annual General Meeting 8 May, 2003, 7.30pm Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust, 19 College Road, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Second Annual Report
ProgressOur second year was not so back-breaking as the first, but was still intensive. We had to repair the damage caused by the flood in William III, replacing the sage and lavender which could not cope with the prolonged wet. We also introduced new plants: Mary Rose clematis and Mary Rose rose. We continued our two hour daily watering régime during the summer months, helped by 'leaky' hoses during the night. We have removed the hurdles which served as salt windbreaks this year as they were disintegrating. We plan to make new ones this autumn, encouraged by our attempts at making four 'wigwams' to support plants. Our rare Leptospermum, raised from seed sent by Auckland Botanic Gardens to Gilly Drummond of Cadland House, is thriving in the potting shed bed, as are three Mary Rose clematis. As well as funds supplied by the Property Trust, we have raised money through sales of plants and bric à brac at Craneswater School car boot sales. Our previous problem of lawn care has been resolved by John Gunn's assiduous attention.LandmarksIn June 2002 we visited Alverstoke Crescent Garden and in July 2002 Beth Chatto's garden and Priory Garden in Hatfield Peverel, both in Essex, to learn more about planting possibilities. On 20 July 2002 at our Tudor Garden Party 100 guests were fed by Mr O'Hagan's delicious Hog Roast, entertained by the Cantalena Singers and the Purbrook Bowmen. Jean had made jam from our morello cherries for raffle prizes.Our hard work was recognised by being awarded a 1st Prize in the Most Attractive Historic Garden section by Portsmouth & Southsea in Bloom judges in November 2002. Rewarding moments have included interesting conversations with visitors, beautiful afternoons and companionship in the garden and seeing blackbirds sitting on a nest in one of the cardoons this Spring. We have acquired our second set of wrought iron gates, which, with the yew hedge, complete the enclosed feel of the original Porter's Garden site. They were initially forged during the Christmas Festival, 29 November to 1 December 2002 and erected at Easter, 20 April 2003. Our compost bins are finished, so we can systematically recycle our garden waste into nutrients and our lawns are nicely groomed, thanks to John Gunn and Charlotte Frost. The cherry trees have been symmetrically fan-trained along canes. Publicity has been improved through the News, particularly an article on the new gates (24 April 2003). Our web site has been kept up to date by John Scott and we now have a supply of brochures in boxes and a donation box in the wall under the distinctive sign provided by the dockyard support group. Our educational remit was served by devising a Heritage Tour of the garden on 15 September 2002 and a Trail Quiz with answers for the Mary Rose Learning Weekend 12-13 October 2002. A book of morello cherry recipes will be compiled by Mrs Lissie Donnithorne. We are liaising with Greenfingers horticultural centre at St James's to provide a learning context for their students and support for us. Their students visited us on 27 January 2003 and will return later in the summer. Greenfingers overwintered some of our plants and will produce some which are difficult for us to grow. The progress of the Land Fill grant application is disappointing. Pauline considers we should decide whether to include the proposed seat on the square lawn. We might stand a better chance if we go just for the granite seats as originally planned, especially as we are unlikely to get matching funding. We should cut our cloth.... On a positive note, we have been promised £900 from the Community Chest Children's Fund for our knot garden. As well as thanks expressed below I would like to express gratitude in particular to Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust for funding us: Chief Executive Peter Goodship, Design Manager Lorraine Carpenter and their office staff for administrative support, Simon Daniel for certifying our accounts and Property Manager Mark Meatcher for overall care; Sally Hocking for her continued horticultural originality and searching out of seeds to save money, Pauline Powell for coping wonderfully with the paperwork, especially grant applications, Jean Flack-Munday for her beautiful logo design and Henry for checking the figures, John Scott for keeping our web page up to date, Fiona Edgley for designing our Morello cherry jam labels and John Gunn for completing the compost bins, turning the compost and keeping our lawn beautiful. DonationsFor gifts in 2002-2003 we should like to thank
Porter's Garden 'digging' FriendsEileen and Emma Brooks, Lorraine Carpenter, Ann Coats, Cate Coley, Chris Dobbs, Fiona Edgley, Jean Flack-Munday, Charlotte Frost, John Gunn, Sally Hocking, Ann Hunt, Gill Jarrett, Sue Lightfoot, David London, Henry Munday, Pauline Powell, Mary Simmons, Audrey Townshend and Sheila Willes (and Aislinn O'Connor and Ruth and Luke Simmons as junior Friends) for digging, watering, woodwork and painting, historical and horticultural research, petrol used to collect plants and horse manure from Hampshire and Sussex, emails and telephone calls, administration, photographs, plants, tools, fertiliser and sundries.At least 500 person hours were donated 30 April 2002-5 May 2003. Dr Ann Coats
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