L'Echiquier — au
coeur de la Puisaye
L'Echiquier — in
the heart of the Puisaye
The
garden at L'Echiquier
Menu
[Haut]
[Top] [Menu] [Premier page]
[Front Page] [Accueil]
[Home] [Maison]
[House] [Jardin]
[Garden] [Environs]
[Nearby] [Gens] [People]
[Animaux] [Animals]
[Images/Sons] [Images/Sounds]
[Cartes] [Maps]
[Liens] [Links] [A propos]
[About] [Bas] [Bottom]
For GRAPHICS version click
here
The garden, covering 5000
m2 (0.5 hectares or 1¼ acres), lies
mostly to the front of the house, which faces south. It has been laid out
in four styles.
Paths lead to and through
various environments. Wildlife and plants are generally encouraged by attempting
to provide different habitats, and by not using chemical products. The principles
of organic gardening are respected as far as possible.
[The
Soil Association]
[Garden Organic]
[Royal Horticultural Society (RHS)]
[Association Kokopelli]
[Agriculture
biologique]
[Le
bio (Organic Farming)]
1— Formal
- Fish pond
- Decking
- Lawn
- Helicoidal herb garden*
- Front terrace
- Japanese garden
(including small fish pond)
* Herb
Gardening by Robert Sulzberger
ISBN 10:
0947793704 — ISBN 13: 9780947793708.
2 — Less
formal
- Tent pitches
- Circle of silver birch
- Fruit walk
- Grassed areas
- Heart garden
- Shrubs
3 — Wild
- Bog garden
- Shaded woodland
- Lake
- Teepee
- Long grass
- Peripheral walk
- Weather stone
- Hedge window
4 — Vegetables
- Raised beds
- Greenhouse (polytunnel)
- Composting
- Fertiliser brewing
Back
to Menu
Formal
(near the house)
- At the front is the lawn (an
artificial environment if ever there was one), laid down a few years
ago after lengthy preparation with sandy topsoil brought locally from
near Tannerre*.
This worked well, but with a policy of no chemical weedkillers or fertilisers
(I am prepared to make an exception here but P is not), the whole thing
now needs a re-seed or a re-think. A camomile or
thyme lawn, perhaps. The lawn can be used as a tent pitch (The Queen's
Pitch).
- Moving anticlockwise
around the house, outside the kitchen door are a small terrace and a
helicoidal herb garden*.
- Next to the paved
area is the decking beside
the fish pond. The decking sits snugly under a male holly tree, apparently
the biggest in the village, which gives dappled shade in summer and protects
the pond from the heat of the afternoon. The decking leads around to
a small raised perennial bed and a tent pitch (The King's Pitch).
- The 7000-litre (1500-gall
UK) fish pond contains different types of goldfish (carp and orfe),
comets, shubunkins and golden orfe. The pond is serviced by mechanical,
biological and ultra-violet filters with the addition of aeration pumps
in the summer to keep the oxygen levels up. As a result of the clean
water, the carp breed well but the orfe have not done so yet. The pond
has attracted many other life forms including frogs and dragonflies.
- Before the decking
the path turns round the side of the house with another raised border
for vegetables and flowers to the right.
- The path continues
along the back of the house with a rough section seeded with wild flowers
alongside. At this point the path is separated from the garden by a retaining
wall of railway sleepers.
- Near the back door
is the Japanese-influenced area, laid out with white gravel and a 1500-litre
(330-gall UK) square fish pond, a rill and
cascades, all of which can be illuminated at night. The whole area has
been set out with plants that have Japanese sounding names. There is
space for a yoga mat and table and chairs here.
- Just outside the back
door is a small covered wooden terrace, used for eating out of the heat
of the midday sun.
- The path continues
anticlockwise to the west side of the house. This area is destined to
become the garage and workshop.
Back
to Menu
* Tannerre more
info.
Less
formal (further away)
- At the front, across
the main drive, are some larger plants, roses and shrubs, arranged roughly
in the form of a heart. This garden will eventually be planted with more
aromatic and tactile plants.
- Further out, a circle
of silver birches and box enclose a hammock space. The hammock will brush
against mints and lavenders as it sways in the mottled shade of the birches.
- To the right is the
BBQ and campfire area.
- To the left is some
rough-cut grass and another tent pitch (The Knight's Pitch).
- Further to the left,
near the gate, is a patch of blackthorn which
produces sloes for gin. The blackthorn thicket may be developed into
a maze or a retreat.
- Along the drive stand
a large cherry tree and walnut trees. We harvest the fruits of both,
leaving enough for the birds and red
squirrels.
- The curved 'fruit
path' from the gate to the birches forms a boundary between the less
formal and wilder areas. The fruit is mainly soft fruit, currants, peaches
and apricots, although some of these will need to be replanted. The peaches
and apricots will be trained into an espalier or
cordon hedge. Raspberries did not like the hot and dry conditions here.
Back
to Menu
Wild
(nature takes the upper hand)
- Behind the circle
of silver birch is a path leading to a large unlined 600,000-litre lake
(132,000-gall (one million pints) UK). This was to be a reservoir. A
mechanical wind pump would lift water to a water tower' enabling the
garden to be watered using a gravity feed. The lake was dug into the
natural earth which appears to be clay. So far it has failed to fill
up, but has retained water through several summers, even the 2009 drought.
- The soil dug out to
create the lake was used to build a ridge, which has been planted with
willows and plums, and spring bulbs visible from the house.
- Behind the bank is
a small wooded area with a path running through it.
- To the right this
shady path leads alongside the neighbouring property and back via the
bog garden to the campfire/BBQ area.
- To the left the path
leads through a 'dell' and on to the teepee, another place to hang a
hammock. In the hedge at the south-eastern end of the garden is a small
stile leading to the road.
- Returning to the house,
you can either :-
- walk along a
path cut through the blackthorn, straight past the 'window' in the
hedge and the 'weather
stone', and back to the drive, or
- return via a
patch of long grass, where a log cabin is planned on the left, to
the filter pond. Turning to the left takes you to a bridge and back
to the birches.
- Between the bridge
and the birches there are plans for a semi-covered stage for entertaining
and events.
- Various bird boxes
have been built and placed in the wild area but as yet they seem uninhabited.
The surrounding countryside must offer them plenty of other choices.
Back
to Menu
Vegetables
(behind the house)
- We grow vegetables
in a series of raised beds measuring 2.4 x 1.2 m (8' x 4').
- Behind these plots
are the composting bins for kitchen waste, leaves and some grass clippings.
This is also where nettle fertiliser and the like are brewed and matured.
- Beyond the compost
area is a stile to the road leading to the hamlet of Les Creux.
This is the northern edge of the garden.
- The hedge bordering
our property and other hedges across the road help protect L'Echiquier from
the winter northeasterlies.
- Next to the raised
beds is the polytunnel, used for seed germination and for growing tomatoes,
cucumbers, peppers and so on.
- The vegetable garden
area is being enclosed to diminish damage by chickens and sheep who may
lose their way there. It appears, however, that moles are not subject
to these rules.
- A.M.A.P.P. In
July 2009 we joined the 'Association pour le Maintien d'une Agriculture
Paysanne de Proximité - Les paniers bio de Saint Privé',
a co-op of local food producers and buyers in our village.
Back
to Menu
Trees
Oak
Birch
Walnut
Willow
Blackthorn
Cherry
Quince
Spindle
Pear(s)
Apple(s)
Hazel
Plums
Mirabelles
Greengages
Elm *
Medlar
* sadly
dying
Arbres
Chêne
Bouleau
Noyer
Saule
Prunelier
Cerisier
Cognassier
Fusain
Poirier
Pommier
Noisetier
Prunier
Mirabellier
Reine Claude
Aulne
Néflier
Herbs
Mint(s)
Thyme(s)
Basil(s)
Verbena
Rosemary
Dill*
Fennel*
Sage
Sorrel
Borage
* these
interbreed
Plantes
aromatiques
Menthe(s)
Thym(s)
Basilic(s)
Verveine
Romarin
Aneth
Fenouil
Sauge
Oseille
Bourrache
Flowers
Tulips
Lavender
Wormwood
Daffodils
Gazanias
Clematis
Montana
Rubens
President
Tangutica
Roses
New
Dawn
Beauté
Prince Klaus
Cosmos
Diane de Potier
Astée
Jean
Giono
Fleurs
Tulipes
Lavande
Absinthe
Narcisses
Gazanias
Clématites
Montana Rubens
President
Tangutica
Rosiers
New Dawn
Beauté
Prince
Klaus
Cosmos
Diane
de Potier
Astée
Jean
Giono
Back
to Menu
Contact details
contact@lechiquier.eu
In France: 0 3 86 74 88 06
From outside France: +33 3 86 74 88 06
(+ is the international dialling prefix, in Europe 00)
We hope you enjoy our site
and would welcome any comments.
Acknowledgements
Created by Sefdik on -
15/10-2009
Last updated -
6-dec-09 18:27
Links last checked - 15/10-2009
Menu
[Haut]
[Top] [Menu] [Premier page]
[Front Page] [Accueil]
[Home] [Maison]
[House] [Jardin]
[Garden] [Environs]
[Nearby] [Gens] [People]
[Animaux] [Animals]
[Images/Sons] [Images/Sounds]
[Cartes] [Maps]
[Liens] [Links] [A propos]
[About] [Bas] [Bottom]
For GRAPHICS version click
here
WC3
- Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines