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BERRY CHRISTMAS.
Winter is here again, although it has been unseasonably mild, the bananas in the Double Walled Garden are snugly wrapped against the cold and the gunneras have their giant leaves cut off, turned upside-down like pixie hats, to protect their crowns from frost.
On The Broadwalk there is a climber that cannot be missed. In autumn, its bright yellow leaves are really eye-catching but it is the fruit of Celastrus orbiculatus, Oriental Bittersweet, native to Asia, that puts on a magnificent display. It produces masses of bright yellow berries which during autumn into winter, turn to orange then red.
Venture into the Double Walled Garden and find a shrub with the oddest coloured fruits. This is Callicarpa bodinieri var. giraldii, Bodinier’s Beautyberry, native to west-central China and more tolerant of cold. It has tiny, violet coloured berries that look like artificial beads.
Also at the top of the Slate Beds is a hawthorn which is native to America. The Grignon’s Thorn, Crataegus x grignonensis , has masses of white flowers in June followed by giant bright red haws in autumn/winter.
Daryll Little







