Grey Granite paid a very brief visit to Chelsea Physic Garden. This delightful, historic garden is a tranquil spot in the middle of the bustle and noise of London.
The garden was founded in 1673 by the Society of Apothecaries of London so that their apprentices could learn to grow medicinal plants and study their uses. The four acre site close to the Thames was chosen by the apothecaries because it was already famed for its orchards and market gardens and had a free draining soil and favourable micro-climate and provided somewhere f to house the painted barge they used for royal pageants. Close by were great houses belonging to Henry VIII and his Chancellor Thomas More who would have used the Thames as the most efficient means of transport. Visiting the garden reminded Grey Granite of reading in Wolf Hall of Thomas Cromwell's journeys along the river thoroughfare.
Carl von Linne, the Swedish botanist, better known as Linnaeus, made several visits to the garden in the 1730's. |
The recently redeveloped Garden of Edible and Useful plants
The Physic Garden, with its historic associations to the greats of botany, was a complete contrast to the crowds and modernism of the Chelsea Flower Show. Grey Granite found her visit a very humbling and moving experience and hopes to return with more time.