08 October 2020

Visit to Chateau Saint Roux, Le Cannet-des-Maures, 29th September 2020

The September visit was the first since February – the March, April, May and June visits were cancelled due to lockdown and the club committee’s decision to suspend all club Activities until the end of the club year.   Later, garden group members were canvassed as to whether they wanted their Activity to re-open and of those who responded 75% were in favour.

We were 13 members for the visit to Chateau Saint Roux just south of Le Cannet-des-Maures and the group was split into a morning and afternoon visit to accommodate the “rule of ten” and had lunch in the sunshine on the spacious outside terrace.

The chateau dates from the fifteenth century when the land was bought by an Italian nobleman and the property named for the dark red earth and rocks.   The chateau was acquired in 2015 by British businessman Mark Dixon and is one of his four wine domains in the Var.   After two years of extensive renovations to both the house and various stone granges and gardens the house was opened as an auberge in 2018.

Unusually the garden was created in tandem with building renovations so the planting is no more than five years old (all plants and trees supplied by Pierre Basset, Cogolin) with ancient olive trees planted above ground with surrounding stone wall and underplanted with thyme.   The rose garden to the side of the house is just two years old and a credit to the gardener with their glossy green leaves and vigorously flowering floribunda rose “Iceberg”.   Metal pergola were covered with climbing roses with some “mile-a-minute (roses not in flower, but the “mile-a-minute” was smothered with white flowers). Dwarf pittisporum edged the beds and we were puzzled as to why quite a few of these had dead vegetation in the centre despite having access to the same soil and water conditions.  

The entrance to the deep terrace in front of the house is via a sand path bordered on either side with slightly curved flower beds enclosed with rusted metal edging radiating from the path which is lit by electric lights concealed in rusted mini-bollards (photo below).   The planting here is pure Provençal with a dash of Africa around the stone fountain (tall, sturdy papyrus).    The Provençal mix is a blend of day lilies (flowering again after the autumn rains), gaura, agapanthas, bright red sages – all interspersed with herbs such as thyme and fennel (over two metres high!).   I also spotted some white gaura the same height and wondered what steroids it was on, then remembered the gardener telling me that they used goat manure – always available thanks to the chateau’s herd of 50 goats in the woods.

The walled vegetable garden with metal gates to keep out the wild boar covers 3,800 sq.m.   The planting is in the shape of a leaf with all beds curved and edged in vertical tree trunks/ branches sourced from the woods – there is 4 km of edging !   The vegetables supply the restaurant and during the early summer you can order boxes of vegetables for collection on Fridays.

 

 

The gardens are irrigated with a watering system of snaking brown pipes with nozzles for each plant.   The annual work involved in removing calcaire and soil from the nozzles is high maintenance and for those with young knees, nimble fingers and good eyesight !   Three full-time gardeners are employed year round with numbers increasing to five in the autumn for hand-weeding (no weedkillers used) and re-opening the greenhouse (not used during hot Provençal summers) for sowing seeds and potting-up cuttings. 

To oneside of the vegetable garden was a long wide avenue of olive trees underplanted with Stipa tenuissima interspersed with Perovskia.  Unusually Stipa, like Salvia, are best planted in the spring.   On the other side of the potager the slope beside the path to the animals were more olive trees, this time underplanted with Helichrysum italicum.

Circular courtyard through bell tower and arch and in front of Boutique with ancient olive tree underplanted with thyme;  behind brilliant pink gaura flowering its socks off.

The goats were the first animals to arrive as the pasture is well away from the house and the noisy building works.   Cheeses are made on site and sold in the Boutique.   The ducks and geese occupy the large rectangular bassin behind the parking with the hens, guinea fowl, pony, donkey, more goats and four black sows (black Corsican pigs crossed with a French wild boar), behind the dependences.   The sows had just farrowed so two-week old piglets were on show in the morning but most were taking an indoor nap during the afternoon.   The crossbred sows had been mated with a resident wild boar (temporarily re-housed for the safety of the piglets) but again the Corsican DNA won the day and there were only four stripey piglets and the rest were black.

 Ideas to take home :  *   metal edging to flower beds

            *  underplanting large olive trees with thyme or lavender or stipa

            *   pots of ferns massed on open metal hanging frame
            *   bark on pathways (but fine bark needs renewing every 5 years)

            *   massed stipa grasses are more effective than groups of three

 

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