The evolution of Sarah Raven's gardens in East Sussex

The evolution of Sarah Raven’s gardens in East Sussex


As every British gardener knows, Sarah Raven’s name goes hand in hand with all that is beautiful and exciting about gardening. Having inspired and educated a whole generation of garden makers through her books, articles and courses, her influence is phenomenal. As her own likes and dislikes change, so do the public’s. If she raves about a certain tulip, sales of that variety will go through the roof. And gardeners absolutely know that they can trust her judgement, because she has grown and trialled everything she sells – from her legendary container combinations to the vases she chooses for her cut flowers.

The hub of her horticultural empire is the house she shares with her writer husband Adam Nicolson, Perch Hill in Sussex, which they bought 30 years ago. Undeterred by the fact it was known to locals as the poorest farm in the parish because of its windswept slopes and depleted soil, they fell instantly in love with the place and threw themselves wholeheartedly into country life. They renovated the farmhouse and replaced the roof on the oast house, and Sarah began to map out the now well-known garden that bursts with colour from the first tulips to the last dahlias. They were immediately ‘deeply embedded’ at Perch Hill, as Adam puts it, and it was difficult to tear themselves away when, in 2004, after the death of Adam’s father, they moved to his family home at Sissinghurst with their two daughters.

Sarah Raven, holding Primula ‘Lilac Lace’, in the flowerfilled courtyard beside her house at Perch Hill in East Sussex. She is surrounded by spring blooms, including orange Tulipa ‘Orca’ and white Narcissus ‘Starlight Sensation’

Dean Hearne

They lived there for eight years, but found themselves at odds with the way it was being run by the National Trust (as documented in a BBC Four series Hidden Treasures of the National Trust) and eventually made the decision to return to the home comforts and relative simplicity of the farm. The farmhouse and outbuildings have a Bloomsbury feel, with a palette of rich, chalky colours linking the inside with the outside. ‘The interiors have always been a collaborative thing, but perhaps more Adam than me,’ says Sarah.

Life before Perch Hill was very different. Sarah had been working as a junior doctor at Charing Cross Hospital in London when she became pregnant with their first daughter. Rosie was nine months old when they bought Perch Hill and Sarah went back to work part-time – but the juggle became increasingly hard. The birth of Molly, their second daughter, was the catalyst to take a step back from her medical career as she threw herself into making a new garden, something that felt completely instinctive to her.

Image may contain Architecture Building Cottage House Housing Garden Nature Outdoors Jar Plant and Planter

Rebuilt in 1996, the old oast house accommodates Adam’s study and space for guests. Inky Fritillaria persica thrive by the steps to this area

Dean Hearne



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