Veddw House Garden will be open from

 2pm-5pm on the first and third Sundays of June, July, August and September 2024.

For more information on opening times and booking please see our Visitor Information page.

“A quirky garden created by self-confessed ‘Bad-Tempered Gardener’ Anne Wareham. The hedges alone are worth a visit, and there is much to learn about the use of plants in this Welsh garden. Quirky, fun, inspiring.”

Alan Titchmarsh

“Anne, I like your garden.”

Piet Oudolf

“A substantial garden that establishes a strong sense of place and uses plants for visual (rather than purely horticultural) effect…. plenty of interest, some sublime design touches, and is a place being constantly refined and improved.”

Chris Young – RHS “The Garden”

“This garden combines all the achievements of a great garden – excellent relationships between house and garden and between the garden and its surroundings, a satisfying blend of formality and informality and of wildness and control, good use of colour and texture, and a distinct personality.”

Stephen Anderton The Times

 

“Plenty of interest, some sublime design touches, and is a place being constantly refined and improved.”

Chris Young The Garden

“This is not a timid place, fiddling around in details. It makes bold marks on the landscape.”

GardenDrum

“One of the Top Ten Artistic Landscapes in Britain”

CountryFile

“I loved this garden.”

Francine Raymond in the Telegraph

“This is a garden which is very ambitious; it is intellectual and experimental, occasionally provocative, but for the most part beautiful and relaxing.”

Noel Kingsbury, Gardens Illustrated

The garden is set in the wonderful countryside of the Welsh border above Tintern: countryside which has recently been seen worldwide in the television series ‘Sex Education,’ while also being the inspiration of Wordsworth’s great poem ‘Tintern Abbey’.

Veddw has been made and designed over the last 33 years by garden photographer Charles Hawes, and by garden writer Anne Wareham, who wrote ‘The Bad Tempered Gardener’ and ‘Outwitting Squirrels’. They have one day a week help from a brilliant hedge cutter and lately from a kind volunteer.

The entrance to the garden offers a dramatic view over the clipped yew and beech hedges to the surrounding woodland, while still only showing half the garden – there are two acres of ornamental gardens and two acres of woods.

The various enclosed gardens have seats, so visitors can relax and enjoy the variety of unusual plants and planting schemes. Some of these gardens emphasise late summer flowers, some have roses, while the meadow, which is over 200 years old, is sweetest in early summer. When the flowering there is over, the sculptural lines of globes bring light and mirrors into the scene.

The Veg Plot no longer grows vegetables but is full of cardoons, heuchera and topiary. There is a dedicated hosta walk, a garden of undug ancient pasture with wild flowers and the addition of rampant perennials.

The gardens are relaxed and wildlife friendly, as the rabbit chomping testifies. A favourite part with visitors and gardeners wanting a break from looking at weeds is the black, some say sinister, reflecting pool. Anne writes about it all regularly on this site in the blog

Veddw House Garden

is featured in Carolyn Mullet’s new book

Adventures in Eden: An Intimate Tour of the Private Gardens of Europe

Thank you for your votes!

Veddw has been voted one of 100 best British gardens again this year and one of the top 3 in Wales!

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