Our flat in Switzerland was like posh student accommodation. Two very small bed rooms and an open plan room with a lot of glass, but no window sill to rest my plants upon.
I never realised how much I needed walls until I moved to Switzerland. Before that I had taken them for granted, but the Swiss are very modern, love glass and see little need for walls. If you couple this with a very high population density then you have dinning rooms that loom strangely in space, over each other. You can admire each other’s cooking, cutlery and even flatulence at disturbingly close quaters with total strangers. I couldn’t get used to such intimacy and did the same as we did in Brazil, blocked it out with plants.
We bought weeping fig trees that loved the reflected heat of our “ wintergarten” and raced away. In the wonderful Swiss second hand store or “brokie” I found a set of shop shelves, with wheels which I loaded with devils ivy cuttings, filched spider plant babies and some geraniums abandoned at the end of the summer that I fed and costeted. They responded by flourishing and giving us some semblance of verdant privacy.
The flat had no balcony, but it did have a set of concrete steps up to the front door that were ours alone. As soon as our first winter was over, I started to buy plants and to move them outside. I started with yellow primroses from the coop and graduated, as the sun strengthened, to ivy leaved geraniums, that trailed red flowers over each open step. In the wonderful botanical garden I snipped a few modest cuttings of lemon, peppermint and rose scented geraniums, potted them up and nursed them and soon it was almost impossible to get up the step and into the flat for perfumed and coloured plants.
Watering became an obsession, as each plant was in a planter small enough to fit each individual step and one day of sunshine could dessicate the whole pot.
We had been given very precise instructions when we rented the flat about what was allowed and what was “verboten”. Using the washing machine or showering after 10 at night was not allowed; hanging out washing was not allowed and shaking a table cloth out of the window was punishable by death. I was therefore very careful not to irritate my neighbours below by over watering and dripping on their doorstep. However after two years of squeezing more and more plants into our improbably small space, My Swiss neighbour actually volunteered to water my babies when we went away and started to talk to me!
At the top of the steps we put the tiniest BBQ known to man and if we each sat on a different step there was just space for us both to eat a chicken leg and for our cat, Bonkers the Magnificent ( who had survived Zambia, Kazakhstan and six months quarantine in England) to survey his new, peaceful and eminently edible kingdom.
Kaskhstan. All My Gardens Part 8
All my Gardens part 7 : Zambia .
All my Gardens- part 6 : Brazil – humming birds and high rise.
All my Gardens -Part 4: Costa Rica and the big world.
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Full marks for ingenuity and perseverance! You must have a bigger garden now as you have ‘country’ in your title.
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You are right. We moved from Switzerland half an hour over the border into France, so I could finally have a garden, as I had always wanted!🌼🌼🐞🌼🐞🌸🦋
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A garden in France….everybody’s dream.
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Your middle name must be innovation, Cathy!
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And desperation for greenery!!
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I enjoy hearing about your many experiences. thank you.
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And I love hearing about the rabbit patch!
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A most enjoyable, and interesting, read. The ingenuity of gardeners never ceases to surprise me. xx
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You can always find a space for green!🌸🌼🌸
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Just love this series, thanks so much. It’s completely transporting (and wakens that barely snoozing travel bug again).
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Well garden 10 is the garden in France where the travelling stops!
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You made the right choice of plants – geraniums will endear you to any Swiss! Lovely way to solve the privacy problem.
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I love all types of geraniums and particularly red flowers in Swiss and Alsacian window boxes!
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Me too! And they are supposed to keep the flies away.
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