Mail Order Catalogue 2008

MAIL ORDER LIST

Water Plants and Marginals    Iris Supplement

Ferns and Grasses

Perennials    Persicaria    Ranunculus ficaria

Water Lilies     Site Map

Filipendula camtschatica

The Nursery

Rowden Gardens was created from a bare field  by John Carter and his wife in 1982 and is one of the leading  nurseries in the country.  In the Showing Field it has won medals at
Chelsea, Hampton Court, N.E.C. Birmingham, Malvern, and other major Shows.  It has appeared on BBC's Gardener's World, Channel 4, and in other national and regional television programmes, and  has been recommended in "The Gardener's Guide to Britain", and in the RHS Garden Finder.  Numerous  articles have been written about the Gardens and visitors come from all around the world to see the very significant plant collections. 

John Carter has judged for the RHS, and as an expert in his field, has contributed to many magazines including "The Garden", "The Water Gardener", and the Plantsman. He is also the author of " Water in a Small Garden" published in 2007 by Dorling Kindersley for the Royal Horticultural Society. A past President of the Devon group of the NCCPG, he is also on the RHS list of speakers and  is in great demand as a lecturer. His wife Galen is the Iris laevigata Representative for the Iris Society.

Currently there are two NCCPG National Collections at the Gardens; Caltha ( Marsh Marigolds) and Water Iris. The Gardens themselves are laid out in a level rectangle of about an acre, with eight canal-like ponds displaying the largest collection of Water Irises in the country (over 60varieties), as well as substantial numbers of lilies and other aquatics. Around this basic plan other plants have been arranged to create colour schemes, with groups of the same genera growing together so that visitors can see representative collections, and more easily choose the best plants for their needs.

As specialists in damp loving and water plants we do not stock varieties that are
commonly available in the ordinary Garden Centre, as we find most of them are quite unsuitable for the average pond. We grow all our plants on the Nursery, and, in the case of Iris and other species that do not come true from seed we only propagate by division, so can guarantee they will be as named.

On a recent viewing of various web-sites, we were shocked to find a large proportion of
incorrect plant names and descriptions.


BACK