A garden on the Devon coast in tune with nature, ecology and its surroundings

In line with the owners’ environmental vision, our Garden Designer of the Year Dan Pearson has created a sustainable and productive garden in tune with nature, which celebrates its spectacular location on the Devon coast
Dan Pearson sustainable garden for Little Dartmouth Farm in Devon
Ngoc Minh Ngo

Past the pond and lawns, a sinuous wall separates pasture from garden, beautifully crafted from local stone and punctuated by traditional snickets (narrow gaps you can step through). Even beyond the wall, the garden extends in a naturalistic strand down towards the sea with a new catkin wood that has 20 or so different types of willow, all grown for coppice. ‘Local trees and wildflowers wrap generously all the way round the outside of the garden, encroaching into it in places,’ says Dan. ‘The ornamental areas of the garden here are relatively small, and we’ve tried to modulate the experience so you’re not going so dramatically from one thing to another. What I love is this blur between the hand of man and the landscape – the naturalistic meeting point of something ornamental and something wilder.’


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This is a garden that harnesses nature rather than fighting against it. Views and scenery are celebrated, and wind and weather embraced. The seasons are felt viscerally rather than merely observed, using the natural rhythm of the countryside to enhance the experience. ‘During the first part of the year until hay-cutting time, the landscape provides the focus,’ says Dan. ‘There are naturalistic bulbs in the meadows near the house – fritillaries, camassias, species tulips and alliums. Then by midsummer, the landscape has done its thing and it’s time for the garden to come into its own, with flowers, fruit and vegetables taking you through until autumn. It’s a rhythm that allows the walled garden to be the focal point in the height of summer.’

In tune with nature, ecology and its surroundings, the gardens at Little Dartmouth Farm epitomise the kind of long-term environmental vision that we should all aim for. This, surely, is the way forward for garden-making in the 21st century. Forget the New Perennial movement – let the New Natural gardens take centre stage.

Dan Pearson Studio: danpearsonstudio.com