The
story of open gardens in Elgin goes back to the 1960s and
1970s, when Lady Bourne opened her spring garden each year
to the public.
In
her early years she had befriended Collingwood Ingram, the
great Japanese flowering cherry enthusiast, and it was through
him that she acquired a number of cherries, becoming the
first person in South Africa to grow them.
Her
garden (begun in the thirties) lay in a sheltered kloof
and featured terraced beds, a bluebell wood, a jasmine pergola,
a charming dogs cemetery, a sweeping lawn with islanded
beds filled with roses and irises, and a magnificent Judas
tree. She also designed many other gardens in the district,
and her influence is still felt today.
In
1991 Fresh Woods, well known for its collection of heritage
and species roses started by Maisie Knox-Shaw in the early
fifties, opened to the public for the first time and has
held open days each year since then. Gradually more gardens
started opening and in 2011 there will be 23 gardens to
visit.