BAREWOOD

A visit to Barewood is fantastical.  

To pull up in the driveway, step through the gate and see an old homestead, appearing to nest on a bed of flowers, dripping in translucent white wisteria feels entirely secret and totally unreal!

The drive up the Awatere Valley from Seddon with its bare hills, flats full of grape vines and the looming rocky skyline of Tapuae-o-Uenuku gives no hint at the eden you will arrive at.  

Barewood, like many large New Zealand gardens of its kind, is the home base of a wider farming property. Struggles with water supply, dense clay soil, shelter and the given isolation were tackled with enthusiasm and kiwi ingenuity by Joe and Carolyn Ferraby. They talk about the expansion of the garden, multiple moves of the washing line and the claiming of the calf paddock with jibes and chuckles, entirely reflecting their warm personalities and positive attitudes. They present casual, humble faces to what is anything but a casual achievement. 

Film by Flashworks Media
Writing and photography by Julia Atkinson-Dunn

This feature was originally made in Dec 2019. I have updated with a mix of spring/late spring imagery. 2023 will be the final year that Barewood will feature in Garden Marlborough as the Ferraby’s are retiring to a new (smaller) property.


Garden profile

LOCATION: Awatere Valley, Marlborough, New Zealand

SIZE:  large sprawling garden in greater rural property.

POSITION & ASPECT: North-facing in a small valley with mature shelter 

@barewoodgarden

Late spring at Barewood - just after the wisteria has finished.

On their move to the family farm, young florist; Carolyn was recommended to take up gardening by her mother-in-law as a way to combat the loneliness she felt sure she'd suffer. As I wandered around the landmark, mature garden in 2019, I wondered if, 40 years on, Mrs Ferraby senior would have ever believed that her words would be taken so literally!

The visit film at Barewood was my third, following two previous with Garden Marlborough. As an eager beginner gardener in 2018, trying to pull my eyebrows out of my hairline, I'll admit meeting the woman responsible had me feeling nervous and practically starstruck. The saturated romance and rambling beauty of Barewood feels like Carolyn probably waves her magic wand and scatters fairy dust at every full moon.

It just doesn't feel like a piece of rural New Zealand! 

Carolyn and Joe Ferraby

The fabulous potager garden - it is rare to find them at this size in New Zealand.

Entrance to the hawthorn avenue .

The summer house.

A garden is like a painting that is never finished.
— Carolyn Ferraby

Thalictrum filamentosum

And I'm not alone in my fluttering admiration. Carolyn shared that overseas visitors are sometimes moved to tears and most are disbelieving that they get to walk the garden with its designer/maker/owner! Gardens of this size and stature in the Northern Hemisphere would commonly be overseen by a head gardener and team of workers. This is rare in New Zealand and is definitely not the case in Marlborough.

Carolyn's words, "A garden is like a painting but never finished" seeped through me as I wandered.

While Barewood serves as a library of all types of wonderful plants, I was reminded to step back out from my rose sniffing and take in its corners and views as a whole. I realised that Barewood was most definitely a painting, one that changes with each day, all year round. 

Mid spring when the old wisteria drips from the wrap-around veranda.

Barewood, for me, is about atmosphere. The strange realisation is that green, forever changing, but intentional spaces can directly affect a person’s emotions. 
— Julia Atkinson-Dunn

Tough Marlborough Daisy and Mexican daisy take up their place against the old cob cottage.

As a beginner, regularly stumped and forced back to Google and books, a garden like Barewood didn't intimidate, instead, it inspired me on all levels. I don't have a calf paddock to expand into, but I do have fence-shaded beds in which I want to grow more than one boring species. Carolyn's creation provided endless examples of what I too might be able to combine and have a go at. The relevance of visiting iconic gardens like this, as a keen newbie, was far more beneficial than I had previously thought. 

I also marvelled at the way the garden curled around the house and the effect this had on connecting the insides with the out. Even in a small garden, pulling plants in containers to doors and allowing green tendrils up verandahs will inject magic.   

Barewood, for me, is about atmosphere. The strange realisation is that green, forever changing, but intentional spaces can directly affect a person's emotions. 

I am certain that Carolyn's vision was very much tied into how she wanted her garden to make "her" feel, that her aesthetics and eye as a florist are behind the detailed layers of colour and texture fueling the need to expand. 

But I think the endless satisfaction of knowing the connection others experience when they visit will be the cherry on top. 


This episode and blog post of "The Magic of Gardening" was created in partnership with Garden Marlborough.
It will be more than obvious that my thoughts are my own and I am so proud to collaborate with such an amazing, homegrown festival . 

You can visit Barewood as part of their "East Coast" tour for the final time in 2023. 

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