Introduction:
There’s something undeniably captivating about listening to someone speak with genuine love for their garden — not as a status symbol or a decorative corner of luxury, but as a living, breathing companion in their daily life. In this intimate conversation, we discover not just a man surrounded by flowers, trees, and koi ponds, but a man whose relationship with the earth is deeply intertwined with gratitude, humility, and quiet joy.
He begins with a chuckle, acknowledging the familiar skepticism: “People think I just pay a gardener to do it all.” And yet, beyond the help of strong hands and trained expertise lies his true connection — the pleasure of pruning, of planning new flower beds, of seeing life bloom where once there was only soil. His English garden, as he describes it, is a symphony of textures and colors — a little wild, a little whimsical, and wholly alive. Tall foxgloves and delphiniums rise proudly beside roses and willows. Each corner, from the shaded woodland to the rose pergola by the pool, tells a story of discovery. “What I love,” he muses, “is that there are nooks and crannies everywhere.”
Gardening, for him, is not work — it’s therapy. In quiet mornings by the pool, with tea and toast at hand, he finds calm in solitude. The garden becomes a sacred retreat, a place where music drifts softly through open doors, and time seems to slow. He pinches himself often, he says, to remember how far he’s come — from a council house in Cheshunt where his family once slept on mattresses and built armchairs by hand, to this serene haven of beauty and abundance. That humility runs deep. “Maybe that’s why I’ll never stop appreciating what I have,” he reflects.
His memories of childhood — a modest garden where his father grew potatoes and once coaxed life from a dying rose — remind us that love for nature often begins in the smallest gestures. Today, that seed has grown into three acres of living art: an orchard with apples he proudly pruned himself, a woodland alive with birdsong, and a pond teeming with koi fish, each lovingly named — Odd Job, Old Blue Eyes, Hot Lips.
But perhaps the most moving part of his reflection is his view of nature as divine creation. Sitting beneath the trees, he finds not only beauty but peace, even prayer. “Some of my best praying has been in the garden,” he admits softly. To him, the natural world is proof of something greater — a reminder that no human creation, no tennis court or house, can rival what God has already placed before us.
By the end of the conversation, as he laughs and invites his guest to the garden bar, we are left with an image not merely of a famous man with a beautiful home — but of a soul who has never lost touch with the ground beneath his feet. His garden is not a luxury; it is a reflection of gratitude, memory, and wonder — a living testament to how life, like the roses he tends, can bloom in the most unexpected soil.
