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Kontrastene er store mellom den engelske landsbygda i Surrey, og Londons travle gater. Jentene oppsummerer besøket hos norske Karen, og gleder seg til boken fra den vakre eiendommen lanseres til høsten. Besøket hos Karen ble avsluttet med en fantastisk opplevelse på Chelsea Flower show. Er du usikker på hva slags arrangement dette her må du høre ukens podcast episode. Vi deler alle detaljene om de vakre hagene, balkongene og blomstene. Hva er de internasjonale hagetrendene? Det får du svar på her. Jentene er også invitert hjem til den norske ambassadøren i London. Den norske residensen i London er bygget i edvardiansk stil, og har et areal på cirka 1200 kvadratmeter, pluss kjeller. Residensen, som brukes også av kongeparet når de er på London-besøk, ligger i Palace Green 10, som er en av Londons dyreste gater. Hør mer om besøket her. Endelig har den store dagen kommet! For i dag finnes Tove sin nye bok «Livvakten» i bokhyllene i alle landets bokhandlere. Send gjerne Tove en gratulasjon på Instagram. I neste uke er Interiørhuset på tur igjen. Følg den spennende reisen på Instagram.
Has the shine worn off for Manchester City as it brings home more silverware whilst fighting charges of financial rule breaking? Sean Farrington will be speaking to a former executive at the club. We'll also be talking the latest on the US debt ceiling and just how much the Chelsea Flower show rakes in.
The Philadelphia Flower Show and the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society pre-date the Chelsea Flower show and the Royal Horticultural Society. If that weren't impressive enough, the money raised because of this important event goes to community service efforts all over the state of Pennsylvania. Seth Pearsoll, the Creative Director of the show, fills us in on the history and behind the scenes information on what it takes to put on something of this scale. The Plant of the Week is the Crocus, and spring is coming!! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/intothegarden/support
Joe is a familiar gardening face having been a regular presenter on BBC Gardeners World since 1998. He also anchors The BBC coverage of The Chelsea Flower show and other RHS shows and has presented several gardening series over the years.Joe is the Design Director of Modular, a garden design and build brand. He has won many design awards including a Chelsea Gold Medal and Society of Garden designers awards.Joe writes a weekly column for The Times and Radio Times Magazine and has written eight books, including his most recent a series of Expert Guides for Collins.
Will commercial pressures force Harry to break his promise to the Queen? And will Andrew face boos at the Jubilee? We discuss all this and more in our must-watch royal talk show. Reports this week suggest that Prince Harry's long-awaited memoirs could be delayed. This follows news that the pair are under pressure from Netflix and Spotify to deliver on their multimillion-dollar commitments. The Daily Mail's Royal Editor Rebecca English says that since signing their big deals the media companies have ‘precious little to show for it'. ‘I think it's fair to assume that there will be a lot of pressure on them to produce,' she tells Palace Confidential. ‘How much this will ratchet up the pressure on them to talk about their time as members of the Royal Family? To talk about what it was like to be part of the institution of the monarchy – which are things that Harry promised his grandmother he wouldn't do?' Meanwhile, there has been shock at the news that Prince Andrew intends to take some part in the Order of the Garter ceremony as part of his mother's Platinum Jubilee celebrations. Given the reasons for his stepping down from royal duties, Rebecca English believes that he is taking a risk: ‘It's the first time we'll see him reacting up close and personal, reacting with members of the public. Could he even be booed?' The Daily Mail's Diary Editor Richard Eden says he was ‘shocked' by the news. ‘The prospect of him, parading through Windsor in his velvet finery and feathers, my goodness! It's horrendous, he should be playing no part in public life and certainly not for the Royal Family,' he tells the programme. ‘Let's hope wise counsel prevails and he is persuaded not to take part.' Meanwhile royal biographer Robert Hardman, whose latest book Queen of Our Times: The Life of Elizabeth II is out now, says that the buggy used by Her Majesty at the Chelsea Flower show this week should answer the ‘constant preoccupation with her health'. ‘I would turn it around and say “isn't it amazing the amount of stuff she's doing, not what she's not doing”,' he says. ‘To be well into your tenth decade and to be so engaged with public life that she is, I just think it's remarkable.' See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
North Korea fires three ballistic missiles just hours after US President Joe Biden left Asia. Japan confirmed at least two launches happened early on Wednesday but acknowledged there may have been more. Experts are telling parents not to worry because monkeypox cases are rare in children, we speak to the designer of Meta's garden which won gold at the Chelsea Flower show and researchers claim Google Chrome is only blocking a quarter of phishing websites. Also, Apple confirms its next major event - will we get a first glimpse of their augmented reality headset? Nasa's InSight lander posts its final selfie in its farewell from Mars and we hear about the underwater drone to carry out the first ever autonomous robotic inspection of wind farm foundations. Plus, there's a new dinosaur in town and this one is vegan. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's the world's most famous flower show, and the medals have just been handed out. The Royal Horticultural Society's Chelsea Flower show is on and open to the public in London. Someone who has had and continues to have a close association with the Chelsea Flower Show is Botanist Janet Cubey, who joins us on the line from Christchurch.
Australia has signed up to a new Asia-Pacific economic bloc set up by the United States, A Ukrainian court has convicted a 21-year-old Russian soldier of war crimes,Ukraine's Chief of Defence Intelligence has claimed that there was an assassination attempt on Vladimir Putin two months ago, Tennis superstar Naomi Osaka has said she's willing to boycott Wimbledon next month, It's been revealed that the new season of the bachelor will feature three bachelors, the Queen made a surprise appearance at the Chelsea Flower show See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today on the podcast we have Ben Branson, founder of Seedlip - the world's first distilled non-alcoholic spirit.Ben grew up with a a father who worked in design, and a mother from a farming family. He started Seedlip originally not from a business opportunity, but because he was curious about what he could do - and whether he could actually finish a project. He was curious to tinker with plants, and learn, and have a creative outlet experimenting with the natural world. He officially started Seedlip in 2015: inspired by nature, and on a new mission to change the way the world drinks by solving the question of what to drink when you're not drinking. Seedlip has since turned into a global success. He's had investment from drinks giant Diageo, it's in thousands of the top bars and restaurants across the world - including London's Savoy Hotel, and Soho House, and he's brokered partnerships like the Chelsea Flower show and also met David Attenborough.We talk about why he thinks it's important to know your strengths, why you should trust your dreams, why your business should serve you as much as you serve the business, and why he hates it w hen someone says ‘hey we should get a drink sometime'.Sign up to the Out of Hours Newsletter for more inspiring updates! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In these spring-time episodes, I look to the great outdoors, to gardens, garden design, landscaping and, in particular, that great institution Chelsea Flower show. Far from its past reputation as a little ‘fuddy duddy', Chelsea is now a place to luxuriate in the great garden renaissance of the 2020s. It is an opportunity to explore current themes, preoccupations and meanings found within the natural world and how we experience it. In this episode I am joined by Lottie Delamain. She is one of the Garden Designers exhibiting at Chelsea 2022. Working with Fashion Revolution, the garden explores the relationship between plants, textiles and colour dyes and prompts us to ask ‘what is in my clothes'? There is simply so much more to that question that meets the eye, so much to consider, to conflate and to contrast.Lottie shares her story, the move from textile to garden design, her experience of Chelsea Flower Show, the Fashion Revolution Garden, the behind-the-scenes practicalities of making it happen and, importantly, the future of the garden once the gates of Chelsea close.
This week I chat with Lynne Lambourne asWe discuss sustainable interior design and creating a show garden at the Chelsea Flower show.Guest: wwwLynnelambourne.com Instagram: @lynnelambourne Sponsor: To take advantage of the generous 15% discount from my sponsor Thorndown, please visit http://bit.ly/TVCarpenter. Discount code: TVCarpenterContact me: www.theTVcarpenter.comMusic: "What's the Angle" by Shane Ivers
Joe Swift will be at BBC Gardeners' World Spring Fair 2022 on Saturday.Find out when he's on the BBC Gardeners' World Magazine Stage.Joe is a familiar gardening face having been a regular presenter on BBC Gardeners World since 1998. He also anchors The BBC coverage of The Chelsea Flower show and other RHS shows and has presented several gardening series over the years.Joe is the Design Director of Modular, a garden design and build brand. He has won many design awards including a Chelsea Gold Medal and Society of Garden designers awards.Joe writes a weekly column for The Times and Radio Times Magazine and has written eight books, including his most recent a series of Expert Guides for Collins.
TV gardener and podcaster Lee Connolly talks about his Schools Gardening Success Plan which aims to help every primary school in the country run a school gardening programme by 2025.Skinny Jean Gardener Lee puts above the ego-boosting TV work, which includes stints on CBBC and an educational slot on David Attenborough's Green Planet series.HortWeek editor Matthew Appleby and Lee discuss the heated topic of peat in horticulture and speculation (aired on Lee's own podcast) of the existence of a 'peat mafia' holding back moves to peat-free. He tells of his "joke" application for the position of RHS director general, a position he warmed to as the application progressed, as well as his hopes to showcase a balcony garden at this year's Chelsea Flower show.And as flared trousers threaten a comeback in men's fashion, he vows never to give up his skinny jeans and chooses his Desert Island Plant. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The government plans to plant 30,000 hectares of trees each year by 2025. But how practical is it and what would the real impact be? Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough talks to Dr Julie Urquhart of the University of Gloucestershire about why we need more information about carbon capture to help select the best places and the best tree species to plant. William Macalpine is based at Rothamsted – his project explores how cutting back and coppicing willows as a crop encourages a rapid growth cycle and replenishment. His presentation Willow Power at the 2008 Chelsea Flower show demonstrated the versatility of willow and the number of varieties. He argues we need longer term funding and to break the 5 year funding cycle for farmers, and researchers. Dr Julie Urquhart is Associate Professor of Environmental Social Science at the University of Gloucestershire. She's an ambassador for the Future of UK Treescapes programme, a collaboration funded by UK Research and Innovation, the Scottish and Welsh government and DEFRA. William Macalpine is a willow breeder at Rothamsted Research, looking at shrub willows as a sustainable energy source. He is also a Chelsea Flower Show Gold Medal winner, for a display entitled ‘Willow Power'. You can find out more about William Macalpine here: https://repository.rothamsted.ac.uk/staff/841w0/william-macalpine&resultMode=3 and the National Willow collection here https://www.rothamsted.ac.uk/uk-national-willow-collection You can find more information about the Treescapes projects here: https://nerc.ukri.org/research/funded/programmes/future-of-uk-treescapes/ Dr Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough is a New Generation Thinker based at the University of Durham. The podcast series Green Thinking is 26 episodes 26 minutes long looking at issues relating to COP26 made in partnership with the Arts and Humanities Research Council, part of UKRI. It explores the latest research and ideas around understanding and tackling the climate and nature emergency. New Generation Thinkers Des Fitzgerald and Eleanor Barraclough are in conversation with researchers about a wide-range of subjects from cryptocurrencies and finance to eco poetry and fast fashion. The podcasts are all available from the Arts & Ideas podcast feed - and collected on the Free Thinking website under Green Thinking where you can also find programmes on mushrooms, forests, rivers, eco-criticism and soil. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07zg0r2 For more information about the research the AHRC's supports around climate change and the natural world you can visit: Responding to climate change – UKRI or follow @ahrcpress on twitter. To join the discussion about the research covered in this podcast and the series please use the hashtag #GreenThinkingPodcast. Producer: Ruth Watts
Online sales doubled during the pandemic says owner Chris Smith, but changes in regulations are making some imports, such as seed potatoes, onion sets and garlic from France and Holland, impossible and could lead to significant pressures come the autumn. Shifting demographics of nursery owners and customers mean horticultural shows could decline as the market shifts from face-to-face to mail order and nurseries cater for newer gardeners, who want instant results and minimal work, favouring salads, soft fruit and perennials, he says. But the veteran grower is enthusiastic about the 'Ten Tomatoes That Changed The World' display planned for this year's autumn Chelsea Flower show and he picks a formidable 'Desert Island Plant'.
Surprise! Michael and Ellen are here with another episode of The Plant Based Podcast this week, taking a deep dive into all things Japanese gardening with garden designer, Makiko. In this episode, Makiko shares her journey, from working in the hotel industry in Japan, to studying horticulture in the UK – where she now spends half her time. She reflects on her time working at The Chelsea Flower show and a number of Japanese orchid festivals over the past couple of years – sharing her appreciation for the plant with fellow orchid lover, Michael! She also talks about her thoughts on wabi sabi gardening, her design inspiration, Gertrude Jekyll, and what she misses most about the UK when she’s in Japan. She also shares her tips with Ellen about how to harvest Japanese rice and shares, how the Sakura’s slow bloom reflects the Japanese mentality of being patient and present in the moment. Visit www.theplantbasedpodcast.net for more info and to win prizes! The Plant Based Podcast: www.theplantbasedpodcast.net Instagram Twitter Facebook This episode of The Plant Based Podcast is brought to you by our friends at Cobra. Cobra has the UK’s largest range of lawnmowers with more than 100 models available, meaning that there is one for every size and type of lawn. The vast range of products from Cobra also includes hedge trimmers, grass strimmers, leaf blowers, shredders across petrol, battery and electric models. The range is constantly expanding with new products added on a regular basis. Throughout series 4, Cobra is giving a way a whole host of Plant Based Podcast prizes. Visit www.cobragarden.co.uk for more information or follow them on Instagram at @cobragardenmachinery. #cobragarden
Garden Designer Nic Howard shares his love and passion for working outside, being his own boss and bringing his ideas to life. We also chat about his experience of creating a garden at the Chelsea Flower show. One of our favourite episodes so far.
We took the opportunity to talk to Gardeners World Presenter, multi gold medal winning Chelsea designer, and all round great guy, Adam Frost. We initially focussed on our joint submission to the DCMS committee which looked into garden tourism, before moving only issues including peat, the benefits of gardening in terms of health, and of course the huge issue of plant health. Adam took time to talk through his current plans for his garden which will be at this years Chelsea Flower show, before we touched upon me and my hollyhock attempt. Some really big issues for industry and Government to think about in the months ahead, put superbly by one of the nicest people in horticulture. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/toryradio/message
Peter is back with more news and tips and an interview with George Hillier. They talk about his family’s legacy, ecology, discuss how business will change in the future and give some tips for visitors to the Chelsea Flower show.Links related to today’s discussions:International Garden Photographer of the Year:https://igpoty.com/RHS Apprenticeships:https://www.rhs.org.uk/education-learning/qualifications-and-training/work-based-training/rhs-apprenticeshipsYoom Tomatoes:https://www.yoomtomato.com/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jamie Waugh is the head of wine at Fortnum & Mason’s and is from a family of wine lovers. After university Jaime's first job was at Oddbin’s, before working at Percy Fox, Corney and Barrow and finally OW Loeb, where after selling wine into Fortnum and mason Jamie was offered the job of selling wine for Fortnum’ and Mason. He has been with Fortnum and Mason for over 11 years now and 5 years as buyer. Fortnum & Mason was founded in 1707. The range of wines, spirits and sparkling wines reflects their longevity, with nearly 1707 in the cellars, of which 164 wines are bottled under the Fortnum’s label. The Fortnum’s collection represents over 60% of wine sales, which is a rare thing in retail. Jamie believes that Fortnum and Mason’s customers seek a sense of pleasure, and he is confident that they offer something special. He buy’s wines from the more traditional regions such as Haut Medoc from Chateau Charmail in St Estephe, to the relatively undiscovered, including Avesso from Anselmo Mendes. Champagne remains Fortnum and Mason’s most important wine.They are very proud to work with producers who don’t label for anyone else, such as Louis Roederer, and they were delighted to serve their Champagnes at the Chelsea Flower show. Further stating that ‘We are particularly proud of buying some wonderful small parcels. For example, we bought the entire UK allocation of Paul Dethune’s wonderfully decadent Blanc de Noirs Grand Cru Champagne: 1200 bottles of exquisite bubbles.’ Jamie is one of a long line of Fortnum’s head wine buyers, that stretches back to 1707. There is a tradition at Fortnum’s that the wine buyers – like good wines – mature with age in the cellars, and, thus, Jaimie has been in my role for just over a decade, and look’s forward to many more happy years of tradition and innovation in Piccadilly.
Every week on a Thursday we like to give you a little bit of inspiration for your travel plans and this week Michelle Jackson of the Novel Traveler is just back from a trip to London to check out The Chelsea Flower show and joined Ivan in the studio with all the information you need to know about how to get around London and what’s happening this summer.
For noen år siden kjørte en norsk furu med politi-eskorte gjennom London - den skulle til verdens største hageutstilling, nemlig Chelsea Flower show. Med Darren Saines og Tone Hoelsveen Saines.
With a tag line of EXCEPTIONAL PAINT. EXTRAORDINARY COLOUR. I'm very excited to talk all things color and paint in this weeks episode with M&L paints Brand Director Nelly Hall. Being part of Alitex - a family run business who have made the most beautiful Victorian looking glasshouses since 1952, she knows what it is to have a brand with beautiful style, high-quality design and commitments to British manufacturing. With all this experience under her belt - having been part of a larger family business, it made perfect sense to take on the Marston and Langinger paint brand and now with their new collaborative paint launch in interior and exterior paints launching at The Chelsea Flower show, the newly named M&L paints is back to take the interiors world by storm. We find out what's been happening and what to look forward to in the future. Find all the show notes details over on https://www.insidestylists.com/mlpaints/ Check out all the amazing new colours by MandLPaints here MandLPaints.com Don't forget to rate and review The Inside Stylists Podcast so other interior nuts can find us and enjoy it too! Thanks x
Former manager of the Chelsea Flower show Alex Denman joins Peter Seabrook to discuss her latest venture - the Royal Windsor Rose & Horticultural Society Show. Plus Peter is perplexed by the list of best-selling plants and has seasonal advice on cabbages. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gardens have long been sacred spaces for many religions and at Easter, Christians reflect on the Garden of Gethsemane - the place of Jesus' arrest and betrayal. When Christians and Muslims imagine what Paradise might be like, they nearly always reflect on gardens. The Garden of Eden can be found in both the Bible and the Quran. Sacred Gardens are places of sanctuary and contemplation and for many they represent Paradise on earth. But what do they represent for religions which do not have a God? What is the spiritual significance of the Zen garden? To discuss Sacred Gardens, Ernie is joined by Hannah Genders - a passionate gardener whose designs have won prizes at the Chelsea Flower show, Emma Clark who is also a garden designer and the author of 'The Art of the Islamic Garden'; and by Yoko Kawaguchi, an expert in Japanese Gardens and the co-author of Japanese Zen Gardens. Ernie also talks to John Irvine who was working in a factory in Flixborough in the North East of England in June 1974 when a huge explosion took the lives of 28 of his friends and colleagues and left him totally blind. He was buried alive for 48 hours before being pulled from the rubble. He found sanctuary and peace and ultimately Christian faith through creating and maintaining his own garden. Producer: Helen Lee Series Producer: Amanda Hancox.
Gardens have long been sacred spaces for many religions and at Easter, Christians reflect on the Garden of Gethsemane - the place of Jesus' arrest and betrayal. When Christians and Muslims imagine what Paradise might be like, they nearly always reflect on gardens. The Garden of Eden can be found in both the Bible and the Quran. Sacred Gardens are places of sanctuary and contemplation and for many they represent Paradise on earth. But what do they represent for religions which do not have a God? What is the spiritual significance of the Zen garden? To discuss Sacred Gardens, Ernie is joined by Hannah Genders - a passionate gardener whose designs have won prizes at the Chelsea Flower show, Emma Clark who is also a garden designer and the author of 'The Art of the Islamic Garden'; and by Yoko Kawaguchi, an expert in Japanese Gardens and the co-author of Japanese Zen Gardens. Ernie also talks to John Irvine who was working in a factory in Flixborough in the North East of England in June 1974 when a huge explosion took the lives of 28 of his friends and colleagues and left him totally blind. He was buried alive for 48 hours before being pulled from the rubble. He found sanctuary and peace and ultimately Christian faith through creating and maintaining his own garden. Producer: Helen Lee Series Producer: Amanda Hancox.
On this weeks garden podcast Peter Donegan chats with Kazuyuki Ishihara at RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2016, Sean Conville of Two Spots Coffee and the wonderful Avril Hogan of Dingle Gin and Distillery. That, alone should win award for being the most pretty jam packed and most varied garden podcast in world history ! But wait..... there's more. Because the very varied, varies a lot more than you might think. Peter chats with Gold medal Chelsea Flower show winner Kazuyuki Ishihara about how he was formerly a moto cross bike rider with Yamaha, the team of 30 people invvolved in his garden build, just why he half self funded this project himself, designing and building 3- -40 gardens per month and his team of around 100 employees. Peter talks to Sean from Two Spots, not about coffee as you might expect but about the excess waste that comes off the bean when it is roasted - known as the chaff - and how that is now being used as dressing in 'flower beds' and as bedding for hens, before ending up on the compost heap. And finally Peter also talks to the wonderful Avril Hogan of Dingle Distillery a little about making gin, but also about how beautiful Dingle is, the collecting of the botanicals for the gin making and working with the seasons to produce one of Ireland's finest refreshments ever. The Sodshow garden podcast.
The Sodshow Garden Podcast - every Friday - live 3pm - 4pm in iTunes and all good podcast stores. Podcast listen/ subscribe: The SodShow in iTunes The Sodshow in Stitcher – for android users On this part 2, Peter Donegan and Paul Martin return to chat Pauls Vestra Wealth sponsored 'Mindful Living' show garden at this years 2016 Chelsea Flower show. There we talk everything from build costs, dimensions, sleepless nights, picturing gardens in your head and how they evolve and just how much work and thought goes into the behind the scenes of creating on such a large stage. We talk detail, getting that right, solid blocks of limestone, candles, point marking and just what and why The RHS may have a mild question about one element of the finished garden, though Paul does not. ;) With very special thanks to The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS). Show Links: more info: paulmartindesigns.com twitter: @PaulbMartin Tickets for all RHS flower shows can be bought at rhs.org.uk/flowershows The Sodshow meets Paul Martin - Part 1 Garden Podcast Our thanks to City North Hotel and the team there for being brilliant. The Sodshow was awarded Ireland’s Best Podcast in 2012 and again in 2013. It’s also Ireland’s only full time garden radio show and garden podcast. Thoughts or comments ? @sodshow on twitter or on facebook as The Sodshow. #rhschelsea
Segments include: • Amanda brings up that Jonesy is wearing nail polish this morning• Gets My Goolies• Reaction Line • Footy Head• Drunk shopping website• Bucks night pubic hair• Amanda's Wrong Song• Lice in new clothes• MasterChef - Marco's roots• Saudi Arabia needs more executioners • We chat to Charlie Albone after he won silver at the Chelsea Flower show• We asked when did you miss your child's birth?• Gene Simmons from KISS called inSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week Peter talks with Chelsea flower show 2013 silver gilt medal winner, Chelsea flower show and Bloom judge, all round pure gent, Garden designer and author Andrew Wilson….. and breath ! In part 1 of a 2 part special Peter and Andrew chat everything from being a show judge to being judged; what gets on your nerves and just what were the judges thing when they gave him a silver gilt at this years RHS 2013 Chelsea Flower show. All that and so much more as always on Ireland’s only [and award winning] garden podcast and radio show, The Sodshow.
We have exclusive interviews with a selection of the internationally-renowned designers who have created Chelsea gardens this year, as RHS Director General Sue Biggs introduces a programme that celebrates the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2013. Our Centenary special features: • Inspirational insights, tips and techniques, and ideas for your garden at home • Award-medal winning designers Jinny Blom, Christopher Bradley-Hole, Adam Frost, Ulf Nordfjel and Roger Platts • We reveal surprising edible plants, like hostas and ferns! • Plants for night scent Also includes: • Sustainability and wildlife • Family gardens • Growing your own fruit and vegetables • Ideas for small spaces and containers Whether you have a country cottage, a suburban semi-detached or a few containers on a window ledge, there’s something in this Chelsea Flower show special to inspire everyone who loves their garden...
This time on Life in Scents, we welcome landscape designer Cleve West who has won an incredible six RHS Gold Medals and Best in Show award at the Chelsea Flower show for his beautiful and innovative gardens. Naturally, Cleve gets stuck into the scent of manure, forests and sniffing out deer through the park, reveals why he has a thing for plasticine, and shares his Anglo-Indian Heritage, including the unforgettable aromas of curry leaves and how to make the perfect cup of aromatic Chai. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.