The Bonsai Garden at Wisley

Many of you will be wondering why I have been so quiet since April of this year. Well we all lead busy lives. In my case, I was in Cyprus teaching bonsai during early April; I then visited Japan at the end of May to source good bonsai material for my nursery. In June I was in Malta teaching bonsai and in between all this, we have bee rebuilding the Bonsai Garden at the Royal Horticultural Society’s centre at Wisley in Surrey.
In the UK, there are not many large public bonsai collections that people can view like in the US. In 1998 my wife and I decided to gift a major collection of bonsai to the Royal Horticultural Society to be permanently displayed on their premises at Wisley.
For those who are not familiar with the gardening scene in the UK, The Royal Horticultural Society is the largest and most prestigious gardening organisation in the country. The Queen is the Society’s Patron. Only recently she visited the garden to inaugurate the new £8million greenhouse. It regularly attracts three quarter million visitors a year and with the new greenhouse, the visitor numbers are expected to top a million.
At the RHS’s centre in Wisley, we were allocated one of their model display gardens to convert into a bonsai display area. We did this by making a few changes to the existing site. One of the first things we did was to introduce a few raked gravel areas to create a Zen garden effect – very similar to what one would see in Kyoto temple gardens. We added three large Japanese garden trees and with just some artistic planting of shrubs and trees, we had the makings of a very suitable bonsai display area.
The picture above and the ones below, show what the site looked like for the past nine years. It is one of the very popular attractions for the many visitors who flock to the Wisley throughout the year.



The rebuild
About two years ago, we decided that although the bonsai collection attracted a steady stream of interested and appreciative visitors, the garden would benefit from not just a facelift but a complete redesign and rebuild.The RHS agreed to let us do this and in February of this year the site was demolished and we rebuilt it again from scratch. However in doing so, I took the opportunity of involving the students who study at the college which is attached to RHS Wisley, in an interactive learning experience. I conducted a number of seminars on Japanese garden design and construction for the students, and throughout the rebuilding process, they were involved in the project from design to final planting. Here are some pictures of the rebuild



In just two months we managed to rebuild the garden completely. The granite paths were laid by professional masons but the planting was done by our nursery staff and the Wisley students. These pictures show what the new garden looks like
New Bonsai Garden









Inauguration by Japanese Ambassador
The bonsai garden was opened to the public on 1st May and on 16th July the Japanese Ambassador to the UK formally inaugurated it in the presence of the Royal Horticultural Society President – Mr Peter Buckley. 

Here are some pictures of that very happy occasion.
The bonsai collection consists of forty trees which are not all shown at the same time. Only those which are in good condition are put on display. As English people love a colourful display, I have used a lot of maples and deciduous bonsai together with the different hues of green from the Yews, Pines and Junipers to make the bonsai garden attractive. There is a large 200 year old Japanese Yew whis is on view. It has splendid jins and sharis on an almost hollow trunk.
In gifting this bonsai collection and garden to RHS Wisley, Dawn and I hope that it will make bonsai more widely known and help to change the negative image which bonsai usually gets in this country. After all these years many people still think that bonsai is cruel to trees. (By the way – I notice that in India and Bangladesh recently, bonsai is portrayed in a very negative sense. In professional circles, bonsai is associated with stunted development. So if someone is a non- achiever, he or she is referred to as a ‘bonsai person’ or ‘bonsai manager’ and so on. Highly derogatory if I may say so.)
If ever you have the chance to visit England we hope you will find time to see the bonsai collection at the famous gardens at Wisley. People in England love gardening and most people who visit Wisley love the bonsai display too.