HomeblogReal gardens: La Ferme de Sourrou ‘But my garden really isn’t very stylish,’ objected Irene Knightley when I first approached her about a Real Garden feature. She must be an incredibly modest woman, as this is one of the most romantic gardens I have ever seen. True, La Ferme de Sorrou, a garden in south-west France, isn’t manicured to right-angled perfection. And all the more to their charm. This is a raffish, informal potager which keeps Irene and her boyfriend Fabrice self-sufficient year-round. And it is marvellous. Irene has been working on the garden for 17 years, practising permaculture and organic gardening while rearing hens, pigs, goats and sheep. The site is former farmland with a stream running through, and ranges from very sandy to heavy clay. At both extremes, she has incorporated plenty of organic matter to encourage a bumper harvest. ‘My main concerns were shelter,’ says Irene. ‘The northern part of the site is very windy and exposed on heavy clay. ‘I’ve lost lots of plants but gradually the shape of the garden is coming together.’ Irene’s nickname on her blog is ‘hardworkinghippy’, and even though she now only spends six hours in the garden, she has clearly toiled long and hard to create such a beautifully peaceful garden. Even though it is primarily a vegetable garden, Irene can’t resist scattering flowers around the site. A large pergola, known as the gloriette, is draped with wisteria and virginia creeper, and irises and echinacea spring up among the pumpkins and herbs. One of Irene’s key weapons in the fight against garden pests is her flock of chickens, which run completely free-range over the site. Once she has protected tasty plants such as Rhubarb, she leaves the birds to scramble around and consume grubs which would normally gobble up seedlings and tender plants. And they produce daily crops of enoromous eggs by way of thanks for such a splendid feast. Irene’s gardening practices are as free-range as her chickens. She feeds hungry plants using a ’soup’ of comfrey, nettles and garden weeds; she builds new raised beds using the hugelkultur system, where dead wood from trees supplies the nutrients, fertility and organisms essential for a successful harvest; and the old bedding from her goat sheds becomes a mulch for the vegetables. Irene is such an adept practitioner of permaculture that she runs courses on off-grid living, self-sufficiency, foraging and smallholding. Which means you can visit this beautiful farm for yourself. Just visit Irene’s blog, La Ferme de Sourrou to find out more. Share this:Share 7 Responses Bernadette Carr May 8, 2010 Your garden is an inspiration. What beautiful photos. Reply Joanne Pattinson September 6, 2010 Wow, I love everything about this garden. Reply Linny O'Hara February 7, 2012 You are sooo blest! You live in paradise! Thank you so very, very much for sharing these photos of your wonderful garden. Hugs, health, and happiness to you now and always. Reply susan March 13, 2012 This garden is so lush, so earthy and real. Thanks for sharing. And those chickens! A very sweet place. Reply Irene kightley April 21, 2012 Thanks for your lovely comments everyone. It really makes me feel very happy that people appreciate my kind of gardening as I’m sure it’s important to combine flowers and edibles - not just for the birds and bees but to lift our spirits too. Irene Reply Sue October 31, 2012 I love your garden! What an inspiration! How do you keep your chickens from tearing it up?? My chickens rip apart everything not protected in wire cages but the look of wire everywhere drives me crazy! Reply Kate Gold November 27, 2012 Hi Irene, I wonder if you aver have wwoofers working for you? (I have left you a message on Flickr too) I am living near Rochechouart in the Limousin. I would love to come and visit you and help out a bit on your land. Please let me know if that would be possible. Thanks, Kate Reply Leave a Reply Cancel Reply Your email address will not be published. Name* Email* Website Comment Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email.
Linny O'Hara February 7, 2012 You are sooo blest! You live in paradise! Thank you so very, very much for sharing these photos of your wonderful garden. Hugs, health, and happiness to you now and always. Reply
susan March 13, 2012 This garden is so lush, so earthy and real. Thanks for sharing. And those chickens! A very sweet place. Reply
Irene kightley April 21, 2012 Thanks for your lovely comments everyone. It really makes me feel very happy that people appreciate my kind of gardening as I’m sure it’s important to combine flowers and edibles - not just for the birds and bees but to lift our spirits too. Irene Reply
Sue October 31, 2012 I love your garden! What an inspiration! How do you keep your chickens from tearing it up?? My chickens rip apart everything not protected in wire cages but the look of wire everywhere drives me crazy! Reply
Kate Gold November 27, 2012 Hi Irene, I wonder if you aver have wwoofers working for you? (I have left you a message on Flickr too) I am living near Rochechouart in the Limousin. I would love to come and visit you and help out a bit on your land. Please let me know if that would be possible. Thanks, Kate Reply