STOKE ST MILBOROUGH ONLINE
  • Home
    • Village Map
    • HISTORY
    • PARISH COUNCIL
  • VILLAGE HALL
    • What's On @ SSMVH
    • HIRE THE HALL
    • USERS GUIDE
    • Policies
    • General Information
    • Film Nights & Arts Alive Shows
    • Burwarton Gardening Club
    • Clee Skittles League
    • Creative Community Cafe (CCC)
  • CHURCH
    • BELL RINGING
    • Caring for God's Acre
  • WHAT'S ON?
  • YOUR VOICE
    • Businesses, Services & Employment
    • Articles, News, Opinion & Local Events
    • Small Ads - For Sale & Wanted - Lost & Found
  • DIRECTORY
    • Complete Directory List
    • Where to Eat, Drink, Stay...
    • Bin Collections
    • Road Closures
    • Report an Obstruction
    • Mobile Library
    • Shropshire Warm Welcome
    • West of the Clee Magazine
    • Defibrillator
  • GALLERY
  • PUZZLES
  • CONTACT
  • Home
    • Village Map
    • HISTORY
    • PARISH COUNCIL
  • VILLAGE HALL
    • What's On @ SSMVH
    • HIRE THE HALL
    • USERS GUIDE
    • Policies
    • General Information
    • Film Nights & Arts Alive Shows
    • Burwarton Gardening Club
    • Clee Skittles League
    • Creative Community Cafe (CCC)
  • CHURCH
    • BELL RINGING
    • Caring for God's Acre
  • WHAT'S ON?
  • YOUR VOICE
    • Businesses, Services & Employment
    • Articles, News, Opinion & Local Events
    • Small Ads - For Sale & Wanted - Lost & Found
  • DIRECTORY
    • Complete Directory List
    • Where to Eat, Drink, Stay...
    • Bin Collections
    • Road Closures
    • Report an Obstruction
    • Mobile Library
    • Shropshire Warm Welcome
    • West of the Clee Magazine
    • Defibrillator
  • GALLERY
  • PUZZLES
  • CONTACT

Garden Club News

Blooming lovely!

17/11/2025

0 Comments

 
​
If you have ever journeyed along the B4368 through the village of Monkhopton and been delighted by the view of a field of glorious blooms, then you have almost certainly passed Katie Briggs Thomas’ business; The Petal Passion Flower Farm.

Katie came to our November meeting to tell us how she set up her business and went from beautician to flower farmer. When COVID shut down Katie’s beauty business in March 2020, like many of us she spent time in her garden and found that she was rather good at growing flowers.

An unlikely flower farmer, Katie had suffered debilitating hayfever until the wonders of modern medicine made working with flowers a possibility. So to develop her passion, Katie bought one and a half acres of the field behind her home and a polytunnel. She began creating flower beds and planting 1000 bare root roses, dahlias, peonies and many other varieties of perennial flowers as well as annuals like cosmos and zinnas, to create stunning floral arrangements.

It is Katie’s mission to help reduce the carbon footprint of cut flowers by offering beautiful blooms locally and sourcing other materials as close to home as possible. She provides seasonal flowers for funerals, weddings, birthdays and other occasions, beautifully arranged in her casual, unique style. In addition Katie supplies florists & shops with seasonal, sustainably & locally grown flowers, with no added chemicals or pesticides.

Katie is extremely keen on protecting the environment and only uses peat free compost and natural fertilizers. She uses sustainable materials in her floral arrangements and made a plea to us to stop using oasis because it is made of plastic which does not biodegrade, but breaks down into microplastics that can harm wildlife . Katie suggested using moss in compostable bags wrapped in twine which I am definitely going to try.

Katie has plans to further develop her business and has planning permission for one more polytunnel and a large workshop from where she can run events. If you are interested in Katie’s work or events then visit her website; www.thepetalpassionflowerfarm.com or facebook page to find out more.
During the Q and A session which followed Katie’s talk, she prepared a stunning bouquet of mixed flowers which was given as a raffle prize.
Our next meeting of the gardening club on 11th December has a slightly different format. We will be listening to talks by members about projects that they have undertaken in their own gardens and this year we will hold a Desert Island gardening tool demonstration. We also have Christmas afternoon tea, a quiz and a Christmas decoration competition. If you would like to join us then do come along to Stoke St Milborough village hall at 2.00pm to join in the fun. ​
0 Comments

November meeting :  Lady Gardener to Flower Farmer

19/10/2025

0 Comments

 
Picture
If you wish to join us, our next speaker will be Katie Briggs Thomas who will be telling us how she went from ‘Lady Gardener to Flower Farmer’.

https://www.thepetalpassionflowerfarm.com

​The meeting will be held at Stoke St Milborough Village Hall at 2.00pm on 13th November.  
If you would like more information about our gardening club, then contact BevHarris on [email protected] or 07933724728.

0 Comments

Off to a good start for 2025/2026 Gardening Club meetings - Coast to Coast by gardens ... by Car, with Jill and Alun Whitehead

19/10/2025

0 Comments

 
What a wonderful start to the gardening club year. The village hall was warm and welcoming with an air of excitement, the speakers were very entertaining and it was lovely to have new members joining us.
Coast to coast by gardens...by car, with Jill and Alun Whitehead was the first of our visiting speakers' talks. The virtual trip began in Tenby, South Wales in Manobier Castle with its small garden benefitting from the castle walls as its backdrop. We then moved on to Dryffen Fernant, a most inspiring garden and one that I noted as a must visit next time we are in South Wales. Moving east, the next garden was Aberglasney which has a restored Elizabethan Cloister Garden that is the only example of its kind in the UK today. It also has an impressive yew tunnel and a 250 year old woodland with stunning ferns and meconopsis.
​​It became clear at this point in the talk that Jill, in particular, was also interested in the sculptures that can be seen in many of the gardens on this tour. This was evident in our next garden in Abergavenny; The Pant which had an enormous stone turtle and rusted metal fish swimming through lavender
Picture
Picture
We then hopped over the border into Herefordshire, to Lyndalls Garden near Ross on Wye. This two acre garden was created from bare fields and is now renowned for its displays of over six hundred types of snowdrops. We then visited Bryan Gound before stopping off at Aulden Farm, Jill and Alun’ home and garden with its many sculptures and impressive displays of irises for which they are well known.

​Moving on into Worcestershire, we came to Stone House Cottage Garden, a beautiful, romantic walled garden with numerous brick built follies. It is apparently home to one of the largest collections of rare plants in the country, so another garden for that list of places to visit on a Saturday afternoon! Along the way we stopped off (virtually) at Packwood House, Broughton Grange and Upton House, before reaching Thenford Arboretum, a four acre walled garden owned by Micheal and Ann Hesseltine. This is a stunning garden which surprisingly houses a 7.5 tonne statue of Lenin! Continuing our journey eastwards we visited Rousham, Coton Manor, The Manor at Hemmingford Grey, Chippenham Park Gardens, Fuller’s Mill, East and Ruston, Benton End, before finishing our garden tour at The Beth Chatto Gardens, one of the loveliest gardens in the UK.
​
As the talk was coast to coast, our final place was not a garden but Aldeburgh on the east coast which has many fascinating gardens and is a lovely seaside town in which to take in the sea air after an exhausting three hundred and fifty mile tour.

If you wish to join us, our next speaker will be Katie Briggs Thomas who will be telling us how she went from ‘Lady Gardener to Flower Falmer’. The meeting will be held at Stoke St Milborough Village Hall at 2.00pm on 13th November.
If you would like more information about our gardening club, then contact Bev Harris on [email protected] or 07933724728.

Picture
0 Comments

October's Talk : Coast to Coast via Gardens . . . . . by Car! Jill and Alun Whitehead -

24/9/2025

0 Comments

 
Picture

​Here we go again… October is an exciting time for the gardening club as it is the first meeting of the new programme.
The format for the year remains the same, but we have some new and exciting speakers to look forward to.
Our first speakers on October 9th are Jill and Alun Whitehead, who live and work on Aulden Farm which is in a very small hamlet in Herefordshire. The property dates back to the mid-17th Century, Jill and Alun purchased the property in 1996 with a plan to develop a garden on the 3 acres surrounding the farmhouse. After much hard work the house was refurbished and a plan for the garden was drawn up. They now have a beautiful garden that is home to a wide variety of plants, wild and cultivated, and an abundance of wildlife, together with a thriving business.
Self confessed plantaholics Jill and Alun, have over the years developed a depth of knowledge especially of irises. In 2007 they acquired a collection of Siberian Irises and they now own a National Collection. Jill and Alun offer a wide range of talks including how they developed their garden and business, Irises and on a selection of gardens including in Shropshire, Herefordshire and Cornwall. So it was difficult deciding which talk to choose but I went for: Coast to Coast via Gardens . . . . . by Car! which is Jill and Alun’s leisurely alternative to Wainwright's idea.
We are looking forward to seeing and hearing about the amazing gardens that they have experienced and noting some destinations for future trips away.

If you are interested in joining our small and friendly gardening club or just visiting for one of our talks, then come along to Stoke St Milborough Village Hall. We meet on the second Thursday of the month at 2.00pm.
Details can be found on our website; www.stokestmilborough.info/burwarton-gardening-club or by contacting me at [email protected] .
Everyone is welcome regardless of gardening knowledge or ability. 


0 Comments

A new season for the Gardening Club

31/8/2025

0 Comments

 
We hope you have all managed to enjoy the gorgeous summer weather, where hopefully you have all had a great time in your gardens and out and about.

We are just finalising the programme for the next year of Gardening Club

We are looking forward to seeing our existing members as well as a some new ones.

The first meeting is on the 9th October, please come along and join us.

14:00 at Stoke St Milborough Village hall

All welcome 
0 Comments

Sunshine, a beautiful peaceful setting and good company - the highlight of the gardening club’s year!

9/8/2025

0 Comments

 
The final meeting of the gardening club’s 2024-25 calendar was the garden picnic which this year was held at the home of Laura and Andrew Jones in Glazeley, Bridgnorth. Laura and Andrew have been at the property for about three years. When they first arrived, the garden was very overgrown and neglected. It had previously been open to the public through the NGS garden scheme and it is clear to see that there were many interesting features which Laura is now bringing back to life.

As you enter the garden you are greeted by the gentle sound of water that is trickling into a pretty wildlife pond. It was a glorious day and Laura had laid the terrace out with plenty of shaded seating , much needed as the temperature was in the high 20s. As we strolled through the garden, we discovered the bog garden, beautiful trees which included a Sequoia with its stunning red bark and a vegetable plot with resident hens. There were many outbuildings, including two very impressive sheds which Andrew had built himself. There were also stables for Laura’s two ponies which have a paddock at the far end of the garden. The ponies are called Betty and Lucy and are mother and daughter. They are rescue ponies who Laura claims have now become very expensive garden ornaments!

Where Laura had begun developing borders, they are well stocked with carefully chosen English cottage garden plants like Centaurea macrocephala, standing tall with its lovely yellow flowers.
Where borders are still untamed there is evidence of wonderful well established perennials, like a lovely dark pink penstemon, just waiting to be tamed and cared for and Laura is certainly the gardener to do that.
Our garden tour was followed by cups of tea and a delicious shared afternoon tea of sandwiches, scones, cheese, savouries and of course plenty of homemade cake.
It was a delightful afternoon in glorious sunshine, in a beautiful peaceful setting with a chance to relax and chat with fellow gardeners. In many ways this is the highlight of our gardening club’s year.
The programme for 2025-56 is now being finalised and we have a number of exciting and varied speakers booked. Watch this space and next month I will provide details of what is to come. If you would like to know more about the gardening club, then please get in touch by emailing us on [email protected].
Bev Harris
Secretary 
0 Comments

2025 Potato Competition Results

9/8/2025

0 Comments

 


Here is list of potato competition entries for 2025
Thank you to everyone who took part. 
Well done Joan on your very impressive harvest of 1.701g 

Potato Competition weights 2025  (Nicola variety):
Angela Herrick        262g
Joan Palmer           1.701g    1st
Tricia Johns            465g
Eunice Cannon       791g
Laura Jones            391g
Helen Sharp            520g
Sharon Thorpe        1.049g
Bev Harris`              1.149g 
Peter Cornah          340g ​
0 Comments

Visit to Ruthall Manor June 2025

2/7/2025

0 Comments

 
PictureDactylorhiza folioza, photo by Bev Harris
Neither torrential rain nor flash floods could dampen our spirits!

As I drove through torrential rain and flash foods on my way to the gardening club’s visit to Ruthall Manor in Ditton Priors, I was unsure what the afternoon would bring. The weather forecast was not good with the potential for thunderstorms, but as I arrived at the car park, there were already a number of members waiting with raincoats, wellies and umbrellas at the ready. We sheltered under an area that had been set out for us, to listen to a brief history of the house and garden from the owner Lynda Clarke. Lynda, Gerald and their family moved into the property in the 1960s and Lynda told us how she accidentally found the haha, when she fell down it when trying to retrieve her children’s ball in the garden. Together they have developed the garden over the past sixty years to produce an amazingly beautiful and mature garden. After the introduction, the rain had stopped and the sky began to brighten so we ventured out of the shelter to begin exploring the garden. The one acre plot has a stunning collection of mature architectural trees which divide the garden into individual sections which are linked by winding paths and planted in creative colour combinations.
​
Throughout the garden there are some very rare and distinctive plants, so it was lucky I had my plant identifying app on my phone. The plant which drew much attention was the Dactylorhiza foliosa, a member of the Orchidaceae family. This deciduous tuberous perennial has lance-shaped leaves and dense terminal racemes of purple/pink flowers.


 


PictureGardening Club members admiring the Old Horse Pond
The garden’s traditional lawn is flanked by striking, mature borders and leads onto a gravel art garden and ha-ha. The stumpery and woodland gardens contain rare specimen trees, curious artifacts and many hidden treasures. There are clematis and roses climbing through a collection of wrought-iron work, unique pottery and old farmyard machinery and tools. The highlight of the visit was without doubt the old horse pond with its vibrant candelabra primulas, iris and bog plants.
​

Of course, no garden visit would be complete without tea and cake and we were not disappointed. Ruthall Manor also offers a huge collection of jigsaw puzzles which they sell for charity. This stunning garden is well worth a visit and is open on 20th July through the NGS. We certainly had a lovely time and many members said that they would be returning soon.
The next and final event of our gardening club calendar for 2025, is a visit to one of our member’s gardens this month. We are really looking forward to seeing Laura’s garden in its full summer glory! If you would like to join our small, friendly and very active gardening club, please get in touch and I can give you more details. We are always pleased to welcome new members.
Bev Harris Secretary
[email protected]
0 Comments

Spring Show 2025

5/5/2025

0 Comments

 
Your browser does not support viewing this document. Click here to download the document.
0 Comments

    Author

    Write something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview.

    Archives

    November 2025
    October 2025
    September 2025
    August 2025
    July 2025
    May 2025

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Picture

www.stokestmilborough.info
​[email protected]

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Can't find what you want? Just use the search bar! You'll find one at the bottom of every page...
Village Map. Click here for a larger version for downloading or zooming in.
Picture
Picture
Hosting Right Now
Defibrillator
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Proudly powered by Weebly