Chris stands in one of his planting beds, surrounded by tall perennials and grasses.

Andrew Montgomery

Chris Brown is someone who has an incredibly intimate knowledge and understanding of plants. As well as studying at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew for three years, he has also travelled extensively through Europe and much further afield. So when he talks about a resilient plant, he probably has in mind something he saw in the rugged mountain peaks of the Alps or the Himalayas – a plant that is tough enough to grow in a rock crevice at the mercy of all sorts of extreme weather. Until recently, Chris was the head gardener at Highlands garden in East Sussex, where he established an experimental, multi-habitat garden and was able to grow an extraordinarily diverse range of plants. He has now moved to nearby Newick Park, where he has plenty of exciting plans for developing its 20 acres of garden.

Bringing back to the UK and applying what he has learned from his travels, Chris is adamant that we should be planting a diverse mix of non-native plants alongside natives as the climate changes around us. ‘The botanical richness of this country is so important,’ he explains. ‘We need a much more diverse suite of plants if we’re going to get through this climate disaster and we need to be bringing in these resilient plants from all over the world to support our ecology. The best way to find resilient plants is to experiment with as many different species as possible and observe which ones do best in your garden. They will be different for everyone, because we all have different settings, aspects and soil. For me, a good plant has to be tough and useful, as well as beautiful. It has to add ecology and have a long season of interest.’

Many of the plants that Chris grew while he was at Highlands have these qualities, providing a framework of reliable and low-maintenance hard-workers, which could be surrounded by other more ephemeral plants. Chris cites Pinus mugo as one of the best architectural evergreens that will grow in the driest of conditions. ‘It is an Alpine plant that grows at the top of rugged mountains, where it is constantly battered by wind, rain, ice and extreme drought or heat. Texturally it is lovely, forming its ownbonsai-like shape,’ he says, before praising Hakonechloa macra for similar versatility. ‘It will grow in sun or shade, dry or wet. In Japan, it is a shady streamside plant, where it thrives in a rocky habitat along shallow stream edges. In the summer, these streams can dry up entirely, so it is also adapted to conditions of drought.’

Chris also recommends self-seeding plants such as Cephalaria alpina, Althaca cannabina and Verbena hastata f. rosea. ‘The self-sowers are extremely valuable and great for giving a wilder look,’ he notes. ‘If a plant is self-sown, it’s stronger and more resilient, because it has found exactly the place where it wants to be.’ One plant that he likes to include in all of his garden planting plans is the common fennel, Foeniculum vulgare (or the bronze form), which self-seeds with ease. ‘It is not an unusual plant, but it is super drought tolerant and edible, and has good winter structure. It is also excellent for wildlife,’ he continues. ‘We all need to think about what else these plants are doing – it is not just about the aesthetics. Beauty lures people in and will get them engaged, but the wildlife has to come first.’

@thesussexplanthunter

10 climate-resilient plants

Moon carrot Seseli gummiferum.

Andrew Montgomery

Seseli gummiferum

Known as the moon carrot, this monocarpic plant takes three years to flower then dies, hopefully self-seeding before it goes. With glaucous foliage and white umbels, it’s good for pollinators and drought tolerant. Chris calls it ‘a fantastic structural plant’.

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