The British Garden
a Personal Perspective on a Year of Gardening in the United Kingdom
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24823/Sibbaldia.2015.81Abstract
The Royal Horticultural Society/Garden Club of America Interchange Fellowship was established in 1952 and is awarded to one American and one British student annually. It was formerly known as the Martin McLaren Scholarship and was created to help encourage the exchange of ideas and information in the horticultural world. Terry Huang was selected as the American 2013–2014 Royal Interchange Fellow. His travels and placements solidified for him the important role that botanic and public gardens play as interpreters of the plant world. He describes some of his experiences and examples of excellence that he saw while in Britain. He goes on to explain that the work placements have influenced and inspired the work he does today in the Botany Greenhouse at the University of Washington.
References
MCLAREN, N. & FARRELL, A. (1998). Exchanges across the Pond. The Horticulturist 7(3): 7–17.
MILLWARD, D. (2012). Alan Titchmarsh attacks David Cameron’s views on gardening. The Telegraph, 8 April 2012. Available online: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/9192938/Alan-Titchmarsh-attacks-David-Camerons-views-on-gardening.html (accessed June 2015).
ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY (2013). Horticulture Matters: The Growing Crisis in UK Horticulture That is Threatening Our Economy, Environment and Food Security. RHS Horticulture Report.
SEALE, W. (2013). The Garden Club of America: One Hundred Years of a Growing Legacy. Smithsonian Books, Washington, DC.
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