Cornwall's Stunning Gardens - Glorious Gardens From Above - S01 EP1 - Gardening Show

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[Music] britain has some of the finest gardens anywhere in  the world for me it's about getting in amongst the   wonderful plants that flourish in this country and  sharing the passion of the people who tend them   however there is another way to enjoy a garden and that's to get up above it i love ballooning because you can get to  see the world below in a whole new light   from up here you get a real sense of how  the garden sits in the landscape how the   terrain and the climate has shaped it and  i want you to share that experience with me [Music] [Music] i'm heading for a part of the uk that's  always had a very special place in my heart and i'm not alone in loving  this particular landscape   in a national poll to find the best views in  britain this county easily came out on top today i'm taking to the  skies above cornwall [Music]   in the far southwest of great britain cornwall  sticks out like a finger into the atlantic ocean in the north of the county high exposed granite  pass to london arable areas but with 400m miles of   coastline cornwall is perhaps best love for its  caves its coast and its wonderful sandy beaches   the beauty and bounty of cornwall has always  drawn people to the county artists visit for the   fabulous light chefs for the mouth-watering  seafood and me i'm just after one thing i'm here to see it's fantastic gardens   and i'm taking to the air to get a whole  new view of glorious cornwall [Music]   today i'm visiting two gardens that flourish  in the unique conditions found in cornwall it's a county where plants appear to have come  from a lost world it just feels like back to   being a dinosaur where i have to take gardening  to an exciting level your star well done and where   everyone pitches in to get the job done with a  sense of cornish pride cornish in it handsome from up here you can see how  varied the landscape of cornwall is   you've got fertile valleys these  beautiful patchwork of fields   surrounding by hedges and the slightly undulating  softness that makes cornwall cornwall [Music]   i'm going to be setting down close to one  of my favorite gardens in the uk [Music]   tree bark covers 26 acres and it's the cream of  cornwall it's chock full of plants that get my   pulse racing trevor sits on the north bank of the  hellford river and it always reminds me of having   a paint pot of plants and i just want to pour it  down the valley to the sea there's that sensitive   adventure foaming trees spectacular planting  for me my favorite cornish volley golf [Music] trouba is world famous for the fabulous exotic   plants that thrive here thanks  to the unique cornish climate the gulf stream brings warm wet weather  across the ocean from the caribbean   and cornwall is one of the  sunniest counties in the uk   put those two things together and the  result is a garden paradise [Music]   tree bar the most magical cornish  subtropical valley that i know   full of froth and excitement and a sense of  adventure it's a combination of the sea the pond   the flowing blue hydrangeas up the valley to that  most amazing gunner plantation i've never been   here and left without being wildly excited and it  is the magic of the place that makes it tree bar the garden was created in the late  1830s by a man called charles fox   who came from a wealthy  local shipping family [Music]   it was an amateur scientist with a huge  passion for exotic trees and plants [Music]   the current head gardener darren dickey has  lived in cornwall since he was a child he's   been working here at tribal for over 20 years and  has been in charge since 2002 [Music] i'm meeting   him at the top of the garden where he's adding  the new exotic specimen to trebar's collection hi hi christy nice to meet you daryn nice  to meet you so what are you doing here   uh we're actually going for a new  introduction for tree but this is a chef   um we've always tried to do something a little  bit different and this is a sort of a new exotic   addition to the garden can they give you a  hand planting it then of course again yeah   go look at this fantastic this is nice yes chef  alpine scheffler's are also known as umberella   plants and this one comes from southeast  asia let's take this hall it's lovely soil   i mean because you could almost sprinkle it on  your complex it's lovely and look i just i do but   what makes trevor so special for you for me you've  obviously got the sort of natural micro climate of   the garden it's very close to the hell for destroy  the sea so you've obviously got the benefit of the   gulf stream and also we have very mild winters  so you get this fantastic sort of lush growth   the season goes on for longer yeah and the other  great thing we have and very fortunate we have a   lovely sort of water features leading all the way  down through and then the ultimate water feature   with the beach at the bottom of the garden so we  have our own private beach where people can come   and enjoy spend the day have an ice cream and  enjoy the beautiful clear waters of the health   but there's no chance of a sit down in a rest  for me not when there's a plant to get in   yeah and preferably obviously if we can loosen  the soil up below so yeah just got a chance to   establish dynamite what do you fancy well  it's funny there's um lovely stories about   years ago that in the cornish gardens one way of  getting rid of stumps in the garden it used to   set dynamite blow them out and blow them up yeah  i know such a shame about health and safety these   days didn't it could you imagine boom i've  come to treasure as the fidgeting goes by   taking away all the fun yeah do you want to  give that a go yeah let's see where we are that's looking pretty good yep when charles fox  was stocking up his back garden in victorian times   he brought exotic plants and shrubs like  these back from abroad in his family's ships yeah that looks alright this is one i  want to see some other new introductions today some of charles fox's original  trees still tower over the garden and what i want to know darren is how on earth  did he know where to put these fantastic trees you   know it was putting in little things like that um  it was interesting this lovely lovely story that   goes that he would create scaffold towers around  the garden uh to the eventual height so that he   could then get the scaffold house positioned  around the garden um so that he knew just   whether they would block the view down through  the valley how they'd fit into the landscape   so once the tower was obviously positioned he'd  let's send the sort of young lad up the youngest   of the team probably uh clambering to the top  with a little flag and they've waved the flag   and he'd stand up to the house sort of left  a bit right a bit so those gardeners boys   might not have enjoyed being sent up scaffolding  to see the garden from up high but i think   seeing tree bar from above is a fantastic way to  appreciate how the garden nestles into its valley   there are four miles of footpaths  winding down through the garden   streams and cascades fill the air  with the sound of falling water   the bamboos whisper and the wind swirls through  the leaves of the tree ferns and grasses meanwhile the valley meanders 80 meters  from its top down to the beach below the garden leads down onto  the hellford river which   opens into an estuary and flows out to the sea tree ball first opened to the public in  1987. since then one of the main draws of   the hundred thousand annual visitors  is the wonderful hydrangea valley in the wild hydrangeas are found in  asia and in north and south america   the hydrangeas at trevor are native to china  and japan these flowers are mainly a glorious   blue because the soil is acidic if the soil  is alkaline hydrangeas produce pink flowers   some hydrangeas thrive in shade and they love  rain and hate frost no wonder they do so well here   but if you think the hydrangeas are outsized  just wait until you see another plant that the   garden is famous for it's a monster this is the  gunnery passage lined with towering plants that   are also known as giant brazilian rhubarb  they're always bringing out the kid in me   i mean it's just awesome it's twice my height  and the leaves are twice as big as i am   so what the heck you know how did you look after  it um it's one of those parts it pretty much looks   after itself but from time to time also we have  to get in here this time of year in the summer   and just trim off some of the leaves as they sort  of collapse down over and some of the dead leaves   just to tidy it up but once we get through into  sort of october and it all starts to die back   and we'll get in there and literally  take the whole lot down so this just   erupts in the spring producing these fantastic  flowers i mean and then just with us away   at the back end but look look at it fluffy bad frosty i want to be a dinosaur because  it just feels like going back to being a dinosaur   i mean it is a truly magnificent plant i mean  come on let's go and do a bit let's sort it out the leaves of gunra can grow up  to two and a half meters wide   there's a bit indiana jones in here we're  just gonna chop them off with a machete   just tidy them up and we'll just use them just  as a little sort of a bit of a cover machete   so yeah he's a bit um a bit brutal looking  but uh always good fun for the gardeners   so if you want to hold on to this step yeah um  i'm just going to take it off down here okay uh   like so so do you want to have a go chopping that  one you see this is the exciting bit look at that   watching legs oh chop it off make it  tidy right how many more can we do   i'm on a roll come on let's have this one off there we go i think it's a  fantastic job gunner a chopper believe it or not by next year  these huge plants will have grown   right back again absolutely amazing  to be able to chop it from underneath   thanks so much clum well thank you  for your help let's have a wander the gunnera valley at tribal  might look like a crazy jungle   but it's as carefully cultivated  as the rest of the garden the balmy cornish climate and fantastic soil  make for great growing conditions but you do   have to keep on top of the pruning and weeding  or things can get quickly out of hand [Music] just up the coast from trevor  is the ancient harbour of penryn   on the edge of the town there's an area  fields and woodlands that should be great for   everyone to enjoy but over the years it's become  unloved overgrown and a bit of a dumping ground   a group of locals have given up their free  time to tidy this community space [Music]   we've got lots of jobs to do today pip colton  bonds is the driving force behind the plans to   transform the wilderness into a green wonderland  the ultimate aim is to keep it clean usable and   a lovely place for anyone to come and visit who  wouldn't want to walk out their front door and   listen to the birds have a game of football with  the kids and just generally relax today pip and   her team are going to be battling the brambles  and clearing the corner of the woodland and river   by the end of today if we can have this area clear  it's a usable space then i think that'll be a   day's work well done really some of the volunteers  remember playing around here as youngsters   it used to be full of children playing messing  around just being children basically and having   lots and lots of fun and that's what we want  for everybody else in this our community   and getting stuck into the cleanup today are  barnaby and his dad i come down with my friends   the dens we play hide and seek if we  clear up more maybe more people could   come and visit and see what the wildlife  is here the woods are not just a place   to learn about nature underneath a layer of  leaves that are uncovering the town's history   i think that's i think that's a tile mosaic that  it's you know what i reckon that's the bottom   part of the swimming pool or a paddling pool  that used to be here have i done good i mean whatever it turns out to be someone once  cared enough about the woods to build is here   with look in years to come the locals  will still appreciate this place   just as much it's a big project it's not going  to happen overnight and we all appreciate that we all work we all give up our time so it's a  long project but we will get there we will we're   all determined it's fantastic what the gang  has achieved in just one day [Music] i don't   think it will be long before the sound of kids  having fun rings around these fields once again [Music]   imagine what it'd be like to grow up with trebor  as your own personal playground that's marcus's   story when he was a child his father was  the head gardener here but unlike today   the garden wasn't open to the public back then  it was a private garden it was a private house   so consequently it was a secret that was shared by  very few people i was one of them in the eyes of a   seven-year-old boy it was a paradise and day after  day i would entertain myself by running around   wildly looking at the wildlife and sitting on  the beach throwing stones doesn't get better when   you're seven marcus left cornwall when he grew  up but returned after retiring he decided to seek   out the place he remembered from childhood and now  works here one day a week as a volunteer gardener   there may be a better place in the world  somewhere but if there is i've never been to it hi marcus hello christie nice to meet you nice  to meet you too so describe the atmosphere paint   a picture of a seven-year-old racing around  trevor well i i can only sort of describe it   as as unfettered fun because if you imagine the  art the mind of a seven-year-old all of this can   be anything you want at any time what was it to  you it was a a a hiding place it was a fortress   it was a castle it was all sorts of things what  about as an adult uh as an adult uh i obviously   have chosen to volunteer here and what uh the  garden gives to me now is not only an opportunity   to relive those memories of childhood but also to  do something practical towards it the time that   i spent actually uh growing up here has obviously  imprinted my heart with triba and so consequently   it is a joy to actually put something back  and what do you actually do as a volunteer   i actually enjoy speaking with people  the visitors to triba because i'm always   absolutely uh amazed to hear their comments  everybody that you speak to just can't believe   anything about it though it's all too lovely and  it's it's just spectacular to actually see them   uh as they enjoy the garden if you  were to describe it and the atmosphere   what would you say about this garden i would say  that this view down the valley takes some beating   in comparison to anything else the world has to  offer if you can imagine the shape of the valley   lends itself perfectly to noise and it's uh sort  of surrounds you it's a bit like when you hear on   the television of uh being in the jungle where  you've got sounds all around you uh it's that   sort of experience it's entirely encapsulating i  think you're a remarkably lucky chap you know well   i i must say that i have to agree with you on that  uh it was a childhood unlike many others i guess   quite magical i think we best get some  gardening done i think so too [Music]   at the very end of tribal gardens marcus's  beloved valley opens out into the halford river   the estuary and the sea it's a peaceful place  down here today with just the lapping of the river   and the coals of the sea birds  disturbing the tranquility [Music]   but 70 years ago the beach echoed  to a very different soundtrack   although it's 200 miles from the coast to  normandy in 1944 trebar played its part in   the events of d-day sylvia was just  a child when the yanks came to town   when the troops came through the village the noise  was the main thing coming through in the daytime   and several ladies they took out cups of tea to  the centrist that was standing by the roadside   and they were told to go back indoors and not  have anything to do with any of the troops at all in may 1943 more than 7 000 soldiers  from the 29th u.s infantry division   arrived in cornwall to prepare for  operation overlord the invasion of france   the covert tribal had been  carefully chosen for the embarkation   the riverbed dropped sharply away just off  the beach meaning boats can get close in   the american troops set about widening the road  down to the shore laying down hard standing and   building jetties in readiness for leaving  for france all onto sylvia's curious eyes   they were building a pier at triba beach and one  day we were sitting we were playing on the beach   and suddenly these airplanes swooped up the river  and started well we thought they were fireworks   but apparently they were shooting at the men  that were building the pier we thought it was   very exciting and we were most upset when our  parents came and shouted for us to come indoors   the troops spent a year preparing  the site and training for d-day   and sylvia and her friends found  themselves with a new playground to explore   well the soldiers that they did camp at bosville  crossroads under the trees and so children   used to go and wander around the camps and the  soldiers were very kind that they would give us   chewing gum and sweets and for us girls sounds  funny but they would give us thick curt wool   and knitting needles because we didn't have  woolen knitting needles during the war so   trying to learn to knit when you were a child  was wonderful devil but they were very kind but on the 1st of june 1944 as swiftly as their  derived the soldiers were gone suddenly one day   one morning we woke up and there was  nothing nothing at all on on on the river   it was as quiet as a male pond no sound it  was very eerie just as if you would imagined it the men of the 29th infantry division  joined the assault on omaha beach in normandy by the end of d-day the sixth of june   over two and a half thousand americans  laid dead on that beach alone there's now a memorial on the shore at tree  bar to the men who gave their lives that day   and sylvia will never forget how a  peaceful stretch of cornish river   played such an important part in british history we thought it would never happen down here  because we were so far away from france down here   we thought it was just a practice run we had no  idea that it was the real thing until afterwards [Music] 20 miles from trevor as the  balloon flies there's another   connection to normandy here in cornwall [Music] after the norman conquest in 1066 the  island of saint michael's mount was   given to the french monastery of mont saint-michel the monks built a prairie on top and for  centuries it was a place of pilgrimage the monks are long gone but save markle's  mounties to the thriving island community now the 30 permanent residents welcome  over a quarter of a million visitors a year most of them come to see the fairytale castle  but then discover the wonderful gardens   exotic species flourish here even though  they're clinging to a piece of granite   lashed by the atlantic winds [Music]   assistant head gardener darren little has  long called this corner of cornwall home so you're a local lad darren but what brought  you to the mount my parents lived on the island   so i was sort of brought and brought up  on the island from obviously a very young   age but what was it like as a youngster um  brilliant really i mean you've got all the   sea around you you've got a lot of activities  you've got your canoeing you're kayaking you're   sailing you're swimming you're fishing and  i've got young children and they're sort of   following my footsteps if you like and sort of  doing what i used to do as a child over here   after growing up on the mount  and working here since 2000   darren knobs the garden better than anyone the  island itself is made up of three sort of main   areas we've got the northern side of the island  which is all your sort of heavier evergreen shrub   planting we've got the southeastern side of the  island which we call our sub-tropical gardens   yeah then we've got the western side of the  island which is more sort of barren cliff faces   and rocky outcrops with just sort of coastal past  running through so what are the challenges um it's   it is sort of garning on the edge we're open sort  of the elements with the salt spray coming up onto   the gardens we work with weather conditions so if  it's a howling northerly wind we can work on the   southern side of the island if we got extreme  temperatures in the gardens because they get   very hot yeah we can work in the shade on the  northern side of the island we try and push our   boundaries and grow a lot of things that other  people can't grow within the gardens [Music]   today darren and his team are going to be putting  in some plants which are particularly suited to   these coastal conditions some  wonderful succulents [Music] succulents form a huge group of plants they can be  big like the agaves or ground hugging like these   echeverias they do best in hot dry conditions and  conserve water in their thick fleshy leaves or   stems many don't need much soil to grow and  will thrive in cracks and crevices [Music]   if you don't have the right conditions to grow  them outside they also make great house plants looking at say michael's mount you'd think  the succulents have sprung up naturally   in fact they've been carefully planned and  planted as the rest of the castle gardens   but some of these cliffs are over 25 meters high   every couple of months darren and his team  need to check for loose rocks and to plant   up new specimens when i offered help i  knew i'd have to be ready for anything   it's not too far left i think you'll be fine  once you get over the edge give it a go [Music]   he's oh the things gardeners have  to do to make a garden grow   so watch how you're going okay you're happy  yeah let some tension come onto that right and   you'll feel nice and secure then keep  going keep going [Music] so just walk   down the front just walk down the cliff face  now now you're safe you're a star well done this might seem crazy but it's all part  of a great master plan for the mount   the garden's what we call going vertical we've  always concentrated on the gardens itself but   we've got all these unique cliff faces but you  could have millions of plants we could and we   probably will and it would be fascinating to  come back in say 10 years time to just see how   many different species you've got growing yes  well even in five years time hopefully yeah blimey i'd best get on and do my bait so i've got a nice little planting pocket  there well quite a big you know it's   it's as big as me this so let's get something in  there can i just pass you the troll back before we   drop this one's uh eony and belle sammy fairy all  right great look at that oh let's give this a new   arm all right get in there little look at that she  looks like she's been there for years there we go   look at that lovely fantastic right i mean this  is amazing i've never done this before they're   certainly not planted up you know the side of a  wall off cliff face really isn't it i'm gonna put   that in there because there we go they're lovely  and then nice look going in yeah right there we go that looks quite pretty actually it does and  you'll hear me sure once these obviously get a   lot larger and they stand out against the cliff  face they'll look lovely you know there was a   natural granite behind and  the the very dark purple   i'm glad i have the guts to do this because i mean  the view is just too pleasing lovely isn't it you   can't get a better office than this if you like  this is my fault first time i've abseiled so this   is quite something quite chuffed and i'll be able  to mark this spot shall i be a rebel and put cw   cw i think we should go down a bit descend and  i think it's cup of tea times you know do you   know i think that sounds good brew time lovely  let's drop out of here i think i've earned a   drink after spending an afternoon abseiling but i  really hope i get the opportunity to do this again just down the coast from st michael's mount  is another stunning cliff top creation this   is the spectacular minute theater every season  the minax stages 16 different productions   a new one every week throughout the summer the theater is now one of the top  tourist attractions in the south west   but the story of its creation  is as remarkable as its setting it was the life work of one extraordinary woman  rowena cade who built it entirely by hand with the   help of her faithful gardeners rowena was born in  1893 to a family who loved dressing up and putting   on plays she moved to cornwall with a mother after  her father died she bought this headland and built   her home here [Music] rowena was rich enough not  to have to work but she needed something to do   her life changed in 1931 when she built a cliff  top stage for the local amateur dramatics group   to use for a production of the tempest zoe kerno first came to work at the minute as  a student and is now the general manager she   takes up rowena's story it would have been really  hard physical work to create what was essentially   a fairly wild cliff gully into the flat stage  area and the roughly terrace seating which   was the precursor of what we now see today they  would have been moving granite around they would   have been carrying wheelbarrow fulls of rock  to filling gullies and to level off surfaces   apparently the only the only thing they managed  to lose was one wheelbarrow over down into the sea   there was an article in the times  at the time about the production   and i think all of that together led rowena  to think about actually this could actually   be something that we could do try again  next year and going forward into the future over the next 60 years rowena put all her time  effort and her own money into a theater she even   salvaged tin mills that had been washed up on the  beach and carried them up the cliff single-handed it's just such an unusual place people  come and look at this site and they're   they they just can't believe that  this was actually you know built   financed effectively by just the one determined  lady rowena cade [Music] this is the fifth summer   that actor and storyteller craig johnson  has brought a show to the minak you have   local people but you always have people on  holiday and and from all different countries so   you've got this brilliant mixed audience of  ages for a lot of them you can see in their   faces they've never seen anything like this before  so it's a really amazing place i think to come to   for these kids a trip to the midnight could  inspire a lifetime's love of the theatre   it's all down to the life's work of  one single-minded woman rowena cade nearly the end of my time in cornwall and  i've come back to tree bar to have a last   stroll through the garden with head  gardener darren and volunteer marcus marcus spent many happy years here as  a child when trebor was a private host   his dad was the head gardener who worked so hard  to create one of my favorite parts of the garden   marcus your dad planted these amazing hydrangeas  are you proud of that i'm very proud of that   each and every time that i walk down the valley  i'm reminded of that uh particular time and i can   even now in my eyes i see him actually planting  some of these hydrangeas in these very spots you left cornwall and you came back but what  does cornwall really mean to you cornwall uh   is is my home and i have traveled elsewhere i've  spent time in london and in devon but cornwall has   always seemed like home to me and never more so  than now really darren what i want to know is how   are you going to move the garden forward how are  you going to use it are you going to develop it   i think it's always very important to remember  that the garden is there for the visitors so it's   important to sort of develop different themes  and also doing more with things like theater   we've just built a new amphitheatre and we're  doing various different performances that we'll   do throughout the year and we can have some of the  trees lit up we can do sort of walks in the autumn   to see the autumn color so seeing the garden  in a different night i think is always great   and obviously sound in the garden is always such a  major feature and highlighting your senses i think   both darren and marcus have reminded me how  important it is to enjoy a garden with your   ears as well as your eyes whether it's water  tumbling over a cascade wind whispering through   the leaves or the callings of birdsong in a  garden we're surrounded by nature's symphony   and i want to create a lasting musical memory  for the people i've met here at tree bar   to help me out i've been in touch with  a very special group of cornish men   these are the singers from the traverva male voice  choir one of the oldest and best in the county   and you know we're going to start with warm up  don't you oh yeah yeah right just as in wales the   cornish choirs have links with the mining industry  but here they were digging for tin not coal tin was first found in  cornwall rivers 2000 years ago   by the 19th century the mines stretched  deep underground and cornwall became the   biggest producer of tin in the world and  each mine had its own male voice choir the tin seams eventually gave out  and the last team mine closed in 1998   but the choirs have carried  on their musical traditions   and today they attract members of  all ages and from all walks of life   norman hyde the longest standing member knows  why a song underground was so important for the   original founders of the choir the miners i mean  to get in the mine they would get in the lift and   have to go down hundreds and hundreds of feet  and of course they would start singing as they   went down more or less to well cheer yourself  up because it wasn't a good way to live [Music]   i mean there were like rats and holes down there  to start it's not like today's mining where you   win a place that's 10 foot high down there  then they were there on their hands and knees   and i think that music and singing together  just carved them through the hard part of life   the choir is rehearsing one of  the most famous cornish songs   the white rose and it's one that  means a lot to norman [Music]   one verse starts the first time i met you my  darling well that was the first thing when i   first met my wife when i was on leave and we fell  in love then and we were married for 65 years [Music] and that was our favorite piece   i was unfortunate to lose my wife five years ago  and then within four months i lost my daughter   and if i hadn't been for this choir i don't think  i would have been here now you know it was such a   jolt but i got so many good nates in the choir  that they helped me through [Music] [Applause]   belonging to the choir isn't just about  keeping the traditions alive for the sake of it   it's about friendship community  and creating great memories [Music] [Applause] as a thank you to the people who have shared  their memories and their gardens with me   i've arranged a very special command performance   i'm proud as punched that the choirs agreed to  join me here at tree bar and norman celebrated   a very special anniversary it actually  is 68 years today as i joined the choir so a long time ago   the choir has been creating wonderful harmonies  since 1936 but this is the first time in their   history that they've sung at tree bar and  i hope they're happy with the location [Music]   as it's such a special occasion i've invited  friends and family of the choir as well as the   staff from tree bar to join us and my guest  of honor is marcus whose dad was responsible   for the splendor of this hydrangea valley i'll  had a most amazing day with you and it's been   very special to share time with you but there's  one thing that's come through as a common thread   and that's the atmosphere of trevor not just  the plants and the stories and the magnificence   of the site but the fact that you both appreciate  the magic of this garden and tonight i hope you're   going to enjoy a very special moment  so it's over to you sir and the choir [Music] [Applause] [Music] so fair as it grows that reminds me of you [Music] the  first time i met you my darling   your face was as bread as a rose  but now your deface was from payload [Music] white rose [Music] [Music] [Music] they [Music] [Applause]   gentlemen thank you very much indeed you've not  just made my day but you've made my year thank   you very much indeed and for me i'd like to thank  you and the choir i visited this garden many times   and i never ever thought i would  have the privilege of hearing   a cornish choir singing the best  cornish garden so thank you both   and thank you the choir for a magical experience  for me as well thank you all very much [Music] [Music]   during my trip to cornwall it's been a joy to  visit two of my favorite places in the world triba   and st michael's mount and it was a privilege to  share the memories of the people i met along the   way after experiencing the unforgettable choir  performance i can leave with a song in my heart [Music] you
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Channel: Banijay Home and Garden
Views: 4,109
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Keywords: aerial discovery, bird's eye perspective, british horticulture, british landscapes, christine walkden, cornwall, cornwall gardens, countryside wonders, cultural landscape, environmental exploration, gardening, gardens from above, greenery from the sky, horticultural exploration, horticulture journey, patchwork fields, the minack theatre, treasured gardens, trebah garden
Id: JrCqyPEWndU
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Length: 44min 24sec (2664 seconds)
Published: Wed Mar 23 2022
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