'Turf wars' rage between the sexes
08/06/2008
Look beyond the tranquil scene of the gently buzzing lawnmower and the delicate snipping of the secateurs and you’ll see a silent battle of the sexes being waged across the nation’s gardens.
Far from being a bed of roses, gardening is causing a great divide between couples up and down the country - according to a survey by The National Gardens Scheme (NGS). Almost half of those questioned blame the problem on men and women’s very different gardening styles, with 78 per cent of these saying that this has caused friction or led to arguments.
Generally, men prefer formal gardens, with straight paths and tidy edges, while women like to create more romantic spaces with winding paths and informal planting. Women also prefer to grow flowers - whereas the lawn seems to be the men’s favourite domain.
A popular solution to avoiding conflict is creating special areas where each person can show off their individual style - but woe betide the partner who oversteps their boundary, as a third of respondents said they do not allow their other half to trespass!
But even this compromise doesn't always work, as many couples have admitted that they have tried to secretly “steal” a slice of their partner’s area - for example, by making borders wider to “pinch” some of the lawn - only to find it is later “grabbed” back elsewhere. One in ten have even resorted to trying to ‘kill off’ one of their partner’s plants. Favourite 'sabotage' tactics are pruning a little too firmly or planting a very large plant too near - and women are the worst culprits.
The survey also found that while Alan Titchmarsh, Monty Don and Joe Swift may dominate the TV gardening programmes, it’s the women who are the real boss and “plants person” in the garden, although the men still look after the DIY jobs and, of course, their last refuge, the garden shed.
John and Valerie Collins, who will be opening their garden in Thrumpton, Nottinghamshire, for the first time with the NGS this weekend have split their garden in two with their house as the boundary line. Valerie, who looks after the back garden, said: “People used to ask me what John had planned for the front but I didn’t know because he didn’t tell me. I’m allowed into John’s garden so rarely that when I was weeding there one day, a local farmer who spotted me insisted I was trespassing! We don’t share any plants, apart from an ornamental grass - and I stole that from him anyway.”
Valerie Woolcott, who also opens her garden in Buckland Stead, Hampshire, with the NGS, said: “My husband and I have never seen eye-to-eye garden wise and have very different gardening styles. We describe our plot as two gardens in one: His and Hers divided by a neutral zone.”
Garden designer and NGS opener Helen Riches, from Essex, commented: “In my experience the lawn is the biggest bone of contention. Often when the woman leaves the room to make the tea, the man will lean over and say conspiratorially, ‘You won’t make the lawn any smaller, will you?’
“When I ask my husband why the plant ‘grass’ is better than any other plant species, he says it is the pleasure he gets from cutting it that is important to him - he likes to count the number of loads he gets to dump on the grass compost heap each mowing! Despite my qualifications as a garden designer and writer, he still sulks for several days each time I ‘steal’ a bit of lawn to make into a planting area.”
Fortunately, all this rivalry is in a very good cause. The NGS opens 3,600 gardens to the public (most of them private) raising around £2 million a year for Macmillan Cancer Support, Marie Curie Cancer Care, Help the Hospices, Crossroads – Caring for Carers and other charities. So whatever the horticultural balance of power, you can be sure that you will see some fabulous examples of all types of planting by visiting one of the gardens in the NGS’s famous Yellow Book.
Garden opening times and prices can also be found on their website.

