Chédigny

By Yvonne Michie Horn
This item appears on page 55 of the October 2015 issue.
Brigitte Liberéau and Alain Biard led me on a tour of Chédigny. Photos by Yvonne Michie Horn

France’s Loire Valley is known as the “Garden of France,” to which those who have admired the landscaping surrounding its fabulous châteaux would readily agree. This month’s “Garden Path” column, however, along with three articles to follow (every other month), wanders off the well-trod châteaux route on a discovery tour to four unique gardens of the Loire. Here is the first in the series. — YMH

 

Perhaps I wasn’t on the right road, even though my GPS assured me it was so. Rolling hills with fields of yellow rapeseed and green grains stretched on either side of the one-way lane, with nary a church steeple in sight. 

I’d left the Loire River behind an hour before, heading east on my way to a dot on the map. Chédigny. 

Dot on the map it might be, but in France’s garden world, the village of Chédigny, population 537, is a star. 

More than 4,000 towns and villages throughout France are designated Villes et Villages Fleuris (Towns and Villages of Flowers), officially recognized for enriching the lives of residents and visitors via horticultural and other beautification efforts. Ratings vary between one and four “flowers.” In 2012, Chédigny became one of a small handful awarded “four flowers.” 

In addition, some 300 French gardens, privately owned and public, carry the prestigious Jardin Remarquable (Remarkable Garden) signs at their entrances. In a unique move by the Ministry of Culture and Communication, which oversees the program, in 2013 the entire village of Chédigny was deemed a Jardin Remarquable, placing the tiny village squarely in the heady company of such world-famous gardens as those surrounding the châteaux of Chenonceau and Villandry. 

A vision of roses

My GPS alerted me that Chédigny was around the next bend. I should be on time for the 10 o’clock group tour of the village. Led by volunteer “passionate gardeners,” it would be the first of the tours scheduled on the second Friday of each month, which would begin this year, 2015, in April and continue through September.

Alain Biard and Brigitte Libéreau, “passionate gardener” leaders for this day’s tour, awaited in the square in front of the 13th-century village church, Saint Pierre-ès- Liens. With my arrival, the group was complete. A group of one! Three, actually, counting Alain and Brigitte. 

Heritage roses labeled with the date of their introduction to Chédigny.<br />

Off we went, after first admiring the spring-in-full-bloom borders brightening Saint Pierre-ès-Liens’ exterior gray-stone gloom. As the three of us began to walk and talk — two sharing a smattering of English (Brigitte and Alain) and one with French fluency a bit of a stretch (me) — the universal language of plants and flowers, accompanied by pantomime and plenty of laughter, made short shrift of any linguistic barrier concern. 

Along the way, I learned that the transformation of Chédigny began in 1998 when the, then, town mayor, Pierre Louault, felt Chédigny could use sprucing up. Certainly, the bones of something better were there — a winding main street lined with attractive residences and small businesses, a waterway cutting through, not to mention the town’s 13th-century church centerpiece. 

With all that, its attractiveness and livability had diminished through the years, with noisy through traffic and parked vehicles lining streets already marred by a festooning of overhead power lines. 

To Mayor Louault, an avid home gardener with a special interest in roses, “sprucing up” meant roses. He turned to André Eve, a Loire Valley rose grower and breeder specializing in the preservation of ancient roses, for assistance. 

It took more than a bit of doing to enlist the cooperation of the village. Streets and sidewalks would have to be torn up to provide planting strips and bury utility lines, all of which would mean digging deep into the town’s pocketbook. Somehow, Mayor Loualt’s plan prevailed. 

Prelude to the show

The planting of 700 rosebushes went underway, espaliered against building walls, trellised to cross the waterway in rose-arched canopies, planted in front of the town hall, bookstore and artisan shops… .

Today, the number of roses in the tiny village has expanded to more than 800, representing 270 tried-and-true heritage varieties, each carefully labeled as to the year of its introduction into the rosario world.

Chédigny’s main street. The entire village has been designated a “Remarkable Garden.”

But my visit was in early April, with roses in bloom weeks away, hence the tour group of one. On the tour Fridays to come, entire garden clubs, individual rose aficionados, photographers, and those simply checking enchanting villages off their travel list would pack Saint Pierre-ès-Liens’ square. 

While it would have been nice to see Chédigny in its full-rose glory, Chédigny in April took my breath away. Throughout the village there were daffodils and tulips galore; an array of spring annuals, among them pansies, violas and candytuft, and the first showing of the more than 3,000 perennials planted to keep company later with the hundreds of roses. Cherry, apple and pear trees billowed with bloom. 

As the villagers watched their town emerge from duckling to swan, they began to follow suit in their home gardens, making it a delight to peek through garden gates and over picket fences. 

Looking ahead

I bid good-bye to Alain and Brigitte where we’d met two hours before, in front of Saint Pierre-ès-Liens, promising to return someday, some year, to see the village’s 800-plus rosebushes in full flower. Perhaps. Meanwhile, April in Chédigny, Jardin Remarquable, would remain quite remarkably memorable among my “Garden Path” wanderings. 

Chédigny is located 31 kilometers from Tours, 12 kilometers from Loches, in the heart of the Touraine district.

From April through September, tours are scheduled on the second Friday of each month — 6 (near $6.50). Reserve via the website, www.chedigny.fr (in French only).

The sleepy little town really comes to life each year during the last weekend in May for the Fetes des Roses. See the website for details.    F

Featured next in this 4-part series on Loire Valley gardens is Leonardo da Vinci Park at Château du Clos Lucé in Amboise (to appear two months from now).

Email Yvonne Michie Horn at yhorn@sonic.net. Also visit www.the travelinggardener.com.