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Grow Like Grandad
Home » About the Editor – Matt Peskett (@GrowLikeGrandad)
Jack & George Cook, Tilgate

About the Editor – Matt Peskett (@GrowLikeGrandad)

Gardening Childhood

No not this Jack and Vera!

As a small boy I would sometimes stay in Bexhill-on-Sea with my maternal grandparents Jack and Vera (yes really…) and whilst there on warm summer evenings I’d help my Grandad to water his vegetable patch. It wasn’t a very big patch because by then he had retired from gardening, but there was enough room for growing lettuce and beetroot and his greenhouse of tomatoes and cucumbers. I recall that a crudely fashioned metallic cat with flaking black paint hung on an old string to keep the birds off as it chimed in the wind. Honestly I wasn’t a big fan of salad for dinner on blue willow pattern plates in those days (what child is?!) but I have fond memories of the time spent with my Grandad outside and now, when I am in the garden or at the allotment, I can feel his spirit with me.

At home I was fortunate enough to have been given a small area of the garden to grow my own vegetables; mainly radishes and swedes although I do recall a great deal of delight in growing marigolds from seeds I had plucked and saved in plastic bags the year before. I also became an expert at digging large trenches into which I would bury the waste from our rabbit hutches. I imagine I was about nine years old, as I tinkered away my father would be busy in some area of the garden digging over a bed – he taught me how to use a fork, and how not to put it through your own foot (he knew somebody once… and somebody who fell into a glass cold frame, and somebody who fell into a water butt…). I occasionally drew the odd garden design and read the odd book about gardening but then I became a stroppy teenager and I forgot about horticulture and turned to computer programming, CB radio and girls for the next twenty years.


A Return to Gardening

My son Jake, learning how to use his first fork

It wasn’t until I had my own children in 2007 and found myself trapped at home with small people needing nappy changes, that I rediscovered gardening as an easy escape. I honestly have to say gardening was an easy thing to fall back into without having to arrange a babysitter. I definitely seem to have green fingers because of those early years of childhood training and it wasn’t long before my wife (who I refer to as MrsGrow on Twitter) organised an allotment for me as a surprise. To her displeasure it also wasn’t long before MrsGrow became an allotment widow – it was to be expected when taking on a hugely overgrown plot because I’m the kind of person who throws themselves 100% into a passion and doesn’t come up for air.


Gardening in My Genes

My Grandad: Jack Cook, Head Gardener at Broadfield, Crawley, West Sussex

Like so many of us, as we approach middle age we begin to take a keener interest in our past, our ancestors, where we came from and where we are going to. As I look more widely into the careers of my maternal Grandad (Jack – see right) and his father (my Great Grandfather George Cook – see photo below right) I can’t help but think that there must be a genetic pull towards horticulture for me as I am most at home with grubby finger nails, a garden fork and a robin following me around for company. Jack was Head Gardener at the Broadfield Estate in Crawley, West Sussex and George was Head Gardener at the Tilgate Estate (now on the opposite side of the A23) in Crawley. In 1922 George worked for John Ashburner Nix at Tilgate and they won the RHS Gordon Lennox Cup (best exhibit of fruit shown by an amateur at the autumn Fruit & Vegetable Show). 

As you can imagine, the Twitter and blog name ‘Grow Like Grandad‘ is something of an homage to them both. I am also told that my paternal grandfather also had an allotment, sadly he passed away when I was very young so I didn’t really get to know him or his gardening side, but I’m told he grew a mean Dahlia.

My Great Grandad: George Cook, Head Gardener, Tilgate, Crawley, West Sussex

There have been one or two strange coincidences in my life connected to Jack and George, I am a firm believer that coincidences are the universe’s way of telling us to take note. Firstly after a coincidental Yahoo chat meeting I moved down from Stevenage, Hertfordshire to be with MrsGrow in Dorking – a stone’s throw from Crawley. Consequently I have worked twice for a publishing company in offices based on top of the old Broadfield estate (where my Grandad would have grown strawberries). Secondly I have lived in Westcott (near Dorking) for 10 years only to recently discover that George Cook spent his final years here in a Perennial care home (he was 108 years old when he died, England’s oldest man at the time – so gardening must be good for you!). I definitely feel my ancestors around me.


So what next for me?

Is gardening just a hobby or is there more to be done? In 2016 I spent 3-4 months suffering with severe anxiety, it was quite debilitating and caused me to stop most things and reflect on my daily routine. It turns out that sitting in front of a computer building websites and getting people listed in Google all day and night hadn’t actually been making me very happy but I was too busy to notice…

Tweeting as Monty Don’s dog Nigel @montysdognigel lead me further into horticulture and that has truly awakened something of a gardening beast. Consequently these days I am Chairman of the Dorking Allotment Holders Association (with three half plots) and am rapidly getting through a landscape gardening project at home (in the Italian style).

My Garden BEFORE Landscaping…

Garden Before A
Garden Before B

My Garden AFTER Landscaping…

April 2017
May 2017
June 2017
July
July 2017
August 2017

The Allotment I ‘Inherited’…

Allotment - New Strimmed
Allotment 2014 A
Allotment - Strimmed
Allotment 2014 B

The Allotment I’ve Cultivated…

My allotment in 2017
My allotment in 2017

growlikegrandad

Chair of #Dorking Allotment Assoc and Westcott Gardeners' Club | Grower of 677lbs pumpkins | 27 yrs in digital | Surviving Hodgkin Lymphoma

New chapter, new book. #hodgkinlymphoma New chapter, new book.
#hodgkinlymphoma
First non-PET appointment at Royal Marsden, offici First non-PET appointment at Royal Marsden, officially a patient today. Nice building, reminds me of the old Nature.com offices on Crinan Street.
Started on my spring bulbs. Early for me but plann Started on my spring bulbs. Early for me but planning ahead as I have December in hospital. Some Apricot Beauty tulips and Jetfire Daffs. Also repotted some big pots of generic daffodils using old tomato bag compost mixed and topped with stable manure.
#gardening
Autumn decoration. #gourds #allotment Autumn decoration.
#gourds #allotment
More dahlias rescued from the rain and into vases. More dahlias rescued from the rain and into vases.
#dahliaseason
Some of my dahlias woke up again. World's smallest Some of my dahlias woke up again. World's smallest sunflowers too 😂 
#dahlias
Bought a couple of new roses today. Both 'Silver A Bought a couple of new roses today. Both 'Silver Anniversary', lovely fragrance. 25% off at Waterperry Gardens. Partly to cheer myself up after dropping eldest off at Birmingham University at 7am 😥
The guys at @kendallcars_ have also been amazing w The guys at @kendallcars_ have also been amazing with the charity giant pumpkin project, gifting me their wonderful 4x4 pickup for the weekend in order to get the big pumpkin down to @tulleysfarm. Couldn't have done it without them OR @daniel_brown_horseman and Hugh Broom the Dorking farmer.
#lymphomawarenessmonth
#giantpumpkin #Dorking ##surreyhills #pumpkingrower #allotment
Abdul the giant pumpkin has reached his forever ho Abdul the giant pumpkin has reached his forever home at @tulleyspumpkins - now his day job begins entertaining the masses through October and Halloween. Huge thanks to @tulleysfarm for their £500 charity donation to East Surrey hospital cancer fund. 

It's been nice to grow a giant pumpkin despite being on chemotherapy treatment, and find a way to give back. Lymphoma is the most common form of blood cancer and September is #lymphomaawarenessmonth
#tulleysfarm #pumpkingrower #giantpumpkins
Not enough dahlias to merit show entries this autu Not enough dahlias to merit show entries this autumn but a nice bunch for the living room table.
#dahlias
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