PeacefulGarden

"A place where goodbye becomes part of the landscape."
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Spring
March — the first crocuses appear before the frost has fully left the soil

The silver birch stream
2024
“We scattered Margaret's ashes by the stream on a Tuesday morning in November. The garden was very still. My son held my hand. I remember thinking — she would have loved this particular patch of light. That thought has carried me through the months since.”
Robert Calloway
Husband
The wildflower meadow
2023
“Dad had written it in his notebook years before he got ill: 'scatter me somewhere wild, somewhere the bees still come.' PeacefulGarden was exactly that. We came in June when the wildflowers were at their highest. My sister brought his favourite recording of Vaughan Williams. It was — it was right.”
Harriet Osei-Bonsu
Daughter
Summer
July — native wildflowers reach their height along the stream's edge

The hedgerow corner
2025
“My wife and I visited before either of us needed to. We wanted to choose together, while we could still laugh about it. The hedgerow corner near the old stone wall — that's ours now. Knowing it's there has given us both something I didn't expect: a kind of peace with the whole business of getting older.”
Graham & Sylvia Marsh
Pre-planning couple
An invitation
Request a Peaceful Visit
Come and walk the garden at your own pace. There is no obligation, no agenda — only a quiet hour to see if this place feels right.
How it works
Three gentle moments
A quiet walk
You arrive when you are ready — morning, afternoon, whichever feels right. A member of our small team walks alongside you, or leaves you entirely to your own pace. There is no itinerary.
Choosing a place
The stream, the lavender path, the hedgerow corner, the wildflower meadow — families find their spot by feeling, not by plan. We have never had two families choose the same place twice.
The day itself
You choose who comes, what is said, whether there is music or only birdsong. We prepare the ground and step back. Afterwards, a native wildflower seed mix is planted where the ashes rest.
The garden is open every day from dawn until dusk. Dogs are welcome. Children are welcome. Silence is always welcome.
Autumn
October — copper leaves drift down the stream beneath the silver birch

The eastern meadow bank
2024
“Mum always said she wanted to be useful after she was gone — 'feed something,' she'd say. The wildflower seed mix they offered meant part of her is still growing there. I go back in May every year. I bring the grandchildren. They know exactly which patch is Nana.”
Deirdre Flanagan
Daughter
The lavender path
2025
“The staff asked us nothing we weren't ready to answer. There was no form to fill out that day, no transaction to complete. They simply walked with us, pointed things out gently, let us stop where we needed to stop. I've never felt less alone in grief.”
Thomas Nakamura
Son
Winter
January — frost settles on the lavender, the garden resting beneath

"The land remembers everyone who returns to it."
When you are ready
There is no right time to reach out. We are here whenever that moment arrives.