Garden of Remembrance – Wend & Wild https://wendandwild.org.uk Tending Land and Soul Sat, 30 Aug 2025 21:10:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 An Unknown Soldier https://wendandwild.org.uk/an-unknown-soldier/ Thu, 14 Aug 2025 08:33:00 +0000 https://wendandwild.org.uk/?p=1121

If you’ve visited the Remembrance Garden recently, you may have noticed that our Unknown Soldier had been standing a little wonky. Time, weather, and a worn post had left him leaning, his stance less certain than when he first arrived. ]]>

If you’ve visited the Remembrance Garden recently, you may have noticed that our Unknown Soldier had been standing a little wonky. Time, weather, and a worn post had left him leaning, his stance less certain than when he first arrived. Over the past week, we’ve given him a gentle wash and polish, and replaced the rotten post that had been struggling to hold him up with two sturdy new ones. He’s now standing straighter and prouder, if a little taller, ready to weather a few more seasons. In time, we’ll look to replace him, as the years and weather have begun to leave their mark and are beginning to show his age.

Our soldier is one of the Royal British Legion’s commemorative silhouettes, life-size, weather-resistant, and created as a striking tribute to those who served and never came home. These figures have been placed in gardens, churchyards, and public spaces across the UK, quietly holding their place in our landscapes and reminding us of the human cost of war.

Here in Whittington, our Unknown Soldier stands within the Remembrance Garden – a space for reflection and gratitude, now cared for by a small group of local volunteers. We have only recently begun tending this place, but already it has become a garden where we nurture not only plants, but also the symbols and stories of those who served and sacrificed.

Tomorrow, 15th August 2025, marks the 80th anniversary of Victory over Japan (VJ) Day, when Japan announced its surrender, bringing the Second World War to an end. For many in the UK, it brought relief and homecoming. For others, the day is bound up with loss, grief, and the memory of battles far from home. It is also impossible to mark VJ Day without acknowledging the devastating atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki just days earlier, acts that hastened the war’s conclusion but caused unimaginable suffering. The history is complex, and its moral weight is not easy to reconcile.

For me, VJ Day is also personal. My grandfather was aboard HMS Cornwall when it was sunk by Japanese forces in 1942. Many lost their lives that day, and the flowers I will lay tomorrow are for him, for them, and for those whose names we do not know. The flowers will be red and white, the colours of remembrance poppies, but also the colours of the Japanese flag. They are a small gesture to honour the lives lost on both sides, and to recognise the shared hope that such conflicts never happen again.

We are fortunate here in Whittington. The Remembrance Garden contains no fresh graves, no new names to carve. Our work is the tending of memory – cleaning, straightening, planting, and keeping these stories alive for future generations. It is a privilege to stand in peace among the flowers, to care for an Unknown Soldier who represents so many, and to remember the cost of the peace we enjoy.

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A Quiet Beginning https://wendandwild.org.uk/a-quiet-beginning/ Wed, 23 Jul 2025 19:08:45 +0000 https://wendandwild.org.uk/?p=828

Sometimes ideas start quietly, with the feeling that something matters even if you’re not quite sure why yet. After staying in long past lockdown, I found myself looking for somewhere to volunteer. I needed something to ease me gently out of the house again.]]>

Sometimes ideas start quietly, with the feeling that something matters even if you’re not quite sure why yet.

After staying in long past lockdown, I found myself looking for somewhere to volunteer. I needed something to ease me gently out of the house and away from my very comfortable remote working. During those long days, I’d started growing cut flowers from seed through a “Grow to Give” Facebook group. I began to wonder if I could share some of the extra plants I was raising, to bring a little colour and feed the pollinators in a local green space.

I thought about the Garden of Remembrance, and the vast border that sat beneath weed suppression fabric and wood chips. It’s a peaceful and beautiful place but when you look more closely, you begin to notice its edges. Weathered benches. Weeds pushing through. Gravestones laid flat, their inscriptions fading. A space that seemed to be asking to be tended with more care.

It’s a peaceful and beautiful place — but when you look more closely, you begin to notice its edges

I asked if there was a local group of volunteers working there. There had been, at different times, but none were active now. I was disappointed, and then curious. Who was going to be looking after it now?

That was the beginning.

It wasn’t straightforward figuring out who to ask or how to begin. But some serendipity, and perhaps a touch of kismet, led me to establish Wend & Wild as a community interest company, nudged along by a quiet desire to keep growing more plants than my own garden borders could contain.

And so here we are some months later – with permission from Shropshire Council, the support of Whittington Parish Council, and a risk assessment, insurance, and a brand new (still empty) accident book, getting ready to begin.

This is the very start of our story in the Garden of Remembrance.
Welcome and thank you for reading. We’ll share more as the seasons unfold.

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