Monty Don

Montagu Denis Wyatt "Monty" Don OBE (born George Montagu Don; 8 July 1955) is a British broadcaster and writer on horticulture who is best known as lead presenter of the BBC gardening television series Gardeners' World since 2003.

Monty Don

OBE
Don in 2007
Born
George Montagu Don

(1955-07-08) 8 July 1955
NationalityBritish
Alma materMagdalene College, Cambridge
OccupationTelevision presenter, gardener, writer
Years active1989–present
TelevisionGardeners' World
Spouse(s)Sarah Erskine (1983–present)
Websitemontydon.com

Born in Germany and raised in England, Don studied at Magdalene College, Cambridge where he met his future wife. They ran a successful costume jewellery business through the 1980s which ended in almost complete bankruptcy. Don made his television debut in 1989 as a regular on This Morning, which led to further presenting work across the decade, including his own shows for BBC Television and Channel 4. Don began his writing career at this time and published his first of over 25 books, in 1990. Between 1994 and 2006, Don wrote a weekly gardening column in The Observer.

In 2003 Don replaced Alan Titchmarsh as the lead presenter of Gardeners' World, only leaving the show in 2008 due to illness before he returned to host from 2011. Since then he has written and produced several garden series of his own; the most recent being Monty Don's American Gardens which was aired in 2020.

Early life and education

George Montagu Don was born on 8 July 1955 in Iserlohn, West Germany.[1] He is the youngest of five children to British parents Denis Thomas Keiller Don, a career soldier stationed in Germany at the time, and Janet Montagu (née Wyatt). He was named after his two Scottish grandfathers, George and Montagu, but his paternal grandfather considered the Montagu absurd, causing his parents to change his birth certificate to Montagu Denis Don. When Don was ten he added his mother's maiden name, becoming Montagu Denis Wyatt Don.[2] Don is a descendant of botanist George Don and the Keiller family, best known as the inventors of Keiller's marmalade.[3][4][5] On his maternal side, he is descended from the Wyatt family of architects.[6] Don had a twin sister who at nineteen, suffered from a broken neck and blindness from a car crash.[3]

When Don was one, the family moved to Hampshire, England.[5] He described his parents as "very strict".[7] He attended three independent schools: Quidhampton School in Basingstoke, followed by Bigshotte School in Wokingham, where at seven, he was asked to leave school for being too boisterous.[5] He then attended Malvern College in Malvern, which he hated,[2] followed by a state comprehensive school, the Vyne School, also in Basingstoke. He failed his A-levels and while studying for retakes at night school, worked on a building site and a pig farm by day. During his childhood he had become an avid gardener and farmer.[5][2] In his late teens, Don spent several months in Aix-en-Provence, France where he worked as a gardener and played rugby in local teams.[8][9] He returned to England, determined to attend Cambridge University out of "sheer bloody-mindedness",[3] and passed the entrance exams. He studied English at Magdalene College,[10][11] during which time he met his future wife Sarah Erskine, a trained jeweller and architect.[5][12][9] Don took up boxing to impress his father, a former heavyweight boxing champion in the army, becoming a Cambridge Half Blue for boxing. He gave up after getting knocked out and suffering a concussion.[10]

Career

Jewellery business

In 1981, Don and Erskine started Monty Don Jewellery, a London-based business that designed, made, and sold costume jewellery. The company became a success and in five years, operated from a shop on Beauchamp Place in Knightsbridge with hundreds of outworkers and had secured as many as 60 outlets across the UK, including Harrods, Harvey Nichols, and Liberty. Among their customers were Boy George, Michael Jackson, and Princess Diana. However, the 1987 stock market crash caused an almost complete bankruptcy as it cut off American sales, their biggest market.[13][14] The situation prompted Don to embark on a career in writing and broadcasting. Reflecting on the experience, he wrote: "We were lambs to the slaughter and we lost everything, [...] we lost our house, our business. We sold every stick of furniture we had at Leominster market". He was unemployed from 1991 to 1993, and spent all of 1992 on the dole.[2][3] Some of their jewellery is kept at the V&A Museum.

Early career

By mid-1989, Don had written several gardening articles and granted writers access to his home garden which was featured in various publications. This increased exposure led to Don writing a gardening column for the Mail on Sunday, a book deal, and an invitation to a screen test for a proposed weekly live gardening segment on the ITV television breakfast show This Morning. Don landed the spot and his first segment aired in October 1989, receiving £100 a show.[15][16] After twenty-six spots on This Morning, Don landed additional television work as presenter on the BBC Television shows Holiday and Tomorrow's World. Though he had some doubts being a presenter, he took the jobs as he felt desperate for work.[15] In November 1999, Channel 4 started to air the gardening series Fork to Fork, in which Don and his wife presented segments on growing and cooking organic vegetables.[17] This was followed by three other series hosted by Don between 1999 and 2003: Real Gardens, Lost Gardens, and Don Roaming.

Gardeners' World

Don presenting at Gardeners' World Live in 2012

In September 2002, the BBC announced Don as the new lead presenter of its long-running series Gardeners' World from 2003, succeeding Alan Titchmarsh.[18] Don is the first self-taught horticulturist presenter in the show's history.[2][19] Don hosted the show until he put his career on hold to recover from his minor stroke in 2008, and the show continued with Toby Buckland filling in as host. During Don's initial stint, viewing figures fell from 5 million to 2 million, this fall being most frequently blamed on the BBC's decision to change the show's format soon after Don's arrival.[20] After viewing figures fell below two million for the first time in 2009,[21] the BBC announced further changes to the programme to entice viewers back.[22] In December 2010, Don announced his return as host for the 2011 series.[23][24] Reaction to the announcement was divided on the programme's blog.[25]

Initially Don filmed episodes of Gardeners' World in Berryfields, a rented garden in Stratford-upon-Avon. When he returned as host in 2011, Don began to present from his own garden, Longmeadow.[26][27] He was frequently seen on screen with his golden retriever Nigel until the dog died in May 2020,[28][29] shortly before his 12th birthday. In 2016, Don introduced viewers to his new golden retriever, Nell.[30] This was followed by the addition of Pattie, a Yorkshire terrier, in April 2020.[31] In 2020, Don signed a contract with the BBC to continue presenting Gardeners' World for three years.[8]

Own series

Don is also known for writing and presenting his own series. In 2005, he setup a 6-acre (2.4 ha) smallholding in Herefordshire so a group of young drug offenders could work the land. The project was documented for the BBC series Growing Out of Trouble, airing in 2006.[2] This was followed by the ambitious BBC series Around the World in 80 Gardens in 2008, where Don visited eighty gardens of a variety of styles worldwide.[32] In 2010, Don presented My Dream Farm, a Channel 4 series which helped people learn to become successful smallholders,[33][34] and Mastercrafts, a BBC series which celebrated six traditional British crafts.[35] Monty Don's Italian Gardens aired on the BBC in 2011,[36] which was followed by Monty Don's French Gardens, in 2013.[37] Later that year, Don presented an episode of Great British Garden Revival. In 2014, Don became the lead presenter for the BBC's flagship Chelsea Flower Show coverage, again replacing Titchmarsh

In 2015, Don presented the four-part BBC series The Secret History of the British Garden, charting the development of British gardens from the 17th to the 20th century.[38] Since 2014, Don has presented three series of Big Dreams, Small Spaces,[39] where he helps amateur gardeners in creating their own "dream spaces" on a domestic scale. Don's next series was Monty Don's Paradise Gardens in 2018, travelling across the Islamic world and beyond in search of paradise gardens and considering their place in the Quran.[40][41][42] This was followed by Monty Don's Japanese Gardens in 2019,[43] and Monty Don's American Gardens in 2020.[44]

Writer

Don has described himself primarily as a writer, "who happens to have lots of television work."[8] By the early 1990s, Don had written two unpublished novels, The Clematis Affair and An Afternoon in Padua. He later described them as "excruciatingly bad".[45] In January 1994, Allan Jenkins, then editor of The Observer, offered Don to write a weekly gardening column for the newspaper. The column began in February of that year and lasted until May 2006; Jenkins was his editor for seven years.[8] In a piece from 2004 to commemorate the tenth year of the column, Don wrote: "It has been more life-changing than any other work I have done in my adult life."[46] Don has written articles for the Daily Mail and Mail Online since 2004.

In 2016 Hodder Books published an audiobook of Don's Nigel: My Family and Other Dogs, read by Don.[47]

Style and reception

Between 2008 and 2016 Don was President of the Soil Association.[48] He is currently a patron of Bees for Development Trust[49] and the Pope's Grotto Preservation Trust.[50]

Don had never received formal training as a gardener. He commented, "I was – am – an amateur gardener and a professional writer. My only authority came from a lifetime of gardening and a passion amounting to an obsession for my own garden."[51]

Don is a keen proponent of organic gardening, becoming "officially" organic in his own garden in 1997.[46] The practice of organic techniques often features in his published and broadcast work. The organic approach is most prominent in his 2003 book The Complete Gardener. This has led him into some controversy with those advocating non-organic techniques, with some criticising his position of influence presenting Gardeners' World and exclusion of non-organic solutions to pests and diseases in the garden.[52]

Don's sartorial style in the garden has been the subject of some critical attention, with Richard D. North commenting, in 2013:[53]

At home and abroad, Monty Don is the paysan manqué. Where an arts presenter might eschew the little black Armani suit and the dazzling white shirt for the crumpled linen, Don’s gear retreats into the manly rumpledon of a workman’s cotton drill. He is not quite the Mr McGregor of the Potter books: real-life ancient gardeners wore mighty cords and moleskins, tweeds and flannels – and sacks if the weather was bad enough. The Don affectation is one tad more painterly than that. ... I guess that this is where we come up against the row within Monty Don, between the lightly earthy garden enthusiast and the grimmer unworldly hippy moralist. Well, we all have an inner cheerfully accepting Cavalier, and it does battle with our gloomier Roundhead.

In 2005 Don himself dedicated a whole column to this subject, commenting:[54]

I get lots of emails, lots of letters. A few are crazed, quite a few astonishingly demanding... quite a surprisingly large chunk of letters and emails are about one specific topic that is at first appearance only tangentially about gardening. These are the ones asking me about the clothes that I garden in.

Prospect magazine declared Don "the nation's gardener".[8]

Personal life

Family

Don married Sarah Erskine in 1983. They have two sons, Adam and Tom, and daughter Freya.[2] The couple lived in Islington, north London, while Don pursued postgraduate study at London School of Economics and worked as a waiter at Joe Allen restaurant in Covent Garden and later as a binman. The couple then moved to the De Beauvoir Town area of Hackney where they made their first garden.[55] In 1989, they relocated to The Hanburies, a country house in Herefordshire. The making of the garden there, and the subsequent loss of the house in the aftermath of the crash of their jewellery business, was the subject of Don's first book, The Prickotty Bush. In 1991, the Dons bought a home in Ivington, Herefordshire where they started to create a new garden named Longmeadow. The home was unfit to live in at the time of purchase, so while they refurbished it they rented a home in Leominster that was infested with rats and had no heating.[56] They moved into their Ivington home at the end of 1992.[16][57]

Nigel and other dogs

Nigel in 2019

Don has owned many dogs throughout his adult life. Two that he currently owns are Nellie, a Golden Retriever, and Patti, a Yorkshire terrier; both are seen on camera with Don on Gardeners' World. He also owns dogs that are not featured on the show.[58] The coppice at Longmeadow holds the graves of Dons' other pets, including dogs Beaufort, Red, Poppy and Barry, and cats Stimpy and Blue.[59] Don also has a sheep farm, on which he keeps 500 ewes.[56]

Nigel was a male Golden Retriever dog owned by Don. Nigel made many appearances on Gardeners' World, sometimes with Nellie. The dog was chosen as a seven-week-old puppy from a litter in the Forest of Dean on 1 July 2008[60] and was popular with viewers who were concerned when he disappeared from the programme in September 2012. He had injured himself after twisting sideways when jumping to catch a tennis ball and had ruptured an intervertebral disc in his spine.[61] Nigel recovered and resumed his television appearances.[60]

Don said that he had chosen Nigel because the domestic dog signifies the good and bad in human relationships with nature; humans can prioritise fluffy animals over others.[62] In September 2016 an autobiographical book entitled Nigel: my family and other dogs was published, telling the story of Nigel and the other dogs in Don's life, including the female golden retriever, Nellie.[63] On 11 May 2020 Don announced, through his Twitter and Instagram pages, that Nigel had died, six days before his 12th birthday.[64][65][66] Don told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme that Nigel had been more than a companion and had helped him with his struggles with depression. He said, "He was a bear of slightly limited brain, what he had was this absolute sense of purity. He exuded a kind of unsullied innocence and we all love our dogs, everybody thinks their dog is special, I've had lots of dogs and there was something special about Nigel."[67][68]

Health

Don has suffered with depression since his mid-twenties.[46] He first wrote about his experiences with it, and its effect on his personal life, in a piece for The Observer in 2000.[16] His editor recalled that it "changed the way that people saw him" and Don himself said the article generated "a very immediate response" from readers.[8] Don recalled "great spans of muddy time" in his life and realised that gardening "heals me better than any medicine".[2] At one point, Don's wife threatened to leave with their children if he did not seek help. After receiving cognitive behavioural therapy and taking Prozac, Don quit both when he realised his depression was mostly seasonal and found relief with a lightbox, now a recognised aid for seasonal affective disorder.[2]

In August 2007, Don suffered from a bout of peritonitis, an abdominal infection. His wife had found him unconscious on the floor and he was rushed to hospital for emergency surgery.[2]

In February 2008, Don suffered from a minor stroke at home. He had been feeling unwell since the Christmas prior, mostly due to exhaustion from travelling to film Around the World in 80 Gardens. When his symptoms did not improve, a brain scan weeks later revealed a temporary blockage in one of his arteries to the brain. In May 2008, he put his career on hold to recover.[2][19]

In 2015, Don said that years of gardening had left him with sore knees, one of which causes constant pain and needs replacing.[56]

Other

In July 2006 he appeared on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, choosing an eclectic mix of pop and classical records; the Beatles' "A Hard Day's Night" was his favourite disc, his book choice was Collected Poems by Henry Vaughan and his luxury item the painting Hendrikje Bathing by Rembrandt.[69]

Shortly before he fell ill with his stroke, Don had launched the Monty Don Project, a charity to help persistent offenders and drug addicts heal themselves by working the land.[70]

Honours

Don was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2018 Birthday Honours for services to horticulture, to broadcasting and to charity.[71]

Publications

Books

  • The Prickotty Bush (1990)
  • The Weekend Gardener (1995)
  • The Sensuous Garden (1997)
  • Gardening Mad (1998; with Fleur Olby)
  • Urban Jungle: The Simple Way to Tame Your Town Garden (1998)
  • Fork to Fork (1999; released as From the Garden to the Table: Growing, Cooking, and Eating Your Own Food in 2003)
  • The Complete Gardener (2003)
  • The Jewel Garden (2004; with Sarah Don)
  • Gardeners' World: Gardening from Berryfields (2005)
  • The Organic Gardener (2005)
  • Growing Out of Trouble (2006)
  • My Roots: A Decade in the Garden (2006)
  • Around the World in 80 Gardens (2008)
  • The Ivington Diaries (2009)
  • My Dream Farm (2010)
  • The Home Cookbook (2010; with Sarah Don)
  • Extraordinary Gardens of the World (2010)
  • The Great Gardens of Italy (2011; with Derry Moore)
  • Gardening at Longmeadow (2012)
  • The Road to Le Tholonet: A French Garden Journey (2013)
  • Nigel: My Family and Other Dogs (2016)
  • Down to Earth: Gardening Wisdom (2017)
  • Paradise Gardens (2018)
  • Japanese Gardens: A Journey (2019)
  • My Garden World: The Natural Year (2020)
  • American Gardens (2020; with Derry Moore)

DVDs

  • Around the World in 80 Gardens (2008)
  • Monty Don's Italian Gardens (2011)
  • Monty Don's French Gardens (2013)
  • Monty Don's Real Craft (2014)
  • The Secret History of the British Garden (2015)
  • Monty Don's Paradise Gardens (2018)
  • Monty Don's Japanese Gardens (2019)
  • Monty Don's American Gardens (2020)

References

  1. Don, Monty (May 2019). "The Full Monty". Gardeners' World. Retrieved 11 August 2020 via Magzter.
  2. Anderson, Hephzibah (25 May 2008). "Green fingers, silver tongue". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  3. "He gave up his jewels but found gold in the garden". The Sunday Times. London. 29 October 2006. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
  4. Horton, Helena (15 June 2019). "Monty Don reveals his family's 170-year-old feud with the Royal Horticultural Society" via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  5. Garfield, Simon (6 April 2003). "And quiet hoes the Don". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  6. "Monty Don - Who Do You Think You Are?". TheGenealogist. 29 August 2010. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  7. "My Secret Life: Monty Don, gardener, 54". 3 October 2009. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  8. Vincent, Alice (11 June 2020). "How Monty Don became the nation's gardener". Prospect. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  9. Raven, Sarah (1 March 2003). "The likely lads". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  10. Sale, Jonathan (2 December 1999). "Passed/Failed: Monty Don". The Independent. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  11. "Meet Monty Don". UKTV Gardens. Archived from the original on 30 March 2008. Retrieved 22 May 2008.
  12. Kellaway, Kate (8 March 2009). "The interview: Monty Don". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
  13. Don, Monty (13 August 1990). "Goodbye to all that". The Guardian. p. 16. Retrieved 6 May 2020 via Newspapers.com.
  14. Grice, Elizabeth (21 August 2004). "Needs sunny situation". The Telegraph. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  15. Husband, Stuart (20 November 1999). "Beats working". The Guardian Guide. Retrieved 12 August 2020 via Newspapers.com.
  16. Don, Monty (9 April 2000). "How gardening saved my life". The Observer. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  17. "C4 secures sponsorship for two new programmes". Marketing Week. 4 November 1999. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  18. Leonard, Tom (30 September 2002). "Monty Don adds a little muscle to Gardeners' World". The Telegraph. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  19. "TV gardener Monty Don has stroke". BBC News. 22 May 2008. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
  20. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/6998352/Back-to-basics-at-Gardeners-World-take-two.html
  21. Smyth, Chris (12 January 2010). Gardeners’ World going back to its roots after gimmicky makeover, say producers. The Times. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  22. Richardson, Tim (12 January 2010). Gardeners' World: BBC goes back to basics. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  23. Singh, Anita (7 December 2010). Monty Don returning to Gardeners' World.The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  24. "Buckland to host Gardeners' World". BBC. 13 August 2008. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
  25. Pasco, Adam (7 December 2010). Monty Don returns to Gardeners’ World. Gardeners' musings (Gardener's World official blog). www.gardenersworld.com.
  26. Cavendish, Lucy (8 March 2013). "Monty Don: My garden has come into itself, for better or for worse". Radio Times. Retrieved 14 March 2014.
  27. Brown, David (15 March 2012). "Monty Don: I'd like a "five-year arrangement" with Gardeners' World". The Telegraph. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  28. Don, Monty [@TheMontyDon] (11 May 2020). "I am very sorry to announce that Nigel has died. He slipped quietly away with no pain or suffering and is now buried in the garden with lots of tennis balls. Rest now old friend. See you in the sweet bye and bye."" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  29. Rodger, James (11 May 2020). "Monty Don announces death of dog - days after Gardeners World appearance". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  30. "BBC official Gardeners World Facebook page". 4 March 2016.
  31. "BBC Gardeners' World TV presenter Monty Don backs grower | Horticulture Week". Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  32. "Natural World: Cork – Forest in a Bottle". The NatureWatch. 2008. Archived from the original on 6 March 2009. Retrieved 22 December 2008.
  33. "My dream farm". Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  34. "My Dream Farm, Channel 4, review". The Daily Telegraph. London. 22 January 2010. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
  35. "Mastercrafts - BBC Two". BBC. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  36. "Monty Don’s Italian Campaign". The Daily Telegraph, by Monty Don, 11 March 2011.
  37. "Monty Don's French Gardens". BBC programme website.
  38. "The Secret History of the British Garden - BBC Two". BBC. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  39. "BBC Two - Big Dreams Small Spaces - Episode guide". BBC.
  40. "Monty Don's Paradise Gardens - BBC Two". BBC. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  41. Wollaston, Sam (20 January 2018). "Monty Don's Paradise Gardens review – a heady tour of earthly delights". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  42. Peskett, Matt (19 January 2018). "Monty Don's Paradise Gardens review – More Than Just Gardens". Grow Like Grandad. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  43. "BBC Two - Monty Don's Japanese Gardens". BBC.
  44. "BBC Two - Monty Don's American Gardens". BBC.
  45. Don, Monty; Don, Sarah (1 March 2012). The Jewel Garden - Monty Don, Sarah Don, Monty Don & Sarah Don - Google Books. ISBN 9781444718782. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  46. Don, Monty (22 February 2004). s "Now we are 10" Check |url= value (help). The Observer. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
  47. "NIGEL: MY FAMILY AND OTHER DOGS written and read by Monty Don - audiobook extract". Hodder Books. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  48. "Monty Don: "I still feel like a black sheep-ish 25-year-old"". Radio Times. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  49. "Staff, Patrons, Trustees and Volunteers". Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  50. "Pope's Grotto Preservation Trust – Patrons: Monty Don OBE, Sir Donald Insall CBE, Kim Wilkie". www.popesgrotto.org.uk.
  51. Don, Monty (28 May 2006). "Through the garden gate". The Observer. London. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
  52. "Monty Don in row with BBC over pledge he will 'promote non organic gardening'". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
  53. "Monty Don, in peasant blue, on grand French gardens". Richard D North. 6 February 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  54. Monty Don. "Dirty Dressing". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  55. "Time and place: Monty Don". The Sunday Times. 6 March 2011. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  56. "Digging Monty Don: TV's favourite gardener on turning 60". Belfast Telegraph. 6 May 2015. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  57. Bloomsbury.com. "The Ivington Diaries". Bloomsbury Publishing. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  58. https://www.gardenersworld.com/news/monty-on-nigel/
  59. "Dogs". Monty Don.
  60. Don, Monty (22 September 2016). Nigel: my family and other dogs. John Murray Press. ISBN 9781473641723. Retrieved 11 May 2020 via Google Books.
  61. "Gardeners' World: Meet Nigel the dog - Monty's pet has his own Twitter!". realitytitbit.com. 27 September 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  62. "Monty Don talks about Nigel". BBC Shared Planet. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  63. Don, Monty (22 September 2016). Nigel: my family and other dogs. Hachette UK. ISBN 9781473641723.
  64. "Monty Don on Instagram: "I am very sorry to announce that Nigel has died. To the end he was happy, healthy and his usual calm, lovely self. But he was suddenly…"". Instagram.
  65. Don, Monty [@TheMontyDon] (11 May 2020). "I am very sorry to announce that Nigel has died. He slipped quietly away with no pain or suffering and is now buried in the garden with lots of tennis balls. Rest now old friend. See you in the sweet bye and bye."" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  66. Rodger, James (11 May 2020). "Monty Don announces death of dog - days after Gardeners World appearance". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  67. "Monty Don: There's a hole in our lives after death of beloved dog". Evening Standard. 13 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  68. "Monty Don thanks fan for support after his dog Nigel's death". Evening Standard. 12 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  69. "Desert Island Discs: Monty Don" 14 July 2006
  70. "'I think I'm dying': Monty Don speaks for the first time of the stroke". Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  71. "No. 62310". The London Gazette (Supplement). 9 June 2018. p. B11.
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