Jude was well into her 30's when she decided to pursue a career in gardening, enrolling in a two year course at
Oaklands Horticultural College,
St Albans, obtaining a national diploma in 1979. Her first gardening job was with the
Royal Parks, after which she set up independently as
Jude the Gardener, partnering with Carol Laws, and finding clients by advertising in the
Hampstead and Highgate Express. She became known for her superb plantsmanship and distinctive designs which reflected the personalities of her clients and the architectural settings of their gardens. She also designed rustic garden furniture and summer houses, influenced by the mid-Victorian garden writer
Shirley Hibberd. Her team of twelve became her friends, taking spontaneous excursions to
Sissinghurst and other notable English gardens and in 1985 she formed a new partnership with the town planner Larry Hansen. In 1986 she became gardening correspondent for the woman's magazine
Prima and began to broadcast on
Woman's Hour. In 1978 she founded the De Beauvoir Gardeners' Club which held annual flower and produce shows in the vicarage garden. For the Club she organised expert lectures and visits to foreign gardens in France, Holland and Ireland. The Club brought together the area's established working class residents and the new middle class arrivals, a model which Hansen and Jude, with her strong social conscience, were anxious to repeat in other poor London districts, though most of their schemes foundered due to bureaucracy, political correctness and a lack of funding. ==Later life==