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Reflections

Green is a color too

Here is a green thought for a white winter day.  As gardeners, perh049aps obsessed in February with the desire and need for color, we need to remember that green is a color too.  We still can get a lot of green in winter from an appropriate mix of conifers in our plantings.  In the season, a good garden offers many shades of green as green is a rich color palette in itself.  Green also provides the base against which all color happens.  Without our gracious green we would not see so clearly the striking orange daylily.  Everybody says they want lots and lots of flowers, but when it comes to the work involved, green has a lot to offer.  Think foliage and think green, from almost yellow to almost blue.

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Reflections

In Praise of Lawns

As a gardener and a garden designer and an environmentalist, I am often in the position of trying to get folks to reduce the size of their lawn and replace lawn with gardens.  But in a recent conversation with someone even more committed than I to taking up the lawn I realized that I would not want to have no lawn.  Grass is actually an amazing plant, no other ground cover can compare for rapidity of growth, coverage, comfort, and relative ease of care.  And, yes, if cared for properly, a lawn can be environmentally sound.  Nothing frames a garden better, nothing is more fun to walk on barefoot, nothing else let’s you play croquet on it, nothing else is better to lie down on for one of those glorious outdoor naps.  In fact, there is nothing quite like grass.

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Reflections

Arbocide in progress

cherrybad2I saw a shrub today that looked to have been tortured.  Its limbs were hacked off, a few branches left presumably for “new growth”, but its chances of survival are slim.  I wonder if there will ever come a time when we consider mistreatment of plants a crime, the way we now consider mistreatment of animals.  I wonder if there will ever come a time when we expect those who purchase plants to know how to take care of them the way we now expect people who purchase animals to know how to take care of them.  Of course, many people don’t know how and end up abusing animals, but when this happens it bothers us.  What about plants?  I often wish I had a sign that I could put where so-called landscaping or pruning is done that would read: ARBOCIDE IN PROGRESS.    It is all about awareness.  Maybe some day.

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Reflections

In Praise of Gardeners

“Gardeners harbor a longing for beauty and perfection.  Because of

Sydney Eddison holding her dog
Sydney Eddison holding her dog

what they do, they never lose sight of the small but vital place that each individual holds in the great fabric of nature.  Being a gardener stops you from the willing destruction of the fragile world on which we all depend for food, health, and the air we breathe.  And if gardening doesn’t make you a better person, at least it reveals the best that is in you.”  Sydney Eddison, Gardening for a Lifetime, 2010

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Reflections

Imagine this

048 “Without an image, you can’t design a garden.  To design is to transform — taking one place and making it into something else, into more than what it once was.  To be able to transform something means that you must be able to see beyond the existing scenario to something quite new: to an image that appears in your mind’s eye.  It is in this leap from reality to imagination that the design process becomes magical . . . ”  Julie Messervey, The Inward Garden.  As we settle into our winter gardening lives, imagination takes over and we create the dreams that will in the spring and summer become our realities.

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Reflections

Plant More Trees

yellowwood fallJoyce Kilmer is known for writing, “I think that I shall never see/ A poem as lovely as a tree.”  I don’t know what it means to “see” a poem, but I do have some thoughts on what it means to “read” a tree.  Truth be told, not all trees are “lovely.”  Some are messy, dropping leaves into gutters and branches on lawns and houses.  Some are misshapen and some are a pest, sending roots into sewer systems and upending sidewalks.  And talk not to those of us who have to clean them up of the cascades of maple seeds and cottonwood puffs.  Yet trees are crucial to our economic, physical and mental health.  They address climate concerns, adding oxygen to our atmosphere and tempering the effects of climate warming.  They create biodiversity and provide shade that reduces reliance on air-conditioning.  And they can indeed by “poems” — visual events  of extraordinary beauty and complexity.  We should all be looking to plant more trees.  The trick is to pick the right one for the appointed site.

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Reflections

Look before you plant

032My customers are always surprised when I insist on looking at the space they wish designed from inside the house as much as from outside.  But most of them quickly recognize the logic of my emphasis.  We see our gardens through windows and doors much of the time and it is important to plant with an eye to these view lines.  This is, of course, particularly important when we are planting for winter interest, a major element of garden design in the northeast.

In a similar vein, I pay attention first to certain features of hardscape when called in to design gardens.  From my perspective, there is little point in a client’s spending a lot of money on an entrance garden or foundation plantings if the path from the driveway to the house is a narrow concrete strip that takes the shortest possible route and ends in a stingy landing backed by steep stairs.  Movement and landing are two of the primary elements of the garden experience and for this experience to work both paths and stopping points need to be generous.

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Reflections

Sometimes more really is less

red and yellow species tulip in bloom, Greece, MarchI love tulips. If I could, I would spend several days every spring at Keukenhof, the Dutch equivalent of a Disney theme park for tulips. The moment you can buy tulips in the store, I bring home bunches. I love them even (especially?) when they have died and the petals lie in random patterns on the table that holds my vase. Recently I spent some time hiking in Greece. There I saw the original, native, species tulip. At first I did not recognize it, the plant was so small and so low to the ground. But I was enchanted by its delicacy and the purity of color in its red and yellow petals. And I was mesmerized by the vision of a field of these still unrecognized flowers growing in the wild amid rocks and greens and other plant cousins. When it hit me that I was looking at tulips, I had to ask, “What have we done?” We have cultivated tulips to the point where they bear little relation to their ancestor. While we have gained much from this process, my Greek experience tells me we have also lost something. Sometimes more really is less.

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Reflections

Plants are awesome

I find plants awesome.  I mean this seriously, literally, spiritually.  They inspire me with awe — for their tenacity, their complexity, their beauty, and above all for their commitment to their own survival.  They keep me humble, particularly when I remember that I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for them.  As a garden designer, I am awestruck and humbled by the those accidents of design that just happen by plants doing their plant thing.  Often these accidents are as successful as the combinations and patterns that I have spent hours creating.  I do not feel one-upped by this.  Rather I feel that with my own small gift of eye I come into harmony with some fundamental principle of life.  Humbled and exalted at the same time?  No wonder we gardeners love gardening.

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Reflections

Thoughts on Snow and Ice

Snow and ice create their own kind of beauty in the garden.  They outline and emphasize the structure of deciduous shrubs and the remains of herbaceous plants.  This winter landscape also allows you to see the relation between your trees, shrubs, and winter plants.  In February, the bones of the garden become visible, making it a perfect time to consider changes to your garden’s design.