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Saturday, 23 June 2018

Hardy Plant Society Study Weekend

presented by the Northwest Perennial Alliance

Saturday evening soiree at McMenamins Anderson School Hotel

The soiree took place in a large room, with dinner provided and with Ciscoe Morris as the MC.

Ciscoe (Allan’s photo)

a contest for best garden hat

and most colourful outfit (Allan’s photo)

later, in the courtyard outside the dining room

Afterward, we walked with Alison and with Jean (from Portland) all around the glorious Anderson School gardens (created by Riz Reyes).

stairs from one courtyard to another

Allan’s photo

courtyard wall made of “urbanite”

Allan’s photo

in a restaurant courtyard

dog friendly outdoor dining

flaming post thingie, one of several

Jean

the meadow garden by the hotel’s main entrance (Allan’s photo)

I love all aspects of this meadow.

So we are looking at it from many angles!

Note the flaming torch and the late evening sun highlighting a tree.

We finally walked toward the gardens by the most distant parking area.

Seseli gummiferum (moon carrot)

Alison, Jean, and me

Allan’s photo

We all wanted to know what this is.

more moon carrot

Seseli gummiferum, with which I am obsessed.

A balloon floated overhead.

Allan’s photo

We walked past the meadow garden again:

I am going to try to grow Echinacea pallida from seed.

We then walked along the front of the building.  I expect that only the CPNs (Certified Plant Nuts) are still with us.    I am pretty sure that Danger Garden is still with us, because she blogged about this garden before.

We later learned that the path you can see below is a guest-made path, a place where the guests cut through.

Allan’s photo

Allan’s photo

monarda (Allan’s photo)

I do hope you will want to see more of this garden when we tour it again in the rain on Monday morning with its creator, Riz Reyes.

Time to rest up for another day of garden touring, this time in north Seattle.

 

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All of the gardens we toured today were in bucolic country side, making for a pleasant drive between each.

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We soon reached the third garden of the day.

The WSU Master Gardeners of Grays Harbor and Pacific County present:

tour

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The entry drive is a bridge over a river.

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approaching the one acre man made pond

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Allan’s photo

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Only Ann got a good photo showing the pleasing design of a spit of land going out into the pond.

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Allan’s photo

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Allan’s photo (coming round the pond the other way)

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a sign warning of roots above the grass

Just as I was navigating that maze of roots, I met up with blog readers Deborah and her sisters from up north!  They had driven down from the tour, a longer drive than ours, and were doing the tour in the opposite order; I hope they enjoyed it as much as we did.  They still had the glorious Willapa riverside garden in store.  They asked where Allan was.  He had parked the van in a provided parking area across the river and was coming round the pond in the other direction.

It always amazes me to hear that people read this blog over their morning coffee.  I tend to actually forget that!  As I told them, while they are reading, I am probably still sleeping.  Deborah is one of my favourite kinds of readers, because she makes comments, as well.

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Allan coming around the other side of the pond

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Allan’s photo

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Allan’s photo

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Glen’s house

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Note how there is not a glimpse of underlying liner in this dry river bed.

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Allan’s photo

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Allan’s photo

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Prunus serrula (Allan’s photo)

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Allan’s photo

Right about here is where I finally met Terri, tour organizer.  We had been emailing back and forth for a month and have a lot in common in garden interests.  Allan and I will be visiting her garden near Westport sometime in August and are very much looking forward to that.

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view from the porch

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view from the porch

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view from the porch

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Allan’s photo

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on the porch

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before photos

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before photo

Notes about the garden:

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hose watering! (Allan’s photo)

Neither Allan nor I got a photo that got across the vastness of this property that had been transformed into an arboretum.  Ann did:

landscape

photo by Ann Amato-Zorich

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sighted as we stroll back to the exit

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Another huge parklike expanse was to our left on the road side of the bridge.

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Allan’s photo

We did not walk into that meadow because of my ill timed sore foot.  Now, looking at this photo, I wish I had made the effort.

 As we walked to our van to depart, we encountered Teresa from the Planter Box.  It seemed that our timing was off from that of all the other peninsulites.  She told us that she had heard that garden four had a great vegetable garden.  That was our next destination.

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chatting with Teresa, then on to the next garden

 

 

 

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Saturday, 15 July 2017

The WSU Master Gardeners of Grays Harbor and Pacific County present:

tour

A focus of the Master Gardener tour is very personal gardens that are designed and maintained by their owners.

Garden One: “Shades of Paris”

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Like all of the gardens on this tour, this one was located by a quiet country road.

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impeccably maintained

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tour guests checking in (Allan’s photo)

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I was well chuffed to be there.

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flowers in patterns

There were lots of zinnias and dahlias that would be in bloom not long from now.  If I lived closer than an hour away, I would be trying to get a peek when the bed above is in full bloom.

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Red white and blue in this place could evoke the French flag.

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pasture just beyond the garden

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People were walking back across the pasture from a nature path, possibly for nearby Fuss Creek.

I missed this opportunity and another, in the third garden, to explore further, because I was having an extra problem today of having a sore foot!

To my left was a fenced kitchen and flower garden.

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berries and roses

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I continued to be impressed by the complete lack of weeds.

 

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This fence was possibly designed to keep out more critters than just deer.

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Guests were invited to snack on the berries.  (Allan’s photo)

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Allan’s photo

We turned our attention to the large patio at the side of the house.

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I felt this might remind the owners of the tradition of dining outdoors in France.

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waterfall pond

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Allan pointed out that the black and white photo in the program got a better overview of the pond than either of us did.

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Between garden and pasture, a wide maintenance path would make wheelbarrowing easy.

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looking back at the house

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fire circle between pond and pasture

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Allan’s photo

Neither Allan nor I got as good a photo of the fire circle as did our friend Ann (Spiffy Seeds, The Amateur Bot-ann-ist) who was touring just behind us.

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photo by Ann Amato-Zorich: “my dream s’mores making fire pit”

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view over the pond from the fire circle

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beyond the garden

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hot tub

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to the next level

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The red tape was a warning where steps went down.

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a sit spot outside a fenced garden and more zinnias that will be colourful soon

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Allan’s photo

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fenced kitchen gardens with berries

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Allan’s photo

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between the house and the fenced berry patch

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Allan’s photo

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looking back as I walk around the house

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Salix integra ‘Hakuro-nishiki’ (Allan’s photo)

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Allan’s photo

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zinnias, a big porch, quilt display

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I wish I had asked who was the quilter.

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leaving the colourful and impeccably maintained garden

 

 

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Friday, 20 June 2014

Hardy Plant Society Study Weekend

Hummingbird Hill

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I walked round and round and round in this garden and felt like immediately going home and replacing all my grass paths with gravel and learning to make stuccoed concrete block walls.

I also felt again the poignancy that I experienced at the Froggwell Garden, where the garden co-creator had also passed away, while at the same time the upbeat mood and colours of Hummingbird Hill made me happy and uplifted.

street view of the garden

street view of the garden

from the street

from the street

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

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We were invited by Bob Barca's sister to enter this way. She said she had done the hardscaping for the garden.

We were invited by Bob Barca’s sister-in-law to enter this way. She said she had done the hardscaping for the garden.

outside the gate

outside the gate

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beside the gate

beside the gate

NPA= Northwest Perennial Alliance, the Seattle area version of the Hardy Plant Society of Oregon and the sponsor of the study weekend

NPA= Northwest Perennial Alliance, the Seattle area version of the Hardy Plant Society of Oregon and the sponsor of the study weekend

stepping inside

stepping inside

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I immediately had to step back outside to tell the sister in law how enormously impressed I was with her stucco wall hardscaping!

The second time I entered the gate!

The second time I entered the gate!

Garage/outbuilding forming one wall of the garden

Garage/outbuilding forming one wall of the garden

All the raised beds and warm walls help the plant collection thrive.

All the raised beds and warm walls help the plant collection thrive.

inset tiles and plants growing atop the walls

inset tiles and plants growing atop the walls..and a water feature!

another angle

another angle

The garden is completely fenced.

The garden is completely fenced.

Allan pondering.  I wonder if he is also wanting to change from lawn to gravel paths!

Allan pondering. I wonder if he is also wanting to change from lawn to gravel paths!

I did enjoy having no lawn at all in my former gardens...hmmm.

I did enjoy having no lawn at all in my former gardens…hmmm.

luscious eremurus

luscious eremurus

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I wish I had a closer photo of that blue flowering plant! (If a salvia, it is huge.)

Allan got a close up...so what is it??

Allan got a close up…so what is it?? A solanum??

Allan: "a piece of rebar solves a twisty problem"

another close up of the same area by Allan: “a piece of rebar solves a twisty problem”

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

a scree garden.   have to rethink my scree garden plan now!

a scree garden of tiny treasures. have to rethink my scree garden plan now!

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

more eremurus envy

more eremurus envy

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plants thriving in the warm microclimates

plants thriving in the warm microclimates

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beside the garage

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on the garage wall...

on the garage wall…

Tropaeolum tuberosum 'Ken Aslet'

Tropaeolum tuberosum ‘Ken Aslet’

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stone and water

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I wonder if at one time each of these ovals had a small plant?

I wonder if at one time each of these ovals had a small plant?

My grandmother, who used a wringer washer well into the 1970s, would have loved this.

My grandmother, who used a wringer washer well into the 1970s, would have loved this wringer washer water feature. (I want one!)

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looking back at the areas I had walked through.

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

and now am in front of the house with my back to the wringer washer

and now am in front of the house with my back to the wringer washer

the house

the house

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a corner of the front garden

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peeking in the potting shed by the house

peeking in the potting shed; I think it was a wing of the house

a little stream

a little stream

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

Allan's photo

Allan’s photo

a bed of peas beside the house

a bed of peas beside the potting shed

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walking behind the house

walking behind the house

shade and moss

shade and moss

Fatsia japonica 'Spider's Web' (I was thrilled to recognize a plant!)

Fatsia japonica ‘Spider’s Web’ (I was thrilled to recognize a plant!)

a private sit spot behind the house

a private sit spot behind the house

shady corner

shady corner

coming around from behind the house

coming around from behind the house

I may be going round in circles now.

I may be going round in circles now.

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a table with magazines, free for the taking, from Bob Barca's collection.  (I was reeling from the pleasures of this garden so did not even think to take any!)

a table with magazines, free for the taking, from Bob Barca’s collection. (I was reeling from the pleasures of this garden so did not even think to take any!)

the late Bob Barca

the late Bob Barca

Allan's photo; Bob Barca loved birds.

Allan’s photo; Bob Barca loved birds.

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Who can tell us what bird this is?

his earthly paradise

earthly paradise for plants and birds and people

Wow...pineapple broom....Argyrocytisus battandieri...HUGE

Wow…pineapple broom….Argyrocytisus battandieri…HUGE

Have grown it but moved before it bloomed, tried to move it and it died, and it is hard to find where I live.  Want!!  (Would it even bloom at the coast??)

Have grown it but moved before it bloomed, tried to move it and it died, and it is hard to find where I live. Want!! (Would it even bloom at the coast??) Sheila grows it successfully and says the flowers indeed smell like pineapple. (I could not get close enough to smell them.)

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on the front porch

on the front porch

another dahlia view

another dahlia view

from the front of the house, a bridge to the garden behind the garage

from the front of the house, a bridge to the garden by the garage

by the front porch

by the front porch

by the front porch

by the front porch

in front of the house

in front of the house

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looking back at the house

looking back at the house

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not wanting to leave...but we must...

not wanting to leave…but we must…

Oh dear, now I feel my garden is so SOFT and GREEN and COOL, and I want the warm, bright, gravel-crunching underfoot feeling of this garden instead.

I would linger, but we have more gardens to tour.

Here are two other blog entries about Hummingbird Hill on the same garden tour:

Linda Letters blog

Alison’s Bonney Lassie blog

 

 

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Leaving Astoria and the Astoria gardens, we drove to Warrenton, a neighbouring town toward the ocean; Whiskey Road looked like this, very bucolic even though it was close to Highway 101.

approach to Hatfield garden

Of course, I itched to prune the dead fronds off of the sword ferns along the road.

Entering the property we walked past an enviable guest house.  It would have suited us perfectly for our main house.

the guest house

(I’ve often thought if one could find just the right employer, it would work to live on a big property and be the fulltime gardener.  To be a Fergus Garrett to a Christopher Lloyd.  There would have to be great trust and some guarantee of security in old age.)

An entry to a woodland path led to lively chickens and another view of the guest house.

along a woodland path

Further along, we came upon a vegetable patch and a garden described in the tour guide as Japanese in style.

further along

by the lake

Past the shrubby shady garden we saw Smith Lake.  And turning to our left, we passed through an arbour into the sunny flower garden between the house and the lake.

arbour view

Below:  Looking from the house to the lake, and from mid-lawn back up to the house.

dock at the bottom of the garden

Smith Lake from the dock

a photographer kneels for a good shot

looking from the dock to the house

You know I would have had more garden and less lawn…but with a desired view of the lake all garden beds would have to be low growing.  The garden might have lost some plants to the harsh winter of 09-10.

another view up the garden

Above, to the left was the arbour we came through from the Japanese style garden and veg patch.  On the other side of the lawn a gorgeous brick path wended gently uphill.

looking back to the dock

path from dock

partway up

along the path

shared fireplace?

We could not tell if this fireplace belonged to the Hatfield garden or the next door garden (which was next on the tour), and we forgot to go to these stairs from the other side.

along the path

looking through to the lawn beds

along the path

path detail

near the house

on a patio

alongside the house; I love this sort of artful display.

Soon we reached  a Koi pond in the house garden; the owner told Allan that a heron had recently snatched some fish. The waterfall cunningly emerged from dark shrubbery uphill.

a lovely pond

pond detail

by the pond

naturalistic stream

the streamhead

A path beckoned.

From the pond, a path lead by the garage to a deck.

From there, we crossed the deck back to the entry driveway.

the greeting committee

We had missed meeting the gardener on the way in. I believe that is Mr. Hatfield in the pink shirt. On that table was a bowl of beautiful polished rocks and each tourer was allowed to choose one.  That’s the sort of kind touch that makes a garden especially memorable.

We left the garden via a woodsy area….

passing this landscaped pumphouse (?)...

and briefly exploring the woods by the road.

Not only was the friendliness of the gardeners memorable but we also were impressed with the pond and stream (and the way it cleverly emerged from the undergrowth) and that beautifully designed and maintained curving brick path.  I’ve enjoyed revisiting it while writing about it.

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The day had arrived for our stint on the Music in the Gardens tour…and absolute perfection had been attained in our garden, or so I hoped.

upstairs window view

Paul’s Himalayan Musk rose (upper left, above) had blessed the garden with its one week of peak bloom.

The beds and pots around the pond were weeded, even the difficult hill in back.

by the pond

Of course as I walked down to the lower gate putting out the final touches (pillows on the middle patio and some last minute printed signage) I found a few more strands of bindweed to pull.

The Akebia vine and roses had started growing back around the Tangly Cottage sign after the massive pruning of 2007.

My Beverly Nichols book cover had been copied, laminated, and hung near the entryway

“Garden Open Today”

The entry with tour guides and signs and a white balloon to mark this as a tour garden.

interpretive signs

On some plants I placed photos of what they would do later on; in this case, the berries of Hypericum ‘Glacier’.  Along a shady walk, I wrote garden quotations on cards and hung them from the tree-like hardy fuchias.
The sunny day was not wonderful for photo taking but made the tour-goers happy.  My lower garden looked like it always enjoyed this sort of weather.

sunny lower garden

 The stepping stone stream walk through the lower garden arbour had never looked more inviting.

walk through the stream

Barely had I pulled a few more strands of bindweed (which must have sprouted overnight) than the hordes of people came.  I found it overwhelming and exciting and did not once think to take photos of women in their garden hats wandering through….except for my mother who sat for awhile on the pond patio.  She said that she could now understand why Allan and I did not want to leave this garden and move to her place even though that was a possibility that we still often discussed.

my mom by the pond, overhung with Fuchsias

This would have been her view across the pond bridge toward Rose ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’.

view from pond island

(We called that sit spot an island, but the back border was a seasonal damp ditch rather than water.)

squeeze effect

Just before you got to the pond island bridge, after walking past the spruce tree from Lower Garden, you’d get this enticing view of our cottage.  Ann Lovejoy would call passing through this willow arbour “a squeeze effect”.

approaching the cottage

We’d planted up containers on the stone steps going up to the house with cool annuals we’d acquired on recent plant shopping trips….an expense we had never gone to just for ourselves.

Below, I’m looking back from the base of those steps toward the willow arch. “Before” pictures of the garden placed there caused quite a sensation regarding how blank (just lawn and a spruce tree!) it was in 1994.

looking back, with before and after pictures posted at the right

These were the before pictures that astonished people, taken in 1994 from around the same spot.

befores

Now the old trailer was still there but painted hunter green and covered with roses.  The silver shed and the old trailer formed an L shaped roofed nook and in it was a water feature with a working flower pot water wheel made by Allan.  The water gave the illusion of having come from the pond because it was at about the same level.  Behind the roofed and shady patio I’d put big pillows on the trailer porch and some people sat and hung out there for awhile.

Allan’s water wheel

Allan’s garden

We guided people through the half-greenhouse/half pergola on the downhill side of the house and around through Allan’s garden shade garden. One of my happiest moments of the tour is when two women stopped in the greenhouse and read aloud to her mother a gardening poem I had posted there.*   Allan had achieved perfection in his backyard garden that used to be nothing but a weedy, muddy dog yard.

As she left the garden from the upper patio a friend took this photo looking back to the house.  This has remained one of my favourite images of the old Tangly Cottage.

from the upper gate

During a midafternoon lull in touring I found myself missing the praise and compliments and said “I want more people!  More people! ”  (And some more came through at the end, folks who had begun the tour at the north end of the Peninsula.)  Therefore I was not at all averse when a member of a garden club from Vancouver asked if she could bring her group back through the garden on August 12nd.  That would be an inspiration to keep it perfect.

Meanwhile, we would check out more tour gardens in Astoria and Gearhart, Oregon and try to catch up on our rather neglected work.

*The poem which was read aloud in the greenhouse:
Portrait of a Neighbour by Edna St. Vincent Millay

PORTRAIT BY A NEIGHBOR

BEFORE she has her floor swept
Or her dishes done,
Any day you’ll find her
A-sunning in the sun!

It’s long after midnight
Her key’s in the lock,
And you never see her chimney smoke
Till past ten o’clock!

She digs in her garden
With a shovel and a spoon,
She weeds her lazy lettuce
By the light of the moon.

She walks up the walk
Like a woman in a dream,

She forgets she borrowed butter

And pays you back cream!

Her lawn looks like a meadow,
And if she mows the place
She leaves the clover standing
And the Queen Anne’s lace!

The local paper had these wonderful words to say about our garden on tour day:

“We headed for Ilwaco and entered into an uber-planetary oasis called Tangly Cottage, Skyler Walker and Allan Fritz’s gnomish Eden.* Teacups adorned curly willow.** Quotes were clothes-pinned along the pathways. A small water wheel of tiny clay pots graced the patio of an abandoned single-wide***, the first structure on the property. 

Everywhere we looked, there was a fascinating plant we had never seen before and Skyler would appear, as if from nowhere, to give us the name of it.

Strategically placed here and there were gardening reference books, in case anyone wanted to look at pictures instead of the real thing. No way!

‘The main purpose of a garden is to give its owner the best and highest kind of earthly pleasure,’ wrote Gertrude Jekyll, influential British garden designer, writer, and artist.****

We couldn’t have agreed more.”

Cate Gable, Chinook Observer newspaper, July 2, 2008

*We don’t have any garden gnomes, though.

** contorted filbert (Harry Lauder’s Walking Stick’), not curly willow

***actually a small travel trailer

****one of the quotations I put up in the garden.

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