RE: Finding the right garden idiom
- Subject: RE: Finding the right garden idiom
- From: &* <p*@comcast.net>
- Date: Thu, 25 Dec 2008 11:43:28 -0800
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Wow! What a lovely garden on such a difficult site. Your two-and-a-half decades of work really shows. Yes, it is a collector’s garden, but so beautifully done! This is most definitely NOT what I would call a yard- you are too modest. Though my personal tastes lean more toward the softer, blousier foliage and flowering forms, yours is exactly site appropriate and so interesting and aesthetically pleasing in its combinations and arrangements. My hat is off to you. Karrie Reid Folsom Foothill Gardener Zone 9
-----Original Message-----
Ben,
Just personalizing my thoughts on this.
For me, it's not emulating some bucholic scene in Italy or France...it's not a strict 'natives only' pc adherence...and it's not about a particular landscape style/look. I live on a tough lot. Steep and very, very rocky so I have to make do. I also like 'exotic' and 'different'...spikey and spiney. I'm more geared to the whole process of tracking down a particular plant, acquiring it...collector mentality. Then finding a place to plant it (but in an aesthetically pleasing way to me). Then again, plants just up and die on me sometimes for no apparent reason and I've got a huge vacuum to fill. So for me anyway, the yard takes on its own character. I just sort of push it along. I also think that's why I prefer to call my yard a yard and not a garden. Also different parts of the yard have their own characteristics, so there isn't necessarily an overall theme. I've lived here for two and a half decades now and still have barren areas that need to be developed. All in due time I suppose...especially now that I'm retired and have more time to devote.
Anyway, in this rambling, I guess what I'm trying to say is that I like all aspects of the process called "gardening" but don't really pursue a specific look for my yard...it just sort of takes on a look of its own that I'll admit, I'm happy with and take pride in. One last thought I want to re-emphasize...if there has been one thing consistent in my own personal horticultural evolution it has been EXOTIC. I like exotic. Unusual looking, unusual combinations, uncommon...so in that way, my yard does NOT have a dialogue with the surrounding environment but yet does not look out of place either (at least I feel that way).
Here's a site where I recently placed a dozen photos of my yard. http://yardshare.com/myyardthumb.php?yard_id=384
-Ron Whisenhunt- Spring Valley CA
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