Friday, June 26, 2015

Character


"It is curious that physical courage should be so common in the world and moral courage so rare."
                                                                                                                                   Mark Twain


This carriage house leans in as if fighting against a strong prevailing wind. The roof heaves and rolls like the waves on an ocean. 

It even has a bit of an interesting story. 

When a new subdivision was added to this part of Fergus, the town planning department decided to square-off existing property lines even though it meant that the revised line would run right through the middle of this carriage house.

One neighbour owns the front half of the carriage house and the other neighbour owns the back half.


One of the two property owners is a gardener.




Here's another vignette that is effortlessly charming.


This gardener very much wanted me to take her picture.

What a great smile!


This is her garden in Guelph, Ontario.


Private Garden in Fergus, Ontario

I love the honesty of this shot down to the rake resting up against the tree trunk and the 
shirt drying on the line.

Private Garden in Fergus, Ontario

Tibetan prayer flags send prayers out on the wind.

Private garden, Fergus Ontario

I wonder what the plans are for the cobalt blue pot?

Private garden, Niagara-on-the-Lake

Is he hiding or did the Big Bad Wolf eat the third little piggy?


A lesson in how to add character.

Private Garden, Toronto Ontario.





And if you have any doubt as to which way to turn to find the garden, here's your answer.


Brain Folmer's Botanical Garden near Walkerton, ON

A pretty checkerboard garden.


"Why are you trying so hard to fit in, when you were born to stand out."
                                                                                                       Oliver James


"Charm is deceptive and beauty is fleeting..."
                                              from Proverbs

 Private Garden, Dartmouth, N.S.

Private garden, Georgetown, Ontario


"And he sailed back over a year 
and in and out of weeks
and through a day
and into the night of his very own room 
where he found his supper waiting for him
and it was still hot"
Maurice Sendak, Where the Wild Things Are


Have a wonderful weekend!

Sunday, June 21, 2015

A Willow Garden in the Rolling Hills of Caledon, Ontario



Garden Design by David Warburton Landscaping
Potting shed, Willow Gates and Fencing by Barbara Guy Long

Afternoon showers have finally abated, but as the air cools with the approach of evening, a fine mist has descended to soften and blur the line of trees that run along the horizon. The willow wattle fence that delineates Robin Ogilvie's garden is dark and wet making the soft grey lichen which colonize its surface stand out in contrast. 

Inside the willow fence, the peonies bend to the ground in submission to the weather, but the other flowers and foliage glisten with raindrops.

The golden color of the Creeping Jenny which carpets most of the flowerbeds easily makes up for any lack of sunshine.



Generally a garden is located somewhere on the perimeter of a house. We have become accustomed to think of this outdoor space as an extension of our homes; as having potential "rooms"complete with outdoor furniture. 

Robin Ogilvie's garden is distinctive. You don't roll out the back door and find yourself in her garden. While the garden is clearly visible from the house, it is at some distance. It stands on its own; distinct in the landscape. Visiting the garden requires a conscious decision and a short walk.

This garden is its own destination; a place to visit to cut some asparagus, pick some raspberries or cut some flowers for the house. 

Best of all, it is a place of beauty and Robin's own private refuge.


Inspired by one of artist Barbara Guy Long's woven willow fences in another Caledon area garden that designer David Warburton had created, Robin Ogilvie hired the pair to create something for her own home. 

I asked multi-media artist Barbara Guy Long to tell me how she became interested in working with willow.

"While living and working as an artist in Muskoka, I noticed all this wonderful twig furniture in old cottages. I wanted to learn how to build these things I loved, so I took a course in willow chair making with Maggie Longworth", says Barbara.

"It wasn't the chair that inspired me as much as the medium. I liked the way willow felt in my hands, the smell and the flexibility of it."

When Barbara met designer David Warburton, who was incorporating a willow wattle into a design for a rose garden he was creating for her cousin Sarah Haney, Barbara convinced David and his assistant Don Cochrane to take her on as an apprentice.

"Over a period of three years I learned how to build the structures that hold willow and how to wattle. I ended up finishing the work on those garden structures."



Peonies and irises in the centre flowerbed.




David Warbuton's inspiration for the garden's design came from an old picture of an English garden with a very primitive woven willow wattle.

"The garden structure is made out of cedar posts and willow which is wattled or woven. The willow is Salix purpurea," says Barbara.

Robin and David worked on the design for the plants and I started building the structure," continues Barbara,"I work intuitively so the woven structures, and the potting shed evolved out of the shapes I could find in the forest. I put a birch bark ceiling in the shed and used Alder to create the designs at the back of the shed. Because I didn't have a crew, it took me about a month to build it."

One of the distinctive planting features in David Warburton's planting scheme is the use of Creeping Jenny, Lysimachia nummularia 'Aurea'

It is a brilliant example of how a problem can become an asset. Creeping Jenny is a fairly aggressive plant, but when you give it the freedom to do its thing, the result can be quite amazing. 

Even if there was not a thing in bloom, this garden positively glows with color.


Golden Creeping Jenny, Lysimachia nummularia 'Aurea' is a bit more behaved than the common green Lysimachia nummularia, but it is still a vigorous groundcover. The stems will root into the ground wherever they happen to touch down. Be warned: once you have this plant it would be tricky to get rid of it. Sun, part shade to full shade. It prefers average or clay soil and conditions on the moist side. Height: 5-10 cm (2-4 inches) USDA Zones: 2-9.




Sweet Cicely, Myrrhis odorata is a plant you don't see often enough. It is both a herb and a flowering perennial. It's ferny foliage has a strong taste and a mild liquorice scent. It's flowers resemble that of Queen Anne's Lace, and when spent, the flowers are replaced with interesting seed pods. You can rejuvenate the foliage by cutting the plant back hard after it flowers. Sun or part shade. Sweet Cicely prefers sandy or clay soil that is moist (In my own garden, the soil is dryer than the plant might like and it is smaller for it). Height: 90-120 cm (35-47 inches), Spread: 75-90 cm (29-35 inches). USDA Zones: 4-9.

A medley of good foliage plants: Ligularia (seen in detail on the right), hosta and standing tall in the corner is Solomon Seal, Polygonatum.


One of the reason's you might want to grow Lady's Mantle, Alchemilla Mollis is its round, soft textured foliage. Raindrops cling to its leaves and shine like diamonds. The plant itself has a nice low mounded shape. Sprays of chartreuse flowers appear in early summer and make a nice filler for floral arrangements (This plant is a good self-seeder, so remove the spent flowers if you don't like unwanted seedlings ). You will sometimes see Lady's Mantle on lists of plants suggested for shade, but I find it much prefers part shade rather than full shade. 
Lady's Mantle, Alchemilla Mollis will grow in a variety of soil types and likes conditions on the moist side. Height: 30-45 cm (12-18 inches), Spread: 45-60 cm (18-23 inches). USDA Zones: 2-9.


Unknown variety of Bearded Iris


Unknown variety of Bearded Iris



As well as flowers, there are herbs, rhubarb and raspberries on the garden's perimeter. 

In the corner (seen on the left), there is a froth of asparagus foliage. 


Sundrops or Evening Primrose, Oenothera tetragonaNot everyone is a fan of this plant because it spreads (I find it easiest to remove unwanted plants at the time of flowering. Grab hold of the flower stem and yank!) It does well in sun or part shade. It has happy yellow flowers in summer and nice burgundy colored foliage in fall . Height: 30-50 cm, Spread: 30-40 cm. USDA Zones: 3-9


Lamb's Ears, Stachys byzantina has velvety-soft silver leaves. Though this is a plant grown for its foliage, it does have upright spikes of magenta-pink flowers in early summer. Full sun or light shade. Average soil is fine for this plant. It prefers conditions on the dry side and is drought tolerant once established. Height: 30-45 cm (12-18 inches), Spread: 30-60 cm (12-23 inches). USDA Zones: 3-9.

Salvia with Lamb's Ears and Creeping Jenny in behind it.


I think you will agree that the collaborative forces of Robin, David and Barbara have come together to create a distinctive garden that sits beautifully in among the hills of Caledon, Ontario.

More Information and Links:

Barbara Guy Long is a willow artist, designing and working with renowned  landscape architects and garden designers to create willow wattle weaving installations in gardens throughout Canada and the United Kingdom. Guy Long's unique creation, "The Living Room," on the grounds of the Ignatius Farms in Guelph Ontario is a living willow installation designed and developed in collaboration with members if Spark of Brilliance, a community based initiative for fostering healing and recovery from mental illness. Recently Barbara has worked on instillations at the Forks of the Credit Hospital in Orangeville and at the Bellhaven Hospital Garden in Scotland.

David Warburton Landscaping is a full service landscape design, installation and maintenance company located in beautiful Hockley Valley, Ontario. Among the many publications featuring David's design work are Gardening Life, Style at Home and Canadian Gardening.