Pages

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Bloedel Reserve, Seattle WA


The last stop on the Garden Blogger's Seattle Fling tour was to the Bloedel Reserve on Bainbridge Island, just east of Seattle, across the Puget Sound. The private and public gardens we visited in Seattle were beautiful but the Bloedel was truly spectacular.
 
The Reserve's 150 acres were filled with quiet trails through woodlands and landscaped gardens, including a Japanese Garden, a Moss Garden and Reflection Pool. 


The Bloedel Reserve was once the home of Prentice Bloedel and his wife, Virginia, who resided on the property from 1951 until 1986. He was deeply interested in the relationship between people and the natural world, and the power of landscape to evoke emotions ranging from tranquility to exhilaration. You can read more about the Bloedel Reserve here

True to Seattle's reputation, it rained the entire day we were at Bloedel, but somehow the wet and the mist added to the beauty of the landscape.


My favorite was the Moss Garden area. Everywhere I looked, moss covered the ground, tree trunks, fallen branches and stones. Ferns and low growing plants filled in the other areas:


The Japanese Garden was serene and beautifully manicured:


The Glen was filled with Birch trees, Rhododendrons and a lovely pond:


Every twist and turn within the Bloedel Reserve was truly breathtaking and magical. If you are ever in the neighborhood, I highly recommend it!



Monday, August 15, 2011

What's Blooming: August

It's Garden Bloggers Bloom Day! Here's what's growing and blooming in my garden this month.

It's been a rainy past few days here in western Long Island, but at least I got to photograph a few of my plants while the sun was still shining.

The Black-eyed Susan's have finally bloomed. I just love their cheery yellow with the dark center.


The purple Salvia has really done well in these boxes and their darkness is a nice contrast to the lemon-yellow Zinnias.

Every time I look at these impatiens, I am still in awe that these were from cuttings I made. Look how full and lush they are!

The Morning Glory vines have really taken off and trying to grab hold of anything they can climb on. I love the shade it provides from inside the house and the way it looks from the outside. I planted a mix of seeds, so the flower colors range from a deep purple to pink to a deep blue. So pretty.


The ferns in the shady area of my backyard are also doing well (as you can see from the fertile fronds on the fern below). But even happier is the Tradescantia zebrina creeping along the grass below the container.


The Caladiums look great, although the spotted pink/green ones are competing a bit with the white Impatiens. Still, they look full and lush and add a spot of color under that maple tree.

The pink Begonias I transplanted from a full shade spot are much happier now in this partial shade spot.

Next year I must remind myself to only plant Coleus in this container. I love the foliage color, but it completely choked out the other plants I had planted with it. Frankly, I don't really mind because it looks so healthy, but still...

I've noticed some garden nurseries advertising garden mums already. Much too early for me - I'm hoping my garden continues to look good through the month of September. See you next month!

Many thanks to Carol over at May Dreams Gardens for hosting the monthly Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Seattle's Public Gardens


In my last post, I showcased some of the private gardens I visited while attending the 2011 Garden Bloggers Fling in Seattle, WA.  A nice contrast to these was some of the great public gardens, arboretums and parks in the Seattle area. Here are some of the highlights I enjoyed:

Dunn Gardens
Dunn Gardens is a beautiful spot and currently listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Located in Seattle's Broadview neighborhood, it was once the summer home of Arthur Dunn and was originally landscaped by the Olmsted Brothers in 1915.


The Olmsted firm, established in 1858 by Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903), designed some of the most notable urban parks in the United States, including Central Park in New York City, the capitol grounds in Washington D.C., and Boston Commons.

The Olmsted Brothers liked to work with the natural topography of the site in their designs, and tried to incorporate as much of the native vegetation and surrounding landscape as possible. A characteristic Olmsted plan included wide, curving paths that connected a series of individual park-like settings, each reflecting the characteristics of its individual site. The parks often featured broad lawns, punctuated by stands of native trees and shrubs.



Dunn Gardens is the only Olmsted residential garden regularly open to the public in Washington state.

The weeping beech tree looks like a natural waterfall into the pond below. 

Ferns growing above a moss-covered bed.

Beautiful mix of plants all within the same color scheme.


I love the texture combinations of these plants in the above and below photos. 


Some beautiful plants in the curator's garden.


Miller Library and Gardens
Housed at the University of Washington's Center for Urban Horticulture, the Miller Library
is the first and only library in the Seattle area dedicated to gardening and horticulture. Gardeners, horticulturists and naturalists could all find something of interest here, and better yet, they would be able to borrow from the collection like a regular library.

The library has over 15,000 books and more than 700 garden periodicals. There's even a rare-book collection with garden texts dating back to the 17th century.

Outside the libary, are UW Botanic Gardens. Officially referred to as the Soest Herbaceous Display Gardens, it was created to help local gardeners select plants appropriate to a variety of site conditions commonly found in Pacific Northwest urban gardens. This garden features over 280 kinds of herbaceous plants that include perennials, annuals, and bulbs.

The gardens demonstrate how soil and light affect plant growth and health; each of the eight beds have a different mixture of soil type and light exposure.


Bellvue Botanical Gardens
The sun shone brightly on this 36 acre botanical garden which is filled with perennial borders, alpine gardens, dahlia and fuschia gardens, woodlands and meadows - just to name a few.

Perennial gardens
I call this a "fuzzy daisy"

After spending a long day in the sun, the woodland gardens were a welcome retreat for me. The winding path was filled with trees, ferns and silent greenery.


Is this the door to a Hobbit's home??

Olympic Sculpture Park
This 9 acre park is a great way to experience different types of sculpture in an outdoor setting, all while enjoying the incredible views of Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains.


Colorful wildflowers grew along the path in the park.
Naturally, our group of garden enthusiasts were most excited and intrigued by the Nekoum Vivarium (vivarium means "a place of life" in Latin). In 2006, artist Mark Dion had a vision for a vivarium and, with permission from the State, had a Western Hemlock tree moved from Green River Watershed to a special greenhouse at the Olympic Sculpture Park.


Dion has been quoted as describing the vivarium as:
"In some ways, this project is an abomination. We’re taking a tree that is an ecosystem—a dead tree, but a living system—and we are re-contextualizing it and taking it to another site. We’re putting it in a sort of Sleeping Beauty coffin, a greenhouse we’re building around it. And we’re pumping it up with a life support system — an incredibly complex system of air, humidity, water, and soil enhancement — to keep it going. All those things are substituting what nature does—emphasizing how, once that’s gone, it’s incredibly difficult, expensive, and technological to approximate that system—to take this tree and to build the next generation of forests on it. So this piece is in some way perverse. It shows that, despite all of our technology and money, when we destroy a natural system it’s virtually impossible to get it back. In a sense we’re building a failure." (http://atlasobscura.com/place/neukom-vivarium-olympic-sculpture-park)


Seattle Arboretum at South Seattle Community College
The South Seattle Community College Arboretum was established by the College and the SSCC Foundation in 1978 in part as the result of a petition by the Landscape Horticulture Program students for an arboretum to serve as their living laboratory. The 6-acre site is used as a laboratory for plant identification, arboriculture, irrigation, landscape maintenance and landscape construction courses. The Arboretum is also used as an outdoor classroom by professional horticulturists and hobby gardeners.



The final public garden we visited was the Bloedel Reserve on Bainbridge Island. It was such an incredible place and I have so many photos to share. It truly deserves its own post, so stay tuned!