Nan Sinton


Saturday, July 24, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Bristol County Open Day, and Saturday, July 24, 10:30 am – 12:30 pm , Shaping Space with Nan Sinton

The Garden Conservancy will feature two South Dartmouth gardens on July 24 as part of this year’s Open Days program, along with a Digging Deeper session with Nan Sinton from 10:30 – 12:30. The Digging Deeper sessions sell out quickly so we are publicizing this early. Learn more and sign up at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/open-days/open-days-schedule/bristol-county-ma-open-day-2

The first garden, Stoney Ground, is a former goat pasture. A ground cover of poison ivy and a path through oak woods to a winding stream intrigued garden designer Nan Sinton and her Midwest-based colleague David Michener. In 2015 Nan built a new farmhouse and barn in historic Russells Mills Village and the new garden began. The goats were the clue: this was not rich farmland but it was endowed with layers of stones that the glaciers left for New England farmers.

Now restored stone walls and a long border planted for pollinators connect a private courtyard of Mediterranean-inspired planting to the woods. A raised-bed vegetable and cutting garden, a dry-soils shrub collection, a young magnolia glade, and experiments with matrix planting using natives and complementary non-invasive plants create an intriguing mix of intentional plant combinations that are all connected along a path interweaving sun and shade. The walks through the native oak, beech, and holly woods to the rock bluff overlooking the Paskamansett River are being developed.

The second property is the Gulf Road Homestead. In 1987 a historic New Bedford house, once slated for demolition, was moved and reconstructed with great attention to historical detail in open meadows bordered by woods near Apponagansett Bay. Fast forward 25 years and the much-traveled owner, inspired by trips to the Orient, sought to infuse the adventurous spirit of the house’s early whaling inhabitants into the landscape. She invited Sinton & Michener Associates to propose new ideas to enliven the open spaces, integrating play, exploration and discovery, and enhancing a growing collection of contemporary sculpture. High on the priority list was the concept of “oasis,” a place to relax and separate from the everyday world.

Sinton & Michener devised a “ramble,” planting trees to blend the backdrop of the woods with and around the existing lawns so that the sculptures are rediscovered from new prospects. Hidden in plain sight, they designed a modern labyrinth of hornbeam that were installed as two-foot tall saplings (be certain to discover what’s in the middle!) An old tree house was re-imagined as a place for contemplation and moon viewing, complemented by the Asian-themed handrails designed by the owner. Another re-purposing is “the Holloway” on the very sandy site of the former drainage field. As the plants mature and create shade, garden visitors will traverse the way of giant stepping stones while strolling through a flowery dell that is its own space apart from all others. Recently the pastoral setting has seen the owner and her family welcome cows to graze in a newly fenced meadow as the experiments in separating from the world and discovering the realms of whimsy and art continues.

The Gulf Road Homestead is the venue for the Digging Deeper session ($30 for Garden Conservancy members, $40 general admission). Join garden designer Nan Sinton to explore how she and her client work with this evolving landscape to celebrate both worldly adventure and peaceful retreat. Beginning with a flat, open site, Nan’s ideas for the present-day garden, her concept of “shaping space,” emerged when she saw it from an existing tree house. Her built and planted forms shape space as well as light and shadow, time and mood, scale and pattern. Inspired by the owner’s extensive travel, the adventurous spirit of the region’s early seafaring residents, and the importance of home in such peripatetic existences, the result is a carefully shaped sequence of experiences, spaces of surprise and active discovery as well as spaces to relax and separate from the everyday world. For more information, please contact the Garden Conservancy by telephone 845.424.6500, M-F, 9-5 Eastern, or email events@gardenconservancy.org.   


Wednesday, July 9, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Martha’s Vineyard Open Day

The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days Program continues Wednesday, July 9 on the island of Martha’s Vineyard.  For complete information visit www.gardenconservancy.org.

First up, the Norris Garden at 19 Blueberry Ridge Lane in Chilmark (PLEASE NOTE, this garden closes at 3 pm.) The garden is located on approximately four acres and was started in 2002, so many of the plantings are still young, with the largest, most mature rhododendron at close to eleven years old. It is located in a low area between two sets of hills to the north and south, crisscrossed by old stone walls. Although the plot was originally heavily wooded, and the soil is acidic, the high water table is a problem for growing rhododendrons. Native species to this area are highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum), cinnamon and royal fern (Osmunda cinnamomea and O. regalis), summersweet (Clethra alnifolia), swamp azalea (Rhododendron viscosum), holly and inkberry (Ilex opaca and I. glabra), sheep laurel (Kalmia angustifolia), and a “river” of skunk cabbage along the stream under a canopy of tall pitch pines (Pinus rigida), red and white oak, beetlebug or tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica), and swamp maples (Acer rubrum). The latter two have shallow root systems which compete with the plantings for moisture and nutrients. There are also spring ephemeral plantings which likely will have gone past (anemone, star flower). There are two man-made ponds with some surviving hardy waterlilies and white lotus, which are just beginning to show. The ponds suffer from muskrats, who love to feast on the lily tubers, but that’s a story for another time. Lots of frogs, turtles, and a stressed-out goldfish population (predation by otters, ospreys, herons). Main plant species collections include rhodies, Japanese maples, and hydrangeas with smaller groupings of mountain laurels (mostly from Broken Arrow Nursery), and tree peonies. In the fenced-in yard behind the house are two large herbaceous perennial beds (created and cared for by a local artist/gardener, Rick Hoffman), two mature apple trees, a small grouping of fruit trees, hydrangea row, Satsuki azaleas, mature yak hybrids, the kalmias, and several Stewartias. The main rhodie plantings extend away from the house along the driveway, a large area near the left of the lower pond and a smaller grouping on the other side of the pond. The “corral,” which was the first protected area, and several nurseries contain over 200 seedlings and plants from many sources. A grove of more than a dozen beetlebungs (Nyssa sylvatica) has been turned into a “damp garden” of ferns planted among stumps carried in from the woods, and other shade/moisture loving plants like arisaema (check out the Arisaema sikokianum with a pure white spathe and striped hood), trilliums, and epimedium. Please be careful of the many surface roots courtesy of the maples and beetlebungs. Some of the paths, especially in the seedling nurseries, are very narrow, and only one person at a time can pass. Suzy Zell, is the full-time head gardener and will also be available to answer questions. We really enjoy it when visitors come to see the collection so please don’t hesitate to ask. Admission: $7

Directions: Three miles west (sign to Menemsha) of intersection of North Road and State Road. Go 0.25 mile past Tea Lane to Blueberry Ridge Lane on left. Garden entrance is 0.25 mile on right. Cars must park near deer gate, which will lower as car passes over it. Limited 10 cars at one time.

Also in Chilmark, at 12 Middle Road, is Brookside Farm. For over thirty years, the gardens at Brookside Farm have been part of the magic of Martha’s Vineyard. Pond, pastures, and stone walls define the space in which trees and shrubs flourish as yearly hosts to the rich perennial garden. Spring flowers including lilacs, peonies, and poppies along the old walls lead out to fruit espaliers on the old milk house and garage. Summer plays out with the border of roses, phlox, gaura, and Joe pye weed. In the fall, the blue and white asters curtsey to the dahlias and rose mallows. The silent animals, horses, oxen, and an occasional barn cat contribute to the peace of nature’s best efforts.
Admission: $7

Directions: Brookside Farm is located about 2 miles west from center of West Tisbury via Music Street and Middle Road. Driveway is limited.

In West Tisbury, visit The Folly at 57 Lamberts Cove Road (HOURS 10 – 2). “The Folly” carved into a boulder is the only indication that you’ve got a surprise in store. The stucco house, balustrades, finials covered with ivy, planted urns, and winding hedges evoke an Italian villa. The many different areas, varied grades and contours, curves and textures, the mix of native plants among non-native, the stonework, the views around every corner, are a successful mix of formality within an informal context. The blue and white theme inside the house is continued outside yet is not overdone and, combined with the greens of the foliage, makes for a very natural, cool, and relaxed atmosphere. There is a protected pool terrace with wisteria dripping off an arched pergola overlooking the border and Vineyard Sound beyond. There are very many planted urns. There are parterres, groundcovers, ferns, and flowers, in the shade and in the sun. There is something for everyone. Admission: $7  (pictured below)

Directions: From Main Street in Vineyard Haven, turn right onto Cromwell Lane. Turn right onto Water Street, go several hundred feet and turn right again onto Beach Road. Go onto State Road. Go 1.5 miles and make slight right onto Lamberts Cove Road. Go 1.7 miles to #57.

Garden Club of the Back Bay speaker Judith Tankard, with her husband John, welcome you to their garden at 16 School Street in Edgartown. This is a new garden planted in 2006 to complement the historic house built around 1730 and fully renovated by the owners, an architect and a garden writer. The garden was designed by Nan Blake Sinton and is composed mainly of hardy shrubs and ornamental trees. Pale pink ‘New Dawn’ roses climb on the fence surrounding the garden, and the roof of the garden shed is covered in ‘White Eden’ and ‘Abraham Darby’ roses as well as a Clematis montana rubens. There are two crabapples (Malus ‘Donald Wyman’) and a large Viburnum sieboldii in the main garden. An espalier, created from Viburnum plicatum mariesii, on the wall of the house and a hedge of clipped Philadelphus coronarius in the parking area provide a bit of formality. There are small flower beds with astilbes, lavender, nepeta, salvia, and other perennials. A small brick patio is planted with lacecap hydrangeas and Hydrangea macrophylla ‘Enziadom.’ At the front of the house, there are American hollies, English boxwood, Ilex glabra ‘Nigra,’ and a large viburnum. One of the outstanding features of the garden is a large, old sycamore maple on the lane at the corner of the property, a survivor from earlier days.  Admission: $7

Directions: The house is located 1 block from Main Street at corner of School Street and Pent Lane. Garden entrance is on Pent Lane. No parking available.

Continue on to the Helman Garden. This walled garden was designed to be protected from the elements and not to compete with the natural beauty of the property, a private garden with formal bones. Square and rectangle beds are for flowers, some for herbs, some for vegetables, and some are mixed. It is a very personal place that ebbs and flows each year. There are four stone semi-circles that the owners call “ectetras.” The garden was designed by Diane McGuire.  Admission: $7

Directions: At the request of the Garden Host, directions to this garden are provided through the Open Days Directory, at other gardens open on this date, or by calling the Garden Conservancy office toll-free weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 1-888-842-2442.

The final garden is at 85 South Water Street, Edgartown. The original parts of this house are believed to date from the 1840’s. More than fifty years ago a former owner and founder of the Martha’s Vineyard Garden Club set out the sunken geometric garden in the shape of a Union Jack. In the late 1990s, the English garden designer Penelope Hobhouse added some important features to the garden, particularly the enclosure of the sunken flag garden to create an outdoor “room.” The garden contains some rare and unusual, as well as native, plants. Currently, the owners, who are hands-on gardeners from England, work closely with Leandro da Silva to implement further design changes.  Admission: $7

Directions: At the request of the Garden Host, directions to this garden are provided through the Open Days Directory, at other gardens open on this date, or by calling the Garden Conservancy office toll-free weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 1-888-842-2442.


Saturday, July 13, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Bristol County Open Day

The Garden Conservancy’s Open Day program will feature gardens in Westport, Dartmouth and South Dartmouth on Saturday, July 13, from 10 – 4, rain or shine.  Gardens include the Penney Garden described below:

The potential for year-round river views drew Jack and Celeste Penney to this wooded, bramble-covered peninsula. Working with the old trees and natural contours of the land, they built to take advantage of the extraordinary river views. The driveway leads past a composition of natural plantings around a vernal pool, home in spring to a chorus of frogs. By mid-summer the area glows with iris, cardinal flowers, black-eyed Susans and Joe Pye weed. On the water side, not visible from the street, landscape designer, Nan Sinton has enhanced the garden, creating transitional plantings as foreground to the magnificent views of the Westport River. Upright junipers and clipped inkberry hollies echo the native vegetation and provide year-round structure. Unusual perennials and summer flowering shrubs take full advantage of this special microclimate. Blue gates lead to the point, past a grouping of stone ‘chairs’ to a secret seating area with its own unexpected views. Sculptures, summer bulbs and dramatic container plantings punctuate this four season garden.

Directions: At the request of the garden host, directions to this Westport garden are available through our Open Days Directory, or at additional gardens open on this date.

Anne Almy’s Garden is another treasure. To fully experience and appreciate this garden located on a historic (1700s) family farm, one must explore the expansive views and garden located behind the house. What you will see is a generous perennial border surrounding a patio, several hydrangea beds and a dahlia bed, an herb garden, vegetable garden, blueberry patch, and raspberry and asparagus beds. In addition to the long shrub border along the road in front of the house, there are specimen trees located throughout the property. Pinus parviflora ‘Glaeka’, Fagus sylvatica ‘Asplenifolia’ and Cercidiphyllum japonicum to name a few. Located adjacent to the property is Sylvan Nursery, a treasure trove of trees, shrubs, and perennials.

Directions: At the request of the garden host, directions to this garden are available through our Open Days Directory, or at additional gardens open on this date.

Next to see is The Meadows at 189 Smith Neck Road, in South Dartmouth. The Meadows was designed in 1910 for ambassador Alanson B. Houghton and his brother Arthur, as a summer retreat for their families. Warren Manning was responsible for the original property layout for twin houses with flower gardens, a “pleasure drive” for the pony trap, tennis courts, apple orchard, and bathing beach. Shortly after construction of the houses, an Episcopal Chapel, a golf hole, and a croquet court were added to the design. The North House garden was redesigned in the 1937 by prominent designer, Ellen Biddle Shipman. This wonderful design for an all white garden is being restored by the current owners. The plans for this garden and period photos will be on view on Open Day. We hope that the soon to be published book by James O’Day about the collaboration of Manning and architects Chapman and Frazier, who designed the houses, will also be available. The original grounds and extensive views of Buzzards Bay remain intact and “The Meadows” retains its beauty as a summer retreat for five generations.

Directions: From I-95 North take Faunces Corner Exit. Turn right onto Faunces Corner and go to second light at Route 6. Turn left onto Route 6 and immediately turn right at first light onto Tucker Road. Follow Tucker Road (aka Bakerville) through Gulf Hill Road intersection until dead end at Rock-O-Dundee Road. Turn left onto Rock-O-Dundee down hill to dead end at Smith Neck Road. Turn right onto Smith Neck Road. Follow to mailbox number 189 and sign for St. Aidans Chapel. Enter stone gates opposite the mailbox. Follow driveway past chapel tio intersection. Both gardens are open to view.

Just down the road is The Meadows at 191 Smith Neck Road. Warren Manning sited this wonderful estate in 1910. Ellen Biddle Shipman planned the gardens and much of the hardscape in 1937. Today, as “ad hoc” gardeners, we have simplified the gardens and highlighted the hardscape. We pay tribute to Ellen Shipman’s White Garden within the dinning room terrace and have her plans framed overlooking the original site. The frog pond has more natural growth and is an active ecosystem. Flowers for the house are grown in the cutting garden that overlooks the tennis court. The main terrace, although simple, is the heart of our family gatherings with views over Buzzard Bay. Fountains, stone structures, and an overgrown maze complete the many gardened nooks of this property.

Directions: After going over the Padanaram Bridge, turn left onto Smith Neck Road. We are 3+ miles up Smith Neck Road. Park in the lot for St. Aidan’s Chapel.

Finally, enjoy the Coolidge-Goldman Gardens, 340 Barneys Joy Road in Dartmouth. Two artists have designed and maintained these gardens bordered by gracefully undulating farmland and pastures. The gardens include two large rings of lilies, annuals, and privet. Indigenous wildflower fields feature paths winding their way through in a maze-like fashion. The gardens have been called “magical” and encourage people to wander and explore, discovering new environments.

Directions: From I-95 take Exit 10/Route 88 South/Horseneck Beach. At 7.4 miles turn right onto Hixbridge Road. Go 1.5 miles and turn right onto Horseneck Road. Go 3.3 miles and turn left onto East Horseneck Road. Go 1.1 miles, and turn right onto Allen’s Neck Road. Road merges with Barneys Joy Road. Number 340 is on right.  Please park on marked area on grass or on street.

Complete information may be found at www.gardenconservancy.org.  $5 admission per garden.

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Thursday, October 13 – Saturday, October 15 – Tour of Garden in the Brandywine Valley

Join Berkshire Botanical Garden staff Dorthe Hviid, Elisabeth Cary and Molly Boxer October 13 – 15 for a three-day study weekend in the Brandywine valley of Pennsylvania. The cornerstone of this trip includes attendance to the Perennial Plant Conference held at the extraordinary Scott Arboretum located on the campus of Swarthmore College (pictured below.)  Attended by both professional and avid home gardeners from the northeast and mid-Atlantic states, this conference is by far the most sophisticated, cutting edge gardening conference held on the East Coast. This three-day trip includes transportation tours of exceptional gardens both private and public, admission to a world class gardening conference and optional evening lectures. There will be a bit of free time for relaxing and resting weary feet! The staff is eager to share this wonderful gardening adventure with you.

Included in the $765 cost (add $180 for a single room, and one must join the Berkshire Botanical Garden if not already a member):

Attendance to The Fall Perennial Plant Conference at Swarthmore College. Speakers include Fergus Garrett, Nan Sinton, Sydney Eddison, Roy Diblick, Gregg Tepper and the ever popular Promising Perennial Forum. For more information visit www.perennialplantconference.com.

Garden visits include:

Hortulus Farm, the private garden of Renny Reynolds and Jack Staub, New Hope, Pennsylvania.

Chanticleer Garden, Wayne, Pennsylvania

Scotts Arboretum, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.

Longwood Garden, Kennett Square, PA

Overnight accommodation at the Radnor Hotel on Philadelphia’s Main Line in Wayne, PA conveniently located near area gardens.

All lunches and breakfasts, admission to all gardens and the conference are included in the fee. Evening meals are on your own – a variety of different restaurants are located within walking distance to the hotel.  A non-refundable $400 deposit is due by August 15.  For more information, visit www.berkshirebotanical.org.


Saturday, July 17, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – South Dartmouth Open Day

Join The Garden Conservancy in the North and South Dartmouth area on Saturday, July 17 from 10 – 4  for a self guided tour of eight fascinating and diverse private gardens.

Fran & Clint Levin’s Garden, North Dartmouth

The gardens surround a house designed by an apprentice to Frank Lloyd Wright. The gardens have evolved over the past sixty years, working first with Allen Haskell, and since 2004 with Nan Sinton. The gardens include a rose garden, succulents, Japanese maples, a tropical garden, and in the last three years the owners have developed a contemporary stroll garden exploring different garden vignettes, vistas, and a “stumpery”. The gardens also include a fish pond, tennis lawn, and secret garden.  Francine Crawford of the Garden Club of the Back Bay reports that a tour of this garden with late fellow member Sandy Tishman several years ago was a highlight of the GCFMA Garden Tour Week.

Nancy & Richard Forbes, 523 Barneys Joy Road, South Dartmouth

Come see one of the most gorgeous properties on the South Coast. God provided incomparable views of the tidal Slocums River, farms tilting down to the river, and meadows, woods, and salt marshes. The Forbes’  part (and landscape architect Martha Moore’s) was to arrange native plant material so as to create interest and still to direct the eye outward. They have augmented the native material with an enclosed cutting and vegetable garden that includes prize-winning dahlias. You will be interested in how the two of them manage the place, with a little help, as they weekend and vacation in their Richard Bertman-designed house.

Frog Landing, 77 Elm Street, South Dartmouth

Set in mature coastal woods, Nan Sinton’s seven-year old garden draws inspiration from classic Renaissance design with an axial plan using native plants as key structural elements. Explore the street-side glade garden, then climb stone steps to a gravel entrance court planted with standard wisterias. Walk through tall wooden gates to discover the main garden areas. Here the designer/owner, who is also a passionate plant collector, has made a patterned viewing garden, a “green” room, and a formal allée. A hidden flower enclosure displays luxuriant tropicals, a vegetable and cutting garden is adjacent to the house, and a series of shaded woodland walks—the cool “bosco” of the historic sixteenth-century gardens—feature native viburnums, clethra, holly, magnolias, and ferns. The garden was featured in the August/September 2008 issue of Horticulture magazine.

Jardim Escondido, 147 Russells Mills Road, South Dartmouth

Jardim Escondido (Hidden Garden – and yes, the owner says it is Jardim, not Jardin) is a plantsman’s garden gem, tucked away behind tall hedges and large trees. The two-and-one-half acres is divided into two areas. Initially, you encounter a country garden: a large wildflower field, lush cutting gardens, and vintage milk house surrounded by specimen trees and backed by twelve acres of woodland. The garden surrounding the house is a romantic, Monet-like garden begun by the Perry family in the 1930s. This European-inspired garden includes beds of pastel annuals, perennials, mature specimen trees, and magnificent old taxus topiaries. Jardim Escondido offers the visitor a visual surprise sure to be appreciated.

Betsy & Greer McBratney, 29 Grinnell Road, South Dartmouth

Fifty years ago, Betsy and Greer McBratney purchased three acres of a new subdivision, Birchfield Farm, a defunct dairy on the shores of Buzzards Bay and Padanaram Harbor. In 1974, seven McBratney’s moved into their new house designed by Wills Association of Boston. The front retaining wall and rock garden were built by Lloyd Lawton of Tiverton, Rhode Island. Design assistance for plantings was given by Blanche Frenning of Little Compton, and later by Allen Haskell. The present sunken garden and attached greenhouse had two incarnations: the first had steps and walls of railroad ties; the second, with assistance of Chris Tracey of Avant Gardens, was of stone for steps and walls. Twenty-two hypertufa troughs line the sunken garden walls. Greer, a beekeeper, is also interested in the lawn, trees, fruits, and vegetables. Grass-cutting, pruning, picking, canning, and freezing are his domain.

Paradise Farm, 1157 Russells Mills Road, South Dartmouth

It takes a village to design a garden, at least in this case. Before the owners moved from Cambridge twenty-four years ago, gardening consisted of keeping house plants alive—barely. Here multiple overgrown acres were in much need of attention. Rather than trust their own green thumbs, they consulted an army of knowledgeable designers, drawing inspiration and information from each one. Lili Morss helped with the pool; Sue Underwood, Allen Haskell, Jim Sears, Nonie Hood, and Kathy Tracey with other gardens. Their collective vision, the rich soil, and a growing understanding of the evolution of a garden have brought the garden  to this point. The many rooms in the garden each have a different high season, and special feeling.

Seathrift – Alfred J. Walker, 288 Russells Mills Road, South Dartmouth

The home of Al Walker and Keith Karlson, “Seathrift” was built in 1860 by whale ship Captain Benjamin M. Wing. For the past twenty years the current owner has reclaimed more than six acres, designing garden spaces both formal and natural, creating the feeling of an arboretum of trees and flowering shrubs using English country and Italian influences in both structure, walls, and ornamentation, yet retaining a country feel. Keep an eye out for the wonderful conifers, a large selection of more than forty Japanese maples, and the granite creations of local artist Ron Rudnicki.

Sarah Spongberg Garden at Herring Run, South Dartmouth

Herring Run Farm is located in a bend of the Paskamansett River. The nine acres on which the house stands is part of old fields and groups of trees edged by native plants. Nothing has been done to alter the character of the landscape. The plantings are intended to enhance its natural swells and dips. The entrance to the kitchen has an herb garden and the entrance to the garden itself is a simple gate that is the portal to a serene natural landscape that feels timeless and is a welcome respite from the world. The reflection of the trees on the far bank of the river is the backdrop for an aerating fountain that reflects the light and adds sparkle to the dappled shade.

Admission to each participating private garden is $5 per person. Children 12 and under are admitted free. Admission may be paid in cash or check. Tickets are not required to attend Open Days. To purchase discounted tickets in advance or to order an Open Days Directory with complete directions to each garden, log on to www.gardenconservancy.org. The Garden Conservancy thanks Garden Design magazine, its national media sponsor for 2010.


Monday, June 28, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Garden Conservancy Open Day in Martha’s Vineyard

The Garden Conservancy will sponsor an Open Day in Martha’s Vineyard on Monday, June 28, from 10 – 4 (one garden is only open until 2 pm – see below). This is a walking or bike tour with little parking available in Edgartown. The best way to reach Edgartown is via Vineyard Transit Authority (www.vineyardtransit.com). There is bus service from ferry terminals at Oak Bluffs (#13) and Vineyard Haven (#1 or #13) to the Visitor Center on Church Street. There are public restrooms at Visitor Center.

85 South Water Street

The original parts of this house are believed to date from the 1840s. More than fifty years ago a former owner and founder of the Martha’s Vineyard Garden Club set out the sunken geometric garden in the shape of a Union Jack. In the late 1990s, the English garden designer Penelope Hobhouse added some important features to the garden, particularly the enclosure of the sunken flag garden to create an outdoor room. The garden contains some rare and unusual, as well as native, plants. Currently, the owners, who are hands-on gardeners from England, work closely with Jeff Verner of Verner Fine Gardens to implement further design changes.

108 North Water Street – Stretch’s Garden

The garden called “Stretch’s Garden” is comprised of a hillside garden border, flowing down the hillside, with Edgartown Harbor creating quite a picturesque backdrop. The owner writes: “We can enjoy the full-season display from our front porch of dozens of perennial species, including hand-pollinated seedlings of delphinium, phlox varieties, gaura, agastache, and Oriental lilies. Many tried-and-true annuals such as Marguerite daisy, angelonia, cosmos, and cleome help summer-long interest and beauty. I enjoy doing my own flower arrangements, but hate to steal even one bit of color from the garden, so we created the cut flower garden at the back of the house. Now with our newly enclosed glass back porch addition, we love its beauty so much we think we’ll have to add a third garden to cut from!”

Cate & Tom Applegate, 61 South Summer Street (open until 2 pm)

The garden was created in 1992 and includes a border of mature evergreens enhanced by layers of rhododendrons, hydrangeas, arborvitaes, cypress, leucothoe, hollies, and hemlocks with an understory of ferns and ivy. The yard has a delicate band of white impatiens circling it, which serves to complement the cool feeling accentuated by the canopy of stately trees. The atmosphere is serene, calm, and elegant, and is added to by an intimate private patio surrounded by sunny perennial flower beds abundant with blooms and color from May through October. Phlox, Shasta daisy, dahlia, veronica, delphinium, and several varieties of lilies all find their home here. Jeff Verner of Verner Fine Gardens assists with the garden.

Michael & Janice Donaroma, 46 Braley’s Way

This quintessential cottage compound consists of seven gardens each having its own unique character. A rose-covered trellis covers the entire front of the guest cottage, playing off the whimsical island bed. The upper level has a cool meditative garden while the studio bed is filled with hot, happy colors. Inside the pool area is the white garden which bursts into bloom during mid-summer. At the far end of the property is the Mauve Garden which leads into the enclosed cut flower and veggie garden. Enjoy the diversity on this small half-acre of property.

John & Judith Tankard, 16 School Street

This is a new garden planted in 2005 to complement the historic house built around 1730 and fully renovated by the owners, an architect and a garden writer (who has spoken twice to The Garden Club of the Back Bay.) The garden was designed by Nan Blake Sinton and is composed mainly of hardy shrubs and ornamental trees. Pale pink ‘New Dawn’ roses climb on the fence surrounding the garden, and the roof of the garden shed is covered in ‘White Eden’ and ‘Abraham Darby’ roses as well as a Clematis montana rubens. There are two crabapples (Malus ‘Donald Wyman’), a large Viburnum sieboldii, and fragrant lilacs in the main garden. An espalier, created from Viburnum plicatum mariesii, on the wall of the house and a hedge of clipped Philadelphus coronarius in the parking area provide a bit of formality. There are small flower beds with astilbes, lavender, nepeta, salvia, and other perennials. A small brick patio is planted with lace cap hydrangeas and Hydrangea macrophylla ‘Enziandom’. At the front of the house, there are American hollies, English boxwood, Ilex glabra ‘Nigra’ and a large viburnum. One of the outstanding features of the garden is a large, old sycamore maple on the lane at the corner of the property, a survivor from earlier days.

Woodside Garden – Dorothy Chaffee, 78 Planting Field Way

The garden at Planting Field Way is a woodside garden built on the bones from other gardens of my past. When the owner moved from the harsher conditions of her home at Job’s Neck, located on Edgartown Great Pond, “into town,” she brought some of the plants with her. Because of the more sheltered quality of the new garden, she was able to incorporate more delicate plantings such as dahlias, phlox, delphiniums, and campanulas. Her garden consists of a variety of heights, leaf shapes, and textures, and incorporates her favorite colors: peach, salmon, soft yellow, pink, and white with touches of blue. Each year she has added a few perennials that meet her criteria for color and form. The play off the salmons and soft yellows off the blues and whites are echoed inside the house and on the deck. The colors follow one throughout the house and yard. She feels the garden has a wonderful serene and private quality. The garden contains a low stone wall, a statue, and a birdbath as well as a stone pathway—the plantings complement and highlight these features and draw one’s eye through the garden. The rhododendrons form a pretty backdrop to the garden and surrounds. Recently she has expanded the garden so it can be seen from the screened porch as well as the back deck.

For directions and ticketing information, log on to www.gardenconservancy.org.

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Saturday, March 20, 8:30 am – 3:30 pm – The Changing American Flower Garden: Bringing Color, Fragrance and New Attitudes Home

Attend a one day symposium sponsored by the Rotch Jones Duff House in New Bedford, Massachusetts, on Saturday, March 20, beginning at 8:30 am and concluding at 3:30 pm.  In celebration of the RJD landscape, this symposium, the first of a three year landscape series exploring changing tastes in gardening in the 19th and 20th centuries, will focus on flower gardens.

Landscape designer and worldwide garden traveler Nan Sinton explores two centuries of the influences on American flower gardening as she shows how attitudes regarding spaces have evolved in her talk entitled “What Were They Thinking?”  Gardener, author, lecturer and long time instructor at New York Botanical Garden, Keynote Speaker Page Dickey, author of Dogs in Their Gardens,  invites gardeners to discover how the floral bounty of meadows and natural places can be brought home to even the tiniest space in her illustrated lecture, “Bringing Wildness into the Garden”, followed by a book signing.  Later, Joann Vieira, Director of Horticulture at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston, who leads the planning and planting of the extensive gardens and dynamic indoor and outdoor container displays there, will reveal which flowers she chooses for an extended season of bloom in “Tradition Meets Experiment: The Best Plants for a Flourishing Flower Garden.”  Following these presentations, there will be time for informal questions with the speakers.  Registration at The Rotch-Jones-Duff House and Garden Museum, 396 County Road, New Bedford, Massachusetts, begins at 8:30 am, and the program cost of $65 per person (members of the sponsor Rotch Jones Duff House) or $75 (nonmembers) includes lunch.  For more information, or to purchase tickets, call 508-997-1401, or log on to www.rjdmuseum.org.

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Wednesday, September 16 – Sunday, September 20 – New England Gardens in Early Fall

Masses of blue and gold daisies set New England gardens aglow in September.  Flowering grasses, drifts of asters, heleniums, boltonias, Japanese anemones, and sedums contrast with the luxuriant growth of tropicals.  Gardens wake up after the late August lull as the long, golden days of fall begin New England’s best season.  Horticulture Magazine’s  five-day tour, led by Horticulture’s Nan Sinton, will bring you to private gardens known for their fall beauty.  From coastal gems in Little Compton, Rhode Island to secret gardens in Vermont and a chance to learn from the masters when you visit with Wayne Winterrowd and Joe Eck at their remarkable country garden, North Hill, you’ll immerse ourselves in the best of fall in New England.

Space is limited.

To request more information on this garden program:

Horticulture Garden Programs
F+W Publications
700 E. State St.
Iola, WI  54990-0001