Tag: Berkshire garden tour

  • Friday, July 19, 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm – Cocktails in Great Gardens: Rockland Farm

    Rockland Farm comprises a variety of areas that flow one from another over about ten acres of the Canaan, New York property. A 450-foot-long rock ledge runs parallel to the front drive and is topped by a dry garden in silver, gray and blue, with a thyme walk along one edge. Raised areas on the west side of the house feature exotic and tropical plants, many in containers. Behind the house is a sequence of garden rooms: a lavender garden contained within a raised hornbeam hedge; a perennial garden in pastels surrounding our pool; a water garden, fronted by a white garden and with a shade garden and rhododendron walk behind; a hot sundial and rock garden; and a fenced vegetable and cutting garden. From here, a hydrangea allée leads to a lawn with sweeps of perennials on one side and a mixed garden containing a faux-bois set on the other—or to steps up to a small, wooded knoll, where paths offer intermittent views of the garden and the hills beyond and connect a folly, a water feature and a stumpery. Where the garden meets open land, a Tim Prentice kinetic piece snakes its way through the trees, and a massive carved bench in a pine grove overlooks a three-acre lake in the middle-distance. Rockland Farm has been featured in magazines and in the books Great Gardens of the BerkshiresPrivate Edens, and Private Gardens of The Hudson Valley.

    Berkshire Botanical Garden will host Cocktails at Rockland Farm on July 19 from 5 – 7. $40 for BBG members, $55 for nonmembers. Address and directions will be provided upon Registration. Register at www.berkshirebotanical.org.

    photo by Rich Pomerantz
  • Wednesday, August 16, 8:00 am – 6:30 pm – Trip to Naumkeag & Chesterwood: Gardens, Art & Architecture in the Berkshires

    The summer estate of Daniel Chester French (1850-1931), sculptor of Abraham Lincoln for the Lincoln Memorial, is one of the hidden gems of the Berkshires. After a guided tour of French’s newly rehabilitated studio and nine-bedroom residence, we’ll enjoy a buffet lunch and free time to explore the formal gardens and woodland walks, plus an outdoor sculpture exhibition of works by 15 contemporary artists.

    The afternoon will feature a guided tour of the house and gardens at Naumkeag. With its gracious house, magnificently restored gardens, and panoramic views, Naumkeag is a quintessential country estate of the Gilded Age. Joseph Choate, a leading 19th-century attorney, hired the architectural firm of McKim, Mead, & White to design the 44-room “cottage” which would serve as a summer retreat for three generations of Choates. With its views of Monument Mountain, its stunning collection of gardens created by Joseph Choates’s daughter, Miss Mabel Choate, and famed landscape architect Fletcher Steele, its original artwork, and its shingle-style house, Naumkeag creates an unforgettable experience for visitors. Garden highlights include the Blue Steps, a series of deep blue fountain pools, flanked by four flights of stairs and a grove of white birches; the Afternoon Garden; Tree Peony Terrace; Rose Garden; Evergreen Garden; and Chinese Garden.

    Please wear comfortable walking shoes and be prepared for climbing stairs and walking on uneven ground. There are no elevators at Naumkeag.
    Wednesday, August 16, Leave Tower Hill at 8am, return at 6:30pm. Tower Hill Member $150, Non-member $175, including transportation, guided tours and buffet lunch. Register online at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Saturday and Sunday, July 16 – 17 – Twentieth Annual Pittsfield Garden Tour

    The Twentieth Annual Pittsfield Garden Tour, to be held this year on Saturday and Sunday, July 16 and 17, is a very easily navigated self-guided tour. First you need to obtain a ticket (passport), either before the tour or on the days of the tour.
    Although the tickets can be used on either day, they may not be transferred to another person. Each garden is numbered and the ticket will contain a map showing you where each of the gardens is located.

    Throughout the route there are pink Garden Tour signs – floating pink and white balloons – showing the direction; at each garden there is a large tent sign with balloons to let you know you have arrived.

    Upon arrival you will be greeted at the entrance by a volunteer who will stamp your passport with a rubber stamp unique to that garden. You need not attend the gardens in any particular order and you may attend each garden as many times as you wish during the two days of the tour. Usually the gardeners themselves will be on hand to answer any questions.

    Please have fun and enjoy this lovely garden tour. Passports (Non-transferrable tickets) go on sale Monday, June 8th. Buy early and save. Tickets are $16.00 prior to July 12th and from July 12th to the 17th tickets are $20.00 available during regular store hours at the following locations:

    Crown Jewelers, Allendale Shopping Center, Pittsfield
    Carr Hardware, 547 North Street, Pittsfield
    Different Drummer Kitchen, 374 Pittsfield Road, Lenox
    Berkshire Mountain Bakery-Pizza Cafe, 180A Elm St, Pittsfield
    The Bookstore, 11 Housatonic Street, Lenox
    Carr Hardware, 179 State Road, North Adams
    Carr Hardware, 256 Main Street, Great Barrington

    On the days of the Tour the passports (tickets) are available in a tent at the Pittsfield Common, Fenn Street from 9:30 – 4 p.m. on Saturday and from 11:30 to 2:30 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets on these days are $20.00. For more information and hours, email info@pittsfieldgardentour.org.  Image from www.theberkshireedge.com.

  • Saturday, May 16, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm, and Sunday, May 17, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Trade Secrets

    Welcome to Trade Secrets – the two-day garden event that includes a rare plant and garden antique sale on Saturday, May 16, and a four-garden tour on Sunday, May 17. We are excited this year to be celebrating the 15th Anniversary of Trade Secrets, dubbed by many to be the northeast region’s garden event of the year!

    Founded by Bunny Williams, Trade Secrets is the signature fundraiser for Women’s Support Services (WSS) of the Northwest Corner of Connecticut. The WSS mission is to create a community free of domestic violence and abuse through intervention, prevention and education by offering free, confidential, client-centered services focused on safety, support advocacy and community outreach.

    This year many beloved vendors are returning (along with a few new additions we know you will love!) for Saturday’s rare plant and garden antique sale at LionRock Farm in Sharon, CT (pictured below.) We have four lovely Connecticut gardens on the Sunday garden tour – including the Trade Secrets’ signature garden of Bunny Williams and John Rosselli – always a treat.  Tickets are available online at http://www.tradesecretsct.com/tickets.

  • Thursday, August 7, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – A Native Meadow: 40 Acres and Over 10 Years of Success

    More than a decade ago, Larry Weaner Landscape Associates designed and installed 40 acres of native meadows and prepared management plans for extensive woodlands on a 400 acre estate in northwest Connecticut, Twin Maples.  A series of pocket landscapes were also created to highlight and enhance the property’s diverse array of existing microhabitats.  In the 10 years since installation, the introduced native paltns have been dispersing seeds and invasive species have been carefully controlled.  The property’s dynamic has now shifted to the point where native species dominate and are even proliferating into unplanted areas.  Upkeep is consequently a fraction of that needed for comparably sized properties.  Yet it is the raw beauty of this place and its evolution in concert with thoughtful management that is most compelling and uplifting: to experience it is to understand how humans can engage in a dance with the land itself.

    On Thursday, August 7, the Ecological Landscape Alliance will sponsor a tour of the property with Larry Weaner, from 1 – 3 pm.  To register, call 617-436-5838, or email ela.info@comcast.net.

  • Thursday, August 7, 10:00 am – 12:00 pm – The Beautiful Garden of Bunny Williams

    Join head gardener Eric Ruquist on Thursday, August 7, for a tour of the beautiful country garden of renowned interior designer and author Bunny Williams. Located in the northwest corner of Connecticut, the tour is timed to take advantage of the height of this magnificent garden’s flora display. In addition to an insider look at maintaining one of Connecticut’s most beautiful gardens, Mr. Ruquist will focus on the cutting garden and demonstrate how he brings the garden indoors with beautiful floral arrangements. Participants are encouraged to bring a picnic lunch to enjoy on the property following the program.

    Eric Ruquist is an artist, gardener and for 13 years the head gardener for Bunny Williams. He was curator of flower garden collection at Stonecrop Gardens, located in Cold Springs, NY, and greenhouse manager for a private estate in Westchester County. Eric thinks of himself as a plantsman and also gardens his own riverside property in Falls Village.

    Bring a bag lunch and dress for the weather. Participants can choose to carpool or drive separately. Those joining the carpool should meet in the parking lot at Berkshire Botanical Garden for a 9:15 am departure. Carpool will return at approximately 1:30 pm. (Program time in Falls Village, CT, is 10am – noon.) BBG members $50, nonmembers $60. To register, visit http://www.berkshirebotanical.org/ai1ec_event/the-beautiful-garden-of-bunny-williams/?instance_id=2618.

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  • Sunday, June 2, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Berkshire Area Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days Program kicks off in the Berkshires on Sunday, June 2, from 10 – 4, with two superior gardens.  Ticketing information may be found at www.gardenconservancy.org.
    Under the Hemlocks, 258 Great Barrington Road
    Housatonic, MA 01236-9773
    The owners write: After a two-year absence from the Open Days program, this garden is ready to be shown again. The garden is maturing and ripening – taking on what it wants – where and when. We still have the basic structure in a wooded setting–a bowl, with a rock garden in the front and the Magnolia garden, with the pond and upper walk in the back, surrounded by many rhododendrons. Boulders are everywhere – such blessings. The many shrubs and trees we planted have grown and taken their places with grace and certainty. There are eleven Japanese maples–at least four varieties –with their graceful shapes and colors. The white Thalia daffodils look spectacular under three of these maples on the side garden. In the Fall, it is the blue Lobelia siphilitica under the same maples. The weeping pines are larger and even droopier. Different grasses and hostas are everywhere. Perennials do their thing: the blue/purple drift of phlox divaricata mingling with the tulips in Spring; the foxgloves popping up all over the upper back garden a little later. Primula Japonica put on a major display after the Spring bulbs die back. Then summer moves on apace, with lilies, including waterlilies in the pond making their appearance, culminating with the Fall display of full grown coleus, phlox, blooming Ligularia Desdemona, dahlias, grasses, Kirengeshomas, and brugmansias. Sculptures dot the garden here and there, also the unexpected. The garden has been featured in several magazines: Passport, Country Living Gardener, Country Gardens, and is one of the Great Gardens of the Berkshires, a recent book by Virginia Small and Richard Pomerantz. We have added a new garden–-the woodland walk–-a playground designed for our new grandson, complete with fire pit. People enjoy the natural flow and feel of this garden. Please feel welcome at Under the Hemlocks.

    Good Dogs Farm—Maria Nation and Roberto Flores, dirtmeisters
    334 West Stahl Road
    Ashley Falls, MA 01257
    The owners say: In the years since we were last open for the Garden Conservancy the gardens have undergone a major transformation. The madcap exuberance has been tamed. The perennials have given way to boxwood, yew, junipers and broad swaths of ground cover beneath clipped shapes. The palate is a more harmonious series of blues, greys and greens. Where once it was a riot of color, now it is a place for peace and contemplation; a place where the shadows and light are as much a part of the garden as the plantings themselves. The paths through the gardens still lead to the follies and eccentricities of the owners – the outdoor bake oven, the outdoor shower, the distant sleeping room, the Keep (a new viewing tower created by Grey Davis & Chase Booth), and the large vegetable garden contained by a rough cedar fence, etc etc. Now the paths also lead the wanderer to the mini donkeys and Haflinger horse, the new barn and paddocks, the farm that has replaced the wild meadow and a river walk carved from the bramble. And, of course, good dogs still live here – and sometimes they stay out of the garden. Our gardens have been featured in Cottage Living, Berkshire Living, The Litchfield Country Times, Oprah’s *O at Home*, Gardenista Daily, various catalogues and the books Great Gardens of the Berkshires and Jack Staub’s newest: Private Edens, published in the Spring of 2013. We look forward to seeing you.

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  • Sunday, July 31, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Berkshire Area Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy has announced its plans for the Berkshire County area Open Day on Sunday, July 31, from 10 – 4.  The first garden to be featured is Seekonk Farm, 296 Division Street in Great Barrington, featured in the 2008 book Great Gardens of the Berkshires. The eighteenth-century Seekonk Farm is set amidst New England fieldstone walls, antique iron gates, and a handmade fence. A natural arbor beyond an American elm and a large katsura tree invites one to a woodland path where Honey Sharp continues to labor on re-introducing native plants. Closer to the house, a lavender-edged walkway follows a small herb garden while the old-fashioned perennial beds now feature pale pink penstemon and dark fuchsia-colored sanguisorba rubbing shoulders. Leading to the pool garden are old-fashioned climbing roses spilling over a fence that borders the small vegetable garden. The pool garden enjoys a chartreuse, silver, and burgundy palette. Contrasting textures and shapes abound amidst the grasses, Japanese maples, smoke bush, ‘Black Lace’ sambucus, and small conifers. An old stone well cover, highlighted by rust colored lichens, remains a focal point.

    Next, also in Great Barrington, is Wheelbarrow Hill Farm, 634 South Egremont Road. What captivated the owners about this house was its site, nestled in the trees on top of a hill with long views. With no flat ground for borders, they tried to use the trees and hill to frame the garden and the view. The tree line provided a place for woodland plants and shrubs. Flower beds terraced into the hill allow them to see the borders from above, below, and at eye level. Trees have been pruned and cut to frame the view. A kitchen herb garden is planted within a walled courtyard. A cutting garden sits at the base of the hill. Wildflowers and groundcovers grow on trails through the woods.

    On to Stockbridge, to Fitzpatrick’s Hillhome (Please Note: open only from 11:00 am – 3:00 pm). Hillhome, pictured below, an historic and distinguished Stockbridge estate, was designed in 1918 by a protégé of Charles F. McKim who was known for the design of private country houses and U.S. diplomatic offices abroad. Its gardens, created from 1933 to 1935 by the well-known landscape architect Prentiss French, nephew of the sculptor Daniel Chester French, set off an impressive view of the Berkshire Hills. Leading to a long stone-paved and grass terrace is a heavy wooden garden door. At the northern end of the terrace stands a three-sided stone architectural structure resembling an arched ruin and created by moving an old mill, stone by stone, from West Stockbridge. This folly continues to provide a quiet and secluded space from which to enjoy the expansive views beyond. French made extensive use of massive stone retaining walls, thereby creating dramatic terraces in the steep hillside. Today, the walls contain charming alpine plants. Not to compete, however, with the view, the genius loci of the property, are the generally more restrained plantings and perennial borders. Be sure to visit the twenty-foot waterfall which splashes through serpentine paths leading down to an iris-bordered lily pond. You will reach it through a small secret garden at the southern end of the main terrace. In 1949, Hillhome was awarded the prestigious Gold Medal by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society. Today, French’s original design remains largely intact.

    Four Williamstown gardens complete the roster.  102 Ide Road features an expansive lawn and garden around a 1902 architectural gem of a residence with an exquisite porch for summer life and new carriage house and living space. . Seasonal gardens feature witch hazels, birches, hawthornes, and maples among other trees; deciduous hollies, hydrangeas, clethras, Chinese tree peonies, and comptonia among other shrubs join with ecclectic selections of bulbs, vines, and herbaceous perennials. Cultivated since 2005, the gardens while youthful in their fullness, do as gardens do in lovely places—appeal strongly seen with the clouds and sky, the moving sun and shadows of time, impressions and detail bringing alive scents and colors and textures for enjoyment. The lawn and gardens on the west adjoin those of Robert and Ilona Bell, open also to visitors through The Garden Conservancy. They form a wonderful background, provide an especially rich depth of field, and mutual pleasure. Tickets for this garden and the next at 152 Ide Road will be collected and sold at 152 Ide Road. 152 Ide Road is described as a romantic garden, surrounding an old carriage barn, divided into rooms to resemble the English gardens loved by the owner/gardener/garden writer/ English professor. The tour begins with a sunken, walled garden that leads to a formal pool with an island waterfall, water lilies, and the divine lotus that bloom in July. A rustic pergola connects the water garden to a trellised, ornamental kitchen garden. A white garden, surrounding clumps of native birch, pays homage to Sissinghurst. A folly, with broken stones and a dripping column evokes ancient ruins, while an aged cedar window on an old marble base frames the folly, the long hot border, and the Phillips garden to the east (also open to Conservancy visitors). Lushly planted pots, secluded seats, and carefully positioned ornamental trees and shrubs provide focal points that draw the eye from one space to the next. The large number of climbing structures covered with flowering vines (over sixty clematis alone) and the wide variety of perennials and annuals, arranged in surprising combinations of color and texture, will make this densely planted garden equally interesting to plant lovers and aesthetes. Pictures and additional information can be found online by searching Smithsonian archives+Ilona’s garden.

    260 Northwest Hill Road is an harmonious landscape of interweaving meadow, lawn, stone terrace, gardens, pools, and house. Elegant, yet informal, the outdoor spaces vary in character from a dramatic woodland ravine, to an intimate bedroom shade garden, to an expansive lawn with views of Mount Greylock and Dome Mountain. Guests are immediately welcomed by an arrival garden with a terraced front entrance. They will visit a rhododendron and hosta shade garden, a rock garden with fishpond, and a lower grove with a sitting garden. Each is unique in character, yet intimately connected with the house and the surrounding multi-level terrain.

    Finally, Brooks Garden, 36 Keep Hill Road, surrounds one of the first modern houses in Williamstown, which was built in 1948 overlooking the valley and Mount Prospect beyond. The pond and fountain in the entrance circle is one of four made by the owners. On the west side of the circle is a small katsura grove. Connecting the house and garage is a courtyard with a pergola and trellis that holds wisteria, kiwi, clematis, and roses. In the middle is a small pond with a quiet fountain surrounded by herbs, pastel spring flowers which give way to warmer colors that attract hummingbirds and butterflies later on in the summer. A larger pond and watercourse is found in the more extensive part of the garden where paths connect different rooms a shade garden and sedum garden and two new gardens in progress. On the east side of the house is a small vegetable garden, rhododendrons and lilacs, and the patio with a small fountain. All landscaping, garden design, stone walls, and care are provided by the owners.

    This tour is rain or shine, and you may pay cash ($5) at each garden you visit, or purchase tickets on line in advance at www.gardenconservancy.org.

  • Saturday, September 25, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Traveling Landscape Design Clinic

    This fast-paced, information saturated clinic sponsored by the Berkshire Botanical Garden will be held at the homes of several of the workshop participants on Saturday, September 25, from 9 am – 5 pm. An active discussion format will focus on common design principles. Problem solving, conceptualizing a landscape master plan and understanding the design process are among the topics to be explored. All attendees will participate in the process of observing and designing. Should time permit, you will visit some of Walter’s projects completed or in-process. This field trip will be held rain or shine. If you would like your property to be one of the site visits, let BBG know. There will be a $40 charge for design visits which may last up to one hour.

    Walter Cudnohufsky is owner of Walter Cudnohufsky Associates Landscape Architects, Ashfield, Mass. He is the founder, and for twenty years the director, of the Conway School of Landscape Design. Mr. Cudnohufsky received his M.L.A. from Harvard Graduate School of Design and his firm has received numerous awards and Walter has been recognized as an outstanding educator.
    $85 for BBG members, $90 for non-members. Register online at www.berkshirebotanical.org, or call 413-298-3926.

  • Sunday, July 25, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Columbia County, New York Open Day

    Columbia County, New York is just over the Massachusetts border in the Berkshires, and those of you in the area may wish to avail yourselves of another Garden Conservancy Open Day opportunity.  Admission to each private garden is $5, tickets are not required in advance, and full details may be found at www.gardenconservancy.org.

    Adams-Westlake, Ancram, New York

    Two writers, garden writer Abby Adams (see The Gardener’s Gripe Book, below) and her late husband, crime novelist Donald Westlake (who wrote under the name Richard Stark), authored the various plantings on this former farm, in a pastoral Columbia County valley. The gardens have evolved over twenty years, reflecting the owners’ deepening involvement with the larger landscape. Ornamental gardens, perennial borders, a walled swimming pool enclosure, an ornamental frog pond, and a courtyard herb garden frame the 1835 farmhouse. A small orchard and a cutting garden/vegetable plot continue the farming tradition. Behind the house, strategically placed paths and sitting areas guide the visitor through the landscape to a deep natural ravine where a spring-fed pond faces a field of wildflowers. A winding creek has recently been liberated from its tangle of thorny multiflora rose, to be replaced by wild and native plant species. Above the ravine, high meadows offer sweeping views.

    Grant & Alice Platt, 46 Tibbet Lane, East Taghkanic, New York

    This garden, which won a Golden Trowel Award from Garden Design magazine in 2005, is nestled in the woods at the end of a country lane. It takes advantage of a widely varied landscape to create a series of informal gardens that attempt to exploit the beauty of the natural setting. The site contains woodland paths, which wander over bridges across a creek and past the remains of old stone walls and natural rock formations. Included in the gardens are sunny herbaceous borders, a rock garden, shade garden, and a park-like hillside garden. Out of sight but just over a rise is a path that leads to a swimming pond.

    Directions:
    From Taconic State Parkway north, pass Route 82/Ancram/Hudson exit and go 1.6 miles. Turn right onto Post Hill Road (from north, turn left). Go 0.8 mile to a silo at Nostrand Road. Turn left and go 0.3 mile to Route 27 (no sign). Turn left and go 1 mile to Taconic Parkway underpass. Go 0.5 mile to Tibbet Lane. Turn left. Proceed to parking area.

    Helen Bodian, Ancramdale, New York  (Please note this garden is open from 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm only)

    The setting is old farmland at a relatively high elevation, cradled in a cirque of hayfields, deciduous forest and meadow, and intersected by a dirt road. Over time, thanks to a desire to experiment with mood and style and unusual plants, the owners  developed four separate gardens, each with its own character and season. In the process, they’ve tried to follow a rule that would unite all four: while displaying a love for botanical diversity and without confiding ourselves to natives, the plantings must nevertheless fit our landscape or play off the surrounding native flora. Starting next to the house is a naturalistic rock garden, scaled both to a shale hill suspended above it and to an elongated modern addition to the house. Across the road is a romantic garden in the form of an open square, and adjacent to that is the greenhouse and its walled garden. For those of you who have visited in the past, the all too labor-intensive, wildly colorful walled garden has been replaced with quite its opposite – a quiet, contemplative, modernist design containing a small pool. Finally, down a longish path, is a productive vegetable and cutting garden where we grow odd and unusual edible plants. The paths, which make patterns through the meadows and connect the gardens to one another, also connect to the outer landscape, leading from the gardens to pond and woods and up the hills to miles of forest trails.

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