Tag: Braveboat Harbor Farm

  • Saturday, July 22 – Sunday, July 23, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – York County Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy will sponsor an open day tour of Braveboat Harbor Farm, 110 Raynes Neck Road in York, Maine, and a Cape Neddick Garden on Saturday, July 22 and Sunday, July 23, from 10 – 4.

    This Braveboat Harbor Farm garden has been evolving over the last seventy-five years. It surrounds and complements a Georgian-style stone house. There are formal and informal borders, a vegetable garden, orchards, and collections of various flowering trees and shrubs. Apples and pears are espaliered on the house and along the walls of the formal front garden. Water features include a newly expanded pond in the woodland garden, a farm pond with rustic bridge, and the Atlantic Ocean. This treasure is protected by a sculpted arborvitae hedge on the northwest, a mature stand of hickory on the northeast, and an extensive screen of old lilacs on the south. New projects include expanding the collection of magnolias and rhododendrons, introducing hydrangeas, an espaliered pear fence, a woodland walk, and a summerhouse with views to the pond and the sea.

    Directions: Located off Route 103 South and Braveboat Harbor Road to end of Raynes Neck Road. Please park in field below house.

    In the Cape Neddick Garden, stroll down a curving, sylvan drive with wooded hills on the right and ferns or lower plants as an offset to the woods and a vernal pond area on the left. Take one of the foot trails to find a path along a marsh and the pond. Return to the drive and find rolling lawns and gardens. Then pass between the house and a lily pond on the way to a rocky Maine coast. Walk along the rocks or stay on the lawn in front of the house to pass through a gate onto a grassy walkway bordered by a stone wall, flowers, and shrubs. Ahead and on your right, you will discover a rock-rimmed swimming pool nestled in a grotto below a rocky promontory. Walk around the pool to climb some stairs, or meander up a grassy promenade toward the house, to find the drive once again. Leave the property the way you entered. (NOTE: this property is only open Saturday, July 22)

    For tickets ($5 Garden Conservancy members, $10 nonmembers) and more information, visit www.gardenconservancy.org. Prior registration is required – tickets will not be sold at the properties.

  • Saturday, August 5, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Garden Conservancy York, Maine, Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy will host three private garden openings on Saturday, August 5 in York, Maine, from 10 – 4.  Admission to each garden is $7 for Conservancy members and advance ticket buyers.  More information and directions to the gardens may be found at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/open-days/open-days-schedule/york-county-me-open-day-3

    Boardman Vegetable Gardens: The owner writes: My gardens are situated around the half-acre lot where my wife and I have lived for more than thirty-seven years. While a variety of flowers grow here, this would not be classified as an ornamental garden by any means. The property is more of a mini-homestead, where the primary goal is to grow food and other support species. Rather than exceptionally neat and orderly, you’ll find the plantings somewhat chaotic but relatively productive. Adhering to organic and permaculture principles, I use no chemical fertilizers or pesticides. Interspersed throughout the gardens are flowers and herbs which are chosen based on their ability to support pollinators, to attract beneficial insect predators, and to serve as companion plants. Numerous varieties of annual vegetables grow in raised beds. They typically include tomatoes, peppers, swiss chard, kale, brussels sprouts, broccoli, leeks, onions, beans, peas, squash, and garlic. The vegetables are are generally grown in mixed plantings rather than in large uniform blocks in order to discourage insect pests and diseases and to make more efficient use of limited space. We also grow perennial vegetables such as asparagus and rhubarb as well a small fruits, primarily blueberries and raspberries. In addition, we have a small flock of chickens which provides fertilizer for the gardens and which, in effect, turns weed seeds, garden trimmings, and bugs into eggs. A more recent addition is a colony of honey bees which aids in pollination and, in a good year, provides honey and wax. A solar PV array on the garage roof contributes to our efforts to be as green and self-sufficient as possible.

    Braveboat Harbor Farm (pictured): This garden has been evolving over the last fifty years. It surrounds and complements a Georgian-style stone house. There are formal and informal borders, a vegetable garden, orchards, and collections of various flowering trees and shrubs. Apples and pears are espaliered on the house and along the walls of the formal front garden. Water features include a newly expanded pond in the woodland garden, a farm pond with rustic bridge, and the Atlantic Ocean. This treasure is protected by a sculpted arborvitae hedge on the northwest, a mature stand of hickory on the northeast, and an extensive screen of old lilacs on the south. New projects include expanding the collection of magnolias and rhododendrons, introducing hydrangeas, an espaliered pear fence, a woodland walk, a summerhouse with views to the pond and the sea, and replanting the front walled garden. We will be watching for the surprises Mother Nature sends us after such an unusual winter!

    Pondfield: The primary garden at 33 Barrell Lane is designed to serve as the foreground and to frame the expansive view across tidal Barrell Pond, the Wiggly Bridge, and the York River. Densely planted, the color scheme is pink, purple, and blue. By contrast, a gravel courtyard is enclosed and intimate. The color scheme of the planting beds surrounding the courtyard is yellow, red, and orange.

  • Saturday, July 24, and Sunday, July 25, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – York County, Maine Open Days

    The Garden Conservancy will sponsor a two day garden tour of six gardens in York County, Maine on Saturday, July 24 and Sunday, July 25 from 10 – 4.  Entry to each garden is $5, and advance tickets are not required.  For complete information, log on to www.gardenconservancy.org.

    Howells-Metz Gardens, 9 Lawrence Lane, Kittery Point, Maine

    The property overlooks the Piscataqua River and Pepperell Cove. The landscaping joins four houses and outbuildings with lawns and gardens that flow into each other. An English conservatory is used for starting seeds for vegetables and annuals.There are rhododendrons and azaleas and shrubs along the houses. Other gardens include a rock garden, a rose garden, borders along a rocky ledge, a vegetable garden with flower borders on two sides for cutting, and an herb garden. In most places daffodils appear in the spring, giving way to day lilies in the summer and annuals (zinnias, asters, dahlias) in the fall. A swimming pool near the beach is filled with salt water from the sea. The family has lived here for some ninety years and currently the houses are occupied by four generations.

    Seapoint, 6 Seapoint Road, Cutts Island, Kittery Point, Maine

    Seapoint is a gardener’s garden overlooking a creek, salt marsh, and the ocean beyond. The property was once part of one of the original saltwater farms on Cutts Island and is nestled alongside of one of the region’s most beautiful wildlife refuges. The garden features an extensive variety of flowering specimen trees, shrubs framed by meandering paths, and intricate stonework.

    Directions:
    About 5 miles from I-95 in Maine, take Exit 2 to Kittery Point. In 0.25 mile enter rotary and exit on Route 236/Kittery Point. Route 236 becomes Route 103. Continue straight across bridge and pass CITGO gas station. In 0.25 mile take fork to right (there are signs for Seapoint). Go straight as road winds around. Pass sign for Rachel Carson Wildlife Refuge. Once past sign, garden is at second house on right, #6.

    Braveboat Harbor Farm, 110 Raynes Neck Road, York, Maine (below)

    This garden has been evolving over the last fifty years. It surrounds and complements a Georgian-style stone house. There are formal and informal borders, a vegetable garden, orchards, and collections of various flowering trees and shrubs. Apples and pears are espaliered on the house and along the walls of the formal front garden. Water features include a goldfish pond in an old septic tank, a farm pond with rustic bridge, and the Atlantic Ocean. This treasure is protected by a sculpted arborvitae hedge on the northwest, a mature stand of hickory on the northeast, and an extensive screen of old lilacs on the south. New projects include expanding the collection of magnolias and rhododendrons, introducing hydrangeas, an espaliered pear fence, a woodland walk, a new pond at the north end of the woodland garden, and a summerhouse with views to the pond and the sea.

    Directions:
    Located off Route 103 South and Braveboat Harbor Road to end of Raynes Neck Road. Please park in field below house.

    http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3223/2795647729_c763891df7.jpg

  • Thursday, June 25, 7:30 a.m. – 6:45 p.m. – Coast of Maine and Seacoast of New Hampshire Day Trip

    The Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture has organized a fabulous day trip on Thursday, June 25.  Meet in the Gray Parking Lot to carpool at 7:30 a.m.  Expected return time is 6:45.  The first garden stop is Braveboat Harbor Farm in York, Maine, the home of Cynthia and Calvin Hosmer.  These gardens were hay fields which rise from the rockbound coast.  Visit the formal front garden, a vegetable garden, an orchard, a woodland garden, and collections of hostas, lilacs and magnolias.  This bit of paradise was featured in last summer’s issue of “La Vie Claire” and has been a participant in the Garden Conservancy’s Open Gardens Day for the past eight years.

    The lovely home of Vance and Anne Mitchell Morgan on Gemish Island in Kittery Point will be the setting for lunch.  The garden, largely designed and created by them, overlooks a tidal inlet and features a rock garden, perennial beds, a fountain garden and a wonderful shady woodland garden.  Colorful containers on the deck show off choice plants.  The Morgans moved to Maine when Anne retired from the Wellesley College Alumnae Association.

    Fuller Gardens in North Hampton, New Hampshire, is a turn-of-the-century estate garden established by then-Governor of Massachusetts Alvan T. Fuller to please his wife, Viola, who loved flowers and especially roses.  Today Fuller Gardens is known primarily for its extensive collection of roses, and Garden Director Jamie Colen will give a short talk about the roses and other features of the Gardens.  A stop at the nearby home of Anne Sinnott Moore for refreshments preceeds heading back to Wellesley.  Members $48, Non-Members $60, includes lunch, snacks, and gardens.  To sign up, log on to http://www.wellesley.edu/WCFH/Courses/OnTheRoadJune09.pdf,  or mail a check to Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture, 106 Central Street, Wellesley, MA 02481-8203.