Tag: Connecticut garden tour

  • Friday, August 11, 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Field Study: Pom’s Cabin Farm

    Pom’s Cabin Farm is a richly-varied, 27-acre piece of land along the Housatonic River that is nurtured and celebrated by its owner, Dale McDonald, and her dedicated team headed by horticulturist Robin Zitter. Robin’s initial priority in 2007 was to get a sense of place and to develop a relationship with it, “working with the forces of nature to enhance and steward the land.” By listening to the land and through observation, she leads her devoted team toward a richly interconnected and regenerative system that values all who live here. Diversity is expressed through differing habitats including meadows, woodlands, wetlands, and a dynamic floodplain along the Housatonic River. Thoughtful ecological practices encourage native plants through a variety of restorative approaches: Paths now wend through woods, whose dominant understory of Japanese barberry is considerately managed. Meadows have been seeded with native flowers and grasses, and an edible human imprint is threaded throughout the landscape with a variety of cultivated vegetables and fruits. A large blueberry field is home to cultivated and native bee housing projects and neighboring shiitake log cultivation. Hedges of raspberries, red, black and white currants, gooseberries and elderberries nestle above the floodplain. Energy conservation is addressed through solar panels, a geothermal system, cisterns, and vegetated swales, even as PCF explores solar thermal and compostable heat sourcing. This landscape is an expression of historical, cultural and ecological life in the northwest corner of Connecticut.

    Berkshire Botanical Garden will lead a field study trip to Pom’s Cabin Farm on August 11 from 3 – 5. Transportation from BBG for an additional $10 fee is available for a limited number of participants. Address and directions will be sent upon registration. BBG members $50, nonmembers $55. Sign up at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/field-study-pom%E2%80%99s-cabin-farm

  • Sunday, July 19, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Connecticut’s Historic Gardens Day

    Historic New England and Roseland Cottage invites you to come visit our parterre garden, one of the only gardens in New England that maintains its original intricate 1850 pattern. Our gardener will be on hand to answer your questions about the historic nature of our landscape, and specially prepared handouts will be available. Groups will be limited to five guests, masks will be required, and preregistration is highly recommended. 

    Pre-order a book (one co-authored by our own member Judith Tankard) to pick up on your tour:

    Everything for the Garden

    Garden Tourist

    All visitors are required to wear a mask and maintain 6 feet of social distance.

    Advance tickets recommended at https://my.historicnewengland.org/6851/7133. Please call 860-928-4074 for more information. The address is 556 Route 169, Woodstock, Connecticut.

  • Thursday, July 14, 10:00 am – 12:00 pm – The Evolution of a Landscape: The Garden of Lee Link

    Join Berkshire Botanical Garden on Thursday, July 14 from 10 – 12 and tour the fabulous Sharon, Connecticut, garden of Lee Link. Learn how this creative hillside garden has changed over the years to meet the needs and interest of this talented plantswoman. From its cedar greenhouse to the terraced gardens replete with rills and borders that playfully combine edible and ornamentals plants, this living landscape is filled with ideas that are sure to inspire us to move our own gardens forward. Horticulturist Bridget Lynch, who also works with Bunny Williams at her garden in nearby Falls Village, will lead this insider’s tour of one the Northwest corners’ most beloved gardens. BBG members $40, nonmembers $45. Register online at https://berkshirebotanical.org/education/field-trips/

  • 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.

  • Saturday, July 14 and Sunday, July 15, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Garden Dialogues: Connecticut

    The Cultural Landscape Foundation will provide exclusive access to private gardens in Connecticut on Saturday, July 14 and Sunday, July 15.  Hear directly from the landscape architects and their patrons about the design process.  How do patrons and designers work together?  What makes for a great, enduring collaboration?  Garden Dialogues provides unique opportunities for small groups to visit some of today’s most beautiful gardens created by some of the most accomplished designers currently in practice.  On Saturday, July 14,  from 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm, see Twin Maples Farm, owned by Douglas and Wilmer Thomas, designed by Larry Weaner Landscape Associates.  This 450-acre northwest Connecticut estate features dramatic vistas, more than 40 acres of seeded meadow and shrubland, and an environmentally sensitive integration with the surrounding woodlands.

    Sunday, July 15, from 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm, see Diamond Hills Gardens in Redding, designed by Richard Hartlage, AHBL (see his book Bold Visions for the Garden below.)  This eight-acre estate garden features native meadows, a sunken garden, woodland walks, sculpture and beautiful water features.  The garden artfully balances rustic and sophisticated through the use of local stone and salvaged barn wood.  Register for either or both tours ($35 per person) at www.tclf.org.

  • Sunday, May 20, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Branford Connecticut Garden Tour

    The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days Program begins the 2012 Northeast season with a tour of the garden of Dr. Nickolas Nickou and Carol Hanby on Sunday, May 20, from 10 – 3, with guided tours at 10:45 and 1 pm. This three-acre garden features many species and varieties of mature rhododendrons and azaleas. In addition, there are many rare trees and shrubs from China and Japan, coupled with woodland flowering plants, ferns, Japanese primulas, and other bog plants.

    Directions: To get to 107 Sunset Hill Drive in Branford, From I-95, take Exit 55 and go east on Route 1; if traveling north turn right at end of ramp; south, turn left. Go 0.4 mile and turn right onto Fearbed Lane. Go to end, about 1 mile. Turn left onto Damascus Road and go 200 feet then turn right onto Griffing Pond Road. Go 0.5 mile to driveway on left with yellow fire hydrant at #107. (Griffing Pond goes into Sunset Hill Road in 0.5 mile). Ignore first right after getting on Griffing Pond for Sunset Hill Drive as this is long way around hill to #107. Please park along road. (Note: some paths are rough and steep.)  Complete details may be found at www.gardenconservancy.org.

  • Saturday and Sunday, May 19 and 20 – Trade Secrets Garden Tour

    The Northeast’s most talked about annual garden event, Trade Secrets, a benefit for Women’s Support Services, a domestic violence program, is celebrating its 12th annual garden weekend in May. Trade Secrets begins on Saturday, May 19th at LionRock Farm in Sharon, CT with the antique and rare plant sale from 10am to 3pm, and, of course, for the early birds there are the early-buying tickets available that include admittance at 8am with an early-buyers breakfast available. On Sunday, May 20th you can tour four gardens including the tours signature garden of Trade Secrets’ founder Bunny Williams.

    From young to old, famous to not-so-famous, Trade Secrets is certainly the place where you find those rare garden plants and antiques for your home. For the past 12 years, Trade Secrets has brought garden-lovers from around the world to the Litchfield Hills of Connecticut to discover new plants, topiary, and antiques for their gardens. 2012 will be no exception with nearly 60 vendors and garden antiques dealers from around the northeast region readying their wares for the trip to the picturesque LionRock Farm (pictured below)  for this annual event.

    With their truckloads of rare garden plants and unusual accessories – those kind of unique treasures that you might search a lifetime for – vendors will descend upon LionRock to offer garden lovers a day of pure treasure hunting! Shoppers can find rare plant specimens from specialized growers and from some of the nation’s best known small nurseries, as well as furniture, antiques, cloches and garden statuary from the choicest purveyors of garden antiques, wrought-iron fencing, textiles from select antiques dealers, and so much more.

    A special treat this year will be a presentation by renowned owner, Marina Marchese of Red Bee Honey. Featured in Martha Stewart Living, this boutique honey bee farm is changing the way consumers taste and use honey! Committed to a sustainable lifestyle, Red Bee Honey boasts a spectacular edible garden, chickens and honeybees!

    Sunday’s garden tour will feature an opportunity to eavesdrop on Bunny Williams’ and John Rosselli’s affair with their house, as their garden is back for the 12th year by popular demand. Also back for a second time on the tour is Jack Hyland’s and Larry Wente’s eco-friendly, forty-one acre futuristic estate that is both outward-looking and inwardly conscientious. Two new gardens added this year are the Linden Hill Farm owned by Richard deBart and Debra Blair, owner of Debra Blair Associates in New York City, and Hawk Hill Farm owned by Robert & Jane Keiter.

    Tickets for the rare plant and garden antique sale on Saturday are $35 for regular admission from 10am to 3pm and $100 for “early buying” tickets. Ticekts for Sunday’s garden tours are $70 ($60 in advance). Tickets may be purchased on line at www.tradesecretsct.com.

  • Friday, August 27 – Sunday, August 29 – Hollister House Garden Study Weekend

    A gardener’s dream: seminar, rare plant sale, gala reception, and tour of exceptional gardens.  Speakers at the Hollister House Garden Weekend, August 27 – 29  include Peter Wirtz, Page Dickey, Margaret Roach, Jill Nokes, Dick Button, Hitch Lyman, and Adam Wheeler. Pre-registration is required.

    The art of gardening as a channel of personal as well as cultural expression will be explored in depth in a program of stimulating lectures. The keynote speaker is Peter Wirtz, scion of the renowned Belgian architectural landscape firm Wirtz International, who will speak on Personal Expressions in the Garden, and be joined by other outstanding horticulturists. The weekend gets underway with a gala cocktail supper Friday evening where participants may informally mingle with the speakers and fellow garden enthusiasts in the gardens at historic Hollister House in Litchfield County, Connecticut.

    Saturday’s symposium takes place at the nearby Montessori School in comfortable, air-conditioned spaces with up to date lecture facilities. A delicious buffet luncheon, a sale of beautifully written and illustrated garden books and a plant sale featuring a select group of New England’s finest specialty plant growers, plus a ‘show & tell’ plant colloquy are included in Saturday’s all-day agenda.

    Other thought-provoking speakers on the roster are:
    • Page Dickey, a popular lecturer and prolific garden writer of, among other books, Gardens in the Spirit of Place, the award-winning Breaking Ground: Portraits of Ten Garden Designers, and to be published in the fall of 2010, Embroidered Ground;
    • Margaret Roach, a journalist who became a major force at Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia and is now a garden blogger with a devoted following;
    • Jill Nokes, a landscape designer and author whose latest book Yard Art and Handmade Places is about 20 Texans who have been astonishingly creative in transforming and decorating their yards and gardens;
    • Dick Button, a former Olympian and figure skating commentator whose North Salem, NY garden is an explosion of color, self-described as “an anything-I-like garden.”

    In the afternoon – two outstanding plantsmen – garden designer Hitch Lyman and nurseryman Adam Wheeler of Broken Arrow will debate the merits of the best plants for late season gardens during the “Plant Show and Tell.”

    There will also be a Rare Plant Sale with opportunities to purchase choice plants for the late season garden from Broken Arrow Nursery (Hamden, CT), Loomis Creek Nursery (Hudson, NY), Falls Village Flower Farm (Falls Village, CT), O’Brien Nurserymen (Granby, CT), Pergola (New Preston, CT), Opus (Little Compton, RI), Rocky Dale Gardens (Bristol, VT), and Sunny Border Nurseries (Berlin, CT).

    Garden books, selected by Washington Depot’s treasured independent bookseller The Hickory Stick, will also be for sale, many authored by the symposium speakers and available for signing.

    The weekend’s grand finale is on Sunday when the Garden Conservancy opens six exceptional private gardens in New Preston, Roxbury and Washington as part of its Open Days Program. Four of them — Stiteler Meadow, Muddy Rugs, the garden of Norman Sunshine & Alan Shayne, and the garden of Mrs. Michael Wiener — are on the Open Days circuit for the first time. The two others are the esteemed gardens of Martine and Richard Copeland and Georgia Middlebrook.
    Hollister House Garden is also featured on the Sunday tour.

    The weekend package includes the Friday, August 27 Gala Cocktail Supper, Saturday, August 28 Continental Breakfast, Seminar, Lunch, Plant & Book Sale.  $230 for members of Garden Conservancy or Hollister House Garden, $240 for non-member.  You may register online at www.hollisterhousegarden.org, or call 860-868-2200.

  • Sunday, July 25, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Washington, Connecticut Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy has scheduled a full day of private garden openings on Sunday, July 25, from 10 – 4, in Washington, Connecticut.  Please note that two of the gardens will be open from noon to four only.  For complete details, log on to www.gardenconservancy.org.  Tickets are not necessary – there is a $5 entrance fee per garden.

    Red Mill Farm, Washington, Connecticut

    Informal gardens set off an 1840s farmhouse and historic pre-Revolutionary War sawmill. Intimate spaces on changing levels around the house and conservatory, paved with local granite, feature tropical and half-hardy container plants and vines along with roses and perennials. A white garden with flagstone paving filled with plants is surrounded by trellises with roses and clematis. Sweeping lawns drop to the sawmill area, where native plants, wildflowers, and a wet garden border the millpond and waterways. Amble through a new woodland area with its rocky pool.

    Ridge Field, 49 Painter Ridge Road, Washington, Connecticut

    After gardening for more than twenty years around a modernist house in dark oak woods on a steep hillside, we migrated to a gambrel-roofed cottage adjacent a bright blue swimming pool surrounded by a ranch-style fence in the middle of a hayfield! Sun? Check. Flat? Check. Now what? JUST KEEP IT MANAGEABLE!! Twelve years later, a series of garden spaces and borders frame the toned-down pool. They are anchored by select trees and shrubs for year-round interest from nearby windows and are enclosed with a “birds lunch” hedgerow. A small, mixed orchard of berries and fruits and a vegetable patch (now rampant with foxgloves and hollyhocks) have pushed out into the hayfield. This garden has appeared in various magazines.

    Hollister House Garden, 300 Nettleton Hollow Road, Washington, Connecticut

    This is an old-fashioned, but unusual, rambling formal garden informally planted with an exuberant abundance of both common and exotic plants in subtle, and sometimes surprising, color combinations. High walls and hedges divide separate rooms and open to create interesting vistas out towards the landscape. Recent expansion of the garden has been completed with other areas being revised.  See picture below.

    Directions:
    From I-84, take Exit 15/Southbury. Take Route 6 north through Southbury and Woodbury. Turn left onto Route 47 North. Go 4 miles, past Woodbury Ski Area on left, and turn right onto Nettleton Hollow Road. Go 1.7 miles. Garden is on right. Please park along road.

    Ron & Nancy Chute, 8 Kirby Road, Washington, Connecticut (Please Note: This garden is open from 12 – 4 only)

    Our 1774 house faces Washington’s Green. Behind it, you will find a serene, private space with mature trees, a long lawn framed with boxwood, stone walls, and woodland plantings. This was created on L-shaped, sloping land after years of benign neglect. The owners, who maintain the property themselves,  leveled the lawn and planted the slopes with tapestries of shrubs and perennials. Tall, tightly pruned hollies screen the rear terrace, and the adjoining cow-shed foundation is now a parterre garden with cast-iron fountain. A cucumber magnolia and other large trees shelter shade-loving collectibles.

    Directions:
    The Chute and Thomson gardens are located near Washington Congregational Church, where Wykeham Road and Kirby Road join Route 47. Parking is available on Kirby Road and in parking lot of Gunn Library, off Wykeham.
    From Route 47 north past intersection of Route 199, turn right onto Wykeham to park at Gunn Library. Or, continue on Route 47 behind church and turn left onto Kirby Road to park there.
    From Nettleton Hollow, go north to Wykeham Road. Turn left and continue to library parking lot on left just before intersection with Route 47. Or, turn right on Route 47 and then left on Kirby Road just past church.
    The address of Chute house is 8 Kirby Road, but the house faces Green. Park along Kirby Road and walk down sidewalk along Green to second house (Chute’s). Enter garden via a narrow passage between first and second house, marked by a red Japanese maple and an old well cover.
    Please park along Green and in front of Congregational Church, but not in front of Parish House.

    Orchard Terrace, 2 Old North Road, Washington, Connecticut (Please Note: this garden is open from 12 – 4 only)

    Orchard Terrace, designed by Erick Rossiter in 1898, is situated on a former apple orchard and overlooks the playing fields of the Gunnery. The garden is a work in progress; much of it created over the last five years. The property is speckled with rock outcroppings amongst which perennial gardens are planted. A pool and greenhouse have been added to showcase tropical plants and orchids as well as native plants and grasses. An effort has been made to provide a natural habitat for butterflies, birds, and other wildlife.

    Directions:
    Please walk across Green from Nancy Chute’s garden. Or, park in lower part of Gunn Library at Wykeham Road. Walk down Wykeham Road to Old North Road (about 100 yards), which is on left. The garden is first driveway on right. Do not attempt to park at house; parking will only be allowed on Green or at library.

    http://www.hollisterhousegarden.org/images/contact_lg.jpg