Tag: Country Gardens

  • Saturday, June 24, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – The Healing Garden

    Since the dawn of history, humans and animals have sought healing from plants. Although many of today’s most popular remedies are compounded in laboratories, there are still vast numbers of commercial cures whose major medicinal ingredients are derived from green herbs, trees, and shrubs. In this illustrated presentation at The Cape Cod Museum of Natural History in Brewster on Saturday, June 24 at 1 pm, Cindy Sauers will share with you her garden journey collaborating with the plants, the soil, wind, sun, cold, heat, rain… and all of nature for food and medicine for the body and soul. You will be able to gently and easily begin your own healing garden or, if you don’t have a space for your own garden you will have new insight to how plants, trees and weeds throughout Cape Cod provide us with healing food and medicine. Cindy will help you identify our wild natural Cape Cod plants and she will share with you easy ways to make remedies to relieve many of our everyday discomforts and fortify our bodies and our minds.

    Cindy Sauers is an artist, shepherd, gardener and herbalist who works in collaboration with her ‘medium’. As a gardener, she collaborates with nature; shaping and adding elements while observing how nature responds and what nature adds or subtracts from the garden. As an herbalist, she has been using plants as healing remedies, scented gifts, and food since 1973. Cindy and her garden, along with her husband and the sheep, the Baa Boys, were recently featured in Country Gardens Spring 2017 magazine. Cindy can’t imagine anything more rewarding than sharing the joy she gets from these sweet plants with you.

    Free with admission. For more information please call: 508-896-3867, ext. 133.

  • Saturday, August 20, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Monadnock Region Open Day

    A fabulous day in New Hampshire awaits on Saturday, August 20, courtesy of The Garden Conservancy.  Most gardens described below are open from 10 – 4, although some are open at 9 am.  For complete information visit www.gardenconservancy.org. $7 per garden admission.

    The Garden of Jenny Lee Hughes & Edward Yoxen in Stoddard, New Hampshire: After clearing old hillsides in 2006 for views and sheep, stone terraces were added next to the old farmhouse—in part to create a platform for growing ornamental plants that volunteer to grow in gravel and to have a salad garden close at hand. The mixed garden, consisting of meadows, hills, and a lake view surrounds a working edible garden and an ornamental mixed border. Each spills into the frames of other in a manner that brings the two together but still retains the individuality of both. Sheep get moved around to keep the open spaces. Their wool is not sold or used for spinning but rather is used at the bottom of the composted garden beds to help retain moisture on soil which is mostly freely draining. Designed by owner Jenny Lee Hughes, whose clients’ gardens have been featured in local and national publications, the garden features trees, understory plantings, ground covers, hedges, specimens, re-seeding annuals, perennials, herbs, fruits, and vegetables. The aim is a garden that feels natural in its surroundings, yet brings something unforgettable to it. And, at 3 pm, enjoy A Nose’s Tour of the Garden with Tovah Martin. Tovah Martin talks about fragrance, plus we’ll sample the aromatic wares and learn a lot about plant scents in the process. Bring your nose: a smellathon will be included.  Garden is pictured below.

    Juniper Hill Farm in Francestown, New Hampshire: The Gardens at Juniper Hill Farm surround an eighteenth-century saltbox house and farmstead that remain much as they were 200 years ago. The approximately two acres of gardens surrounding the farm might best be described as “country formal.” There is a courtyard garden, a formal lilac garden leading to a frog pool, a whimsical stumpery, a tranquil Mediterranean-inspired “clipped green” garden, a formal potager, and a pool house modeled after the garden pavilion at Hidcote. Scattered throughout the garden are many planted containers and more than 150 boxwoods representing eleven different varieties. Because winter interest was an important consideration in the original layout of the garden, strong architectural lines have become an important design element. The house and garden have been featured several times in both regional and national magazines. For photos and more info on Juniper Hill go to www.josephvalentine.com or Notes From Juniper Hill on Facebook. As another special feature, from 10 – 11:30 Roger Swain will be on hand for a Garden Q & A. He’ll be glad to provide both encouragement and advice. Known as ‘the man with the red suspenders’ and recognized by millions, Roger Swain was host of the popular PBS TV series, The Victory Garden for fifteen years. Plus, specialty growers Broken Arrow Nursery will be on site selling plants. This garden will be open from 9 – 5.

    The Gardens of Laura & Jamie Trowbridge in Peterborough, New Hampshire: Their 1765 Cape Cod-style house is set on a hillside with a sweeping view to the west. Nineteen years ago, they bought the property and set to work creating a long border garden along the rambling, lichen-covered stone wall at the edge of the lawn. Over the years, the full sun border has become the main feature of the landscape as it evolved to include a mixture of annuals, perennials, bulbs, shrubs, and specialty trees. In addition to the eclectic and colorful border, there are garden areas surrounding the old house which include a sunny patio covered with tropicals in containers as well as shade gardens and a shady patio which has become an ideal location for a collection of potted begonias. There are three vegetable gardens, too. The gardens have been featured in New Hampshire Home magazine, Country Gardens magazine, and Fine Gardening magazine is currently working on a design story for 2017.  Rocky Dale Gardens will be on site selling plants during this Open Day.

    The Gardens of Michael & Betsy Gordon in Peterborough, New Hampshire: This small garden in the village was designed by a plantsman to be an extension of the house. The house and garden are situated on a hill and the garden is terraced on three levels. The upper level was designed to be enjoyed from the street. The middle level is laid out formally using yew hedges and a century-old granite wall foundation to create a garden room. The lowest level, an informal woodland garden, has both eastern North American and eastern Asian shade-loving plants. The garden was planted with a mixture of unusual trees, shrubs, perennials, grasses, annuals, and bulbs. Plants were selected primarily for interesting form, foliage, and texture. The garden is chronicled in the blog, thegardenerseye.blogspot.com.  Nano-nursery Opus Plants will be on site selling plants during this Open Day.

    Eleanor Briggs’ Garden in Hancock, New Hampshire: In the words of the owner, “My gardens surround Hancock’s first house, built in 1776 by the town clerk, Jonathan Bennett. Since it is a farmhouse, the plantings are informal and blend into surrounding woods and fields. On each side of the “front” door are raised beds reminiscent of colonial gardens. The real front door (never used) is flanked by plantings of old roses and lavender. Behind a 1970 wing is a forty-eight-foot-long koi pond designed by landscape architect Diane McGuire and planted with lotus and water lilies. McGuire also laid out the perennial bed and woodland garden. The AIA-award-winning screened porch was designed by Dan Scully. Sculptures in the terraced vegetable garden are by Noel Grenier. A pair of 200-year-old granite Korean rams graze on the back lawn. I have followed McGuire’s brilliant layout of the parallel borders but have deepened the perennial bed to make more room to “paint” with interesting annuals and perennials. In the woodland border witch hazel, azaleas, snakeroot and rogersias blend into the woods. Walking between the borders from sun to shade, one comes to a new bog garden surrounded by marsh marigolds, skunk cabbage, and cardinal flowers. Last fall, in the field below the vegetable garden, I started a small pollinator garden. Very exciting!”  See the Porter Garden Telescope on display at this garden courtesy of Telescopes of Vermont. At the request of the Garden Host, directions to this garden are provided at additional gardens open on this date, or by calling the Garden Conservancy office toll-free weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST, 1-888-842-2442.

    The Gardens of Maude & John Odgers in Peterborough, New Hampshire: Maude is drawn to using unusual combinations of trees, shrubs, perennials, and annuals in creating interesting textures, harmonies of balance, color, light, movement, and design. Her gardens draw inspiration from English border gardens, and her work as an artist. For her, gardening is painting in motion. A soft palette and flowing shapes are used to create a quiet sense of serenity. Stonewalls and granite pieces complement the New England countryside. Maude and John cleared this land thirty-five years ago, designing and building everything themselves—from the house, with an attached garden room, to a small post-and-beam barn (now garden shed), arbors, unusual undulating wooden fences with moon gates, a bluestone patio that emulates the gardens shapes, an enclosed raised-bed vegetable garden, a frog pond—along with the many garden beds that envelope their home. Their garden has been featured in numerous publications. Achille Agway will be on site selling plants during this Open Day.

  • Thursday, August 20, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – The Art of Growing Food

    The Art of Growing Food presentation at Elm Bank on Thursday, August 20 from 7 – 8:30 will inspire you to elevate an ordinary vegetable garden to an extraordinary European inspired potager. Discover new techniques to grow food in elegant and artful ways. With gorgeous color photographs from her book, The Complete Kitchen Garden, Ellen will share six steps to easily creating a beautiful kitchen garden.

    This lecture is ideal for new and experienced gardeners or anyone interested in innovative ideas and classic design. The ultimate goal is to learn new ways to design and plant a kitchen garden for productivity, low maintenance and pure pleasure, turning work into play!

    Ellen Ecker Ogden is the author of five books, including her most recent, The Complete Kitchen Garden, and co-founder of The Cook’s Garden seed catalog. She writes many articles regularly featured in Garden Design, Eating Well, Organic Gardening, Country Gardens, The Boston Globe, The New York Times and Martha Stewart Living to name a few. She is also maintains an active website and blog. For more information about Ellen and her work, visit her website here: http://www.ellenogden.com.

    Sign up here today to reserve your space! http://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/event?oeidk=a07ebal4dcu014e540b&llr=kzaorjcab  Mass Hort Members $15, Non-Members $20.

  • 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.

    http://www.architecturaldigest.com/blogs/daily/2013/03/gardens-book-jack-staub-private-edens-connecticut-virginia/_jcr_content/par/cn_contentwell/par-main/cn_blogpost/cn_image_1.size.private-edens-01.jpg

  • Friday, November 6 – Sunday, November 8, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Christmas at The Crosby Mansion

    Built in 1888, “Tawasentha” is located on Crosby Lane off Route 6A across from Nickerson State Park in Brewster.  On Friday, November 6 through Sunday, November 8, The Nauset Garden Club will Deck the Halls with Christmas at The Crosby Mansion.  Tickets are $15 in advance or $20 at the door, and may be purchased at Hyannis Country Gardens, at Agway in Orleans, Chatham and Dennis, at Puritan in Hyannis or Chatham, at Nory’s in Orleans, and at the Brewster General Store.  To get to the Mansion, take Route 6 South to Exit 11, follow Route 137 to Brewster.  Take right turn on Millstone Road and follow to Route 6A.  Take a right onto 6A and follow for 1/2 miles.  Crosby Lane will be on your left.

    http://www.baysidebears.com/mansion.jpg

  • Sunday, July 12, 10 – 5 – Georges River Land Trust Garden Tour

    18th “Gardens in the Watershed” tour in mid-coast Maine, featuring seven country gardens in Spruce Head, Tenants Harbor and Port Clyde. A gourmet bag lunch is available by pre-order through the Georges River Land Trust office. Sponsored by and to benefit the Georges River Land Trust. Tickets are $20 in advance, $22 on tour day. For further information contact Linda Arnold at the Georges River Land Trust, 207-594-5166, info@grlt.org, or log on to www.grlt.org.