One to Watch

Even fall rains can't get Ted and Nancy Dobson's garden down.  This tiny, magical space only gets better with age and the careful attention of its inhabitants.  Readers familiar with the space through garden tours or the journal may note the beautiful new water feature at right, one of the Dobson's summer projects.  Stunning, isn't it?  It seems that we're not the only ones who love this intricate and collaborative space, and you may get to see this fabulous garden in print soon (more details to come, of course)!

While photos may be worth a 1,000 words, a visit to this garden speaks volumes.  The Dobsons' garden (and several of our other gardens) will be on the tour for the Hardy Plant Study Weekend next June 7-10, 2012.  Save the date and stay tuned for more information!

Japanese Maple Sale at Baltzer's!

We've got so much good news for gardeners these days!  Our friends Bob and Nancy Baltzer, of Baltzer's Specialized Nursery are having a sale on their gorgeous specimen maples.  All non lace leaf maples in 20 gallon or larger containers are on sale for at least $25 off and some are marked down to $75!  Bob and Nancy grow a wider variety of maples than anyone we know, and they care for them beautifully.  Aside from maples, the Baltzers also carry  wonderful, unusual conifers and some interesting garden features.  Their nursery is one of our area's little known treasures, and well worth the short drive to Pleasant Hill.

Baltzer's is open Friday - Monday, 10am - 5pm (closed Tuesday-Thursday)

36011 Highway 58 Pleasant Hill, OR 97455 541-747-5604

Ginny's Garden Sale

Our friend Ginny is moving into town from her fabulous garden and farm in Creswell.  In terrific news for garden treasure hunters, Ginny is having a huge yard/garden sale tomorrow, Saturday, May 14, to help her pare down and prepare for her urban space.  Containers of all sizes!  Furniture!  Useful and pretty things!   Ginny has great taste, and the perfect addition to your garden may be waiting for you in Creswell.   If nothing else, it's a great excuse to see one of our area's best gardens.  Part of the proceeds benefit the Lane County Master Gardeners.  More information below.

The Plant Sales Are Coming!

It's that magical time of year again, when the best specialty nurseries in Oregon flock to Eugene for a one-day plant extravaganza....   On May, 7, grab your mom for a Mother's Day Eve outing and find your new favorite plants!

The Willamette Valley Hardy Plant Group sale is in the Auditorium Building of the Lane County Fairgrounds from 9am-2pm. More information here.

The Avid Gardeners Plant Sale is also 9am-2pm (where to go first?!?) at Alton Baker Park.  More information here and on their cute poster at right.

Plant group members and potential members, take note - volunteers get first dibs on plants, so pitch in!

Sunset Garden Anywhere!

Just saw a big photograph of Joanne and Peter Alba's garden in Sunset's Garden Anywhere!, a "bookazine" that will be on store shelves until early June (I found it at the Woodfield Station Market of Choice).  You may remember the Alba's garden from this post about their photo in the April '08 Sunset, or this post about gardening with deer.  Cool!

Sometimes these photos catch us by surprise.  If you know of a photo of our gardens that's not mentioned on our press page, please let us know where you found it, so we can spread the word!

The Gregory Garden (and house) are for sale

Our friend and client Joy Gregory is moving out of town, and her wonderful North Eugene house and garden are for sale.  We are sorry to see her and her awesome son leave Eugene, but we have no doubt that they'll take their new home by storm.  We wrote the garden in our first newsletter, and you may remember the garden from Sunset, the Register-Guard or Pacific Horticulture (you can find an article or two on our press page).

If you happen to be shopping for a great house, neighborhood and garden, take a look!

http://www.remax.com/homes-for-sale/OR/Eugene/10060366-MLS_Number/

Studies in Texture at the Bancroft Garden

Our trip to Northern California was brief, but we are so glad that we made time to visit one of our favorite gardens.  The Ruth Bancroft Garden in Walnut Creek, CA is a mecca for hortitexturephiles and garden lovers of all stripes.  We wrote a short post about the Bancroft Garden last year, but we may not have been emphatic enough in our praise.   It is magical.  You should visit.  Soon.

As you probably know, a sunny summer afternoon is less than ideal for photographing gardens, but Buell managed to get a number of fun shots and (we think) a few pretty darn good ones.

Enjoy!

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Public Gardens

This weekend, Rebecca received a terrific email from her stepmom with photos of her Dad at his weekly volunteer gig in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden!  Dad helped finish the new herb garden at the BBG, and he's looking forward to helping maintain and develop it for the future.

If you're ever in New York with a little time, we highly recommend a stroll through the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.  It's a fantastic, huge garden with formal areas, rolling park-like sections, a Japanese garden (see my photo from fall '08) and the coolest greenhouse pavilions.

Public gardens are a tremendous asset to their communities and the larger gardening world, and we all have a debt of gratitude to the dedicated staff and volunteers who build and work in them.

While Eugene doesn't have sprawling botanic gardens like the BBG, we do have a few fun public gardens, like the Sebring Garden in Alton Baker Park.  One of the largest rock gardens in North America, the Sebring Garden is now 12 years old and packed with fascinating, unusual plants.  The garden was built and is developed and maintained by the Emerald Chapter of the North American Rock Garden Society.  Even if you're not sure you want a true "rock garden," rock garden plants tend to be low-water, smaller varieties, perfect for many urban spaces.  If you're looking for a great way to support public gardens and learn from some of our area's most knowledgeable plantspeople, volunteer a few hours in the Sebring.  Or, if you just want to expand your knowledge about wild and wonderful plants, attend some of the NARGS meetings, trips and other fun events (check out this cool camping trip).

Nature Nurture: Preserving our Plenty

Our friend Robin Cushman graciously allowed us to share this announcement for her upcoming show and invitation to the opening!  This new "stained glass" photo at left is gorgeous, and we can't wait to see more....

We'll let Robin take it from here:

Dear gardening friends, Below is an invitation to my solo show at the David Joyce Gallery at LCC. I hope you can drop by for the festivities. The show is up now and will be through the summer. Susan Detroy curated the show and the LCC culinary arts department will provide hors d'oeuvres.

The opening coincides with the "100-mile Meal" put on by culinary arts students. All the foods come from within 100 miles, some from their own LCC Learning Garden [Mosaic note: a member of the culinary school faculty shared that the students did such a great job sourcing ingredients for the meal, that all ingredients actually come from within *30* miles - wow!]. They felt my work would complement the theme, as all the images are from the bountiful Willamette Valley.

In addition to my garden/farm/market photos, I am exploring two new areas of foods – produce revealing more through being back-lit (think stained glass) and a series of "frisky fruits and voluptuous vegetables."

Hope you can attend the opening & show. Please invite your friends – Robin

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Plant Sales - Saturday, May 8

Make a date with your mom or your best plant buddy!  Eugene's two biggest, baddest plant sales are coming on May 8.  Both sales will have an incredible selection of plants from fantastic nurseries.  The best plants go fast, so arrive early and work fast!  Click on the links for more information.

The Oregon Plant Fair, hosted by the Avid Gardeners, takes place at Alton Baker Park

The Willamette Valley Hardy Plant Sale will be held at the Lane County Fairgrounds

Sadly, this is our last chance to buy the exquisite plants grown by Hedgerows Nursery, from McMinnville.  David and Susie are moving "back east," and will be sorely missed.  They have provided us with some of the best, boldest and weirdest plants in our garden.  They'll have a table at the WVHPG sale but you'll have to arrive early to get the best selection....

Arizona Spring

Our friends, David and Ginger Starck just sent pictures of their young "winter" garden in Yuma and some beautiful desert wildflowers, and we thought we'd share!  Gorgeous, hunh? [gallery link="file" order="DESC" columns="4"]

These two are great gardeners.... Their wonderful, rambling "summer" garden near Creswell deserves a post of its own - maybe this summer when we're all wishing our garden were as cool and shady as theirs.  For now, you can get a taste here (and if anyone can find a link to the terrific Oregonian article, please send it!).

Hellebore Open Garden Days at Northwest Garden Nursery

Our friends at Northwest Garden Nursery are holding their annual Open Garden and plant sale! This wonderful little nursery and its big display garden are only open to the public only a few days a year. Ernie and Marietta O'Byrne have spent years developing the most gorgeous strains of Hellebores, with attention to the tiniest details of foliage and flower, and working in their inspiring display garden. The garden is full of rare and wonderful plants, combined with an eye for subtle, but striking combinations of color and foliage texture.

Helleborus orientalis and related hybrids are a mainstay of our plantings. Their glossy, dark, evergreen foliage enriches shady to partial sun plantings, even those that are heavily browsed by deer. We love to plant them in groups of 7 to 40, contrasted against a block of lighter or silver foliaged plants, such as Brunnera 'Jack Frost.' Their foliage alone would be good enough for us, but the stunning flowers are a magical addition to the late winter garden. Caring for Hellebores couldn't be easier. In winter, before or just as the flowers emerge, cut off the old leaves. When the flowers start to fade and set seed, cut off the whole flower stalk (with any leaves directly attached to it), leaving the new leaves that emerged after the flowers. These two simple steps will keep your Hellebore patch healthy, full and happy for years to come!

Make a date to visit Northwest Garden Nursery with your best plant buddy in the next few weeks, and start or add to your Hellebore collection.

Northwest Garden Nursery's Hellebore Garden Open Days for 2010 are:

  • Saturday and Sunday, February 20 and 21
  • Saturday and Sunday, February 27 and 28
  • Friday, Saturday and Sunday, March 5-7

Beginning March 11 they are open regular hours on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. through the end of March (March 27).

Click here for directions and a map to the nursery.

Grateful for Gosslers

Thanksgiving is our favorite holiday for many reasons, from time with loved ones to mountains of mashed potatoes. In addition to our gratitude for our foundation of good health, family and friends, we are thankful for our creative, trying, engaging, intricate, brute force, dirty, rewarding, nitpicky, joyful work of building gardens. So many people, from our wonderful clients to the nice folks who deliver our soil, make Mosaic possible. In honor of the season, we'd like to highlight one nursery that has been a source of support, information and, of course, plants since we started planting in Oregon.

Roger, Marj and Eric of Gossler Farms Nursery are Renaissance plantspeople. They know something about almost every plant we can grow in the PNW, (as well as quite a few that we cannot), and they have forgotten more than most of us will ever know about Magnolias and deciduous shrubs. We discover new plants every time we walk through their greenhouses, and rely heavily on their detailed knowledge of each variety's habits and cultivation. Thanks to their mail order prowess, they've even selected and shipped plants to our mothers on the East Coast (Hi Moms!). Our moms were thrilled and the plants are still thriving.

If that weren't enough, they've now published a beautiful book, The Gossler Guide to the Best Hardy Shrubs, which features well-researched, insightful, amusing text, terrific photos, and one of our absolute favorite plants. This plant is gorgeous, rare, and an absolute showstopper throughout the growing season. Intrigued? You can buy a copy online, or better yet, get a signed copy and some personalized advice at the nursery. The plant is discussed and beautifully photographed on pages 58-61.

We hope you'll take the time to read the book, stroll through the nursery, or order a couple of plants for your mom. If nothing else, don't forget to thank the Gosslers and other great plantspeople for sharing their passion and knowledge with all of us.

Last, but not least, thanks so much for keeping up with us. As you may have noticed, our journal writing has slowed down this fall We're taking a much-needed break right now, but will return in a few weeks with an idea that we hope will keep the journal moving through the shorter days.

Best, Rebecca & Buell

The Ruth Bancroft Garden

CA succulents and friends in our garden

The Ruth Bancroft Garden in Walnut Creek, CA is a wonderland of textures and colors, and a stunning example of why we would move to Northern CA, if we could only convince a few million people to move away. How lucky that one of the best collections of succulents anywhere would be so beautifully curated.... We hope you'll find time to visit when you're in the Bay Area. It's one of our favorite places, and it may become one of yours, as well. Be sure to check out their photo pages!

WARNING: Visiting the Bancroft Garden can be a thorny proposition for those of us with an affection for spiky, spiny, sculptural plants. They have a nursery, and if you are like us, there is always room for one (or twelve) more little containers.... Serious succulent addicts should be sure to avoid the Dry Garden in Oakland, unless they are prepared to build a cold frame.

Just a thought.... The Bancroft Garden is one of the Garden Conservancy's Preservation Projects, and one very good reason to join the Conservancy (or give/request a gift membership). spaceball

Harvest Season - Mosaic Newsletter #5

Fall harvest

At first glance, the geometric structure required by the way most of us garden (rows of vegetables in rectangular or rectangular-ish raised beds, surrounded by straight paths) may seem limited, but a little thought and creativity offers a range of solutions and feelings from formal and sculptural to whimsical. We consider the necessary rectangular forms and pathways a jumping off point for design, rather than a limitation. Once we've got the basic form in mind, we consider materials for borders or retaining. Stone, metal, and wood all present a variety options for finishing the structure of a garden.

We planted our first veggies before the rest of the garden was complete.

In our garden, the best space for the veggie garden was in a lower, sunny corner of our property. The straight lines of the paths and circular "roundabout" continue the overall design of the ornamental garden, and the pea gravel paths and surrounding corrugated, galvanized fence emphasize an overall continuity of materials. Rather than continuing to use the rough, straight edged basalt that forms the borders, walls and stairs of our ornamental garden, however, we bordered our raised beds in large, round river rock. The river rock softens the lines of the veggie garden, and playfully frames the herbs, strawberries and other low plants that spill over the borders. The aesthetic center of our veggie garden is the Vietnamese urn water feature at the intersection of our main paths. The urn is visible from the upper garden and punctuates the long axis of our narrow space. The circular space around the urn cuts into the straight lines of our raised beds, at once playing off of and playing with the surrounding, mostly rectangular, geometry.

Our space reflects our desires and priorities (cohesiveness of design and maximizing usable space, among others). The veggie gardens we have created for clients vary with their goals. One client was a busy mother with a strong design sense. She wanted to involve her young boys in growing some food, but she was more interested in having a "sculptural" garden that was easy for her and the boys to work than in maximizing planting space that she would not have time to maintain. We built three long, narrow, rectangular raised beds from dry stack basalt. Their unusual forms look great even in winter, and grow gorgeous peppers and other heat-loving crops in the summer.

These long, narrow raised beds are perfect for our client who wanted a small, sculptural garden to work with her sons.

A simple, portable ipe and steel framed veggie box

Another client wanted a simple, contemporary box for their veggies. The catch was their request for a portable design they could take with them if they moved. We bolted ipe (a sustainably forested tropical hardwood) to rusting metal corners, which extended below the wood and doubled as stakes to hold the box in place.

There are so many more ideas and materials to try, and we love the challenges and rewards in designing vegetable gardens. Just the ideas for retaining (vertical flagstone, rusting metal, how about a mini-gabion wall?) seem endless. Each space and lifestyle offers challenges and inspiration for design well outside the ubiquitous cedar box.

iA Little Help

We love growing food. Our veggie garden and orchard take a third or so of our usable garden space, and we dream of having more space to grow all of the things that we can't cram into our little property (brussels sprouts! pumpkins!). That said, our expertise is in landscape design and construction, not in producing food, and what success we have in growing fruits and vegetables is due in large part to research and strategic questioning of farmers and home gardeners many times more experienced and knowledgeable than we are. Below are a few of our favorite resources. We'd love to hear about yours!

One of Robin's photos of the farmer's market

  • The Lane County Farmer's Market and other local farmer's markets - Local farmers know what, when, where and how to plant, cultivate and harvest, and most of them are generous with advice. Two of our favorite farmers at the market are Grateful Harvest and Ruby and Amber's (they cultivate by horse power!). The market is also the place to buy starts in the spring - try Ruby and Amber's tomato starts next year....
  • Growing Vegetables West of the Cascades by Steve Salomon - Everything from planting calendars to best varieties for our area.... This is the Willamette Valley veggie geek's best friend. It has awfully high expectations for those of us on smaller lots, and we would quibble with a few particulars, but our copy is dirt smudged and dog-eared for a reason.
  • Territorial Seed Company - Seeds and starts grown in Oregon, with many organic options available. One of our greatest early season joys is the March delivery of the year's seeds.
  • The Oregon State Extension service - lots of information on fruits, vegetables, pests, and regional differences. We just found this cool pdf with information and planting calendars for different regions of the state.
  • Robin Bachtler Cushman's photographs are terrific inspiration. She chronicles our local farms and vegetable gardens. If you happen to be on the LCC campus before September 21, her work is part of a show, "Markets," at the David Joyce Gallery.

These are just a handful of the terrific local and regional resources, including many exceptional home gardeners who are happy to share their experience and advice with the rest of us.

Thanks for keeping up with us! Fall is a wonderful time to be outside, and we hope the next month brings plenty of beautiful weather for gardening and other adventures.

Best,

Rebecca & Buell

Check out the Gregory garden at Sunset.com

Gregory Meadow

Joy Gregory's garden is on the first page of a Sunset.com article about lawn-free front yards! Cool, hunh?

If you'd like to learn more about the Gregory garden, check out our first newsletter and some fun articles about the space on our press page.

Check back soon - the next newsletter is in process and should be up tomorrow or Friday. [Edit:  Make that this weekend!  Site work took most of our time for the week, but we should have time to wrap up the newsletter in the next couple of days.  Thanks for staying tuned....]

Cool online tool

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Have you seen the Blooming Advantage Plant Finder? Blooming is an exceptional grower of unusual plants, and Northwest gardeners see their purplish pots in almost every nursery. They are best known for their perennials, but they grow a little bit of everything (well, not trees, I 'spose...).

With the Plant Finder, you can search by name to learn about the habit and cultural requirements of a plant or you can input your requirements, such as sun exposure, flower color and height, and the Finder will generate a list of plants that meet those requirements. Most of the plant descriptions include photos, too. Cool, hunh?