Water as a "sacred element" in southwestern gardens

Water as a “sacred element” in southwestern gardens

August 27, 2009 Softleaf yucca (Y. recurvifolia) I nearly always read the last page of a magazine first. So when my Garden Design (Sept/Oct 2009) arrived today I flipped to the back to read about Arizona landscape architect Christy Ten Eyck. I’ve seen her work featured in magazines, and I ...
Visit to Garfield Park Conservatory

Visit to Garfield Park Conservatory

June 06, 2009 I’m going to reveal my innate geekiness by comparing the Fern Room in Chicago’s excellent Garfield Park Conservatory to the lush, edenic world created by Project Genesis in Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan. Come on, you know you’ve seen it. Don’t you agree? A century old, ...
Trudi Temple's garden

Trudi Temple’s garden

June 02, 2009 On Sunday after the official Spring Fling activities had ended, Mr. McGregor’s Daughter picked up several of the late-stayers for additional garden tours she’d arranged in the western suburbs of Chicago. The star attraction was the beautiful garden of author Trudi Temple, who welcomed us with open ...
Gardens on Tour 2009: Rockcliff Road garden

Gardens on Tour 2009: Rockcliff Road garden

May 10, 2009 Our second stop on the Wildflower Center-sponsored Gardens on Tour was the Rockcliff Road garden in upscale, woodsy Westlake. This garden surprised me by virtue of its loose, naturalistic style juxtaposed with a large, expensive home; I expected a more formal, even contemporary, garden out front, but ...
Gardens on Tour 2009: Academy Drive garden

Gardens on Tour 2009: Academy Drive garden

May 10, 2009 On Saturday I joined Diana of Sharing Nature’s Garden, Lori of The Gardener of Good and Evil, and a friend of Lori’s from Arizona to visit four private gardens on the Wildflower Center-sponsored Gardens on Tour, an annual tour of gardens that predominantly feature native Texas plants ...
Blogger field trip: Peckerwood Garden

Blogger field trip: Peckerwood Garden

November 08, 2008 Funny name and all, Peckerwood Garden is a place I’d wanted to see for years. But because it opens to the public for only a handful of days each year and it bars children under 12 from visiting (for safety reasons), as well as the fact that ...
Three more gardens from Open Days Austin

Three more gardens from Open Days Austin

October 13, 2008 When Annie and I visited the gardens on the Open Days Austin tour two weekends ago, I was bowled over by Stone Palms and Fatal Flower, where the hand of the owners was plainly visible in the creativity of design and plant choices. Two more gardens on ...
Stone Palms Garden: Open Days Austin

Stone Palms Garden: Open Days Austin

October 07, 2008 I’m back! After a whirlwind weekend of packing, lifting, and unpacking, we’re settling into our new house. I will post pictures of the new yard soon, but all my attention so far has been focused on the inside of the house. Boxes still loom in the hallways ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Gravel Garden and Ruin

A visit to Chanticleer: Gravel Garden and Ruin

July 23, 2008 Among all the beautiful, bold, and imaginative gardens at Chanticleer, why do I like the Gravel Garden best? It so resembles the dry gardens of west Austin that I feel a little sheepish to admit that in this lush, Pennsylvania garden I preferred the familiarity of home ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Asian Woods & Stream Garden

A visit to Chanticleer: Asian Woods & Stream Garden

July 22, 2008 During our tour of Chanticleer in early July, the mistiness of early afternoon gave way to bright sunshine as we dipped into the Asian Woods garden below the main house. Tall trees, their lower trunks wrapped in wire trellises for climbing vines, create a serene wood and ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Hydrangeas & House Garden

A visit to Chanticleer: Hydrangeas & House Garden

July 21, 2008 I’m sure something shines brightly every month that Chanticleer is open (April through October). But I felt fortunate to see the hydrangeas in full bloom since I rarely see one in Austin. I can never decide whether I prefer the pink or the blue. The lacecaps are ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Teacup & Tennis Court Gardens

A visit to Chanticleer: Teacup & Tennis Court Gardens

July 20, 2008 If you haven’t been to Chanticleer, you must go. Hop on a plane or jump in the car and go. Now. Dubbed “a pleasure garden” in its brochure, it lives up to the billing. From the moment we arrived, just after lunchtime on a quiet Sunday in ...
Switch Willo Stables

Switch Willo Stables

June 13, 2008 During the past week of 100-degree days, I enjoyed a twice-daily visit to Switch Willo Stables in northwest Austin, where my daughter attended a riding day camp. What a beautiful, lush oasis tucked away in a neighborhood that nowadays is practically in-town. When Switch Willo opened back ...
Nursery tour: Hill Country Water Gardens & Nursery

Nursery tour: Hill Country Water Gardens & Nursery

May 03, 2008 A naturalistic stream chattering around boulders and splashing into a large pond is the centerpiece of my garden—that is, the garden I dream of having one day. In reality, my small, flat garden is never likely to support this vision, so I make do with a 100-gallon ...
Nursery tour: Hill Country Water Gardens & Nursery

Nursery tour: Hill Country Water Gardens & Nursery

May 03, 2008 A naturalistic stream chattering around boulders and splashing into a large pond is the centerpiece of my garden—that is, the garden I dream of having one day. In reality, my small, flat garden is never likely to support this vision, so I make do with a 100-gallon ...
My sister's Houston garden

My sister's Houston garden

March 18, 2008 Front porch vignette Last Friday we drove three hours east to Houston to visit my sister and her partner in their house in the Heights. Despite unseasonably hot and humid weather on Friday and Saturday, we had a wonderful time kicking around at the Houston Rodeo, shopping ...