Coleson Bruce's crevice garden in spring flower

Coleson Bruce’s crevice garden in spring flower

May 04, 2022 Two weeks ago Coleson Bruce invited me back to his garden to see it in spring flower. I’d first visited Coleson’s garden last fall — a garden unlike any other I’ve seen in Austin or even Texas. Colorado-style crevice gardens are unusual here, and Coleson’s is not ...
Gathering spaces in Ruthie Burrus Garden, part 2

Gathering spaces in Ruthie Burrus Garden, part 2

May 02, 2022 In my last post I hope I wowed you — as I was wowed — by the colorful wildflower meadow and textural spiky-soft shade garden of Ruthie Burrus. If you missed it, check out Part 1 of my visit to Ruthie’s West Austin garden. Today we’ll explore ...
Peacocks and giants: Visiting Mayfield Park and Laguna Gloria

Peacocks and giants: Visiting Mayfield Park and Laguna Gloria

April 27, 2022 In early April I visited Mayfield Park for the Trowel & Error gardening talks. Of course if you visit Mayfield Park you’re going to see peacocks. Mayfield Park Two dozen of these beautiful birds — peacocks and peahens — roam the grounds. Unafraid if a little wary, ...
Zilker Garden turns surreal after dark with fantastical neon art

Zilker Garden turns surreal after dark with fantastical neon art

April 25, 2022 Last Friday my husband and I decked ourselves out in floral clothing and headed to Zilker Botanical Garden to attend The Surreal Garden, an interactive neon-art event. I have to say, it was even more fun than I’d imagined. Fantastical neon light sculptures filled the gardens (mainly ...
Houston Botanic Garden edibles, water wall, and end-of-winter gardens

Houston Botanic Garden edibles, water wall, and end-of-winter gardens

April 04, 2022 In early March, on a quick trip to Houston, I returned to Houston Botanic Garden for an end-of-winter visit. HBG is still a new garden — it opened in September 2020; click for my visit — and the culinary garden with its massive, aqua-tiled water wall is ...
Totemic sculpture by Dustin Gimbel evokes desert flora

Totemic sculpture by Dustin Gimbel evokes desert flora

March 04, 2022 The next best thing to a cool sculptural plant is a cool sculpture that looks like a plant. Such a fusion of manmade art and the natural world has been perfected by Los Angeles-based ceramist and garden designer Dustin Gimbel. His segmented ceramic totems echo the striking ...
Creative paths and cutting garden glory at Chanticleer

Creative paths and cutting garden glory at Chanticleer

March 03, 2022 Chanticleer Garden enchants through marvelous plant combos and artful garden spaces that evoke a sense of mystery, romance, and discovery. I visited Chanticleer, located in Wayne, Pennsylvania, on my East Coast road trip last fall. This is Part 6 — and the finale — of my blog ...
Flowery meadow instead of lawn at Chanticleer's house garden

Flowery meadow instead of lawn at Chanticleer’s house garden

February 26, 2022 You’d expect a garden surrounding an estate house to be formal, restrained, with neat lawns and containers that serve to frame the grand structure. The house garden at Chanticleer, a Pennsylvania “pleasure garden” I visited during my East Coast road trip last October, upends this convention through ...
A garden rising from ruin at Chanticleer

A garden rising from ruin at Chanticleer

February 22, 2022 View from Chanticleer’s Gravel Garden to the Ruin My last post overflowed with images of the glorious gravel garden at Chanticleer, a public garden in Wayne, Pennsylvania, that I visited on my road trip last October. That garden segues right into the Ruin, which I’ll share today ...
Gravel garden at Chanticleer reminds me of Texas

Gravel garden at Chanticleer reminds me of Texas

February 21, 2022 Whether you love plants, exciting planting combos, design and gardening artistry, or overlooks and hideaways to sit and enjoy a beautiful garden, Chanticleer has it all. Located near Philadelphia, Chanticleer dubs itself “a pleasure garden,” and it’s been my favorite public garden since I first visited in ...
Garden path wonderland at Paxson Hill Farm, part 3

Garden path wonderland at Paxson Hill Farm, part 3

February 15, 2022 My detour to Paxson Hill Farm‘s beautiful and imaginative gardens in New Hope, Pennsylvania, proved to be a highlight of my big road trip last October. Here’s Part 3 of my tour. Click here for Part 1 and Part 2. Railroad tie path Leaving the hobbit house ...
Fantasy gardens at Paxson Hill Farm, part 2

Fantasy gardens at Paxson Hill Farm, part 2

February 11, 2022 The gardens of Paxson HIll Farm, which I explored during the Pennsylvania portion of my road trip last October, started out good and got even better. In my last post I shared the farm’s nursery, Shade Garden, Katsura Garden, and Temple Garden. Let’s move on to a ...
Gardens galore at Paxson Hill Farm, part 1

Gardens galore at Paxson Hill Farm, part 1

February 09, 2022 Paxson Hill Farm’s crossroads, where inviting paths branch in every direction A friend asked me how I find gardens to see when traveling. Aside from online research a lot comes down to asking gardeners who live in the area. And it pays to build in time for ...
Enchanted Woods and reflecting pool garden at Winterthur, part 2

Enchanted Woods and reflecting pool garden at Winterthur, part 2

February 03, 2022 Tulip Tree House, made from a hollow tulip poplar trunk Children’s gardens are popping up like toadstools at botanical gardens everywhere nowadays. And they’re a welcome addition, encouraging families to visit and giving children, who increasingly spend much of their time online, an opportunity to explore outdoors, ...
James Golden's Federal Twist garden is like Fight Club, except we do talk about it

James Golden’s Federal Twist garden is like Fight Club, except we do talk about it

January 22, 2022 At the garden gate, towering grasses make you feel about 3 feet tall Plants duke it out for space and sunlight in every garden. But at Federal Twist, a wet-meadow garden in a clearing in the woods near Stockton, New Jersey, you witness the brawling fistfight from ...
LongHouse Reserve ramble, Part 3: Pond, zodiac amphitheater, and grass garden

LongHouse Reserve ramble, Part 3: Pond, zodiac amphitheater, and grass garden

January 09, 2022 You wouldn’t believe how long I studied these stone-like spheres at LongHouse Reserve when I visited the East Hampton, New York, garden back in October. The openness of the gravel under a grove of trees, with lush greenery all around, and those great, lumpy, gray and brown ...