Quantcast
Channel: danger garden
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2742

Visiting the gardens of Webster Manor

$
0
0
Back on July 13th I finally paid a visit to my friend Tim's garden, aka Webster Manor. I meant to get over there ("over there" being all of 3 miles away) last summer, but never managed to do so—I made it a priority this year. Since the light was harsh during my visit I borrowed this wide-shot from Tim...

Nice right? Well now feast your eyes on the "before", when he bought it back in 2018. That's right, just 5 years ago...
That's what vision and a lot of hard work will do. Here are a couple of my attempts at a wide-shot, bright afternoon that it was. I'm standing on the street when I took these photos.

Tim is growing Trachelospermum jasminoides on the chain-link fence to create a nice front garden wall.

And he's cleverly worked in several spikes.


Berkheya purpurea

There's a little art installation next to the driveway, of course everyone is free to interpret these plantings however they like.

Agaves!

This spiky wonder has a bit of a backstory. 

Every year I share a photo of the agaves at the Rare Plant Research open house labeled as Agave utahensis and every year I mention they're most likely Agave montana. Tim bought one a few years back and it's grown into this beauty, however it rotted off at the base after this ugly winter. After discovering the tragedy Tim placed the rootless agave on the ground in his greenhouse and... it rooted! He since moved it out here, it looks pretty darn good don't you think?

As we worked our way into the front garden Tim used the term "chaos gardening" to describe his style. I like it, but I also feel a little like it undercuts his serious gardening credentials. 


Chaos would be every container a different color. 


Okay... I suppose there might be a touch of chaos in there, but it's the very best kind.

I complimented his collection of rusty metal, Tim said he'd done something more interesting with the pieces but they'd recently been moved to this spot during another project. 

Tricyrtis formosana I believe.

Cunninghamia (I believe)

By now you've no doubt realized Tim is a collector. His is the kind of garden I can get lost in for hours. There is a good overall design, but the plants themselves are treasures, each requiring examination.

Podophyllum 'Spotty Dotty', all the more interesting planted with the dark foliage of the acer.

Looking skyward at the bananas...

...and the tetrapanax.

Looking back over my shoulder.

That gunnera! Gunnera perpensa (the curly leaves).

I didn't catch which eucalyptus this is, but the blue looks stunning against the green hedge, which was inherited and gives great privacy from the neighbor next door.

Tim scored a pair of these chimney pots from fellow gardener Gail Barnard who recently moved gardens.

They flank the entrance to the back part of the property which Tim referenced as the orchard. He named the different fruit trees growing there but I didn't manage to make note of them.

Oxydendrum arboreum, aka sourwood growing near the chicken coup.

Close-up of the tree...

Close-up of the fancy chickens and their cabbage on a rope...

Turning back around and bam! There's the dreamy greenhouse.

Darlingtonia californica

Sarracenia

Tim has all the cool trees, this one Sciadopitys verticillata, the Japanese umbrella-pine.

I may have heard mention of buying trees with the "next garden" in mind.

How dreamy is this!?! It's not every garden that has a ginormous cycad.

That curly new growth is fabulous.

Of course there was a stash of new plants waiting to be planted. Of course I had to check them out. I fell so hard for this one, Soldanella alpina, that I placed an online order the next day (more on that coming up on Friday).

At first glance I thought this Athrotaxis cupressoides (pencil pine) was a Cassiope lycopodioides (another current obsession of mine).

I stared at this rusty wall mounted bromeliad business longer than I care to admit, before I realized I made it! Ha! Tim purchased it from me at the spring T.O.P.S. sale.

How cool is that cabinet? A find that our mutual friend Patricia encouraged Tim to purchase.

Wollemi Pine, because he has all the cool plants.

And healthy bamboo, too.

Unfortunately this visit has drawn to a close. If you're a Portlander (or live within driving distance) you'll be excited to learn that Tim is planning to open his garden for the HPSO in September, date TBD. Info will be in the HPSO email, and if you follow Tim on Instagram you'll see notice there, or on Facebook. 

BTW—another opportunity to visit local gardens is coming up this weekend! The Beaumont-Wilshire Neighborhood Association is holding a garden tour, one of the gardens on the tour will be this garden I've written about several times, belonging to Dale Latham. Dale is a kind supporter of my work and will have a few copies of my book, Fearless Gardening available for purchase at his garden during the tour (1-5pm Saturday July 29th). Check it out!

—   —   —

To receive alerts of new danger garden posts by email, subscribe here. Please note; these are sent from a third party, you’ll want to click thru to read the post here on the blog to avoid their annoying ads. 
All material © 2009-2023 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2742

Trending Articles