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9780609605875

Eden on Their Minds : American Gardeners with Bold Visions

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780609605875

  • ISBN10:

    0609605879

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2001-11-01
  • Publisher: Clarkson Potter
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List Price: $60.00

Summary

What distinguishes a great garden from one that is merely beautiful? In her triumphant follow-up to the award-winningEarth on Her Hands, Starr Ockenga illustrates how a diverse group of visionary American plantsmen and women have taken risks, pushed boundaries, and stretched traditions to create distinctive, idiosyncratic gardens. Boldly conceived and boldly executed, these 21 gardens are highly personal interpretations of paradise. Each of the gardens bears the indelible stamp of the individual. Paul Held's Connecticut garden reflects his passion for the Japanese Sakurasoh, a variety of primula he propagates from seed. Marlyn Sachtjen's Wisconsin property is a sanctuary for the magnificent trees she has termed "majesties." In his Illinois garden, Justin Harper collects and propagates rare conifers, and in a New York penthouse Mark Bramble's obsession is orchids. Artists such as Sarah Draney in upstate New York and Marcia Donahue in northern California have conceived landscapes that serve as the ideal settings for their own works, while Richard Reames forms living trees into unique arborsculpture in Oregon. William Woys Weaver and husband-wife team Karen Strohbeen and Bill Luchsinger use their Pennsylvania and Iowa gardens as laboratories for ongoing experimentation in heirloom vegetable cultivation and ambitious perennial gardening. From the making of welcoming garden rooms densely planted with exotic flowers and foliage to sprawling landscapes featuring drifts of native plants in their natural habitats, these gardens represent a personal vision of Eden for each of their creators. Intimate portraits of the gardeners themselves and invaluable lists of the plants and techniques these innovators have devised over years and decades of gardening make this a useful and memorable addition to any gardener's library.

Author Biography

Starr Ockenga is a writer, photographer, designer, and educator. Her photographs and articles have appeared in many publications, including Life, Esquire, Camera, Victoria, Country Home, and Horticulture. She received her master's degree in photography from the Rhode Island School of Design and has been granted fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Massachusetts Artists Foundation. Her work has been exhibited in galleries across the United States and abroad, and is in numerous public and private collections. Her most recent book, Earth on Her Hands: The American Woman in Her Garden, was the recipient of an American Horticultural Society's Annual Book Award for 1999. Formerly an associate professor of photography at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, she currently operates a studio in Manhattan and gardens in upstate New York

Table of Contents

Introductionp. 8
Perennial Paradisep. 15
A Pioneer's Pathp. 27
Master of Illusionp. 37
A Modern Pleasure Palacep. 47
Singular Visionp. 59
Witches'-Broomp. 69
Shoehorn Gardeningp. 79
A Multicultural Marriagep. 87
Sanctuaryp. 97
Tree-Trunk Topiaryp. 109
Romance in the Ruinsp. 119
Crazy for Colorp. 131
Wizard of Wonderlandp. 141
Pot of Goldp. 151
Stone Agep. 159
The Bold Onep. 171
His Season in the Sunp. 183
Stairway to Heavenp. 191
Majestiesp. 201
Seed Saviorp. 211
Sublime Simplicityp. 221
Acknowledgmentsp. 233
Indexp. 236
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

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Excerpts

PERENNIAL PARADISE
Karen Strohbeen and Bill Luchsinger

Winterset, Iowa
In 1982, acting on a tip that a secluded parcel of land was going on the market, Karen Strohbeen and Bill Luchsinger passed through a sleepy hamlet in south central Iowa. Its grassy square was home to swing sets, picnic tables, and a simple bell tower. The largest local business was Ham's Sharpening Service. Karen and Bill drove to the dead end of a gravel road on the far side of town, leaving a cloud of dust in their wake.

A one-story house and a cluster of outbuildings, painted iron red, were sited on a knoll. Looking across a 3-acre spring-fed pond to the undulating landscape beyond, Karen and Bill feasted on the view: clouds reflected in crystal-clear water; a wide, gentle slope leading to the pond's edge; meadows lush with wildflowers; ribbons of trees, planted by farmers as windbreaks. A mature herb garden, designed and lovingly cared for by the owners, grew by the side of the house. "I like it," Bill said. Karen agreed.

The couple, both successful artists, had sought a location where their passion for gardening could flourish, where, as Bill says, they could grow older and never move again. They spent portions of each year in Brooklyn, New York, as many-up-and-coming artists do. But, Iowans by birth and temperament, they eventually returned to their home state, settling for the first few years in the western part of the state.

They had met at Drake University's art school in Des Moines. Karen and Bill came from gardening backgrounds, and both cite their grandfathers as influences. Gardening became an increasingly powerful force in their lives. A deep connection exists between the imagery on the walls of their house and the garden pictures framed by its windows: prints, sculptures, ceramics, drawings, paintings, videos, and an ambitious perennial garden.

"For me," muses Karen, "gardening is making art outdoors. All the same principles apply."

Working together, Karen and Bill, who have made pieces of sculpture with a joint signature, accumulated plants, expertise, and equipment. The Winterset place came with 80 acres of rich farmland that answered their need for expansion. For the first five years they maintained, and enjoyed, the existing herb garden "out of respect," as Karen recalls. Gradually, however, their ideas for experimentation dictated changes, and they embarked on an innovative plant study program. They removed the original brick paths and in their place installed fifty-four 4-foot-square raised boxes made of treated pine 4-by-4's spaced 2 feet apart. "We never plant anything we plan to eat in boxes made of treated lumber," Bill observes. "This garden is strictly for testing perennials."

Karen divides the growing season-and the location of beds-into four color-coded demarcations: late winter to early spring-blue; late spring to early summer-green; summer-yellow; and fall-red. Karen never plants two summer boxes or two fall boxes adjacent to each other in the Box Garden. Using a mathematical system devised by Bill, Karen organizes the arrangement so that one season's box flows into the next, creating a colorful patchwork pattern throughout the grid. Always the artist, she insists that the experimental nature of this garden not detract from its beauty or limit its color combinations. She says,

"We are thinking about time, space, color, line, texture, making pictures within the 4-foot frames." In each bed Karen tests a group of plants with similar cultural needs and overlapping bloom periods. Just as significant, however, is how well each plant gets along with its bedfellows.

Karen thinks about the size that each mature plant will demand aboveground. For example, a low-mounding plant and a tall, narrow plant do not inhabit the same air space and can be planted quite close to each other without becoming crowded. The plant's habit underground, she stresses, is just as important. A plant with a long taproot can occupy approximately the same space as one with a shallow root clump.

Karen admits, "I am looking for exciting plant combinations." While a box might primarily contain summer-performing perennials, she might also insert spring-flowering plants, like Oriental poppies. The box would have a splash of electric orange or salmon pink in spring, and the foliage of the summer bloomers would camouflage the hole left by the poppies as they go dormant.

Certain categories of plants automatically take assigned positions, as on an athletic team. Grasses go into autumn boxes, where they provide interest all summer, before peaking and blooming in the fall. Conifers are planted in the late-winter and early-spring boxes, as they provide form and structure when the rest of the garden sleeps and as it wakens in the spring.

When a combination pleases the couple, it is ready to debut in the main garden, a series of grandly proportioned island beds that occupy the 200-foot slope between the buildings and the pond. "I would never suggest that people create island beds," says Bill. "Generally, they don't complement suburban settings, where they are so often used. But here they seem to repeat the contours of the surrounding landscape. Their shapes were our response to what we see when we lift our eyes."

The half-dozen beds cover 2 acres, curving around one another, like embracing lovers. Each island is raised 2 feet higher along its entire central axis; this additional height gives the bed a startling new dimension, and drainage is dramatically improved.

Iowa is known for its excellent soil, which is often referred to as black gold. Bill reports that 25 percent of the world's Class A soil is in Iowa. However, because it is so rich and fine, compaction and drainage can be problematic. Therefore, in preparing the soil for a new garden, a program that takes a year, Karen and Bill always use the same formula: one-third garden soil, one-third coarse sand, and one-third organic matter such as manure or compost, all of which Bill tills together until well mixed.

Removing the stump of a dead tree triggered plans for the House Beds. Bill proposed three irregularly shaped beds nested within one another and enveloping the south end of the house. Floribunda and English roses offer fragrance and a long season of bloom. Clematis 3 durandii with abundant purple-blue flowers thrive in congregations of rustic tuteurs, some as tall as 14 feet. Blue spruce (Picea pungens 'Glauca Globosa') on standards, positioned like oversize lollipops, add a touch of humor. The beds are underplanted with spring bulbs and alliums, especially A. 'Globemaster', selected because its dying foliage is less offensive than that of some of its relatives.

The Lily Garden-named for its array of Asiatic, regale, Oriental, and species lilies-fills two beds that lie back to back. Plants, in their varied forms, can be architecture. "But they are not enough," says Karen, "especially in winter and early spring." Conifers and grasses add texture and height in a garden with no physical walls. A staggered line of Alberta spruce trees (Picea glauca 'Conica'), with their pointed caps, march through the bed, providing contrast to balls of arborvitae (Thuja occidentalis 'Hetz Midget') or Pinus strobus 'Nana'.

Since all these island beds are expansive in scale-one is 25 by 75 feet-Karen and Bill have created a system of narrow dirt paths that are hidden from view. One rule is cast in stone: they never step directly on the prepared earth. If they have to walk into a planted area, they first place a small board a little bigger than a work boot on the ground and step on it.

Bill says, "The plants are our mulch. They provide a cover that is cool and clean and low in maintenance." And indeed very little soil is visible. In the rare spot where it can be seen, the earth is an advertisement for the perfect planting medium. "Ideally," Bill says, "we feed the soil once a year by spreading an inch to an inch and a half of compost over the top."

The only other soil cover used in the garden is sawdust from the local sawmill. Paths in the box gardens are softened with a thick layer. Karen observes, "We always want to use local materials, and sawdust is something we can get easily. It makes walking in that garden very quiet, almost contemplative." Sawdust is also used as an edging material around the gardens. Encroaching grass is given crisp definition with an electric edger, and sawdust is laid on the revealed earth. Plants don't like sawdust, but neither do weeds. The result is a clean, unobtrusive, narrow border of rosy sawdust around all the beds, a practical and aesthetic solution to a perpetual challenge.

When designing a garden on this scale, future maintenance is always a consideration. "Think about being able to get mowers through the grassy paths," Karen advises. "The 2-foot-wide paths in the Box Garden are just wide enough to accommodate the wheelbarrows." Plants that require the most care, like roses, are planted closest to the house. More independent plants and spring-flowering bulbs live farther away. The spring chores might be lessened if Karen cut back perennials in the fall, but she leaves them standing. The debris serves as protection in a winter with little snow cover. In the Zone 4 climate, with winter temperatures dropping to minus 30°F, the plants need insulated blankets over their heads.

In recognition of their accomplishments, PBS has signed with Karen and Bill to create The Perennial Gardener with Karen Strohbeen. Karen is the talent, and Bill is the video artist.

"We are trying to share what we do with other gardeners," Karen says. "By explaining the nitty-gritty, we hope to make the process of gardening accessible. And the other gardeners we visit are dirt gardeners, like us. Our goal is to celebrate the act of gardening."

Excerpted from Eden on Their Minds: American Gardeners with Bold Visions by Starr OcKenga
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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