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How to create a pet-friendly garden: ideas, tips durable plants

Melinda Frey, the Portland designer who created the pet-friendly backyard where the two dogs live and play, started from scratch with a landscape that was cratered like the surface of the moon. From the beginning, she considered the needs of the dogs and two cats, Tango and Sparky. Instead of trying to contain the dogs in certain areas, Frey turned a well-padded track into a path. If they are going to run there anyway, she says, the best way was to go with it.

“They are really active,” says Frey, who owns Raindrop Garden Design and has done about half a dozen gardens focused on the requirements of pets as well as people. “And now they have space to exert that energy. Then they’re more mellow and chill out.”

Emmerson hired Frey after noticing a flier advertising a tandem talk by Frey and Anne Taylor of Living Elements Landscape.

“We wanted a dog-resistant, dog-friendly, safe garden that was also appealing to people,” Emmerson says. “We didn’t know where to start.”

Fortunately, Frey did. In addition to the paths, she had the couple build raised beds for vegetables. Even though the medium-size dogs can easily scramble in, the boxes act as a deterrent, as do prickly plants placed strategically. The garden has a lawn where the owners can play with and train their pets.

“You have to understand they’re dogs,” Frey says. “It takes training from humans to let them know what’s OK and what’s not OK.”

Americans love their pets. They spent more than $61 billion on them in 2011, according to a new report from the U.S. Department of Labor. That translated to just more than $500 for the average household.

So perhaps it’s not so surprising that two women from the other side of the country called Portland designer Carol Lindsay to create outdoor pooch places after reading her blog.

The first was a lobster boat owner in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, who has three young golden retrievers and wanted a private dog park.

“She had to talk me into it,” says Lindsay of Design in a Day. “I didn’t want a bi-coastal relationship.”

But she gave in. The dog owner, who read Lindsay’s blog post about pet-friendly gardens, sent photos of her favorite off-leash dog parks; one included a sand fort — an igloo-type structure over a patch of sand.

“Dogs can go in and dig like crazy,” Lindsay says. “And they come out happy.”

The second East Coast client was the owner of a brownstone in Brooklyn, N.Y., who was at a total loss about how to deal with four Lab-sized rescue dogs in a 19-by-37-foot garden.

“It was a real challenge,” says Lindsay. “She’d given up.”

But the Portland garden designer took on the job and found that rejiggering the deck, cleaning out some plants and creating rooms provided a lot more usable space. The Brooklyn woman got to keep the romance of her favorite roses, and her tail-wagging friends got room to stretch.

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Lindsay and Frey agree that keeping a dog happy keeps the owner happy, too. If you watch your canines’ habits, it’s easier to make garden choices. Do they run the perimeter? If so, keep that area free of plants or use containers. Do they love the dog next door? Cut out little windows in the fence so they can go nose to nose. And don’t forget to get toxic plants out of your landscape. Cedar chips, flagstone, gravel, crushable ground covers or artificial grass will help keep your pup’s feet cleaner.

Cats aren’t left out. For Emmerson  and Felton, Frey designed a “cattery” with basking stones, shaded hidey-holes, juniper scratching posts and perches.

“The cats love it,” says Emmerson. “The dogs love it. And we love it.”

 
TIPS FOR BUILDING A CATTERY
— Cover area with netting or some other kind of screening if you want to keep cats from roaming.
— Provide scratching posts.
— Plant shrubs so cats have a shady place to hide.
— Add a flattish rock big enough for them to sun on.
— Build shelves for play and sleep.
— Have a window you can open or a cat door so cats can come and go at will.
— Make sure they have fresh water.

 
10 TIPS FOR A DOG-FRIENDLY GARDEN
1. Make sure fresh drinking water is always available to your pets to keep them hydrated and to dilute their urine, which will minimize brown spots on your lawn. Give dogs that love water a fountain or pool to play in.
2. Strategically placed plants with a prickly nature and sturdy form can keep dogs from charging through planted beds
3. Toxic plants are commonly found in Northwest gardens. The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has comprehensive toxic and nontoxic plant lists for dogs and cats. If you think your pet has eaten a toxic plant, call your vet. (For more, see “Beware of plants, blooms poisonous to cats and dogs”)
4. Training is a major part of a successful pet-friendly garden. Our dogs want to please us. Time spent in the garden with your pet can enrich your outdoor experience.
5. A trip to your local dog park allows active dogs a way to burn off pent-up energy. When they get home, they’re more relaxed and create less havoc in the garden.
6. If you’ve got diggers, make an area where they have permission to make a mess. Some people use sand for this purpose.
7. Make paths where dogs naturally go. If they patrol the perimeter, leave a path between fence and plants.
8. Put in raised beds; they’ll help keep dogs from trampling vegetables.
9. Use plants with stickers or those with smells they don’t like to keep them out of beds.
10. Make a window or two at face level in the fence if your dog likes socializing with the dog next door.
 
Source: Melinda Frey, Raindrop Garden Design, and Carol Lindsay, Design in a Day

 
RESOURCES
Melinda Frey
Raindrop Garden Design
raindropgardendesign.com
503-260-8781
 
Carol Lindsay
Design in a Day
landscape-design-in-a-day.com
503-223-2426

 
DURABLE PLANTS FOR PET-FRIENDLY GARDENS
 
SHRUBS

Hardy fuchsia
Sword fern (Polystichum munitum)
Redtwig dogwood (Cornus alba)
Montgomery spruce (Picea pungens ‘Montgomery’)

 
GRASSES
Fountain grass
(Pennisetum)
Japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa)
Reed grass (Calamagrostis)
Blue oat grass (Helictotrichon sempervirens)

 
GROUND COVERS
Kinnikinick
(Arctostaphylos uva-ursi)
Carpet bugle (Ajuga)
Miniature stonecrop (Sedum acre or S. requieni)
Elfin thyme (Thymus serpyllum ‘Elfin’)

 
URINE-RESISTANT PLANTS
Doublefile viburnum (Viburnum plicatum f. tomentosum)
Snowball viburnum (Viburnum macrocephalum)
Feather reed grass (Calamagrostis x acutiflora ‘Karl Foerster’)
Rugosa rose (Rosa rugosa)
Spirea (Spiraea japonica)
Weigela (W. florida ‘Variegata’ or W. ‘Minuet’)

Binetti: Two books to help you enjoy your garden

So why not enjoy your garden this week? Sometimes the eye of a gardener becomes continuously focused on what needs to be done — instead of the beauty that is blooming in midsummer glory.

Your plants will not be scandalized if a few weeds share their bed or stop flowering immediately if you relax and ignore some faded blooms. You can even mow the lawn a bit less often as summer arrives. If you just can’t see the flowers for the weeds, learn to love foliage over flowers or to blur your eyes while you gaze at your garden and enjoy splashes of color and texture — even if there are some blooming weeds adding to the color show.

Give yourself permission to celebrate summer by just sitting in the garden — perhaps with a good book. Here are two suggestions:

“DOWN TO EARTH WITH HELEN DILLON”

By Helen Dillon, Timber Press, $23.12 hardcover (Amazon)

I just finished reading this classic entertaining book by Irish author Helen Dillon retitled from “Down to Earth Gardening” for an American audience.

I loved not only the new nuggets of gardening information but also the humor and personality the author infuses into her writing. We’ll be leading a garden tour to Ireland this fall and visiting the garden of Helen Dillon as part of our tour — so with the idea of research for the trip, I thought I would need to order the Dillon garden books from a British publisher. It was a nice surprise to find out that Portland publisher Timber Press has renamed and reissued this Helen Dillon book that has become a best-seller in the United Kingdom. You can find it at local book stores, your library and for sure at Amazon.com.

Here’s some gardening advice from the very opinionated Helen Dillon. Her wisdom is broken down into short chapters some devoted to beginning gardeners and other chapters for more advanced gardeners. The beautiful photographs of her own garden, near Dublin prove the point that Dillon knows how to dig in, design and delight in the gardening lifestyle.

Change is good: Helen Dillon shares many past mistakes and explains how she got rid of the multi-tiered, Victorian fountain that was once the focal point of her garden. She now prefers a more modern garden design with more subtle focal points and she freely shares her past gardening mistakes.

Use real things: Fake flagstone always look like fake flagstone — get the real thing.

Your lawn takes up too much time: Helen replaced her lawn with a long, narrow, water feature down the length of the back garden. She has one of the most photographed gardens in the United Kingdom, so this drastic design change along with getting rid of many demanding perennial plants sent shock waves through the gardening world.

Skip the roses: Most roses are not worth the bother — but roses you love are worthy of constant care and pampering.

Create a space: Every gardener needs a potting shed or greenhouse in which to hide out. Then you can relax and do nothing at all — that is until you hear footsteps heading your way. Then just start throwing soil and pots about and you can fool all visitors and family members into thinking what a dedicated and hardworking gardener you have become.

Dogs are great in a garden: Unless visiting royalty steps in a doggy deposit and tracks it into your home at tea time, dogs are a great addition to every garden. Helen Dillon will tell you how to handle that.

“FINE FOLIAGE – ELEGANT PLANT COMBINATIONS FOR GARDEN AND CONTAINER”

By Karen Chapman and Christina Salwitz, St. Lynn’s Press, $16.95

Ready for more summer reading in the garden? Closer to home is this book by local garden designers Karen Chapman (Duvall) and Christina Salwitz (Renton). These two have grafted their ideas on foliage, container gardens and landscape design into a new hybrid of a garden book that is a work of stunning beauty.

Seattle photographer Ashely DeLatour has captured the essence of living leaves as works of art. If you like lots of photos with your garden books and step-by-step ideas on how to duplicate the landscapes and container gardens that use foliage over flowers than this is required summer reading.

The design of this small book is user-friendly with more than 60 plant partnerships. Each page highlights a finished project and the facing page displays a brief explanation of “Why this works” and then a photo, name and description of the plants that were used in the design.

You don’t have to be a gardener to lust after these luscious leaves. Leaf through these pages and even the most committed flower-lovers are going to be tempted to start an exciting affair with Fine Foliage.

Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and is the author of several books. Reach her at binettigarden.com.

Kent designer’s dune garden is a finalist

 

A garden on shifting sands at Camber near Rye by Kent designer Jo Thompson is through to the final rounds of the Society of Garden Designers 2013 Awards.

A simple design lies behind a complex brief. The garden had to offer its owner privacy as the space is continuous with the public beach, provide shelter from salty winds and be in keeping with the area’s Site of Special Scientific Interest status.

Sea Gem, Camber Sands by Jo Thompson

Jo Thompson’s garden for Sea Gem incorporates curvaceous seating, a barbeque pit, rinsing stations for sandy feet and cedar decking which leads to a timber gate. Rope from the Historic Dockyard in Chatham provides an appropriate nautical boundary fence. The dunes are planted with tough species that will cope with sand and the climate.

Jo said: “Right from the start this garden was all about the elements. The strong, salty winds, its constant state of flux and finding plants that will take hold and not blow away. I am delighted with the result.”

The Society of Garden Designers has been championing excellence in garden design for 30 years. It is the only professional association for garden designers in the UK and counts some of the UK’s leading garden and landscape designers among its growing membership.

 The annual awards programme, in its second year, is designed to recognise and reward outstanding achievement in the garden and landscape design profession, from private domestic gardens to engaging public spaces. Out of a total of 95 projects, 35 have been named as finalists.

 The next round of judging will take place in October and the winners will be announced at the SGD Awards ceremony in London on January 24, 2014.

Jo Thompson’s garden design practice is in Stone Street, Cranbrook. She set up her practice six years ago, after studying garden design at the English Gardening School, and is now recognised as one of the country’s leading garden designers.

 

Ross Parcel is one of Alta’s youngest business owners

(Photo)

Ross Parcel is one of Alta’s youngest business owners.

At just 19, his business – Ross Parcel Landscapes – is blooming.

Ross’ interest in landscaping work started when he was just 13 when he began working during the summers with Wes and Brad Bunjes and their landscaping business. He learned a great deal from them. When he was 17, he began doing a few small projects on his own, hauling what little equipment he had at the time in a 6’x5′ trailer.

Through word of mouth, he was being called on for more and more projects and he realized he had something going. He graduated from Alta-Aurelia High School in 2012 and added to his equipment, including a truck, and this year he added a second truck and trailers, purchased with dollars received from completing projects.

Ross attends Kirkwood College, double majoring in the landscape construction and design courses. When he returns, he will be learning in greater detail about ligthing and irrigation. He has completed one year and will be done in May.

He enjoys living in Alta and intends to remain in Alta, in fact, he just purchased two lots in the Alta Municipal Utilities addition from the city/utilities to put up a hoop building to store his equipment and house an office. In his three-year plan is the addition of a greenhouse.

While there are two landscape businesses in the community, they don’t really compete. “There’s plenty of business,” he said. Both business complete projects in Alta and throughout a large area around Alta.

“It’s different work everyday and that’s what I like about it,” Ross said. “Many of the projects don’t take more than a week to complete and that’s what keeps it exciting. The ideas are endless. It’s fun to go to a job where the yard is all grass and create something and to see the customer happy with their changed yard.”

Clients have ideas in mind when they meet with him while many ask him to come up with a design. Though computer programs are available for drawing up plans, he prefers to draw them free hand which allows him to express more ideas. If a 3-D picture is requested, he uses the computer.

Being young, Ross often gets peculiar looks when clients meet him for the first time but once they see the quality work he does, they realize that his young age doesn’t matter.

At this time, Ross does not have any fulltime employees working for him but does have a few guys that help out when needed.

Friend Alex Stephan will be attending Kirkwood come this fall, also majoring in landscaping. Just as the Bunjes brothers served as mentors to him, he will pay it forward and share his knowledge with Alex next summer by offering him an internship.

To contact Ross call 712-2xx-xxxx. You can view some of his projects at the Ross Parcel Landscapes Facebook page.

Nature Scapes by Kim: Creating and caring for home landscaping designs

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By Nancy Brumback, Contributing Writer

Kimberly White, owner of Nature Scapes  (photo/submitted)

Photo: Kimberly White, owner of Nature Scapes (photo/submitted)

Business name: Nature Scapes by Kim

Address: P.O. Box 113, South Grafton

Owner: Kimberly White

Contact Information: 508-868-2170, www.NatureScapesbyKim.com

 

What does your company specialize in?

“We specialize in creative, economical landscape solutions for residential customers. Every homeowner has their own vision for their property. As a landscape designer, I work with them to make that vision a reality,” said Kimberly White, owner and designer for Nature Scapes by Kim since 2000. She received her education from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in addition to a five-year apprenticeship with an award-winning landscape designer. She is currently working on a degree in environmental science at Worcester State University.

“We build outdoor living areas, as well as spectacular front entrances, depending on what the homeowner needs. Sometimes it is rearranging a perennial garden and transplanting shrubs along with pruning, trimming, weeding, mulch application, edging. Other times it may require repair or installation of patios and walkways. No job is too big or too small.”

White’s work can be seen in the Grafton area and surrounding towns and in pictures on the website, www.NatureScapesbyKim.com.

 

How do you get started on a project?

“Usually a customer calls with an idea of what they want. I’ll meet with them to see if their ideas will work in the space available and fit within their budget. Sometimes we’ll scale down or do different areas at different times,” White said.

“I put together an estimate, and once we have agreed, my crew and I show up on a scheduled date and do the work through to completion. I like to show my customers the courtesy of getting the job done as quickly as possible once we start.

“I want people to be thrilled when they walk away from our experience. Not only with what we’ve done with the landscaping, but with my crew and myself.”

 

And you recommend and provide the needed plants?

“I’m a landscape designer, which means I have a lot of plant knowledge and I am particularly knowledgeable about perennials. I know what a particular plant likes—sun or shade, the type of soil, drainage, when it’s going to flower, what color. A well-planned garden includes conifers, evergreens, deciduous shrubs and trees, as well as perennials. The perennials are where the garden pops. A well-planned perennial garden will always have something flowering, something new going on. And I choose those for foliage as well as the flowers.”

 

Nature Scapes maintains gardens as well?

“We do perennial maintenance, taking care of the garden after it’s been planted. For regular customers, in the spring we do the spring cleanup, mulch, fertilize everything with organic fertilizers. Then in late July or August we prune everything, cut back where needed, do a lot of weeding. In the fall we put the garden to sleep, whatever the plants need to protect them from the harsh winters,” White said.

“We try to stay as organic as possible. I try not to use chemicals unless it’s absolutely necessary. And then, sparingly.”

 

What are popular projects?

“Replacing foundation plantings in front of the house and along the street. Often a builder puts all the money into the house and very little on the landscaping. They buy whatever’s on sale and plant it 12 inches from the foundation. Years later, there are problems. Sometimes we have to rip it out, sometimes we can move it, sometimes we can just prune it.

“Often a few years after people have bought a house and finished what they want to do inside, they want to customize the outside. Landscaping also adds curb appeal when owners are putting their house on the market.”

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‘Grove Fest’ to focus on nature

FREMONT Experiencing nature and the outdoors is the new focus of daytime activities July 27 at the Hayes Presidential Center’s GroveFest.

GroveFest takes its name from Spiegel Grove, the estate of 19th U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes. The Grove’s 25 acres are a state park that is open year-round dawn to dusk.

GroveFest’s new focus hopes to help visitors appreciate the natural wonders available in all parks. It also provides educational opportunities families can enjoy together.

Major sponsorship for GroveFest is provided by The Fremont Co. and Key Bank-the Walter E. Terhune Memorial Fund.

Daytime events that take place 11 a.m.-2 p.m are free. Among the interactive activities are bird banding, wagon rides, Bucket-Mouth Bass fishing game, make-it-take-it crafts, fly-tying, wildlife art, gardening programs’ kids’ art and flower arranging.

The Toledo Zoo will have a display focusing on Ohio animals and is bringing some of its residents, as is the Sandusky County Humane Society and StarGazer Farm Suri Alpacas. Stone Laboratory hosts a program on Ohio’s foxsnake and its work at Lake Erie. Back to the Wild will bring animals they are rehabilitating to return to their natural habitats.

Free programs are scheduled throughout the day.

Presenters and times are:

Noon landscaping tips and ideas, courtesy Pump Landscaping Garden Center.

12:30 p.m. wildlife program by Back to the Wild.

1 p.m. gardening program by Master Gardeners.

1:30 p.m. wildlife program by Back to the Wild.

Inspired by the Grove’s popularity with dog walkers, GroveFest introduces its “Pooch on the Porch Parade” at 11 a.m. on the verandah. (Registration is required; forms available at www.rbhayes.org).

This event is organized by the Humane Society of Sandusky County. Dogs must be vaccinated, well-behaved (able to tolerate other dogs and a crowd of people) and remain on leash while in Spiegel Grove. Owners are required to clean up after their pets.

Evening is set aside for the Hayes Presidential Center’s largest annual fundraiser, Bid at the Grove Auction. Celebrity auctioneer Jerry Anderson of WTOL-11 and Fox Toledo TV headlines this adults-only ticketed event that takes place 6-10 p.m. in a reception tent located in Lucy Hayes’ Rose Garden.

The auction theme is “A Red, White Blue Celebration!” Guests are invited to wear patriotic clothing and enjoy hors d’oeuvres that were favorites of U.S. presidents. Food, wine, beer, and other refreshments are available all evening as guests bid on auction items, participate in games, and join in raffles.

Call (419) 332-2081, ext. 226 for ticket information and reservations.

Meet our Great Garden contest winners

To walk through an amazing garden is like stepping into another world with all your senses on alert. Colors, textures, shapes envelop you. A bee buzzes around you. The smell of roses fills the air.

We asked St. Louisans if their garden had what it takes to be crowned the best in the area. More than 200 gardeners responded in our Post-Dispatch Annual Great Garden Contest.

Picking just six winners (first, second and third place in the amateur division and the amateur with professional help division) was a challenge for our four judges. But design, color and elegance stole the show.

And the winners received some great prizes:

• First place in both categories: $1,000 gift card from the Home Depot; $100 to For the Garden; $100 to Sugar Creek Gardens

• Second place in both categories: $150 to the Bug Store; $100 to Sherwood’s Forest; $50 to Sugar Creek Gardens; $50 to Bowood Farms; $25 to For the Garden; $25 to Hillermann Nursery and Florist.

• Third place in both categories: $50 to the Bug Store; $50 to Sugar Creek Gardens; $50 to Sherwood’s Forest; $25 to Bowood Farms; $25 to For the Garden; $25 to Hillermann Nursery and Florist.

• Every winner receives a $25 gift card from Eckert’s Garden Center and a family membership to the Missouri Botanical Garden, valued at $150.

AMATEUR WITH

PROFESSIONAL HELP

First place • Debbie Hadley

Home • Webster Groves

Family • Husband Bob; three grown children

Occupation • Debbie is the owner of Gardening Angel Landscaping in Webster Groves, and Bob is a machinist at Bodine Aluminum.

 

The success of the Hadleys’ garden lies in their two ponds, a wooden swing, a hammock, tables, benches, a bottle tree, a fountain, an arbor, a pergola, statues, bird baths, and, of course, the plants. They have a variety of plants, including 42 trees, hundreds of shrubs and thousands of perennials.

The couple started renovating their primitive backyard and badminton court into a lush garden in 1995, when Debbie was just getting interested in gardening. In 2003, she opened a landscaping business, and her staff helped construct the second pond and made a handmade swinging bench. A fire pit was also installed.

The couple moved into their home 33 years ago and raised three kids. Originally, the home was purchased by Debbie’s great-grandparents when they came from England in 1909. Five generations of Debbie’s family have lived there.

The half-acre garden’s design includes levels. Each level is bordered with walls built by Debbie’s dad and grandfather 60 years ago and constructed of broken concrete from the streets of St. Louis.

“My yard has been my test and trial garden,” Debbie says. Twelve years ago, they built an 8,000-gallon pond, home to 26 large koi. It has a stream, waterfall and a bridge. The smaller pond, built three years ago, showcases a tall, double waterfall and three fish. Hardy and tropical plants surround both ponds.

The paths are all made of natural stone, and among the varieties are granite boulders.

All four of our judges chose this winning garden. “This has all the elements of a great and soothing getaway garden, not only to stroll through but to stop and relax and enjoy the sounds of nature,” says Fred Ortlip, master gardener and Post-Dispatch copy editor.

Chip Tynan and June Hutson at the Missouri Botanical Garden agree. “Water feature is excellent. Wonderful paths to view close-up many beautiful specimens of plants. Split level pools in foreground plus waterfall in background. Many beautiful conifers dot the landscape, giving a sense of structure.”

Debbie says, “Our garden will never be finished. We love to add things and change it up.”

Second place • Dee Jay Hubbard

Home • Ballwin

Family • Wife, Audrey; two grown sons, Brock and Colin

Occupation • He’s a retired speech pathologist with the Veterans Administration, and she’s a retired teacher.

 

After a trip to England, Dee Jay and Audrey Hubbard wanted to bring back more than a spot of tea. With the help of gardening professionals, they built a luscious garden spot inspired by the gardens they saw on their trip.

“We were tired of looking at an asphalt driveway and large parking pad,” Dee Jay says. In 2000, Chesterfield Valley Nursery tore up the asphalt, graded the area and built a mound for the waterfall. They dug the pond, put all the stone in and began planting most of the major trees and shrubs such as boxwood, holly, lilac, bright yellow shrubs, a Weeping Atlas cedar tree and an oak. The nursery also constructed a flagstone garden path, and the couple placed wood chips around the stone. Christine O’Brien, production manager at Bowood Farms’ growing facility in Clarksville, Mo., helped with the selection of the perennial plantings. The stone pillars were built by Jim Fobian, a private stone mason.

“It’s still a work in progress,” Audrey says. “Every year we’re planting new plants, cutting back bushes and replacing hostas that have been eaten by the deer and rabbits.”

Judge Ken Miller of Miller Horticultural and owner of the Bug Store says, “It’s a garden where wild and elegance interact. Tastefully appointed and elegant garden in an elegant setting.”

Third place • Kathy Gugger

Home • Edwardsville

Family • Husband, Joe; children, two grown daughters

Occupation • Kathy is a retired dentist, and Joe is self-employed.

 

Not all backyards are perfectly flat. When the Guggers moved into their home in 1987, they decided to utilize their terraced (upper and lower) 2 1/2-acre backyard design. In 2005, with the assistance of Burns Landscaping in Edwardsville (closed in 2007), they inserted large rocks into the yard slopes and built a gravel pit. A waterfall was constructed next to a garden path. Tile setters from Premier Hardwoods in Pontoon Beach built a blue-stone terrace for seating. The couple purchased two stone benches from the Market Basket in Edwardsville to create a relaxing area around the fire pit on the terrace. They planted prairie-type flowers such as black-eyed Susans, different types of grasses and tiger lilies. “I have three helpers to keep my garden looking great,” Kathy says. “Me, myself and I.”

Miller says, “It’s a great execution of waterfall and great natural design. Dramatic use of the hillside with many beautiful specimen plants.”

AMATEUR DIVISION

First place • Terry Metzler

Home • South St. Louis County

Family • Husband, Steve; grown son, Matt

Occupation • Dental hygienist

 

When the Metzlers bought their South County house in 1990, the backyard was “a dust bowl on a hill.” They started by planting trees and grass. “One year later, my husband convinced me we needed a fish pond,” Terry says. That began their journey to their award-winning garden.

It’s now mostly Terry’s baby. “When we got married, I told my husband I love to cut the grass,” she says. “However, working full time and being a mom, I could not do it all. We made a deal. I do the lawn and gardening, and he does the laundry. It makes for a great marriage.”

The garden consists of more than 350 hostas with 250 different varieties. There are coral bells, hellebores, azaleas, rhododendrons, hydrangeas, ferns, evergreens and 17 different types of Japanese maples.

For color, Terry has peonies and daylilies, several kinds of iris, roses and other perennials. “When I started gardening I thought the flowers were IT. I have come to appreciate all the textures and shades of greens and purples present just in the leaves of my plants.”

Our judges (three of whom chose Terry as their first-place winner) loved the layers, too. Tynan, of the Missouri Botanical Garden, says: “The contrasting texture and color of foliage lend interest in the absence of flowers. The clock and plantings between the streams lend a new meaning to the term ‘island bed.’”

Ortlip agreed: “A backyard with a long slope toward a house can be a nightmare or a perfect landscaping opportunity, and Terry took a lemon of a layout and created a great glass of lemonade. The hardscapes and water combine with an appealing variety of color in the deciduous and evergreen plantings to make this a remarkable getaway, just outside the back door.”

Terry says she spends about 20 hours a week on her garden, “but I love it. I just love it.”

Second place • Karen Frimel

Home • Ladue

Family • Husband, Greg; three grown daughters

Occupation • Karen works part time for her dad’s company; Greg is a dentist

 

Except for the front of the house and some edges of the garden, the Frimels’ house is in total shade. After removing river rock and Japanese honeysuckle, Karen started dividing the common hosta that were already there. “Thanks to the St. Louis Hosta Society, (I learned) that there were really so many more choices,” she says.

Greg found ornamental trees to create an interesting understory to the large ones already in the yard. Favorites include several varieties of Japanese maples, tricolor beech, peeling bark maples and many varieties of dogwoods. Over the years, Karen added hydrangea, ferns, lenten roses, bulbs and azaleas. “Gardening ‘in the woods’ has been a challenge. I like neat and tidy, but I cannot have it too formal or use tropicals and keep the woodland feel.”

Hutson, of the Missouri Botanical Garden, says she liked the well-placed steppingstones that “provide a meandering path through hosta specimens of many colors.” Miller, from the Bug Store, says he loved the exciting and bold contrast of leave and their colors. “Truly an alluring shade garden.”

Third place • Phyllis Weidman

Home • Kirkwood

Family • Husband, Jim; two grown children

Occupation • Homemaker; Jim is a consultant to nonprofits

 

The Weidmans’ garden is divided by a long, meandering dry creek that helps drain the three terraces that go up the hill in the back of the house to the edge of a woods. It contains about 350 varieties of hostas, Japanese maples, conifers and shade companion plants.

“As the years have passed, the garden beds continue to grow with the grass area becoming smaller and smaller,” Phyllis says.

Judge Miller appreciated the “powerful combination of texture, form and leaf color to create a striking composition.”

Meet our Great Garden contest winners

To walk through an amazing garden is like stepping into another world with all your senses on alert. Colors, textures, shapes envelop you. A bee buzzes around you. The smell of roses fills the air.

We asked St. Louisans if their garden had what it takes to be crowned the best in the area. More than 200 gardeners responded in our Post-Dispatch Annual Great Garden Contest.

Picking just six winners (first, second and third place in the amateur division and the amateur with professional help division) was a challenge for our four judges. But design, color and elegance stole the show.

And the winners received some great prizes:

• First place in both categories: $1,000 gift card from the Home Depot; $100 to For the Garden; $100 to Sugar Creek Gardens

• Second place in both categories: $150 to the Bug Store; $100 to Sherwood’s Forest; $50 to Sugar Creek Gardens; $50 to Bowood Farms; $25 to For the Garden; $25 to Hillermann Nursery and Florist.

• Third place in both categories: $50 to the Bug Store; $50 to Sugar Creek Gardens; $50 to Sherwood’s Forest; $25 to Bowood Farms; $25 to For the Garden; $25 to Hillermann Nursery and Florist.

• Every winner receives a $25 gift card from Eckert’s Garden Center and a family membership to the Missouri Botanical Garden, valued at $150.

AMATEUR WITH

PROFESSIONAL HELP

First place • Debbie Hadley

Home • Webster Groves

Family • Husband Bob; three grown children

Occupation • Debbie is the owner of Gardening Angel Landscaping in Webster Groves, and Bob is a machinist at Bodine Aluminum.

 

The success of the Hadleys’ garden lies in their two ponds, a wooden swing, a hammock, tables, benches, a bottle tree, a fountain, an arbor, a pergola, statues, bird baths, and, of course, the plants. They have a variety of plants, including 42 trees, hundreds of shrubs and thousands of perennials.

The couple started renovating their primitive backyard and badminton court into a lush garden in 1995, when Debbie was just getting interested in gardening. In 2003, she opened a landscaping business, and her staff helped construct the second pond and made a handmade swinging bench. A fire pit was also installed.

The couple moved into their home 33 years ago and raised three kids. Originally, the home was purchased by Debbie’s great-grandparents when they came from England in 1909. Five generations of Debbie’s family have lived there.

The half-acre garden’s design includes levels. Each level is bordered with walls built by Debbie’s dad and grandfather 60 years ago and constructed of broken concrete from the streets of St. Louis.

“My yard has been my test and trial garden,” Debbie says. Twelve years ago, they built an 8,000-gallon pond, home to 26 large koi. It has a stream, waterfall and a bridge. The smaller pond, built three years ago, showcases a tall, double waterfall and three fish. Hardy and tropical plants surround both ponds.

The paths are all made of natural stone, and among the varieties are granite boulders.

All four of our judges chose this winning garden. “This has all the elements of a great and soothing getaway garden, not only to stroll through but to stop and relax and enjoy the sounds of nature,” says Fred Ortlip, master gardener and Post-Dispatch copy editor.

Chip Tynan and June Hutson at the Missouri Botanical Garden agree. “Water feature is excellent. Wonderful paths to view close-up many beautiful specimens of plants. Split level pools in foreground plus waterfall in background. Many beautiful conifers dot the landscape, giving a sense of structure.”

Debbie says, “Our garden will never be finished. We love to add things and change it up.”

Second place • Dee Jay Hubbard

Home • Ballwin

Family • Wife, Audrey; two grown sons, Brock and Colin

Occupation • He’s a retired speech pathologist with the Veterans Administration, and she’s a retired teacher.

 

After a trip to England, Dee Jay and Audrey Hubbard wanted to bring back more than a spot of tea. With the help of gardening professionals, they built a luscious garden spot inspired by the gardens they saw on their trip.

“We were tired of looking at an asphalt driveway and large parking pad,” Dee Jay says. In 2000, Chesterfield Valley Nursery tore up the asphalt, graded the area and built a mound for the waterfall. They dug the pond, put all the stone in and began planting most of the major trees and shrubs such as boxwood, holly, lilac, bright yellow shrubs, a Weeping Atlas cedar tree and an oak. The nursery also constructed a flagstone garden path, and the couple placed wood chips around the stone. Christine O’Brien, production manager at Bowood Farms’ growing facility in Clarksville, Mo., helped with the selection of the perennial plantings. The stone pillars were built by Jim Fobian, a private stone mason.

“It’s still a work in progress,” Audrey says. “Every year we’re planting new plants, cutting back bushes and replacing hostas that have been eaten by the deer and rabbits.”

Judge Ken Miller of Miller Horticultural and owner of the Bug Store says, “It’s a garden where wild and elegance interact. Tastefully appointed and elegant garden in an elegant setting.”

Third place • Kathy Gugger

Home • Edwardsville

Family • Husband, Joe; children, two grown daughters

Occupation • Kathy is a retired dentist, and Joe is self-employed.

 

Not all backyards are perfectly flat. When the Guggers moved into their home in 1987, they decided to utilize their terraced (upper and lower) 2 1/2-acre backyard design. In 2005, with the assistance of Burns Landscaping in Edwardsville (closed in 2007), they inserted large rocks into the yard slopes and built a gravel pit. A waterfall was constructed next to a garden path. Tile setters from Premier Hardwoods in Pontoon Beach built a blue-stone terrace for seating. The couple purchased two stone benches from the Market Basket in Edwardsville to create a relaxing area around the fire pit on the terrace. They planted prairie-type flowers such as black-eyed Susans, different types of grasses and tiger lilies. “I have three helpers to keep my garden looking great,” Kathy says. “Me, myself and I.”

Miller says, “It’s a great execution of waterfall and great natural design. Dramatic use of the hillside with many beautiful specimen plants.”

AMATEUR DIVISION

First place • Terry Metzler

Home • South St. Louis County

Family • Husband, Steve; grown son, Matt

Occupation • Dental hygienist

 

When the Metzlers bought their South County house in 1990, the backyard was “a dust bowl on a hill.” They started by planting trees and grass. “One year later, my husband convinced me we needed a fish pond,” Terry says. That began their journey to their award-winning garden.

It’s now mostly Terry’s baby. “When we got married, I told my husband I love to cut the grass,” she says. “However, working full time and being a mom, I could not do it all. We made a deal. I do the lawn and gardening, and he does the laundry. It makes for a great marriage.”

The garden consists of more than 350 hostas with 250 different varieties. There are coral bells, hellebores, azaleas, rhododendrons, hydrangeas, ferns, evergreens and 17 different types of Japanese maples.

For color, Terry has peonies and daylilies, several kinds of iris, roses and other perennials. “When I started gardening I thought the flowers were IT. I have come to appreciate all the textures and shades of greens and purples present just in the leaves of my plants.”

Our judges (three of whom chose Terry as their first-place winner) loved the layers, too. Tynan, of the Missouri Botanical Garden, says: “The contrasting texture and color of foliage lend interest in the absence of flowers. The clock and plantings between the streams lend a new meaning to the term ‘island bed.’”

Ortlip agreed: “A backyard with a long slope toward a house can be a nightmare or a perfect landscaping opportunity, and Terry took a lemon of a layout and created a great glass of lemonade. The hardscapes and water combine with an appealing variety of color in the deciduous and evergreen plantings to make this a remarkable getaway, just outside the back door.”

Terry says she spends about 20 hours a week on her garden, “but I love it. I just love it.”

Second place • Karen Frimel

Home • Ladue

Family • Husband, Greg; three grown daughters

Occupation • Karen works part time for her dad’s company; Greg is a dentist

 

Except for the front of the house and some edges of the garden, the Frimels’ house is in total shade. After removing river rock and Japanese honeysuckle, Karen started dividing the common hosta that were already there. “Thanks to the St. Louis Hosta Society, (I learned) that there were really so many more choices,” she says.

Greg found ornamental trees to create an interesting understory to the large ones already in the yard. Favorites include several varieties of Japanese maples, tricolor beech, peeling bark maples and many varieties of dogwoods. Over the years, Karen added hydrangea, ferns, lenten roses, bulbs and azaleas. “Gardening ‘in the woods’ has been a challenge. I like neat and tidy, but I cannot have it too formal or use tropicals and keep the woodland feel.”

Hutson, of the Missouri Botanical Garden, says she liked the well-placed steppingstones that “provide a meandering path through hosta specimens of many colors.” Miller, from the Bug Store, says he loved the exciting and bold contrast of leave and their colors. “Truly an alluring shade garden.”

Third place • Phyllis Weidman

Home • Kirkwood

Family • Husband, Jim; two grown children

Occupation • Homemaker; Jim is a consultant to nonprofits

 

The Weidmans’ garden is divided by a long, meandering dry creek that helps drain the three terraces that go up the hill in the back of the house to the edge of a woods. It contains about 350 varieties of hostas, Japanese maples, conifers and shade companion plants.

“As the years have passed, the garden beds continue to grow with the grass area becoming smaller and smaller,” Phyllis says.

Judge Miller appreciated the “powerful combination of texture, form and leaf color to create a striking composition.”

Gardening Tips: Buy or grow peaches locally


Posted: Friday, July 19, 2013 11:08 am


Gardening Tips: Buy or grow peaches locally

By Matthew Stevens

The Daily Herald, Roanoke Rapids, NC

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Peach season is here in Halifax County, and it’s a great time to get them from local vendors.

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Friday, July 19, 2013 11:08 am.

Gardening Tips: Buy or grow peaches locally


Posted: Friday, July 19, 2013 11:08 am


Gardening Tips: Buy or grow peaches locally

By Matthew Stevens

The Daily Herald, Roanoke Rapids, NC

|
0 comments

Peach season is here in Halifax County, and it’s a great time to get them from local vendors.

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Friday, July 19, 2013 11:08 am.