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Garden Designs for Beauty and Function

Our organic gardens are the hub of our homestead. They serve many functions to us, like increasing our self-reliance and food security, adding to the beauty of our farm, to our health, teaching opportunities, the uniqueness of our lodging business and our very limited need of money.

When Dennis first came here 15 years ago, the driveway went straight through what’s now one of our gardens. Until a few years ago, the other garden area still was a forest floor with standing trees. Today our two gardens together measure about 8000 square feet and provide us with food year round, as well as plenty for trading and giving away.

Use Natural Materials

The overarching philosophy for our gardens, as well as for our homestead, is that maintenance and enhancement should be done as much as possible by local, free and natural materials and that aesthetics and practical functionality are inseparable. Everything around our farm should be pleasing to the eye which usually for us means being made from wood, glass or stone, have a designated location and a form and color that blends into a natural landscape. But to be fully satisfactory, all that should also work well – add to the ease with which we carry out our chores, be time saving, low maintenance, durable and beneficial for the health of our land and ourselves. Our garden design is a simple, straight-row lay out that we find both pleasing to the eye and efficient to work with. We maximize the yield by building the soil with natural material, incorporating succession planting and intensive space utilization and we minimize the work by weed prevention, moisture management (to avoid watering) and by timing our actions with the weather and seasons, to let sun, rain, heat and cool work in our favor. We don’t have a greenhouse or use row covers or plastic mulches in our garden, since they don’t meet our aesthetic ideals. The function – a longer growing season – is met by using cold frames made from wood and recycled glass that gives us overwintered greens and serves as a warm place to start our brassica seedlings.

How to Build a Garden Fence

Our garden fence is one example where form and function blends together. Deer are the greatest pest threat to our gardens and our 6 foot chicken wire fence is what it takes to keep them out. It’s sturdy, yet the wire is thin enough to make the fence basically transparent. The wooden posts and railings blends in to the homestead picture and a couple of days each year of replacing parts broken by wear or the weight of snow is all it takes for maintenance.

We prefer to use locust wood as fence posts since it’s likely to last for decades without spoiling. It grows on the island and nearby on the mainland and we’re often contacted to salvage all or parts of trees that people need to cut down. To use red oak is a compromise in quality but it grows on our land, making it a sustainable option when we need it. If the part that will be buried in the ground is thoroughly charred and it can last up to 10 years.

We dig the post holes 36 inches deep to get below the frost line and prevent the posts from heaving in spring and we use rocks as a back filler to secure the posts. Does it sound like a lot of work? Well, trust me, it is. But a fence post of the right material that is properly put in the ground will be there for decades and over the course of time it will still amount to less work (and headache) than having to redo it in 5-6 years. We run horizontal railings at 3 and 6 feet to attach the chicken wire to, they are made from dense, slow growing red spruce that we harvest from our own land. The best way to increase the longevity of the railings is to peel off about half of the bark in strips so that the wood can dry slowly and the cracks be minimal, preventing water from seeping in and rotting the wood. The gates are placed so that the gardens are accessible from several directions, which makes it both more inviting to enter and easier to work in.

The gardens are roughly divided in four different kind of areas, all with their uses. We have raised beds, open areas, beds along the fence and the paths.

Raised Beds

The raised beds are framed with logs, usually spruce or fir. They are 16 feet long and lay about 3-4 inches higher than ground level. The beds are roughly 32 inches wide, not including the logs. This kind of raised beds make the garden look tidy and symmetrical and the natural material serves a great aesthetic purpose at the same time as it’s a great divider between fertile soil and the paths. We have many guests wandering around in our gardens and they can walk freely knowing that they won’t step in a bed when they walk in the area with raised beds. We find that underneath the logs habitats for all sorts of worms, salamanders and insects are created and as the logs deteriorate fungi and micro organisms benefit the soil and the plants. Using logs this way is for us a good utilization of trees that need to be cleared out from dense areas of the woods and the logs are most always either too narrow or too low quality to use for lumber or firewood.

This type of garden beds do need some maintenance. Spruce and fir laid on the ground won’t really last more than 6 years even though we tend to leave them until it’s not much left. That means that every spring we need to replace about 5-6 logs which involves finding the trees and hauling them to our yard. A good garden bed log is reasonably straight through the desired length, 5-8 inches wide and the bark needs to be peeled off. We use wider logs too, but put them on the sawmill to narrow them down and we use the draw knife to round the sharp corners. Peeling the bark is essential to the longevity of the log, since bark that’s left will make it rot faster.

The open areas of our gardens mainly serve the purpose that the layout can be rearranged in accordance to what we want to grow there. Potatoes, for example, are most practical to grow in an open area, as are pumpkins and squash that needs a lot of space for the vines. Some of the beds in this open area remain at the same spot year after year. When I change the layout where the good top soil is thin, I take great care to hoe that soil from where I want the new path to be into the area of the bed. The change in layout does mean that what’s a path one year with foot traffic compacting the soil might be a bed the next year, but the soil is generally well drained and light and some simple work will fluff it back up.

Using the area along the fence is a great way to both enhance the beauty of the garden by framing it with lush growth and to use the already existing fence for the dual purpose of supporting plants. It’s also a way to save space – cucumbers and small fruit squash such as Delicatas and can be trained upright and pumpkins for example can be planted inside the fence in a rich bed but trained outwards to not use the garden area for the spreading vines. My tomato plants always grow too big for the standard cages and by growing them along the fence and tying the vines to it, it serves the multiple benefit of pest control, space saving and plant support.

Weed Management

We keep our garden beds well weeded and mulched. Weeds will spread – by seeds or running roots and it is little use fighting weeds that grow in the bed if the paths are not tended to. Where the paths are permanent, like in the area with raised beds, we use wood chips salvaged from sites nearby where trees been cut and chipped. In the open areas I put oak leaves in the path that I gather the previous fall that creates a solid mat and when I’m ready to change the layout of the beds next spring, the leaves will have broken down and faded into the garden residue.

A well thought through garden design will make the work enjoyable and manageable and will encourage the gardener’s presence and attention. And that, regardless of other features, can, and most surely will, increase the yield and multiply the rewards.

Designers create ‘Garden Fantasy’ at Chimneys mansion

To step back to America’s Gilded Age — when the very rich could and would spend tens of thousands of dollars every spring to manicure their grounds — consider heading to Bridgeport’s stately Chimneys mansion atop a hill in the St. Mary’s-By-the-Sea section.

The third Vines Vignettes Spring Garden Fantasy Experience on Saturday, May 31, will bring together landscape designers, antique dealers and representatives of area garden nurseries for a “stunning transformation of the landmark property,” said event spokeswoman Lindsay Chessare.

Garden Fantasy will be a visual feast for garden enthusiasts and those who appreciate gracious living, she said. As an added feature, the author, Emmy-nominated TV host and home-and-garden guru Mar Jennings will be on hand to sign copies of his new book, “Life on Mars: Creating Casual Luxury.” From 11 a.m. to noon, the Westport-based designer will be the featured speaker in the event’s lecture tent.

An occasional event (the last was in 2011), Vines Vignettes is a benefit for the Black Rock Food Pantry, St. Ann Academy and a new partner, Christian Heritage School in Trumbull.

Since the Chimneys — described as a Georgian-Revival mansion built in the 1920s — is privately owned, all displays and activities, including a cafe and about 30 boutiques, will be outdoors. A rain date is set for Sunday, June 1.

Chessare explained that the three-acre property has been sectioned into more that 20 areas, called vignettes, that will be designed by its own gardener/designer, each having a distinctive theme or style.

“For me, the greatest pleasure will be to see the transformation from the cold and snowy winter we experienced to a beautiful setting. That’s really exciting. When the designers initially visited, it was in winter. That they could visualize what it could look like in May is amazing,” she said.

These vignettes will be spaced around the grounds in floral and herb gardens, terraces, courts, walkways, a pool-house area and the original “Motor Court,” which is covered in slate, where vintage luxury autos will be on view.

Visitors are also invited to attend a wine tasting that will run from 1 to 4 p.m.

In a prepared statement, Jennings said he is looking forward to meeting visitors and offering gardening and design tips.

“I’m excited to join Vines Vignettes, and I cannot wait to see this year’s garden fantasy come to life. I am a big fan of the work this organization does to support the children and the Black Rock Food Pantry. I’m delighted to be involved and get a chance to see everyone there.”

Among the vendors that will be transforming the grounds are Austin Ganim Landscape Design, Ganim’s Garden Center Florist, Oliver Nurseries, Lindquist Landscape Design, Beau Maas Antiques and Epicure of Design.

Lecture tent schedule

In addition to Jennings, featured speakers are:

Amie Hall, of From Your Inside Out, noon to 1 p.m.; Eva Chimulera, of Austin Ganim Landscape Design, 1-2 p.m.; Dan Uriuol, of Bartlett Tree Experts, 2 to 3 p.m.; and Ethan Currier, of Sticks and Stones Farm, 3 to 4 p.m.

Parking

There is very limited parking near the mansion, which is on a narrow lane. Free parking will be available at St. Ann Academy, 521 Brewster St., Bridgeport. Several shuttles will run continuously throughout the day.

The Chimneys mansion, Old Battery Road, Bridgeport. Saturday, May 31, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; rain date is Sunday, June 1. $35 advance online; $40 door. www.vinesandvignettes.com.

pasboros@ctpost.com; Twitter: @PhyllisASBoros

Garden designer strikes gold

Date:

Designer garden pleases the judges at show

A GARDEN designer from Shiplake has been awarded for one of her latest creations.

Ana Mari Bull, of Mill Road, and design partner Lorenzo Soprani entered the Royal Horticultural Society Malvern Spring Show on May 10, where their design was named Best Festival Show Garden.

The pair have been working together for the last few years since graduating from the Oxford College of Garden Design where they completed a post-graduate course in residential landscape architecture.

Mrs Bull, who runs Ana Mari Bull Landscape and Garden Design, said: “The judges loved how we were able to tell our story in such a small space.

“They were particularly impressed with the choice of cloud pruned CarpinusBetulus trees, which attracted a lot of attention throughout the show, and also the way we had managed to make the planting seem so natural.

“The plant everyone was drawn to was a pink cow parsley called Chaerophyllum Hirsutum Roseum — they sold out of it in the floral marquee.”

Mr Soprani, who runs LSV Gardens in the Cotswolds, said their design offered a study of the relationship between man and the natural world.

He said: “The garden has a clean, geometric layout combined with neatly clipped planting to highlight the human need to organise and bring order to the natural world.

“In contrast, areas of naturalistic planting represent the uncontrolled growth that takes place when nature is left untamed. The design creates harmony and rhythm through the use of these two very different styles of planting.”

Mrs Bull is a Royal Horticultural Society-trained horticulturist whose work has been featured on Grand Designs.

She said: “We love what we do. It’s a real privilege to be able to work with a client to create an outdoor space which is personal to them, the house and its surroundings.

“Clients bring us in to help them make best use of all their outside space. Gardens are visible from every room of the house but often ignored or left to the end of a project when the entire budget has been spent.”

For more information, contact Mrs Bull at anamaribull@yahoo.com or 07876 060790 and Mr Soprani at lsv gardens@gmail.com or 07814 505762.

Published 27/05/14

BBC to film new Chelsea garden design series

By Matthew Appleby
Monday, 26 May 2014

RHS and BBC combine to work on flower show programmes

The BBC and RHS have launched a competition to find the best aspiring designer in the UK.

The winner will design a show garden feature on the RHS stand at Chelsea 2015.

Professional garden designers are inelgible.

The competition will be the basis of a BBC2 TV series called Designs on Chelsea. The BBC will film the series around the country in summer 2014 and the final will be at RHS Wisley.

The RHS hopes the programme will show the careers available in horticulture. Producers are Robi Dutta and Will Knott.

Meanwhile, the RHS has appointed garden designer Adam Frost as an ambassador for the charity.

GREEN THUMBS UP: The basics of garden design


By Suzanne Mahler


Posted May. 10, 2014 @ 2:00 pm


Retired Northampton General Hospital oncologist training to garden design for …

A retired Northampton General Hospital oncologist is training to be an expert in gardens designed for cancer patients.

Dr Jill Stewart is now studying horticulture and garden design at Moulton College after spending 30 years as a consultant oncologist at NGH.

Always holding a passion for plants and botanical art, she took Royal Horticultural Society exams in 2011 and then started on a foundation degree in Horticulture and Garden Design at Moulton College.

She is now competing against fellow students in a garden design competition run by the Linford Wood Medical Centre in Milton Keynes.

Simon Lewis, business development manager, said: “Our ethos is to provide integrated holistic care for our patients and we wanted to extend this beyond the centre itself.

“We approached Moulton College to see if their students wanted to get involved in designing a holistic garden in an area of land that lays next to our chemotherapy unit.

“We provided a brief, explaining the impact cancer and its treatment can have on patients, such as sensitivity to sunlight, nausea and tiredness.

“We didn’t think for one moment that one of the students would already know all this and more.”

Dr Stewart said the fact that current chemotherapy drugs were derived from plant molecules, as well as the idea of plant defence has always been a source of fascination, because of its usefulness in terms of cancer treatment development.

But she always enjoyed gardening and found it relaxing after a busy day at NGH.

She said: “Clearly no patient wants to be in the situation of having to have cancer treatment.

“Their life is suddenly disrupted, it becomes difficult to make plans, confidence is rocky and they may have to cope with treatment side effects that vary greatly from person to person.

“I think kindness and care, a calm and efficient environment and minimising the time that a patient has to spend being treated helps.

“Concentration is usually short and people may feel ‘foggy’ on chemotherapy, so a pretty and interesting garden will give a nice diversion even, if only for a few minutes.

“For those who may be short on stamina because of their treatment side effects, having an escape route into nature can really lift spirits.”

Spring Garden Township teen launches web-design business

His office is in his family’s Spring Garden Township home. He squeezes in business appointments between school and track practice. And his mom drives him to client meetings at the local Starbucks.

Meet Nick Pitoniak, entrepreneur, age 16.

At an age when most kids are busy text messaging their BFFs or hanging out at the mall, Pitoniak, a sophomore at York Suburban High School, is building a web-design business.

The teenager has already snagged a few clients and launched a website for his company, Limeband Coding.

“I’ve always had a fascination with computers,” said Pitoniak, who taught himself computer code writing when he was 13. “Code controls the world and if you know the code, you can do anything.”

Pitoniak launched Limeband Coding in March. The name comes from the color of the headband Pitoniak wears during track and cross-country meets. It’s his good luck charm.

Limeband Coding isn’t Pitoniak’s first for-profit venture. He and his brother Bob started a lawn-care business in their neighborhood when Nick was 7 and Bob was 9.

The latest venture comes doesn’t come as a surprise to Pitoniak’s mother.

“Nick has always been an analytical thinker,” said Stephanie Pitoniak, an English teacher at Northeastern High School.

There have always been kids who run their own small businesses. Think lemonade stands and baby-sitters. Nationwide, 381,000 people under the age of 25 were self-employed in 2012, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy.

The popularity of TV’s “Shark Tank,” in which startup business owners pitch their products to a team of celebrity judges, has spurred a whole new generation of budding moguls, said Jay Azriel, who directs a program at York College for high school-age entrepreneurs.

“Being an entrepreneur is kind of cool these days,” said Azriel, an associate professor of entrepreneurship.

Young would-be business owners have plenty of role models their own age to which they can turn for inspiration.

Nick Pitoniak updates his own website in his York Township home. He named his business Limeband Coding after the color of a good-luck headband he wears

Nick D’Aloisio founded Summly, a smartphone application for organizing news stories, when he was 15. He sold the company to search engine giant Yahoo in 2013 for $30 million.

Moziah Bridges started a business making and selling bow ties when the Memphis, Tenn. preteen was 9 years old. Bridges has appeared on “Shark Tank,” been interviewed on the “Today” show and mentioned in Oprah Winfrey’s O Magazine.

And York Suburban High School is the alma mater of Evan Sharp, a founder of Pinterest, a popular social media website that allows users to post photos of their favorite items.

Despite some high-profile success stories, most young entrepreneurs face a major hurdle in getting adult customers to take them seriously, said Azriel, the York College professor.

Pitoniak’s fee for designing websites starts at $299. He recently lowered it from $399. But he realized he needed to discount his services further to convince skeptical adults he could handle the work.

He struck a deal with Lori Rhinehart to design a website for Rhinehart’s Lori’s Loop charity 5k run in exchange for her waiving the $20 entrance fee.

“He did a fabulous job,” Rhinehart said. “It wasn’t like I was dealing with a kid. He was every bit the professional.”

Anthony Billet, Pitoniak’s track coach, said the budding entrepreneur asks him lots of questions about marketing and how to get clients.

“You can just tell he has a drive within him that other kids don’t,” said Billet, the president of abSketches, a York architectural renderings firm. “He’s constantly thinking about every aspect of his business.”

Pitoniak plans to either enlist in the Navy or Air Force to learn more about computer programming or attend college to study computer science. He’s got his eye on Drexel University in Philadelphia.

He counts Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Aaron Swartz, the late co-founder of the news website Reddit, and Steve Jobs among his influences.

Pitoniak read a recent biography of the late Apple co-founder and came away impressed.

“It really inspired me that if you do what you love, and work hard enough, anything is possible,” he said.

Want to start your own business? Here are some tips

Tom Russell, president of Junior Achievement of South Central PA, offers the following tips for teens who want to start their own business.

• Begin with an idea you are passionate about, something that stems from a hobby or interest.

• Be prepared to spend 15 to 20 hours a week your business. If you’re launching a business just because you think it looks good on a college application, this is not thing for you.

• Print business cards to distribute to help publicize the business.

• Have a professional-looking website, including a professional-sounding email address.

• Use social media sites including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Pinterest to promote your business.

“You can do a lot of promotion of your business for free,” Russell said.

• Draft a mission statement capturing in a few words what your company does and what your goals are. That will help keep you on track.

Related

· More business news

Chelsea Flower Show 2014: Low-maintenance garden? Give up and play golf

“The pleasure of gardens is gardening. This is what the great [gardener
and author] Christopher Lloyd said. Let’s enjoy gardening.

See: Chelsea Flower Show 2014: show gardens

“If you don’t want to do it, either you pay somebody or otherwise you can
never have a garden looking good. It’s impossible.

“It’s a theme of life. You only get back what you give. The low maintenance
garden doesn’t exist. It’s impossible.”

See: Chelsea 2014: 360 degree view of The Telegraph
garden

Speaking at Chelsea, Titchmarsh said: “At the top end of garden design now,
that’s what people are asking for: they want a sitting room that’s outside,
where nothing grows, where it’s all squares, all clean lines, no curves,
nothing natural-looking, no wildlife.

“For me, that’s not a garden. That’s what a lot of top end designers are
having to do now and they’re getting frustrated.”

In decades gone by, homeowners who comissioned garden designers had a passion
for gardening. “They used to buy plants and seeds, they used to grow things.
We’re lacking that kind of patron now who’s a real grower,” Titchmarsh said.

Gavin suggested some people were put off by the “untidy” effect
created by plants and flowers that encourage wildlife. “A low-maintenance
garden tends to be soulless, and for passion to really come out you have to
get in there, you have to understand the soil, you have to work at it.

“And you have to have a range of plants these days that are not only suitable
for you but also to encourage wildlife. That can be a bit untidy.”

Cleve West, who won the top award at Chelsea in 2011 and 2012, said he turns
down commissions from potential customers who spend their money on flashy
house extensions and want the back garden to be little more than an add-on
to the kitchen.

“I tend to shy away from jobs where they just want to extend the house and
make the footprint so large that there’s no room for planting. Those kind of
jobs don’t really interest me. It’s a case of waiting for clients who are a
little bit more interested in plants,” West said.

“I have turned people down who, when they show me the plans for the extension,
have a fair-sized garden but want to extend so much that the footprint of
the whole thing just looks ridiculous.”

Kent garden designer Jo Thompson strikes gold at RHS 2014 Chelsea Flower …

Jo Thompson with the Macmillan rose

Jo Thompson with the Macmillan Nurse rose. Pictures by Ian West

“It is made of stainless steel and took a big part of the budget. I liked the idea of it winding down the steps but it was difficult to explain to Toby, the bench-maker, so he had to almost guess from the design plan. It was all done within a month but it hit the mark.”

Jo, from Cranbrook, created her vision of a corner of a London Square by using silver birch trees to provide boundary structure, height and dappled shade, edged by viburnum opulus and a single cornus kousa which provided a foil for white foxgloves and cream Macmillan Nurse standard and low-growing roses.

Jo avoided grasses and cow parsley. She said: “I suspected there would be a lot of grasses and ravenswing this year so I went a bit more ‘shrubby’. I used a limited palette of colours and plant varieties in creams and whites.

Full bloom, the Macmillan rose

Full bloom, the Macmillan Nurse rose

“The underplanting includes euronymous and aquilegas which work well and are easy to grow.”

There was due to be a hint of apricot from Happenstance iris but these were dropped at the last minute.

Jo said: “I was trying to be clever, thinking a hint of apricot would lift the planting but sometimes you have to accept it when an idea does not work. I listened to my gut and left them out. I am, though, really pleased with the final result.”

Apricot does show up in her second Chelsea design, a garden for the horticultural charity Perennial, in the Great Pavilion. This comes in form of geum Princess Juliana and foxglove Sutton’s Apricot.

Perennial plants from Coblands

Perennial plants from Coblands

The whole display is made up from donations by industry stalwarts including Hardy’s Cottage Garden Plants, CED Natural Stone and Coblands Nurseries, of Tonbridge and Sevenoaks.

The garden, which celebrates the charity’s 175th anniversary of working with gardeners who have fallen on hard times, caught the eye of The Queen on her tour of the show and she stopped to talk to Jo about Perennial.

Jo said: “She was lovely and seemed so happy to be at Chelsea. She talked about the charity’s work – and how gardening makes you feel better. I was so excited to meet her!”

Coblands also provided plants for designer Paul Hervey-Brookes’ bronze medal-winning BrandAlley Renaissance Garden which was his first major venture in the Main Avenue.

Paul Harris with his gold medal and Andy Murray hosta

Paul Harris with his gold medal and Andy Murray hosta

Paul Harris, of Brookfield Plants, Ashford, grabbed gold again after his first top medal in 2013 where he displayed 100 varieties to mark the Chelsea centenary. This year he took the opportunity to display the new Andy Murray hosta which was chosen by the British Hosta and Hemerocallis Society (BHHS) to honour the tennis player’s achievements.

BHHS member Paul, of Sandyhurst Lane, Ashford, said: “The society has a link with Andy’s home town of Dunblane and we approached Judy, his mother, about our idea to name a hosta after her son.”

Hosta Andy Murray was bred by nurseryman Bob Solberg, in North Carolina, USA, and although it is still in short supply, Paul says ‘the plants are coming through’.

He said: “The plant now sells at £30 but they will reduce in price once there is a plentiful supply.”

Dr Simon Charlesworth of Downderry Lavender

Dr Simon Charlesworth of Downderry Lavender

Dr Simon Charlesworth, of Downderry Lavender, Hadlow, near Tonbridge, took gold again with his extraordinary display of purple, pink and white plants. The swirl of lavenders, he said, looked almost like a spacecraft. “I should have kept some of the darker pink ones for the back to make it look like it was a spaceship being fired up!

Dr Charlesworth, looking co-ordinated in purple velvet trousers, said 2014 had been a much easier year for him as the weather had been so mild. He said: “Last year was a nightmare but we had no problems with getting everything into bloom this year.”

The Chelsea Flower Show runs until Saturday, May 23. For a full list of winners click here.

A splash of colour from Kent's Downderry Lavender

A splash of colour from Kent’s Downderry Lavender