Thank you .. ‘Dirt du Jour’

for the glowing review! "Go ask Alice ... where all the best vineyard gardens are. She's an erudite charmer; you'll have fun!"

England

A Visionary Garden .. Veddw

Veddw .. Front Garden

Veddw Blooms, Doorway Through Hedge © Alice Joyce

Definition: Visionary  – A person with unusual powers of foresight; utopian, chimeric, dreamer, enthusiast, escapist, exalted, idealistic, illusory, zealot.

Veddw Overview  © Alice Joyce

Veddw House Garden has been written about and praised by such luminaries as Germaine Greer.

Veddw  © Alice Joyce

Created by Anne Wareham and Charles Hawes, the contemporary setting at Veddw is compelling in ways that only the rare gardenscape can reach deep inside and grab at one’s soul, even as the mind is busily engaged in noting the garden’s bones, appreciating the artful plantings, and bold forms.

Veddw – Ruin in Background © Alice Joyce

Veddw grows up in the arcadian landscape of Monmouthshire in south east Wales, where my meeting with Anne and Charles was all too brief. Below: Garden Room with Sculpture ~ Alice Joyce Photo

Veddw Pleached Allee  © Alice Joyce

Veddw Blue Bench   © Alice Joyce

A sad fact of traveling: timing does not always play out as hoped for. And with too little time to wander about the garden – a place that deserves two or three lengthy visits to take in all the elements / the overall effect – I’ve struggled to write cogently about the experience of this rare contemporary garden. Moreover, an innovative work of art.

Veddw Border  © Alice Joyce

Veddw Crescent Border..Birds  © Alice Joyce

Having decided to wait no longer, I offer a photographic diary of my perambulations through the Gardens at Veddw House.

Do visit the web site:  https://veddw.com

to find stimulating essays describing the garden, and view photographs by Charles Hawes.

Bronze foliage Rodgersia – Copyright Alice Joyce

Stephen Anderton and Charles Hawes have written a wonderful book that I highly recommend, a lushly photographed, provocatively written effort providing insight and guidance for an au courant journey through the gardening scene in Wales, be it from your armchair or in real time!

Discovering Welsh Gardens

France

Alchemy in Provence .. Jardin de l'Alchimiste

In the charming Provençal village of Eygalieres, in the region of les Alpilles,

Garden of the Alchemist – White Garden Photo © Alice Joyce

I once ventured to a charming country hotel housed in a Renaissance manor, Mas de la Brune, to experience the quietude of early morning, in a place where one is enveloped by the fragrance of Iceberg roses. A gentle breeze causes the tall plumes of miscanthus to brush up against your face as you lose yourself in the sensory delights unfolding along the path of the White Garden, a magically lush oasis in Le Jardin de l’Alchimiste – The Garden of the Alchemist!

Garden in Red – Photo courtesy Jardin de l’Alchimiste

My all too brief stay at Mas de la Brune enabled me to wander in the Alchemist’s Garden whenever I wished, as the gardens are adjacent to the Bed & Breakfast lodgings. Nestled in the bewitchingly blue Alpilles mountains of France, the garden opened to the public in 1999, on a site adjoining Mas de la Brune.  The owners worked with renowned designers Arnaud Maurieres and Eric Ossart to create a uniquely conceived, contemporary gardenscape.

Garden of the Alchemist Red Opening to White Photo © Alice Joyce

Above: Looking through the circular entry to the White Garden from the Garden in Red.

Inspired by the belief that the property’s main building had once been the home of an alchemist,  the garden took shape using symbols, colors, shapes and forms, directing visitors along a trail of discovery. The sensual atmosphere of the garden is experienced after traveling through a narrow labyrinth sculpted into a section of dense hedging. Going forward, one enters a botanical garden of magic plants, serving as a prelude to the Alchemist’s Garden.

Garden of the Alchemist Passageway Photo © Alice Joyce

The ample, open layout of the botanical plantings is intersected by wide aisles, where the species celebrate the esoteric repute of local flora; taking in aphrodisiac qualities, divining rods crafted of hazel branches, nettles, and a botanical assembly from olive trees to apothecary’s roses.

Garden of the Alchemist – Eygalieres Photo © Alice Joyce

Decorative devices employed in the magic plants’ garden include a vine-shrouded arch, spanning the garden at midpoint to provide a pleasing balance. A long rill cut into the ground plane flows silently crosswise, while magic forests – wooded plots with curving paths – bracket the outer boundaries.

A far-reaching row of white curtains stands opposite wreathed fencing of living willow, acting to screen and separate horticultural groupings of magic plants from the mystical garden beyond.

Composed in 3 parts, the Alchemist’s Garden – Le Jardin de l’Alchimiste, proposes a transformative walk through the stages of life – from the early years to mellow adulthood, and finally, to a spiritual state of being. The alchemist’s methods are presented in the enchanting guise of tonal works, i.e. the work in black, in white, and in red. Each area is imbued with an acute materiality. The black garden features a shaded passageway upholstered in leafy shrubbery, transitioning into a space furnished with black mondo grass aligned in pots perched on metal stands. Around the corner, emerald hedges set the stage for a queue of terra cotta planters showcasing fleshy, claret-hued Aeonium arboreum. Entering the luxuriant white garden, a gently twisting path paved in glistening gravel guides you on a course through an overabundance of ‘Iceberg’ roses intermingled with a silvery-striped cultivar of  Miscanthus sinensis.

One more experience must unfold before the unusual garden journey culminates – the satisfying architecture of the Red garden. A fountainhead rises up at the heart of the space, from a water feature shaped like the Star of David. Hue and texture marry in a level expanse of iron-red stones complemented by sections of green turf, while an ordered structure composed of row upon row of red roses radiates outward from the pool’s central star.

Update: I believe this lovely bed & breakfast hotel and its unique garden are no longer open to the public. 

Botanical Gardens

Mecca for Garden Lovers : Washington Park Arboretum - Seattle

Azaleas Blooming  – photo courtesy Arboretum Foundation

Attention to detail is characteristic of the authentic style you’ll experience when touring Seattle’s Japanese Garden. When Juki Iida, the garden’s primary designer, arrived in the United States from Japan, he proceeded to choose 500 massive boulders from their natural mountainous environment, and then personally supervised the placing of the formidable architectural forms that were so essential to the philosophical and artistic underpinnings of the landscaping.

Pacific Connections Garden ~ Courtesy Cheri Shanahan

Magnolia sieboldii – Photo by Niall Dunne

Every month of the year, the Japanese Garden and the Washington Park Arboretum offer unique displays to engage the interest of garden lovers.

The Arboretum’s new Pacific Connections Garden is located at the south end of the Arboretum.

Glorious magnolias and lush conifers harbor large-leaved  rhododendrons in an area known as Loderi Valley. The collection of ‘rhodies’ blooms from February into June, while the peak exhibition of magnolias spans March through May.

Witch-hazel in the winter garden ~ Photo courtesy Niall Dunne

A witch-hazel blooming in the Witt Winter Garden at the Washington Park Arboretum in January. The Witt garden is especially splendid from November through March. Be sure to tour the Waterfront Trail for up-close views of Marsh Island and Foster Island, with all the flora and fauna that coexist in a marshland habitat.

Woodland Garden ~ Photo courtesy Joy Spurr

Designed by the renowned Olmsted Brothers, scions of Frederick Law Olmsted, the city of Seattle’s fine boulevard plan and park system suggest plenty of reasons to explore neighborhoods throughout town. The tranquil landscape of the Arboretum and Japanese Garden play a prominent role among Seattle’s treasure trove of parkland settings.

When planning a visit to Seattle, be sure to visit the Washington Park Arboretum Foundation web site for news and announcements about special events. Near the Graham Visitors Center at the Arboretum, the crabapple, Malus ‘Adirondack’ flowers.

Malus ‘Adirondack’ Photo courtesy Niall Dunne