The Transplanted Gardener overseas: Quelle surprise
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I have been transplanting myself the better part of this summer 鈥 northern California, the Ozarks, the land of Lincoln 鈥 and wherever I go, I find little landscape lessons to cherry-pick.
Last week I was in France, touring the Bordeaux region, and in between the incredible meals (some of聽 the entrees didn't even look like food 鈥 they looked more like Transformer toys) and the rich history (why don鈥檛 we have any medieval buildings in this country?), there were the gardens. And the surprises.
Such as: Why was there this one lone 200-year-old sequoia tree on a former monastery (now retirement center for aging horses) in Entre-Deux-Mers? Picture it: vineyard, pasture, ancient stables 鈥 and this all-by-itself, very-out-of-place, musta-come-by-wooden-ship-way-back-when evergreen towering over the land.
Maybe it figures: vertical food, vertical landscaping.
And that verticality was not limited to the countryside. In (what a gorgeous city, by the way), a small flower bed in a public park featured a new twist on growing up. (See photo at right).
The chartreuse Marguerite potato vine is trained up the sphagnum-filled arch, which is also planted with flowering annuals and a touch of Blackie sweet potato for contrast. And at the arch鈥檚 feet: gold helichrysum is forced to stand erect with the aid of a chicken-wire fence. Ten-hut!
At (amazing the number of Irish names you come across thereabouts) in Margaux, I ambled into a strikingly large planting of orange-red Lucifer crocosmia. (See first photo above.) I guess I鈥檓 more used to seeing them in threesies and fivesies, so this seemed pretty dramatic to me. Coupled with flaming scarlet roses? Hotter than, as , a pepper sprout.
You鈥檒l notice the lamb鈥檚 ears and sedum up front, daisies and goldenrod in the back 鈥 and fine use of ancient architecture in the background. Now there鈥檚 a worthwhile gardening tip: When at all possible, for greatest garden presentation,do put 300-year-old stone buildings behind your beds and borders.
And while staying in the ancient , I wandered out back of the Logis des Remparts hotel to find (1) a pool! And (2) a forceful argument for compare-and-contrast in formally clipped trees, shrubs, and herbs. (See second photo at top.)
Yes, herbs. That鈥檚 a ball of rosemary you see looking like a looming moon of fromage vert. Perhaps an allusion to Bordeaux, the Port of the Moon.
What else I鈥檓 into this week: is a voluminous music fanzine with all the attendant youthful gush of awkward prose. But the comes-with-it CD is the best pure pop for now people you will find. Ever. Clocking in at usually more than an hour, these plasticene compendiums of semi-unknowns will rivet any adventurous music fan, be they 22 or 52.
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