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The good garden blog is about sharing garden inspiration and ideas from historic gardens around the world and some right next door.  Garden stories explore garden history, design, and the garden people behind famous and not-so-famous gardens.  My garden photographs span dozens of places across 5 continents.  Please join me in celebrating good garden design.

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A formal, wild meadow

David July 31, 2015

I will never forget this formal, wild meadow garden in East Hampton, NY. 

The Hamptons are famous for village lanes lined with mature sycamores, privet hedges, and arborvitae.  Such plantings mark the separation between the private and public worlds.  They provide shelter and privacy to personal gardens; shade and coziness to public spaces.  Getting around means passing through these delightful lanes.  

While walking back from the beach along one such lane, dense green walls on either side gave way to a burst of light and color.   The setting sun streamed through this stunning meadow seen above; thousands of cosmos were backlit so they appeared to be floating paper lanterns.

This garden has the layout of a formal parterre, a geometric area divided by symmetrical paths.  Its structure could easily fit into a French formal garden.  A square space is framed by evergreens.  Straight, criss-crossing paths meet in the middle of it to form a series of triangular beds filled with flowers.  This formality unifies the garden, giving it rhythm and consistency. 

What made this garden special was how the gardener’s plant choices and pruning restraint softened its structured layout.  The evergreens were left to grow naturally; mown grass was used in the pathways instead of gravel; cosmos were selected for the flowerbeds and fell freely into the paths.  A few grasses and daisies were allowed to pop up now and then, further softening the scheme. The power of this garden comes from its combination of formality, and what I suppose was inspiration from the wild.

Fashioned in the arts and crafts style, this garden is one room in a series of gardens: more formal outdoor areas near the house provide space for entertaining; and this garden in the far corner is looser, more naturalistic.

As I plan my fantasy garden, a formal meadow like this one will fit in beautifully, especially since I will have limited space.   I can create a defined area with paths for easy access to the flower beds, and at the same time enjoy the beauty and serendipity that only nature can provide.  It will also face west so that the setting sun can wash over it.

See more arts and crafts gardens here.

Founded in 1648, East Hampton is one of the earliest English settlements in America. This area is known for beautiful beaches and bays, historic (and modern) homes, design shops, and wonderful garden centers.

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In Wild, Arts and crafts Tags East Hampton Garden, Cosmos, plant ideas, plant combinations, Meadow garden, parterre
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Plant hunters

David February 11, 2015

"The gorgeous dahlia that nods over the flower bed - the brilliant peony that sparkles on the parterre - the lovely camellia that greets you in the greenhouse - ...the azaleas, the rhododendrons,... the gerania, and a thousand other beauties, are on all of them, the gifts of the plant hunter." - from Captain Mayne Reid’s 1858 book The Plant Hunters.

Plant hunters, the Wardian case, horticultural knowledge, and the large scale green house all made the gardenesque style possible.  

A Wardian case at Chelsea Physic Garden, London.

Botanists joined expeditions from Europe to explore the corners of the earth in search of exotic plant species. Their motivation: science, profit, adventure, and fame. Joseph Banks’ first voyage from 1768-71 on the Endeavor took him to South America, Tahiti, New Zealand and Australia. Marianne North was one of the only women in the field, and as an inspiration to mid-life career changers, she started her expeditions at the age of 40. Paintings she made in the field are on display at Kew Gardens in London.

In 1829, the Wardian Case increased the likelihood that plants would survive their return to Europe. This small glass case protected plants during harsh trips.  In 1841, Joseph Hooker first used the Wardian case to ship plants back from New Zealand and India.

As people learned about the propagation of exotics and began to build and use large scale green houses, these new plants could be grown in commercially viable quantities. 

European and American gardeners owe a great deal to the plant hunters.  Azaleas came from Japan to Europe in 1680 as popular greenhouse plants; then came to the United States from England in 1848. 

The tree peony was imported to Europe in 1789 by Joseph Banks, and made it to North America in the 1830’s. 

Hydrangeas, mostly from Asia, were first introduced by Joseph Banks from a Chinese garden in 1739.  Other popular hydrangeas came later: the PeeGee hydrangea, for example, came from Japan in 1862. 

Hooker shared some insight behind his desire to focus on plant exploration in a letter he wrote to Charles Darwin in 1854: "From my earliest childhood I nourished and cherished the desire to make a creditable journey in a new country, and write such a respectable account of its natural features as should give me a niche amongst the scientific explorers of the globe I inhabit, and hand my name down as a useful contributor of original matter."

Joseph Banks. A key plant explorer whose work shaped what we garden with today.  Source: Natural History Museum.

Joseph Banks. A key plant explorer whose work shaped what we garden with today.  Source: Natural History Museum.

Joseph Hooker.  One of the first to use the Wardian case. Source: Encyclopædia Britannica

Joseph Hooker.  One of the first to use the Wardian case. Source: Encyclopædia Britannica

Photograph of Marianne North at her easel. Her paintings are on display at Kew Gardens.  Source: PlantExplorers.com

Photograph of Marianne North at her easel. Her paintings are on display at Kew Gardens.  Source: PlantExplorers.com

 
In Gardenesque Tags plant hunters, wardian case, Joseph Banks, Marianne North, Joseph Hooker, Mayne Reid, Hillwood, Pan Gate Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, East Hampton Garden, East Hampton, Keukenhof, Chelsea Physic Garden
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