getting real

Echium wildpretii growing wild in Tenerife

Grow this plant and your gar­den will look exactly like this! (Yah, right… )

[ Right: Image of Echium wild­pretii by Mat­a­parda. This file is licensed under the Cre­ative Com­mons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license. ]

I’ve got to be real­is­tic, I keep telling myself. The plant may be cool, but the whole effect prob­a­bly won’t be much like how the plants grow in the wild or how they’re shown on some dra­mat­i­cally illus­trated gar­den website.

It’s like buy­ing clothes out of a cat­a­log that are being mod­eled some­one impec­ca­bly styled and impos­si­bly toned. But because of the reces­sion most of us have had to let our per­sonal styl­ists go, and when you go to try on the clothes the look ends up being a sad disappointment.

For my last post, on my bloom­ing echi­ums, I was hav­ing a hard time com­ing up with an attrac­tive photo that showed the entire plant. The plants are grow­ing in a tight cor­ner of the gar­den that has a wood­pile, a rusty shed and a big dis­or­derly stack of stuff wait­ing to be dis­sem­bled and taken to the metal recy­cling facil­ity at the landfill–not stuff I wanted to pub­lish out there for all the world to see.

From one van­tage point the stu­dio walls act as a fairly neu­tral back­drop, but to take this photo my back was against the neighbor’s wall and I couldn’t get the dis­tance I wanted.

The angles that showed off the plants bet­ter also showed off all the junk. Gag.

Okay, back to get­ting real. My gar­den will never look like the high vol­canic slopes of Tener­ife. It’ll never look like the east­ern slope of the Sierra Nevada, or approx­i­mate the wide vis­tas of our desert two hours to the east of here. Some of my plants may come from those places, but cul­ti­vat­ing them won’t hide the fact that I live in a sub­urb with neigh­bors all around.

I guess I look at the gar­den as a scrap­book or photo album. A plant might have asso­ci­a­tions with some­where I’ve been or would like to visit. Maybe I grew up with another of the plants. Yet another may be intrigu­ingly cool even though I have no idea where it comes from. In arrang­ing the plants, in mak­ing the gar­den, I can come up with some­thing where my mem­o­ries can mix with the shapes, col­ors and tex­tures of the plants and pro­duce some­thing I like and hope­fully will look okay to others.

Bloom­ing now in one of my lit­tle bog gar­dens is a stream orchid, Epi­pactis gigan­tea, a plant with a huge pile of asso­ci­a­tions for me. (You can sort of make it out to the left in this photo.) Those mem­o­ries go some­thing like this: I was tak­ing some of the rough Jeep roads in Saline Val­ley, a gen­er­ally unvis­ited expanse of white sand imme­di­ately north­west of Death Val­ley. I’d camped one night on the west side of the val­ley at the mouth of a lit­tle canyon lead­ing up into the Inyo Moun­tains. All night long I kept hear­ing angered chal­lenges from the wild bur­ros that called this area their home. The next morn­ing I headed towards the canyon, keep­ing a wary eye on the bur­ros that were never far away. Soon I started to hear water. I guess I’d unknow­ingly plopped myself on top of a trail lead­ing to a water source for the burros–That would explain the angry noises all night.

Soon the canyon folded in around me, and I went from the glar­ing white hot­ness of the exposed val­ley floor to a cool, shel­tered out­door room. Water driz­zled down a gran­ite face in front of me. Ferns grew every­where. And scar­let columbines. And dozens of this plant, the stream orchid, in peak bloom. Imag­ine that. Orchids in the desert. It was one of those peak out­door moments that I’ll remem­ber forever.

Well, the lit­tle bog gar­den looks and feels noth­ing like that May morn­ing in Saline Val­ley, but see­ing this lit­tle orchid will remind me of that encounter every time I see it.

June 06 2010 | Categories: gardeningmy gardenphotography | Tags: | 13 Comments »

chicago in…february?

Work will be tak­ing me to Chicago in mid-February. My first reac­tion to the con­fer­ence orga­niz­ers’ choice of loca­tion and time was some­thing approach­ing dis­be­lief. Chicago in Feb­ru­ary? I don’t have that many lay­ers of cloth­ing in my closet!

Mind you, you’re lis­ten­ing to a wimp from San Diego. I’ve been get­ting dis­tressed that the nights are start­ing to drop below 50 degrees. I feel like I need to count my fin­gers and toes every time I come back indoors to be sure they haven’t frozen off.

My first trip to Chicago as an adult was just over a decade ago, and I quickly fell in love with all the cul­tural ben­e­fits of the place. Its muse­ums, archi­tec­ture and restau­rants are noth­ing short of amaz­ing. Those are all pretty much indoor things, how­ever. What’s a wimpy sub­trop­i­cal gar­dener and out­doors per­son to do?

On the top of my list of things to see in Chicago is the Lurie Gar­den, designed by Gustafson Guthrie Nichol Ltd, Piet Oudolf and Robert Israel. Aside from the Bat­tery in New York, I believe it’s Oudolf’s only pub­lic work in the U.S.

Left: The Lurie Gar­den in June. (Photo by Tor­sodog via the Wiki­me­dia Com­mons [ source ])

But the gar­den in Feb­ru­ary? Even though Oudolf tries to incor­po­rate nat­ural cycles into his designs, cre­at­ing spaces that honor and cel­e­brate the nat­ural changes in the world, I sus­pect that Feb­ru­ary will be a harsh test.

Still, even if it’s an amaz­ing place in Feb­ru­ary, I’ll know that I’ll have missed one of the main points of the gar­den. This is a garden-as-process. It’s not about look­ing gor­geous for a few weeks of the year. Instead it’s ded­i­cated to the changes that hap­pen as the sea­sons progress. (From the pho­tos I’ve seen, it also hap­pens to look great most of the year…)

It’ll be like step­ping into a con­cert hall to hear a few quiet min­utes of a piece of music that lasts much longer. Even if those few min­utes are amaz­ing, that music is a liv­ing thing that has a life longer that what you’ve expe­ri­enced. You leave the hall sens­ing that you’ve missed some amaz­ing moments.

I sus­pect that’ll be how I feel after I leave Chicago.

December 11 2008 | Categories: gardeninglandscapeplaces | Tags: | 2 Comments »