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Find the Perfect Tomato
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25 Robust Summer Bloomers
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Backyard Makeover Game
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How to Start a Vegetable Garden
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Soil Testing is Worth the Effort
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10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
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Design an Engaging Entryway
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15 Deer-Resistant Plants
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Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
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Cool-Season Annuals
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All About Starting Seeds
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Garden Catalog Collector
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Variegated Plants Create Drama
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Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
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Friendly Ways to Battle Garden Pests
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The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
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Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
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Enchanting Japanese Maples
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Building a Compost Bin
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Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
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Off With Their Heads: Deadheading Perennials
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Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
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Big Flowers from Bigleaf Hydrangeas
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How to Grow Raspberries
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A gardener's checklist for early summer
My Very First Garden Conservancy Open Days Tour!
comments (0) April 29th, 2010 in blogs
True confessions: Last Sunday was the first time I attended a Garden Conservancy Open Days tour.
It was all Lin’s idea. After reading an eye-catching article in the Los Angeles Times, my spousal support unit suggested we spend the next Sunday in Pasadena, strolling other people’s gardens (without fear of getting arrested for trespassing). No way I could turn down an offer like that.
That’s what’s so cool about Open Days, a program that, since 1995, has allowed folks like you and me – and about a million others – to wander through more than 3,000 private gardens around the country. It’s the perfect marriage: Visitors pick up ideas for their own gardens, meet lots of like-minded garden enthusiasts and talk to designers.
And the Conservancy benefits by raising money and increasing public awareness of their primary mission: “…preserving exceptional American gardens for the education and enjoyment of the public. We seek to develop and deepen public appreciation of gardens as integral elements of our national artistic and cultural heritage.”
One thing I like about garden tours is the opportunity to take a pazillion digital pictures and write blog posts about all the fun I had.
Design Tips From Pasadena
Marry the house and garden: Our first stop was Sally and Harlan Bixby’s home – a 1922 Spanish Revival house emblematic of many SoCal homes. There were a number of theme gardens, a spitting crocodile fountain, and interesting plants throughout the property. But what caught my eye was a subtle pairing of easy-care cane orchids (Epidendrum imbaguense) and the warm tones of the exterior walls. Vibrant orange and yellow flowers blend with the ochre stucco. Does your garden’s color scheme respond to the exterior colors of your house? If not, opportunity knocks.
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The most interesting garden compositions are the ones that strike a balance between variety and unity. Notice how the rounded forms of the two different cacti unify this pairing, while variations in the color and the topography of each plant brings variety. The secret is massing multiples of only a few plant species.
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The next time you redo one of your beds, imagine how light can play a key role in your own plant choices.
Yipes! Look at the time…
There are a few dozen more photos to sort through, so how about we temporarily pull the plug on the Pasadena Open Days tour and I’ll be back with the next installment ASAP.
Let me know if you’ve used any of these design tricks in your own garden and share some of your own.
Resource: To find out more about the Garden Conservancy and the Open Days program visit www.gardenconservancy.org or www.opendaysprogram.org.
Read part 2...
posted in: cool green gardens, billy goodnick, Open Days, Garden Conservancy
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Enter the world of sustainable gardening with Billy Goodnick's "Cool Green Gardens" blog. Billy lives in Santa Barbara, CA, and delivers a West Coast perspective on landscape design that will translate into your own backyard. Check out CGG for great ideas on reducing your impact on the environment and creating a landscape that is an extension of your home.







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