Happy New Year 2019
Happy New Year!
Not that I need a new year, I kinda like the one I just had. I know, however, that things change and so will the calendar. Of course it will take me a month or more to stop writing 2018.
I am very grateful for the last year even with so many challenges. Especially the weather. I was telling the girls that it seemed like we only worked in excruciating heat and torrential rain. In fact statistics show that it was the rainiest September through November recorded at the local Blue Hill Observatory so I know I am not just getting old and grumpy. And it was HOT. Hats off to the crews that helped install gardens when the temperatures were well into the 90’s.
Then of course it got bitterly cold right at Thanksgiving and stayed that way which meant the winter containers were quite a challenge to create. Many more garden design jobs meant things were extra busy but that’s okay. I can always do laundry later.
I want to thank all my friends and family members who heard too many times that “I can only talk for a minute the client is on his way” or “Dinner is what you make of it – literally”. There were crazy busy days when I would arrive home so exhausted that I did not even have the energy to eat. And friends and family forgave me the busyness. They even called to just say they were praying for me.
I want to thank my clients who give me the privilege of working at something I love every day. What an incredible blessing to hear after a project that it is just perfect and I must have “read their mind”. Of course not every job ends that way and so I am also grateful to clients who allow me a second chance to get it right. Great design, like anything, requires communication and collaboration and the grace for a “do-over” is always appreciated.
2018 was the best year so far for The Captured Garden. And while the company is growing that is not the main focus. My focus is on developing relationships with clients and their gardens that will last. That is why we only take on a handful of select jobs each season. Good design takes time and that’s what I think it deserves. Quality over quantity.
I hope in your New Year you see the value of taking time for the things that are important to you.
2019 here we come!
Champagne, anyone?
During the holidays bling is certainly appropriate.
Not only for you but also for your containers.
In fact, I think winter containers are even more beautiful with a little sparkle. Especially since days are short and the dark is long.
We see lots of silver and gold but this year decided to celebrate with…champagne.
This unexpected color is an elegant bridge between cool silver and warm gold. Champagne goes well with everything and we’re not talking about the liquid variety (although the same could be said).
Champagne in a recent windowbox picked up the variations in bark color and was used as an accent in dried mushrooms and picks.
By spraying the brown of the fresh magnolia leaves silver we created a beautiful champagne color.
Champagne was a beautiful, elegant player in this composition.
Botanical bling…understated elegance.
We even snagged some gorgeous ribbon and can hardly wait to use it for the next client with a taste for champagne.
Could that be you?
Succulents and Pumpkins
These are livable centerpieces… It’s really just fun.
You don’t even carve the pumpkins. You just put the succulents on top and bring it to someone’s house.
It definitely beats a bottle of wine.
The centerpieces consist of normal pumpkins with succulents (juicy leaves) glued on top for decoration. We used a variety of succulents to the workshop of all different shapes and sizes and colors.
Thankful. Grateful. Blessed.
It’s that time of year again when we take time to count our blessings and give thanks for all we have. I am personally trying to do it on a more regular basis!
As a gardener I am thankful for many things: polar fleece, daylight savings time and warm gloves top the list.
I am thankful that I have eyes to see all the beautiful plant material I am blessed to be able to use.
I am thankful that my ears work well enough to hear the birds around me as I garden.
I can also hear when my knees pop when I go up and down but at least they do their job and for that I am thankful.
Ditto for my hands and wrists which get a little sore after too much pruning. But I am thankful for my Felco pruning shears which make the job that much easier.
As I travel far and wide in pursuit of great plant material I am thankful for a car that works. Even if it does, as my kids constantly remind me, “smell like manure.”
I’m thankful for gas that is available and still relatively inexpensive. I should mention, however, that if it ever hits $5 a gallon you will see The Captured Garden on a moped.
I’m thankful for my new GPS which means I will never get lost again – ha, ha.
I am thankful that I live in a country where I have the freedom to start my own business. Seems like just yesterday The Captured Garden was only a seed of an idea and now it is a real honest-to-goodness business venture. Just ask the IRS!
Lastly, I am extremely fortunate and blessed to have the greatest clients/friends in the world. I am grateful for each one of you and thank you for the opportunity to work with you.
I hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving and are surrounded by all that gives you joy.
The Grand Garden Show on Mackinac Island
Here are some of the highlights from my trip to Mackinac Island in Michigan for the Grand Garden Show Featuring Proven Winners®. I was honored to have been asked by Proven Winners to present three talks on container gardening and leading tours through some of the amazing gardens on the island. I am especially excited to have had the opportunity to spend the weekend with like-minded garden enthusiasts!
I am not sure if it was the big chair or the long journey that had me saying “are we there yet?” over and over but I definitely felt like a little kid. The Grand Hotel was definitely….grand. And they know how to do geraniums! Pots, pots everywhere. And gardens that were simply begging to be photographed. The master designer, Jack Barnwell, (Barnwell Landscape and Garden Services- A Mackinac Island Based Company) led us docents on a rainy tour of some of the island’s private gardens. One “cottage” had a sweet porch ceiling that was painted blue with birds on it! And how better to end a long day than with delicious food…hello filet mignon!
Beautiful gardens and a great view from the Cupola Bar at the Grand Hotel. I was blessed to be a docent at two gorgeous downtown gardens. First at the Hotel Iroquois then the beautiful Boardwalk Cottage. Hydrangea paniculata ‘Great Star’ was the most photographed plant on both tours! I met Myrtle, the turtle, explored the island via a private carriage ride and took even more pictures of the Grand Hotel. Then the great crew at Jack Barnwell Design started adding extra curb appeal for the big opening of the Grand Garden Show. Moving planters like the pros they are! An opening night cocktail party was a great excuse to dress up and hang out with my friend Kerry Ann Mendez. Another delicious meal with the folks from Proven Winners and then….showtime!
Grand Garden Show
Someone pinch me.
No really.
I must be dreaming because I am going to Mackinaw Island in August. Initially I was not familiar with the place and referred to it as Mackinack Island, sounds like Mackinawe Island. After doing a bit of research I learned it was an island in Michigan and that cars were not allowed. To get around you had to bike or take a horse-drawn carriage. Right away I was intrigued. So many times I wish I could go back in time to a gentler type of world – this sounded like the place.
Then I found out that Mackinac Island had some breathtaking gardens.
Sign me up.
Read More»Fireflies
We are blessed to own a family home on an island in Maine. It is an old sea captain’s house that belonged to a great great great member of the family and has been lovingly passed down to its current caretakers. It’s a place I go to escape. To turn back the clock. To breathe deeply. I have a very vivid memory of a time a few years back when we had all headed in from the front porch as it got dark to play games or watch TV. Suddenly my daughter groaned “I left my camera on the front porch”. The groan was due to the fact that is gets dark in Maine. Really dark. So dark you can’t see your hand in front of your face dark. There are no street lights and we have no outside lights at the front of the house.
We decided we would go and retrieve the camera together. What greeted us when we stepped onto the porch was amazing. Bursts of lights and flashes, as if from a hundred different cameras, made me feel like a superstar on the Red Carpet. I think we both gasped and immediately shouted to those inside to “get out here” or something like that. The field across the dirt road was filled with fireflies and we watched their show for what seemed like hours.
Read More»It’s Tick Season
Ahhh…summer! I look out at the green fields, the trees with their leaves rustling in the breeze and the path that leads through the woods and I have one thought: ticks. When I was younger my siblings and I spent all day playing outdoors yet I do not remember any of us getting bitten by a tick. I have been bitten at least three times in the last few years. I am not sure why the increase in tick activity but I resent the fact that they are limiting mine.
Read More»New Echinaceas
Who doesn’t love purple coneflowers? Echinacea, whose name comes from the Greek word for Hedgehog or sea urchin due to its spiny seed head, is a beautiful perennial that is loved by bees and other pollinators.As a beekeeper I always try to include them in any garden design. Many of us have the old favorites ‘Magnus’ or ‘White Swan’ but recently I have come across some that are a bit less well-known that I can’t wait to try.
Read More»Hosta for Dinner
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