I wrote this blog last fall and am re-sending it now that the technical problems that prevented my blogs from circulating have been resolved. I’ve edited it slightly. Apologies if you are reading it for the second time!
2023 was a busy summer! We held three very successful open garden days, all to benefit the work of the Massawippi Foundation. Thanks to all who came, despite some tricky weather.
We had a visit from a very important person. Hillary Clinton who was staying at Manoir Hovey next door came with a dozen or more friends and a few security guards. It was a wonderful visit!
In mid-September, I left for a month in Italy and I plan to write about some of the gardens I visited there, including La Mortella. This amazing garden is on the island of Ischia, not far from Naples. It was designed in part by Russell Page and developed over the years by Susana and William Walters. More on that garden and others in Italy in posts to come.
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La Mortella is divided into two sections, valley and a hillside gardens. Russell Page designed this straight axis and rill to provide structure in the valley garden.
The biggest event, though, was a long-time planned move. After 27 years at Glen Villa, I switched houses with my daughter and her family. Preparing for the move was tons of work: going through decades of accumulated possessions and deciding what to keep and what to dispose of. Coming back from Italy and moving into this new house, strange as it was, has nonetheless opened the door to new adventures.
Here’s the house as it was.
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I took this photo in early September, before I left for Italy.
Here’s the house now (or as it was last October!). As you can see, almost everything in the garden in front of the house has been dug up and heeled in for the winter. Jacques Gosselin and Ken Kelso, my can-do-everything guys, did this while I was in Italy. They also brought in new soil in preparation for planting in the spring.
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York House, Oct 23, 2023
The following week, we started removing some of the vegetation that was threatening to swallow the house and the view. Jacques and Ken took down two trees in front of the house and started the mammoth job of removing plants that were hiding the beautiful outcroppings of rock between the house and Lake Massawippi. Even on a dismal rainy day, the view is now open to the sky and water.
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York House, Oct 23, 2023
Opening the view onto the lake is a good thing. Opening the view onto the Upper Room, my installation that honours my mother and my roots in Virginia, is not. We transplanted some spruce trees onto the hillside you see below. It will take years for the trees to grow tall enough to block the view onto this area but gardening is as much about patience as it is about planning.
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This view of the Upper Room gives some idea of how steep the hillside is.
One of the guiding principles I used when designing the gardens at Glen Villa Art Garden was a respect for history. I am continuing that in my new location. We’ve named that house York House in honour of John and Betty York, the couple who built the house in the 1950s and lived in it until they died. Years ago the house and garden were featured in a local newspaper that described the garden as a rock garden. I can easily understand why: the house is surrounded by enormous granite boulders, markers of millennia past when the glaciers retreated. I don’t yet know how I will use these natural features in the new garden, but I am sure they will play a major role.
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One granite boulder is on the left of the house and a similar one is on the right.
I’m sure, too, that the view onto the fields that surround both Glen Villa and York House will continue to add beauty all year round.
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This view from some years ago shows the house in its setting. One of those granite boulders is on the right, the one pictured previously is hidden behind the garage, that small building on the left. The bundled sticks are no longer there. As for the daffodils, next spring will tell the tale.
I’m eager to see how working on a smaller scale will influence my design decisions and plant choices. So do keep posted as this new garden develops!