Inspiration at the Miller Botanical Garden
There is much to admire at the Miller Botanical Garden. Although I visit at least twice annually for Great Plant Picks meetings I doubt I would ever walk away uninspired. Each encounter is a new day and a new frame of mind. Each visit I try to see the garden a little differently. I let myself be drawn by whatever force my head and heart are cooking up, a kind of stream of consciousness of traversing through a garden, especially this trip where my mind wanted to wander. It was moss, textures, and unusual flowers this encounter. And while March is not a typically inspirational month in the garden, I think the Miller has such great bones from which the creative people caring for it are able to work, they make magic even in late winter.
Pyrrosia sheareri is a quintessential plant when I imagine the Miller. This fern inspired me to add one to my own garden last year and it gives year-round pleasure. Here in a container out on the deck it is the star lineup in a row of pots leading you out towards a view of Puget Sound beyond the fence in the background.
DESIGN
Alike, but different. Cordyline indivisa on the right and another pink foliaged cordyline on the left echo each other's shape and size but with different colors. This adds balance without being too obvious about it, though if they were both the same plant it would also add a sense of unification and perhaps tones of formality.
A subtle design element is framing the open dining room terrace with plant materials, keeping site lines clear so one can appreciate the structure. The home is made of stone and wood and blends beautifully with its surroundings, so obscuring it would be a shame.
FLOWERS
Winter flowers are not something I expect or necessarily look for in March. Our native Mahonia aquifolium with sulphur yellow flower buds ready to open on the next sunny day. This is a lovely evergreen shrub that forms colonies in time. It's the Oregon state flower, after all, and a valuable addition to the landscape.
The fern lawn with pretty Cardamine quinquefolia blooming.
Osmanthus, probably Osmanthus x burkwoodii, a rather large evergreen shrub with flower buds just barely opening.
Rhododendron stenopetalum ‘Linearifolium’ is a quite unexpected bit of color for early March.
While Camellias are not high on my list of "must have" plants (though they are worthy, I'm simply not a fan of them in the off season and when their large flowers go brown and litter the ground with a pink/brown layer of mush), any well-grown plant deserves a moment for appreciation. This rather gigantic specimen is, undoubtedly, very old and likely one of Elisabeth Miller's original plantings. The lesson here is consider legacy plants, ones that will certainly outlive you, often improving with age. As a side note, I watched a hummingbird feed on this plant for several minutes; however, a good photo of it was not to be had.
Parrotiopsis jacquemontiana, an upright deciduous tree, currently covered in sweet little flowers with yellow stamens. I am not familiar with this plant, it was Martin, the director of the Hoyt Arboretum, who identified it for me. Thank goodness for plant nerd friends!
MOSS
Moss is certainly expected in the Pacific Northwest, particularly shady, mild weather gardens such as the Miller. Moss on trees and branches are always special to my eyes, a velvet glow decorating branches, rocks and paths.
Moss as a groundcover in the lower part of the garden. Camassia 'Blue Heaven' is emerging from the moss lawn.
A well worn gravel path through the moss.
Adorning branches
Bringing out the interesting form of this shrub.
On many garden group forums, people ask regularly how to get rid of moss. Often with chemical warfare. What? Seriously? If it's in your lawn, it's not killing your lawn, it's there because it's a perfect environment for moss to grow. If it's on your tree branches it's not killing your tree, it's enjoying a perfect environment to thrive. I ask, why would you want to remove it? Personally, I adore it. It is not a threat to gardens or plants.
CONTAINERS
One of the most enchanting elements of this garden are the hundreds, yes easily hundreds, of containers. This trough had me imagining building one myself this year.
Near the house, fresh foliage and flower combinations are installed every year (perhaps changing each season?) in fancier pots. This grouping with hellebore, heuchera, erysimum, euphorbia and cordyline has lovely color echoes.
I noticed a few new "fern" tables this visit. I use quotations because that's the term we learned to use when describing tabletop gardens. Obviously, here, they are sun lovers. Richie used to teach classes at Joy Creek Nursery where I worked for several years how to make these. It's really quite simple, requiring a base (concrete, pavers, a sturdy piece of lumber), building mounds of soil and placing rocks, branches or whatever one fancies and tucking them in securely, then digging pockets out of the soil and tucking in plants. The whole thing gets wrapped in fishing line or something similar to help keep it in place until the plants root in and help stabilize it. Install the fishing line before the plants, though. They change over time of course and need special attention paid for watering as they dry out quickly. Also, if they are of any decent size, build them in situ so you don't have the burden of moving it. Plants do need to be replaced from time to time, but don't we do that in our gardens anyway? I love these.
A wider view of three new-to-me tables with lots of our native sedum and fescue as well as colorful sempervivums. Also that they are raised up on cement blocks allows for eye-level enjoyment.
If you would like to build one, the Miller has online instructions, you can find that here.
The dining room terrace, a container lover's paradise as far as I'm concerned with plenty of alpine troughs, pyrrosia, succulents and interesting dwarf conifers. The sky is the limit is the lesson I take away here. If you adore a plant and it can grow in a container, it's a way to add more layers to the garden.
Details
An enclosed porch area off of the dining room is filled with shady containers featuring rhododendrons, ferns and Aspidistra ssp.
While not of the decorative sort, many containers in the nursery part of the garden, some propagated on site and some purchased and awaiting planting in a holding area. It's fun to see this side of the garden.
FOLIAGE
Foliage is the most important element at the Miller. Here a restio Thamnochortus insignis (thatching reed) catches the light adding drama and feathery texture.
Bright hot pink and cranberry colors of a cordyline.
Pentarhizidium orientale (syn. Matteuccia orientalis) fertile fronds left standing after older foliage was removed. It's a weird and wonderful detail that I'm delighted to have seen.
Rhododendron kendrickii, a favorite of Richie's. I adore rhododendrons with interesting foliage well above and beyond any flowering.
A rather tall rhododendron in a container by the front door provides the opportunity to see the undersides and their coppery soft indumentum.
TEXTURE
I've given a lot of thought as to what defines texture in a garden sense. It has a lot to do with how light reflects or doesn't off of foliage, stones, wood, etc. and something to do with color. Shape, too, sometimes light going through a plant makes an interesting silhouette. However you define it, the different foliage shapes, colors and luminosity show up well in winter light. Having a variety of textures keeps it vibrant and invites exploration.
Closer to the house the velvety moss juxtaposed with hard stone and tactile bark of the tree are examples of varied texture. Add the slightly shiny foliage of low-growing Saxifraga primuloides (center, bottom), smooth surface of a container and the cedar siding of the house and this is a complete garden scene on a small scale.
Lovely branching and flowers
Tasmanian tree fern (Dicksonia antartica) wrapped in burlap on the left, contributes to textures in the lower garden. The burlap is winter protection, of course, and blends in very naturally with its surroundings. Foliage color, dark conifers with sun reflecting off of its leaves, rocks, sinuous dark lines of tree trunks, bare branches and shiny leaves are more examples of creating interest with texture.
So much to appreciate here.
DETAILS
There are so many carefully considered details in this garden, here are a couple. The transition from wood deck to stone to gravel for pathways, lots of containers along the edges of the deck in coordinating tones to a bit of evergreen presence in the stone roundel in the center, are simply a few.
A well-weathered invitation to sit for a moment. Considering how materials weather over time is worthwhile, especially when moss and lichen adorn surfaces.
Even in winter, twining vines on the deck railing are intentional and interesting.
Practical and interesting, these wood roundels used for a path through a rather shady, damp area are covered in netting to keep visitors from slipping. They blend in too and add a bit of texture.
A parting image of a gravel path morphing to stones then to lawn (the only real bit of lawn in this whole garden) to cordylines and a couple of my friends chatting all things plants and Great Plant Picks.
There and back again in a day. That's how it happens, four hours in a car up to Seattle, a few hours at the Miller then four to five hours home. It's quite tiring but inspiring. We love visiting with one another, swapping plant stories and sharing experiences and learning about new plants. It's quite stimulating, like the garden itself. I notice in these photos that some of these ideas I have incorporated into my own garden, perhaps subconsciously, but perhaps it's a coincidence. It's a love language of inspiration. The Miller and indeed every garden I have the privilege to visit make their way into my own one way or another, I suppose that's true for us all. I hope you've enjoyed a virtual visit to one of my favorite Pacific Northwest gardens in early March.
That's a wrap for this week at Chickadee Gardens. As always, thank you so much for reading and commenting, we do love hearing what you are all up to! Happy gardening!
The photos and your knowledgeable and thoughtful response to this magical garden are so appreciated. I've been wondering if Cordyline indivisa might like my garden, haha. Is this the garden that Withey/Price managed for a while? Pretty sure the Fling toured it too -- wish you were the docent, I'd have had a deeper appreciation.
ReplyDeletePermit a response from a Miller Board member. Not Withey/Price, they were curators at the Dunn Garden not too far off ( while I was ED,,their colorful work can still be seen in Edmonds in front of Epulo)
DeleteDenise, the Fling was unable to get into the Miller Garden due to the constraints on visitors.
DeleteHi Denise, Board Member and Danger! Denise - thank you for your thoughtful comment. Regarding your questions, I think Loree and Miller Board Member answered them about Withey/Price and the Fling - thank you both for your answers, as I wasn't sure about either. Cheers.
Deletethanks for the group effort in answering my questions!
DeleteI always read every word. You are a fine garden documentarian and awesome trouble maker. xoxo
ReplyDeleteYou are a big hearted lovely person, Patricia. And an awesome trouble maker too. Tee hee!
DeleteLots of great inspiration! Love that photo of the tree fern! The way you set up the photo to grab the rocks, the path, the shrubs and plants in the background, just lovely. And yes, moss gets a bad rap. I love it! So gorgeous. Thanks for the link to the fern tables. Would be fun to make some. And yes, some concrete troughs would be amazing additions to your gardens. Loved your design thoughts and insights. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jeanne for your kind comments. Here's to more moss in the garden! Hooray! I think this might be the year I try to officially make a trough. Hopefully. Maybe. We'll see.
DeleteThat was a lovely walk around the Miller with great insights. I love that place. Is that a young Cordyline indivisa in the roundel on the deck?
ReplyDeleteThank you Danger! It's such a great garden, so dreamy. I think you might be right about the Cordyline indivisa - if I can confirm it with Richie, I'll update it here. Cheers.
DeleteJust Thank You for bringing us along on your visit. Your post is one of the first things I've read all day to bring me joy.
ReplyDeleteKTRaveller, you are welcome. It means everything to bring a little joy to someone. Gardens are healing, for sure. Hugs.
DeleteI will forever remember Paul Bonine at Xera making me laugh when he described the pink camellias that are planted everywhere as "hamburger plants" because their flowers are the same color as raw hamburger just starting to brown in the pan. The Parrotiopsis is really cool!
ReplyDeleteHee hee, oh, that Paul. That is a pretty accurate (and colorful) description. Yeah, the Parrotiopsis is rather lovely, are you familiar?
DeleteNo, I wasn't familiar at all with the Parrotiopsis. It is indeed lovely.
DeleteIn your opening remarks you said "And while March is not a typically inspirational month in the garden...", then continue to lead us through an extremely inspirational March garden :-D
ReplyDeleteI find spring and summer gardens beautiful and a pleasure to visit, but - and this may sound crazy - also overwhelming, can't see the forest for the trees kind of thing. A quieter time of year is often the thing that makes my creative juices flowing.
I hope you do make a trough planter this year. The one in the first 'Containers' photo, with the large moss mounds is fantastic. Or better yet, inspirational.
Chavli
Yes, exactly! The Miller is SO FULL of fun inspiration year round. I totally agree with you regarding seeing the garden in quieter months, it really can be inspirational. I do hope to really build a trough sometime, I think it would be a fun project. Have you ever built one?
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