One of my favorite clients and dear friends took off this morning for Rome. As hard as it is for me to believe, she insisted my post on Villa D’Este inspired her to go visit her granddaughter who is on foreign study in Rome-and by the way, go see that garden. By this time last week, she had enlisted both of her daughters-one of whom is Carol, the proud Mom of said student Grace. Daughter Diane is an RN living in California-she flew out for the Romefest. Four other friends signed on. She organized an entourage- soon to land in Italy. Tonight, I think.
She has the week ahead planned. A guided visit to the Vatican. Villa D’Este, of course. A request from me for an Italian boater with an orange band. A cooking course she thought sounded like fun. I have no details on this, as once you use the word cooking within my earshot, I black out. Some time she has left to Grace to organize. Her energy puts me to shame.
I am thinking about her, as she loves to travel. She so enjoys the garden tour we do every year; she has been trying to worm out of me for weeks where this year’s tour might take her. She drive-travels straight through to get her granddaughter back to Clemson University in September, and drive-travels again to pick her up at year’s end. She travels in other ways less literal. She considers ideas outside her realm-she is happy to go anywhere, and decide if she likes it. She is a traveller.
I am not a board a vehicle and go traveller. I hate the packing and the time it takes to arrive at a destination. I am not crazy about being away from home. I travel-reluctantly; the process exhausts me. I am always happy to get where I am going-what is not to like about seeing new places. Whomever can convince me to travel-many thanks. When NASA figures out how to beam me up, I will be first in line. On occasion, something or someone will beam me over to what never occurred to me-best regards, and many thanks for this. But I am always thinking about travelling when I design.
I know travel is a key issue in design. Once a mortgage survey is in my hands, my first move is to decide how, why and where one might travel in the landscape. For anyone designing their own landscape, I would encourage them to build some roads in their garden. Some roads need to be two lane. Other roads can be a skinny dirt two-track. Some places need stop signs. Other places need roundabouts. A travel sceme is essential for you, your kids, dogs, and guests. Plan your routes before you decide anything else.
How will you get from the house, to the grill, to the terrace, to the trash, to the rose garden, to the street, to the back door, to the compost pile, to the picnic table-how will you drive through, walk through, and linger in the space? Where will your family and friends congregate? If you were to walk your garden with a video camera running, would a story be told? Expand off road wherever you have a mind to.
No writer/gardener I ever read more clearly and more beautifully addresses the travel particular to the journey of a gardener than Dominique Browning; I have talked about this before. Her discussion of the evolution of her garden has everything to do with travelling through, and lingering here or there. When she is stopped, she is stopped in her tracks. When she moves on to somewhere else, there is a big pair of lopping shears in her hand, and /or significant emotional travel involved.
She has a sense of humor about her basic unwillingness to budge off her comfort spot. She is entirely dispassionate about all of her passions. I admire this in her. Her writing encourages me to loosen up, and move around more. How you will live, perch, lounge, work, read or take a nap are questions that need to be addressed before you make moves.
No matter how glued I am to my place, I put that aside, and encourage myself to take my clients somewhere. Somewhere better than they thought they could have it. Think about this, you people who have a mind to design your own gardens. If you have a notion to hire a designer, first and foremost understand how you will travel through the landscape they have designed for you.
Jane’s travels are much more than I have detailed here. Like all of us, she has roads to travel, like them all or not. Getting control of the layout of those roads may make things easier. Some paths are 25mph quiet zones. Others have lots of traffic. It is important to get this part right. Some badly placed plants can easily be moved-your routes, not so easy to redo. Whether you use a piece of paper, a garden hose, landscape paint, or stakes and strings, taking the time to plan your trip is a good idea.










As my clients were bound and determined that Allie, Snoopy and Vladdy would be members of their wedding party, their choices for a wedding venue were slim to none. I was happy for them to get married at the shop, and equally happy to welcome the canine members of their family. Since the decision was made some six months prior to the ceremony, I had the chance to plan a garden that would look great on their late, late summer date.
A copper pergola would provide the chuppah necessary for the ceremony. We infilled the poles at each corner with birch bark tubes. This blue and white scheme dictated the selection of plants as much as the season would. A collection of Italian cypress, giant rosemary topiaries, kales and cabbages would look swell come wedding time. Luckily a local grower has a very late batch of sunflowers, including the ultra double “teddy bear”. That intense yellow would warm up the arbor in a happy and sunny way. A goldenrod garland casually draped over the chuppah provided the roof necessary for the ceremony.
Silver dichondra has a distinctly blue cast; its diminuitive felted leaves were a great contrast to the giant blistered kale, “Nero di Toscano”. Short blue foliaged fescues, white million bells and showy oregano made good companions for the massive cabbages. White iron urns showed off the long tails of dichondra to good advantage.
As the ceremony required a table be available for the Rabbi, my clients chose a carved concrete faux bois piece whose legs were carved and acid stained to look like birch. The wedding party flowers in lime green, white, and lavender repeated the color scheme of the garden. Is that old rosemary topiary not a dream come true?
The plan for the reception involved nine 8′ long tables set end to end in the drive. Small glass vases covered in short birch bark tubes held late summer garden flowers available from the growers at my local farmer’s market. These 45 small arrangements centered on the tables would run for the entire 72 foot long reception dinner table.
Allie and Snoopy were nervous, but they did take their big lime green satin bow and flower collars in stride. They did mill around-but just a little bit. All in all they were very well behaved.
Vladdy was ordinarily fairly dignified and unflappable; he sat calmly through the entire ceremony.
It was a beautiful wedding, and I was happy to have a part in it. There is something so satisfying about a small ceremony for everyone involved. When there are but a few details, every detail can be very personal and thoughtful. I think they were so pleased to be able to have their dog family there that day.