Garden tours in Atlanta became dicey about the 90's. Not that gardens chosen were bad, inferior, worthy of complaint. Yet, Garden Whisperers 'knew'. Something new had arrived, alas, something of the old had disappeared.
In the mid-90's touring an Atlanta, GA technically correct and considered lovely garden set in a street of McMansions I saw a friend who was on the Garden Tour committee. Telling her of all the gardens already seen and my favorite parts, I looked around at the garden we were in and said, "These people are cold, I don't want to know them.", she said, "Oh, you've met them.". Never met them, was sad to see their personalities writ large in their garden. My friend said they were the most difficult homeowners to work with putting the garden tour together. She said their garden would not be a 'repeat', ever.
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Why was their garden 'cold'?
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Reading Monty Don, A French Garden Journey: the Road to Le Tholonet, in bed last night, Don described my experience in the 'cold' garden many years before, and why, "They are still lovely and essentially unspoilt. but there is a kind of self-knowing quality to them that was not there forty years ago. The innocence has been sold....."
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Exactly, the 'cold' garden was totally paid for, not an ounce of 'magic', there was 'a sleekness and order that only money can buy'. "It was like a fine-set face made puffy and bloated with years of ease."
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That last sentence had me laughing out loud, go Monty go. Especially, 'years of ease'. I have many clients with weekly lawn care and I always tell them they must take care of a certain area, by themselves, zero help. How else to be connected to their garden? Most things that I can do in my garden, I do. Knowing, hiring out work I can do would become habit, and remove one of life's chief pleasures, and honor. Working in my garden is, Washing of the servants feet. Honoring, Nature.
Pics, above, The Gardens of Chateau Val Joanis.
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Garden, above, is not a 'cold' personal garden. Yet, it had once been a richly warm residential garden, now, a commercial garden. Don used this garden, above, in the chapters where I took his quotes, above, from.
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Garden & Be Well, XOT
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Kayaking, 1st time ever, this summer in the salt water marsh of Saint Simons Island, we reached a sand bar our guide wanted us to park at, and walk a bit. Docking my kayak on the steeply sloped beach, the guide was quickly placing his hands on my arms, making sure I didn't fall awkwardly getting out of the kayak. A very quick, "No, thank you." He continued trying to help me, "No really, step away, thank you." In the end, he did not step away, and kept both arms spread as if we were about to begin a ballroom waltz. Ugh. Nope. Hope I'm well into my 90's still getting out of a kayak on a steep beach, by myself. It has begun, I saw it with Rosemary Very during her 2 visits to Atlanta, many years apart, the transition from physical power to feminine power. Great topic, Feminine Power, no time to go further now.
3 comments:
Great post all the way through.
I love Monty Don. I've not read any of his books, but have enjoyed him on you-tube.
Have a lovely day ~ FlowerLady
Beautiful, but cold and without a soul ... I have seen that many times on garden tours. Makes me feel sorry for the homeowners.
I can see the exchange between you and the kayak guide so clearly!
Your best post for me in some time, thank you.
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