Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Front Porch Questions

Every element sings together on this front porch.






Field gathered furniture swathed in the came color.


Porch questions.  Is the porch so wonderful I must go inside and see the home?  Is the porch so wonderful I must see the garden?
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Garden & Be Well,   XO Tara
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Pics taken last weekend, same garden as previous post.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Front Porch

Subtle, original.


 A desk on the front porch.




I must know you from the exterior of your home, before ever knocking on the door.
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Garden & Be Well,     XO Tara
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Pics from same home/garden as yesterday's post.

Monday, April 8, 2013

What To Put On Your House

Gertrude Jekyll wrote, "The first thing I consider when designing a garden is what to put on the house."




At no point during my college education did any instructor or book make this point.  Nor any symposium or lecture attended during 3 decades of seeking continuing education.


Outside of Athens, GA, this home is less than 15 years old.
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Garden & Be Well, XO Tara
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Pics taken last Saturday.  I use a lot of woody espalier plants on a home.  No trellis or wire needed.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Glass Awning

Never in USA, but there must be some, only in Europe

have I seen glass awnings over a door.
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Garden & Be Well,             XO Tara
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Pic Slim Paley.  The glass awning I saw, in France, is a slide somewhere in the bowels of my archives.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Stupid Does Have a Price

Beware the landscape contractor, with one of my Garden Designs, "No, can't be done."


Stupid does have a price tag.
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Fieldstone retaining wall, above, in dirt.  No concrete + mortar.  Italy has quite a few olive orchards, older than Christ, still holding proud their fieldstone in dirt terracing.
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Stupid-does-have-a-price-tag, said fieldstone in dirt did not work, he wanted to make more money with concrete, mortar, chipped stone.  I don't use him anymore.  My jobs have grossed millions since then.  Do the math.
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When I mention my Team it's from the heart & head.  They make my designs better.  Why did I fall for SDHAPT?  I met the author of Never Be Lied to Again, when I was the garden expert on NBC-TV morning show.  Zero awareness of those lying to me at that time.
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Garden & Be Well,    XO Tara
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Pic Old Long Island.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

How to Teach Children Gardening

 Children need a lawn to play?  Children need a place for imagination to play.


Schools across USA plant vegetable plots for children to learn 'gardening'.
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That's not gardening, it's agriculture.
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Who teaches children ornamental horticulture increases agriculture yields almost double?
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Do you know how ornamental horticulture increases agricultural yields?
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Garden & Be Well,    XO Tara
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Pic from Castles, Crowns & Cottages.  Lucky me, I've never stopped going into brambly gardens to play.  Luckier, I've had girlfriends to come with me.  Only once attracting a police chopper !  No, not caught.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Chairs after Lunch

 After the party, or lunch, chairs are pure narrative.


Warmth, connection.


Conversation.
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Grace.
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Garden & Be Well,     XO Tara
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Pics taken last month after lunch in the Conservatory.  Torte de Shelle top pic.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Garden Growth

More than this fortunate, ca. 1800, below.


I've not had the money to live without a day job.  Gardening from college, ca. 1980, is my 1st career choice.


Yesterday, above, in Griffin, GA, getting blackberries & figs for a client.  Had zero hint it was completely out of the Piedmont and in the Coastal Plain.


Most of their bare root fruit, above/below, was shipped in from TX & FL.  Healed in the sand, dug & boxed when ordered.


This, above, has been done for centuries.


Too many years since I've propagated cuttings in this exact type of greenhouse.
Millions in my time.


I stood at the frame, above, leaned in and was still a long time.  Smelling.  Absorbing the work, this time done by other hands.  Not mine.  
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Yes, I still want to do it all.
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Garden & Be Well,   XO Tara
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pics taken yesterday.  Top pic Garden History Girl

Monday, April 1, 2013

Listen to the Genius of the Place


Emergency phone call last month.  Client wavering on placement of stone steps & fire ring.


Many choices in Garden Design do not have a single answer.


This choice did.


Asymmetrical French architecture demanded the center of the new stone terrace & steps be on center with the gable peak/palladian window.
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Love it when we can pull a string & hammer the stake.  Done.
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Architecture & Garden are one.  Listen to the genius of the place.
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Garden & Be Well,            XO Tara
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Pics taken 2 weeks ago on the job.  Top pic, general contractor & stone mason.  Both make everything I do better.
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Georgia red clay.  Freshly disturbed.  Love that smell.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Driveway Design

A driveway.


Sound of gravel.
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Tapestry hedge.
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Oh my this is good.
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Garden & Be Well, XO Tara
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Pic Whimble.

Friday, March 29, 2013

The Divide Between Interior & Garden Design

You're looking at the divide between interior design & garden design, below.


Hydrangea, above, beginning to leaf.


From her first week cracked out, above, she's loved to be held & have the bottoms of her feet rubbed.


Don't let her divert you, though she is a beautiful girl.  Can you tell me what the 'great divide' is between interior & landscape design?


Laura, above, feeling a bit left out, no pun intended, when I was shooting pics in the garden yesterday.
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Don't let Laura divert you either.  What is this gulf between interior & garden design?
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Top pic, exposes the gulf beautifully.  Makes me proud.  Pleased with the many layers of complexity put into its simplicity.
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This 'difference' is critical.  Especially for interior decorators to know.  Yet, many garden designers do not know it either.
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Gardens must be designed for winter.  
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Garden & Be Well,      XO Tara
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A garden designed for winter will be beautiful all year.  Gardens designed for spring will be gorgeous in spring.  You are in luck, The Garden In Winter, by Rosemary Verey is affordable again.  They must have had a reissue.
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Will totally skip: the finial, gate, color, gravel, axis, slope contained with stone, contrasting textures, form, flow, repetition, eyes to the sky, focal point, subsidiary focal point, fake geometry, and how many neighbors houses you would see without this bit of garden.  Designing for winter, yes, that's what you must know first.
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How to test your garden in winter.  Are pics of it worthy of a magazine cover?  Book cover?

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Color on the Ceiling

"Paint the ceiling the same color as the walls", she said.  


Susanne Hudson has come onto my team many times thru the years, I trust her.  Painting the ceiling was out of my comfort zone.  Of course there was no other reply than, "Ok". 
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Benjamin Moore-HC Rockport Gray.
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Morning winter sun, above, reads blue.  As summer comes and the trees leaf , the ceiling is white in the mornings and greenish in the afternoon.  
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Walls & ceiling are the same color, above.  
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The ceiling never looks the same color as the walls.  
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Garden & Be Well, XO Tara
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Pic yesterday, had to verify a package delivery.  Exciting times, this is the 'before' pic.  Gave Susanne a heads-up last weekend about ordering a sofa for this room & slipcovering a pair of chairs.  You know I especially love how my garden colors the ceilings.
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Marc Chagall, "Color is all. When color is right, form is right. Color is everything, color is vibration like music; everything is vibration."

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Lisa Porter Collection: Vanishing Threshold


Texture, scale, flow, color, invitation, narrative, poverty cycle, light, fragrance, repetition, simplicity, intellect, ceiling, walls, floors & more.


It's all part of vanishing threshold.
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Garden & Be Well,          XO Tara
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Pic via Lisa Porter Collection.  Take the link, lots of pics, about this home by the beach.  Original article from Traditional Home July 2001.  Photos by Jon Jensen for Traditional Home
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Puppet Barbuda adores this fireplace.  Not at all reminiscent of the stone fireplaces in every flower show across USA redolent of the monolith floating amongst the galaxies at the end of 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

What is the narrative of your garden?

Cute kills.


Whimsey is for the intellect.
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Pure narrative.  Got any in your garden?  These cats, this narrative, melts me.
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Garden & Be Well,  XO Tara
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Pic Deborah Silver, Dirt Simple.  She designs & owns a nursery.  Take the link, enjoy her shop.  Are there even 10 such shops in USA?
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This pair of cats are also, subsidiary focal points.  Name it to claim it.  I've had to name a lot of things in this garden design world.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Work, Dinner, Cooking


Working late at a jobsite, below, last Friday night.  


Of course it meant dinner, mussels in a light white wine creme sauce, below, at Shorty's.


I eat here more nites each week than home.  Enough.  Tamar Adler has been compared to MFK Fisher.  Earlier this month a client had her book, An Everlasting Meal.  She's genius.  Ordered my copy yesterday.
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Garden & Be Well, XO Tara
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Below, from Tamar Adler's site:

BECOMING: MFK FISHER DINNER AT BUBBY’S



I always avoid asking children what they dream of doing or becoming. I never liked it as a child. I have no way of knowing whether children I meet do or don’t, but I am as committed as I remember to be to keeping myself from inflicting the pains on children that grownups did unto me, and asking children about their “dreams” is one of these.

I have no memory of what I used to answer the smelly grownups who asked me that, or the other bits of colloquial laziness adults so often substitute for engaged questions when they are talking to small people. This isn’t because I have a bad memory—I remember the precise moss green of the carpet in my first bedroom and the way pine needles smelled at different times on rainy days on one ten foot part of a path at our camp in Maine—but because the pressures such violent questioning exerted were so overwhelming that dreams that were preparing to bud must have snapped themselves closed defensively at the first sign of approaching interrogation.

My neural pathways to certain sorts of plans—a house with turrets, a fishing dog, and three tan princes with big smiles and chestnut colored hair with whom to play hopscotch on Thursday mornings, or marrying my high school boyfriend, or owning an old, low, shiny, topless car—aren’t well developed. This strange abortion of a kind of thinking about the future has left me occasionally, mildly, wondering whether I’m missing out, because it seems like it would be wonderful to fulfill my dreams, maybe.

But it has also created a situation I didn’t invent and don’t think I would have had the spiritual wisdom to have, but have found, as I’ve aged, to be the most genuinely spirit-and life-affirming one available to my human consciousness. It is that little that I do has anything to measure up to. For example, I never quite let myself “want” to be a writer, again in response to those aggressive grown-up fumes of expectation. The hardened places from which that dream would have bud need assiduous internal scrubbing all the time, but finally letting myself become one and then becoming one, and still becoming one is a welcome and cherished surprise because I never let myself expect it or want it.

The same has been true of other dream-like things I’ve done, like run a restaurant kitchen and write my first book review for the New York Times, or maybe it was simply that those arrived late and swiftly, when I was a grown up and the sort of grown up that dealt with wanting things by doing what I could to get them.

This all seems like a roundabout way to talk about having thrown a big dinner party at Bubby’s to launch my paperback and celebrate MFK Fisher, but that is because I think that it all happened in about this roundabout a way, and that the story of how I feel about it, and why we chose to make the dinner we did is pretty much the story above, of how one decides what one really deeply wants and wants to do, and how one is made happy.

I did not know, until I was peeking around the partition at the back of the Bubby’s dining room where waiters collect themselves and put glasses on trays to carry out to the diners and cut bread, at a room full of people, that I was perhaps serving a meal I’d wanted to serve my whole life, since the very first time I thought of being able to serve people food at all.

By the same account, or an earlier account of the same story, when the day before the dinner I had to finalize the font on the menu with the woman who had patiently endured each of my several weeks of vetoes—I had decided that one menu font was too flowery, and another too austere. A third was too casual, a fourth far too formal. I felt there was also too much space between words, too little space between lines, a blue too dark, an ochre that seemed to “pierce” awkwardly—I realized that there was a story that had to be told about why I’d chosen the menu I had, and to make each thing as I planned to. So I typed it out, quickly, unthinkingly, not having been conscious of there having been an articulable design to my decisions. And found myself, in the middle of the second paragraph, with peppery tears running down each cheek, deeply, soulfully happy, in the absolute middle of living what would, if I had had the emotional terminology or emotional hardiness, been a lifelong dream. (The essay itself is at the end of all this, in case you want to know what I was crying over.)

It was the same sort of thing when I pressed myself to that partition at the back of Bubby’s and looked out at a dining room. It was a little golden lit and people looked both settled and expectant. They were eating the bread I’d chosen, and at the moment I looked out and the moment I am remembering, a lot of them were dipping it into empty oyster shells and poking it tentatively at the little nests of seaweed we’d scattered under each shell. They were drinking a wine I’d chosen to go with the oysters, and sitting next to other people I’d liked and invited. And looking around the room more, getting deeply nervous and beginning to feel truly off kilter, I saw so many people I liked I couldn’t quite imagine how I’d met so many, or how they’d ended up in the same room at the same time for dinner, or how I’d possibly ended up lucky enough to have gotten to choose what to serve them, at what time of day, and year, in a room lit how, on a table laid in what manner. Or that I had somehow ended up, in life, able to decide what to feed so many people I liked. That I had developed a certainty inside me about anything at all suddenly seemed utterly spectacular: that I knew not only that I liked people, but which people, and not only that I wanted to feed them, but on what, and with what done to it, and that there was so much incredible specificity to what I wanted and loved and didn’t seemed almost impossible. Particularly because it all seemed so unconscious, or if conscious, so unplanned.

It was nervousness, not contentment I felt most strongly in that moment. It was harsh, nearly overwhelming nervousness. It is a lot of distilled emotion to realize that one does have a real dream and then that for better or worse, one has done what one has to in order to try to fulfill it, and to realize it all sitting at a computer screen and then hiding behind a drywall partition at the back of a dining room.

It was nervousness because of my sense of already being far down the river, and because by cooking an homage to my literary hero, MFK Fisher, I heard myself saying out loud: This person’s work has shaped me. I am showing what I have learned. This is what I’m made of. This is what I want.

I don’t know if that would be as terrifying to anyone as it was to me. I do know there are a few other times I’ve felt similar things: the day I walked down the field at Full Moon Farms and knelt down and ate a bite of the strange weed called vetch and agreed to stay on as chef of Farm 255, the night I scrubbed my station at Chez Panisse for the last time, keeping the copper sauté pan I’d been given as a going away present in sight on my right. During the first I thought: oh my god, I’ve always wanted to be a chef, and somehow I am one, and during the second I thought, I used to cook at Chez Panisse. Oddly, my haphazard emotions on that sweet, long night at the end of June at Bubby’s, weren’t specific. They were more like: that was too real and good to have dreamt. That was a very good thing we just did.


“What’s past is prologue…”
-The Tempest, W. Shakespeare

Everything on this menu comes from somewhere in MFK.

The chocolate and bread for eating during the discussion is like something she describes in an essay called The Pale Yellow Glove as “one souvenir of eating, that I can keep with impunity throughout all seasonal changes.” She ate it while feeling lonesome and foreign on a hill near Les Laumes-Alésia.

The shrimp pâté and salad of wild greens, poulet, and petits pois are from How to Cook a Wolf.

The first, third, fourth are impossibly decadent for a book on wartime eating. That is why I chose them, instead of the sensible “war cake” or “sludge” usually trotted out as that book’s stars. MFK Fisher would, I think, have been perturbed to know that in a book that abounds with ideas and recipes that are plain good, in war- or peace-time, only the ones tinted with the exotics of suffering are remembered. Two are from How to Practice True Economy, a chapter on shutting one’s eyes and ears to the horrors of war to “enjoy a short respite from reality…doubly blessed, to posses in this troubled life both the capacity and the wherewithal to forget it for a time.” Surely, we are triply, to not need the respite as badly today. Les petit pois are from How to Be Content with a Vegetable Love, which she was, and so am I.

The salad is from a story about a woman who lived in a tiny house on a cliff. At her table, “There was always the exciting, mysterious perfume of bruised herbs, plucked fresh and cool from the tangle of weeds around the shack. Sue put them into a salad.” As have we, other than the wild goose-tongue, from which we’ve made little beds for oysters torn from theirs.

In Consider the Oyster, we learn: “Men have enjoyed eating oysters since they were not much more than monkeys, according to the kitchen middens they have left behind them.” Thank god, since our ancestors did things that are unimaginable to us and we do things our descendents will disbelieve. We have all been born, live till death, and eat oysters, though; so alike we are. Roast oysters with pepper-sauce and butter, in particular, have been to our taste at least since 1870, when this recipe was written.

Diplomate au Krisch A la maniere de PAPAZI will always exist more metaphysically than physically. Thankfully, MFK provides fair assurance of transmutation in the last line of her recipe for the frozen pudding: “And be lifted, willy-nilly, to heavenly levels, for never was there a dessert more delicate, more fragrant, more sophisticated and naïve.”

So those are the reasons for this menu. It is also full of tastes and ways of cooking I like, and don’t often taste or do. It is not meant to be quirky and full of artifacts. I don’t know if any of it is like it would have been if MFK had cooked it. The menu was written and tables set in a spirit she’d like, at least, even if she couldn’t stomach a bite of dinner.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Camellias Have a Song

  Song of the camellias.



 A lot of driving is done getting to appointments.


The song of the camellias is over 10 minutes long.


When it finishes I hit the repeat button.
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For weeks now.
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Garden & Be Well,      XO Tara
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Pics of camellias at Massee Lane Garden in Fort Valley, GA, taken last weekend.
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All the Mornings of the World, music of the Camellia.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Japanese

Invitation.  




 "...eternals as applicable in the smallest of spaces as in the vast acres of a country house garden." Sir Roy Strong.  Above, vast as a mountain range.


Water Mirror, miroir d'eau, above.




Water breaks the footprint of the Tea House, above.  Small touch, huge impact.


Looking outward, above, from the bamboo window seen coming in the entry, top pic.


Framing the view, above, for centuries this has been done.  Is a brick ca. 1960 ranch less worthy?


Hidden, then meandering, above, then spilling into the pond, below.


Why, above, do we like walking on water?

 At the minimum, 2 stones.  Male & female.  Earth & sky.  Ying & yang.  Even the shadows are benevolent.


Leaving the Japanese garden from its other side, above, into a pecan orchard.
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Garden & Be Well,   XO Tara
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Pics taken Massee Lane Garden last weekend.