Spring Flowers

I love spring. Winter is relatively austere time in the garden so I relish the bounty of spring all the more. Over the years I have tried growing most flowers that will provide color in March, April and May. Below are some of my favorites.

First to bloom are the bulb flowers that begin the spring show in March. I have thousands of snowdrops (Galanathus elwesii), squill (Scilla siberica), glory of the snow (Chionodoxa luciliae). These are followed in April by crocus, daffodils and early tulips. I cut even the smallest blossoms to bring inside and place on the kitchen counter in a vase. Almost all the bulb plants are good cut flowers. I plant bulb plants every fall, and recommend top-dressing them with organic fertilizer after they finish blooming each spring. 

Then come the early perennials, starting in April and continuing on into May. One of the first, and easiest to grow, is called lungwort. The unattractive name comes from the leaves, which some unfortunate person decided looked like lungs – complete with spots on most varieties. I prefer to call them by their Latin genus, Pulmonaria, which is more melodious.

Pulmonaria will grow in sun or shade, wet or dry. They spread by root, creating large low-growing colonies. I once had a gardening client who considered them invasive, though I do not. If they overstep their welcome, I find they pull fairly easily with my favorite weeding tool, the CobraHead weeder, which gets under them easily. The small flowers come in shades of blue, pink, peach and white. They don’t do well in a vase, so I don’t pick them.

Hellebore

Hellebore

Another spring favorite of mine is the hellebore, sometimes called the Lenten Rose. Hellebores are among the earliest to send up shoots of flowers and hold those flowers for several weeks. Each flower stalk stands 12 to 15 inches tall and supports new leaves and bell-shaped flowers that are rose to purple in color, or sometimes green and white. Like the Pulmonaria, they do not last well in a vase.

Primroses bloom early, and come in a wide range of species and colors. I have at least 6 different species in bloom now. One of my favorites has no common name, only going by its scientific name, Primula kisoana. Because its species name starts with “kis”, you can call it the kissing primrose – even if no one else does (except me). It has bright magenta-colored flowers that stand just a few inches above the light-green leaves. It is not very well known at nurseries; I found mine at Cider Hill Gardens in Windsor, VT (www.ciderhillgardens.com).

Primula Kisoan

Primula Kisoan

An endearing quality of Primula kisoana is that it spreads by root – but never runs over another plant to establish new territory. Primroses, in general, are form clumps but spread by seed. Some, like the candelabra primrose (Primula japonica) spread very vigorously by seed if the conditions are right for it. That one stands up over two-feet tall, but blooms much later, usually in June. But P. kisoana spreads fast if the soil conditions are right. One plant can grow to cover 1 to 2 square feet in a season. They like rich, dark soil with a slightly acidic pH.

Most primroses grow well in light shade or morning sunshine and prefer moist soil. Primula kisoana, on the other hand, will grow in dry soil, too. I have observed that one of the best places to grow any primrose is under an old apple tree. The soil and light there generally is perfect for primroses.

Although it is contrary to the law to dig up wildflowers and transplant them to your property, many good garden centers are now propagating and selling them. In nature, most spring wildflowers grow in the dappled shade of a hardwood forest. They send up flowers and leaves before the trees have leafed out, and disappear soon after the forest becomes shady. Among my favorites are the trilliums, bloodroot, and hepaticas – though there are dozens of other species.

Bloodroot are so named for the red juice that oozes from the roots if cut. I’ve read that Indians used it for dye. The leaves come up wrapped like a cigar around the flower stalk. Each simple white flower stands 6 inches tall. The blossoms open on warm, sunny days and close up at night or on chilly days. They spread by root to form nice clumps. I also have some double bloodroot – the flowers resemble small white double peonies. The flowers are probably sterile, as they keep on blooming much longer than the singles. Most flowers stop blooming once fertilized, having done their work.

Common Red Trillium

Common Red Trillium

White Trillium

White Trillium

I have three species of trillium: the ordinary maroon one (Trillium erectum), the white one (Trillium grandiflorum) and the yellow one (Trillium luteum). All will grow in light shade or part sun and prefer rich, dark soil. The New England Wildflower Society (www.newfs.org) sells all three – and many other fine wildflowers at their headquarters, The Garden in the Woods in Framingham, MA.   I bought my yellow trillium from them. In addition to its flower, it has handsome mottled leaves.

So visit your local garden center soon to see what early spring bloomers they offer, and try something new. You’ll be glad you did.

Henry Homeyer is a gardening consultant and the author of 4 gardening books. His Web site is www.Gardening-Guy.com.

Organic Gardening Reviewed by the Cobrahead Blog

By Noel Valdes

Published: Febuary 15, 2012 – The Cobrahead Blog

Organic Gardening

Organic Gardening

 We knew little of what is referred to as “Lawn & Garden” in the worldwide marketplace before we started CobraHead.  But we soon learned that if you can make garden writers familiar and happy with your products, there is a chance they might mention them when they write, and possibly the Lawn & Garden industry might notice, too.  So we’ve promoted CobraHead products earnestly to garden writers and it’s been a very smart move.

Henry Homeyer was an early CobraHead convert and he’s been a long time champion for our tools.  Henry is a professional garden writer, Master Gardener, gardening magazine editor, radio broadcaster, and gardening teacher who lives and gardens in New Hampshire.  He writes a weekly gardening column for a long list of newspapers in New England, and he has an avid following.

Henry recently published another book and it’s one I can recommend, highly.  The book is a collection of gardening articles Henry has written.  They’ve been edited and updated, and formatted into a month-by-month discussion of what gardeners should and could be doing throughout the gardening year.

The title, Organic Gardening NOT JUST in the Northeast, is important.  In Wisconsin we have real winters as do about two-thirds of the geographical US.  So what Henry writes about is good for most everywhere except the deep South and west of the Rockies, and it certainly applies to most of Canada, too.  Just remember that seed starting and planting dates can vary widely, even within your own state or province.

Henry approaches growing and caring for both ornamental plants and food plants with totally organic methods.  It’s one of the things that I find so useful about the book.  I’ve met a lot of professional and amateur gardeners who seem to think organic is for the veggies, but it’s okay to use chemical pesticides and herbicides on the flowers, lawn, and trees.  My thinking is it’s all the same garden, why do I want to poison any of it.  I’m glad to find a really good gardener who thinks the same way.

A beginning gardener will find much useful information in this book.  It’s easy to read and understand.  While it is a well indexed and useful reference, it’s also a good read and enjoyable just to go through it, front-to-back.  Henry’s an excellent story teller and the book can almost be read as a collection of short stories.  The solid advice dispensed is not just for new gardeners, however.  I found a recipe for a soil mix to use in soil blocks, which I never had good success with before, that will get me to try them again.  I’m sure even professional gardeners can find lot of good information here.

Henry starts the book with March, so the last chapter is February, which is where we are now.  Here are a couple interesting comments Henry has about Groundhog Day and what is the last “full” month of winter:  “I think we should take time out to recognize that February 2nd is halfway though winter.  The worst is over.  That’s worthy of celebration”.  And, “It’s still real winter, and too early for starting seeds indoors, but in a couple weeks we can start onions and leeks.  Then, by the first week of March, I’ll plant peppers and artichokes.  And before you know it, spring will be upon us, with snowdrops and crocuses.  I can barely wait.”  Henry’s book is loaded with optimism and, of course, gardening is a most optimistic endeavor.

I know I approach this with a bias, but my favorite part of the book is really the cover.  It’s a woodcut of Henry, squatted over his onions and working them with a CobraHead Weeder and Cultivator.  Woo Hoo!!  Thank you, Henry!

Organic Gardening in the Northeast

Organic Gardening

List Price: 17.50
Sale Price: 14.86
Savings of 15%

Organic Gardening (not just) in the North-East is organized around the calendar year, starting in March and continuing through the year with timely advice. Henry Homeyer’s book is packed with information you won’t find elsewhere: how to sharpen your pruners, use a screw driver to test for compaction in the lawn, build a welcoming cedar arbor as an entrance to the garden, grow ladyslipper orchids or Himalayan blue poppies, prune apple trees, grow a giant pumpkin, even how to start a date palm from a grocery store date and build a small stone igloo to delight grandchildren. Eccentric, eclectic, and entertaining, whether you are a beginner or a veteran, this book has something and more for you.

The Green Garden Reviewed by Mass Hort

 

The Green Garden

The Green Garden

The Green Garden : A New England Guide to Planning, Planting, and Maintaining the Eco-Friendly Habitat,

Ellen Sousa (Bunker Hill Publishing, 2011)

Reviewed by Maureen Horn, Mass Hort Librarian

What makes a ‘green’ garden? Aren’t all gardens ‘green’ by definition? Ellen Sousa has some strongly held and eloquently stated views that an ‘eco-friendly’ and ‘beneficial’ habitat is essential to our long-term environmental well being. She has written a book that is specific to New England that tells how to create such a garden.

Ms. Sousa sets a high but reasonable threshold for her gardens; namely, that they must be sustainable for enjoyment by future generations. They should be beneficial in that they attract the animals and insects that were indigenous to our area before European settlement. Her goal is to gradually reverse the missteps made over a period of centuries. She acknowledges that doing so takes hard work, but that it can be done in small, manageable steps.

The steps are easy at the beginning, such as introducing durable native plants like violets and goldenrod. Surprisingly, Ms. Sousa is not opposed to growing non-native species provided they aren’t potentially invasive. Japanese crabapples, for example, don’t push their neighbors out of the way. Moreover, they attract butterflies and hummingbirds. Above all, though, she wants us to enjoy our gardens. To help us appreciate them, Ms. Sousa has filled her book with gorgeous photographs paired with the words of noted writers.

Her steps to creating a garden start with having a vision of the final result. That, in turn, takes careful preparation and she believes a great way of planning a habitat landscape is to take a tour of the neighborhood. The Green Garden points out what to look for during the tour in order to identify what plants and animals are already thriving there.

Some books on eco-gardening can become shrill when discussing what is ‘allowed’ and what is not. Many of those books also adopt a ‘this way or not at all’ attitude. Ms. Sousa doesn’t fall into this category. Instead of idealizing the potential habitat gardener, she recognizes that many of us may have misgivings about inviting what we call pests into our sanctuaries.

For example, knowing that insects are not usually the favorite life forms of many people, she motivates us to attract them by giving examples of how they are necessary to most birds. She knows that not all wildlife is welcome in our garden and gives advice on how ways to discourage or distract certain animals. Never forgetting that attracting wildlife is the main goal of the habitat gardener, though, she mandates what is needed to attract moving creatures in a chapter called, “Habitat Essentials”.

The book is generous with lists of plants for every kind of soil and amount of sunlight. Far from focusing on just the suburban gardener, Ms. Sousa spreads her advice all around New England, helping the reader to manage forests and farms, to landscape near the shoreline and near freshwater ponds, streams and other wetlands, and to plant in small spaces, for example, on rooftops.

The author knows that hope and hard work are important, but that knowledge is more important. We look forward to hearing Ellen Sousa during a lecture in mid-spring. Reading the book ahead of time should act as a catalyst to enlightened questions.

The Green Garden

The Green Garden

List Price: 34.95
Sale Price: 29.95
Savings of 15%

Whether you have just purchased a new property with a garden to tend, or have made a rash personal decision to go ‘Green’ or are just looking at the same old backyard that needs attention, this book is definitely for you! Read More…

Ellen Sousa

Ellen Sousa is a Massachusetts-based garden coach and teacher whose enthusiasm for creating backyard habitat sanctuaries has made her a popular speaker and natural-style garden tour guide across New England. She lives in Spencer, MA with her husband, Robert, along with 2 dogs, on a small farm landscaped as a natural habitat for farm animals, wild birds and pollinators. She writes about habitat gardening in New England at blog.THBFarm.com and is a team member at BeautifulWildlifeGarden.com and NativePlantWildlifeGarden.com

BIBLIOGRAPHY

The Green Garden

The Green Garden

List Price: 34.95
Sale Price: 29.95
Savings of 15%

Whether you have just purchased a new property with a garden to tend, or have made a rash personal decision to go ‘Green’ or are just looking at the same old backyard that needs attention, this book is definitely for you! Read More…

The Green Garden: The New England Guide to Planning, Planting and Maintaining an Eco-Friendly Habitat Garden

 

The Green Garden

The Green Garden


List Price: 34.95
Sale Price: 29.95
Savings of 15%

DESCRIPTION

Whether you have just purchased a new property with a garden to tend, or have made a rash personal decision to go ‘Green’ or are just looking at the same old backyard that needs attention, this book is definitely for you!

Designed and written in a practical no nonsense comprehensive style The Green Garden is an inspirational guidebook. If you are looking for low-cost, beautiful and earth-friendly ways to “green” those landscapes and outdoor spaces and supply an adequate habitat for a whole variety of declining species, including birds, native pollinators, honey bees, amphibians and turtles, this book will be invaluable.

It includes an extensive Plant Guide, detailing the best wildlife-friendly plants suitable for the varied conditions and microclimates found across New England, along with cultivation hints and tips, and the species attracted by each plant.

Broken down into sections for Annuals, Vegetables and Herbs, Bulbs and Perennials, Shrubs, Vines, and Medium to Large “Mast” Trees, The Green Garden includes an introduction and photos from renowned native plant author and propagator William Cullina, formerly from the New England Wild Flower Society, now Curator at Coastal Maine Botanic Garden.

REVIEW

Maureen Horn, Massachusetts Horticultural Society, What makes a ‘green’ garden? Aren’t all gardens ‘green’ by definition? Ellen Sousa has some strongly held and eloquently stated views that an ‘eco-friendly’ and ‘beneficial’ habitat is essential to our long-term environmental well being. She has written a book that is specific to New England that tells how to create such a garden.  click here for full review

Debbie, Garden of Possibilities, The days of simply viewing our gardens as pretty accessories that adorn our homes are waning. Instead, smart gardeners want a green garden — one that supports local wildlife, is a haven for birds, butterflies and bees and is beautiful. click here for full review

Marilyn K. Alaimo, Chicago Botanic Garden “When perusing these pages, readers can’t help but recall the words of Midwest landscape architect/gardeners Ossian Cole Simonds (1855–1931) and Jens Jensen (1860–1951) who introduced and advocated the use of native plants in the landscape. Ellen Sousa has furthered their thoughts in this manual on the importance of creating and maintaining grounds that support nature.” click here for full review

PRODUCT DETAILS

Hardcover: 224 pages, 225 color  photos
ISBN-10:
ISBN-13: 978-1-59373-091-8
Language: English
Dimensions:
Weight:

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ellen Sousa is a Massachusetts-based garden coach and teacher whose enthusiasm for creating backyard habitat sanctuaries has made her a popular speaker and natural-style garden tour guide across New England. She lives in Spencer, MA

North Country Book News

Organic Gardening (not just) in The Northeast
A Hands-On Month-by-Month Guide
by Henry Homeyer (Bunker Hill Publishing, Piermont, N.H.)
From the Vermont Country Sampler

With local strawberries about to come on the market many gardeners might be wishing they had planted their own, but when and what kind? Look no further than this well-written and informative but often amusing book that makes gardening a year-round adventure whether your ‘green-thumb’ is best suited for vegetables, flowers, shrubs, or trees. For strawberries, Homeyer advises the day-neutral or ever bearing variety that can be harvested all summer long as well as a fall crop, too. “All strawberries hate weeds, so mulch like crazy,” he advises. The author started gardening as a toddler more than 60 years ago, but only started writing about the “gardening magic” 10 years ago. Some 500 articles were written since then; and as he says, his favorites and those of his readers were weeded out for this book.

As for weeds in your garden, he recommends pulling a few every day. “Make it a habit like brushing your teeth.” As a journalist, Homeyer has the knack for finding people with good gardening stories to tell.

An example was finding Joey Klein of Plainfield, VT at the Tunbridge World’s Fair where he won a blue ribbon for his 18-inch long organically raised carrots. Joey attributed his success with carrots to weed control, proper watering, and raising them in soil built up with organic matter from cover crops (oats, peas, barley) that are mowed and ploughed into the soil.

For growing giant pumpkins, the author checks out a 225-pound prize winner grown by Karen and Steve Cutter of Cornish, NH, who share their secrets on how to produce such a wonder, grown from Dills Atlantic Giant seeds. A remarkable story is also told about Bill Shepard of Thetford, VT, who decided that over the course of his life he would create an arboretum, which would not only please him but would nurture wildlife.

Bill today has 30 species of trees growing on half an acre of land surrounding his house. The arboretum cost very little as family and friends gave him seedlings that were generally 12–24 inches tall. The first tree he planted was a thornless honey locust. More unusual trees include beaked filbert, mountain maple, and hackberry, as well as shrubs including witchhazel, elderberry, pagoda and red osier dogwood, blueberries and hobblebush.

Chapter headings invite the reader to learn still more. Some examples: Compost Tea; Weeding 101; Watering 101; Standing Stones in The Garden; Saving Seeds; Growing Garlic; Hoes and Wheelbarrows; and Growing Bananas and Other Unusual Plants from Seed. This is an exceptional book as it not only includes excellent technical advice, but captures the joy and fun of the growing season, and the people who make it happen.

Organic Gardening

Organic Gardening


List Price: 17.50

Sale Price: 14.86
Savings of 15%


Organic Gardening (not just) in The Northeast by Henry Homeyer is available at bookstores for $17.50 or can be ordered from Bunker Hill Publishing, 285 River Rd., Piermont, NH 03770. (603) 272-9221. www.bunkerhillpublishing.com.

 

Organic Gardening (Not Just) in the Northeast

Organic Gardening

Organic Gardening

Available Now

List Price: 17.50

Sale Price: 14.86
Savings of 15%

DESCRIPTION

Organic Gardening (Not Just) in the Northeast is organized around the calendar year, starting in March and continuing through the year with timely advice. Henry Homeyer’s book is packed with information you won’t find elsewhere: how to sharpen your pruners, use a screw driver to test for compaction in the lawn, build a welcoming cedar arbor as an entrance to the garden, grow ladyslipper orchids or Himalayan blue poppies, prune apple trees, grow a giant pumpkin, even how to start a date palm from a grocery store date and build a small stone igloo to delight grandchildren. Eccentric, eclectic, and entertaining, whether you are a beginner or a veteran, this book has something and more for you.

ENDORSEMENTS

Michael Dirr, author of Dirr’s Hardy Trees and Shrubs – The book represents a life well lived, kindness to the earth by treading softly, and a philosophy of sharing its bounty without reservation. This is a classic by which future books on the subject will be measured.

Paul J. Tukey, author of The Organic Lawn Care Manual – Henry Homeyer’s writing and advice have become an indispensable fabric of the Northeast landscape, as comfortable as your crusted leather boots and gloves, and as reliable as your grandfather’s spade with the old ash handle. This book won’t stay on the shelf; it will reside in the potting shed or on the garden bench. The advice, like the gloves, will be well worn, but it will never wear out.

Edward C. Smith, author of The Vegetable Gardener’s Bible Organic Gardening (not just) in the Northeast is a delightful book. It’s full of good, solid gardening advice that challenges traditional thinking, and there’s also whimsy. The essays are like potato chips—you can’t read just one at a sitting. If you like to garden, you’ll like this book. If you love to garden, you’ll love it.

Sydney Eddison, author of,best-selling gardening books, including Gardening for a Lifetime – Homeyer has written an honest, enthusiastic, hands-onorganic gardener’s delight of a book. The tone is friendly and straightforward, and his stories involve real-life gardeners. He introduces readers to gardening friends as diverse as Tasha Tudor and Ray Magliozzi, and to members of his own family.

REVIEW

Noel Valdes, the Cobrahead Blog - We knew little of what is referred to as “Lawn & Garden” in the worldwide marketplace before we started CobraHead.  But we soon learned that if you can make garden writers familiar and happy with your products, there is a chance they might mention them when they write, and possibly the Lawn & Garden industry might notice, too.  So we’ve promoted CobraHead products earnestly to garden writers and it’s been a very smart move. click here for full review

Vermont Country Sampler – “All strawberries hate weeds, so mulch like crazy,” he advises. The author started gardening as a toddler more than 60 years ago, but only started writing about the “gardening magic” 10 years ago. Some 500 articles were written since then; and as he says, his favorites and those of his readers were weeded out for this book. click here for full review

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION

Paperback: 264 pages 15 b&w illustrations
ISBN-10: 159373090X
ISBN-13: 9781593730901
Language: English
Dimensions: 6 x 9

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Henry Homeyer

Henry Homeyer

Henry Homeyer is a UNH Master Gardener, and the author of three other gardening books who has been writing a weekly gardening column for newspapers in the Northeast for over ten years. He was the New Hampshire/Vermont associate editor for People, Places and Plants magazine for nearly as long. He broadcasts on VPR and teaches a course in Sustainable Gardening at Granite State College.

No shows booked at the moment.

 

 

The Inward Garden

The Inward Garden

The Inward Garden

List Price: $35.00
Sale Price: $29.75
Savings of 15 %


DESCRIPTION

The Inward Garden was first published in 1995, and with it Julie Moir Messervy introduced a movement in landscape design that inspired individuals to embark upon a voyage of discovery of the natural world outside and the contemplative spirit within. Unlike other authors who focus almost entirely on practical design elements of gardening, Messervy beckons you to identify the atmosphere and mood of a very personal garden you can create. She tells readers to think back to those places in memory that have given them the greatest joy and ease, either as children or as adults, and to use those memories in creating a retreat or garden of the mind in one’s own backyard. Messervy asks readers to “feel” the space around them and to use their hearts and minds to figure out how to turn this imagined space into a reality. Culling from archetypes and spiritual insights, guided by the practical methods of hands-in-the-dirt gardening, the result is a happy blend of myth and art with logic and organization.

Evocative, poetic, and beautifully written, The Inward Garden gives the reader a process for designing a dream garden. Based on garden archetypes the sea, the cave, the harbor, the promontory, the island, the mountain, and the sky ó the book provides a structure for imagining the garden of one’s desires and a practical process for designing this personal garden. Messervy describes in detail each of these archetypal gardens, and each archetype, along with subsequent designs, is magnificently illustrated with lush garden photographs by acclaimed National Geographic photographer Sam Abell. The text and illustrations take the reader on a step-by-step walk through gardens great and small, analyzing landforms, inspecting soil, studying light, all with the goal of teaching one how to design a garden by following one’s own creative impulses.

REVIEWS

via Amazon.com (c) 1998 – “Messervy has found a way to codify something that seemed vague to me: the “feel” of a landscape, or how a person reacts to a space. She breaks landscape forms down into 7 “archetypes,” lists the features of each, then suggests ways to use this new understanding in designing your own yard or garden. I suddenly realized, for example, that the narrow, paved alleys coming off my tiny city backyard weren’t necessarily the problem and disappointment I had always considered them, but were features I could play up and turn to advantage. (They had always tempted me to walk to the end — now I just have to make that journey worthwhile.) I was just bursting with ideas after reading this book, able to look at my tiny space with new eyes. The archetypal business isn’t just pleasantly mystical but is also practical, backed up with sophisticated but down-to-earth ideas. It’s a different kind of garden design book that gets you to think of the overall “feel” (not look) you want first (the step missing from most gardening books), and then figure out how to actually construct it — a satisfying blend of mythic/artistic with practical and well-organized. (And as a bonus, the photos are drop-dead gorgeous!)”

via Amazon.com (c) 1997 – “This is garden design from the heart, not the head. Garden design books usually offer us a formula, templates, and lists of plants. “The Inward Garden” instead tries to stimulate a new way of thinking about our landscapes. Messervy tries to create gardens that resonate with fond memories of the places where we felt most secure and most free as children. You might think that you want an elaborate perennial border, but after reading this book realize that you’d really rather gaze at a little bit of prairie, or a woodland or listen to a tinkling stream. If you are going to spend all that time, money and effort, wouldn’t it be wonderful to have a garden that makes you feel good, instead of one that merely consumes resources and becomes a millstone? This is not the book that will help you calculate how many bags of mulch you need, or how to build a retaining wall. What it will do is help you identify what you really want from your landscape, instead of what you think you’re supposed to want, or what all your neighbors have.”

via Amazon.com (c) 1998 – “Julie Moir Messervy has written what undoubtedly will become a classic of garden writing and design. Deeply literate and beautifully written, The Inward Garden gives the reader a process for designing one’s “dream garden”. Based on garden archetypes: the sea, the cave, the harbor, the promitory, the island, the mountain, and the sky, this book provides a structure for imagining the garden of one’s desires and a practical process for designing this deeply felt garden. The author describes in detail each of these archytical gardens. Each archtype is illustrated with outstanding garden photographs. The Inner Garden gently asks the reader to think and feel deeply about the garden of his or her dreams and to have the courage to begin creating that garden.”

PRODUCT DETAILS

Hardcover: 256 pages
ISBN-10: 1593730594
ISBN-13: 978-1593730598
Language: English
Dimensions: 10.2 x 10.1 x 1 inches
Weight: 2.8 pounds

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Julie Moir Messervy is an award-winning author of four books including The Magic Land, Contemplative Gardens, and Outside the Not So Big House. Among her notable works, Messervycollaborated with Yo-Yo Ma and the City of Toronto to design a three-acre Music Garden at the Toronto Harbourfront based on a suite by J.S. Bach. She is the principal of Julie Moir Messervy Design Studio. based in Saxtons River, Vermont.

No shows booked at the moment.