Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts

Thursday, April 15, 2010

More About Gordon Hayward's Gardens

Get a load of these magnificent garden settings!!!!!

In 1978, Gordon Hayward began writing for Horticulture Magazine, where he has since published over fifty articles. He now is a contributing editor for Fine Gardening Magazine. Gordon Hayward has also written nine books, six of which remain in print. *See below at the bottom of my post









L E S S O N S   T O   B E   L E A R N E D   
F R O M   V I S I T I N G   G A R D E N S 

"Visiting a garden, whether public or private, is a rare treat, in part because it can help us see our own garden more clearly. What we get out of visiting a garden, however, is not up to the garden; it’s up to us to ask the right questions. Too often we don’t get all we could out of a visit because we walk into a fine garden looking to see what we like and don’t like about it. Our own judgmental attitudes get in the way of learning new principles of garden design. And once we pass judgment, we often limit ourselves to the question, “What’s that plant?” In this one-hour lecture, Hayward will show 40 pairs of slides he has taken of grand gardens through America and England. Throughout he will show you how to look at grand gardens so as to gather new ideas for your own more modest garden. This lecture comes out of an article Gordon Hayward wrote for the April, 2002 issue of Horticulture Magazine." 
ABOVE: Rosemary Alexander’s Garden in England
 
Gordon Hayward







Planning,planning,planning.




T H E   W I N T E R   G A R D E N

When designing a garden that is interesting 12 months of the year, those of us who live in the northern half of the United States must carefully consider what our garden looks like in the winter. During the seven month growing season colors and textures abound, but in late October we cut back perennials, remove annuals and bring in delicate garden ornaments and furniture, thereby exposing the layout and structural elements of our gardens. Those elements form the backbone of the winter garden, and they lie in gazeboes, pergolas and garden sheds, as well as in paths, hedges, stonewalls, evergreens and lasting perennials such as ornamental grasses. Detail within that structure lies in winter-tolerant garden ornaments, as well as the form, line and color in twig and fruit of many deciduous trees and shrubs. Because we spend so much more time in the house in winter, view-lines from doors and windows into our winter gardens become especially important. In this one hour lecture, Gordon Hayward uses pairs of slides that both he and Richard Brown, a professional garden photographer, took to show around fifty different places in the Haywards’one and one half acre garden in both summer and winter in order to illustrate design principles you can apply to your own garden to give it greater winter interest.
ABOVE: A design for a garden in Southern New Hampshire.

Want more?
You can stay at this cottage. Click here.
They think the North Cotswolds is the most beautiful part of England. Somebody must agree because the whole area, including Blockley, was designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty a few years ago.
His Books:


Gordon and Mary Hayward
508 McKinnon Road
Putney VT 05346

802.387.4766

email: gordonhayward@comcast.net

I can't get enough.
Can you?

XX's


Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her BLOG.....
Interior Design, Palm Beach, Boca Raton,Ft.Lauderdale,Design Service, Window Treatments, 
TurnKey Interior Design Service,Paint selection, Floor-Plans,Online Interior Design,
Design Center of The Americas, D.C.O.T.A.,Gordon Hayward, Gardens, landscaping
Share/Save/Bookmark

Monday, April 12, 2010

It's Coming On Springtime....



Gorden Hayward 




is a brilliant landscape designer.



Hayward offers amateur landscapers these guidelines:

"
Don't be afraid of straight lines in forming bed edges, lawn shape, and paths, especially near the house. After all, your house is geometric; make beds near it geometric, too. Then let beds and paths curve as you get away from the house."





"......avoid putting all planting beds around the perimeter of your house 
and the outer perimeter of the lawn. "












Is your garden ready for spring?


Read the article in Traditional Home here.


Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her BLOG.....
Interior Design, Palm Beach, Boca Raton,Ft.Lauderdale,Design Service, Window Treatments, 
TurnKey Interior Design Service,Paint selection, Floor-Plans,Online Interior Design,
Design Center of The Americas, D.C.O.T.A., Spring-time, landscaping, gardens
Share/Save/Bookmark

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Derailed

My brain,
did it again ,
it was dreaming while awake......
Dreaming while awake ....
I was fantasizing about buying a really beautiful piece of property with a view.


If it doesn't have a view, then I will make one
with a garden.

Dreaming while awake.....
What would be inexpensive to build , and live in ?
Really different ?
Charming ?
And Really FAST !
( I want what I want , when I want it )
Something small , quaint ,and really well built.
....and just right for my particular purpose.
A sort of play-house, that I could be very comfortable in and stay for quite a while if I wished to.
An escape ( yes - another one ), with minimum commitment, if you follow my meaning.
A trailer of any sort is out of the question !!!

But a train, is historical, is funky ,is mechanical ,and is built like a tank.
after all , trains are built to withstand a crash.
Dreaming while awake....
A very private place , where I can hide in plain site.
I want it to be in a tiny little seaside village, where I can bicycle & walk to everything.

(The Orient Express) This might work.

' LIFE'S CRASHES ' make me dream of this place.

Dreaming while awake...
These are some of the woods that I would consider for the interior paneling etc.
If it ends up being a true summer place, I would choose the whitewash burl.
If I will be running up to my caboose cabin all during the year............I would then use my all time favorite WALNUT & Walnut Burl. YUMMO !!!
Dreaming while awake....
This wouldn't be bad at all. I would really be able to get lost here.
This setting is certainly elegant enough for entertaining..................
Dreaming while awake.....
Oh look, it's Cary Grant and me !!! wink wink ( North By Northwest )
He is a lovely dinner guest, but it was a real task getting him to remove those RayBan's.
.....MISSION ACCOMPLISHED after a cocktail or two.
A framed photograph of heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post as seen in the observation salon of private car Chapel Hill. DeWitt Chapple, Jr. restored the car in 1971. Chapple retained the car’s number, but added the name Chapel Hill after his alma mater, the University of North Carolina, in Chapel Hill. It has been chartered for whistle stop tours.
Dreaming while awake...
I even have a small desk where I can blog on my laptop.
There is enough room (in the very back) for a bistro table ( 18" -24" top ) and 2 tiny side chairs for coffee in the morning.
See ? Just enough room.
With the canopy, I can sit a while longer , even if it begins to rain.

These trains are very roomy.
Keep in mind....I am small.
So everything looks 'big enough' to me .

Dreaming while awake...
This will be the view from my tiny Pullman kitchen. Imagine all the super space saver,and high tech gadgets I can hide behind the gorgeous paneling.
'Our Truest life is when we are in our dreams awake.' Thoreau

Can you see this place in your head like I do ??
site for the history- presidents:
http://cruiselinehistory.com/?p=629

gardens: