Archive for the ‘gardening events’ Category

Exploring Garden Treasures: Dunn Gardens, Part III of III

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Today we wrap up my three part interview with Sue Nevler of Dunn Gardens. (Part I here; Part II here.) Just a reminder that this Sunday is the Spring Wine Tasting Tour at Dunn. You do not want to miss this opportunity, so be sure to reserve your tickets now!

Ducks Enjoying Dunn Gardens

Ducks Enjoying Dunn Gardens

Robin: Last spring during the wine tasting tour, a pair of ducks was bobbing along in one of the waterfall pools. Do the ducks return each year? How long have they been coming?

Sue: The ducks are relatively new to the ponds. We’ll have to see if they return again. Was fun to see them.

Robin: Following up on the prior question, what other wildlife visits the gardens regularly and do you have difficulties with any of them? Ah, the moles plague Roger and Zsolt. Coyotes do visit periodically. We often see eagles perching or being harassed by the crows, and there are many small birds and hummingbirds throughout the garden. Glenn and Charles’ cat Tabby rules the roost though. Tabby is the spoiled king of the Dunn Gardens. His finest hour was walking very proudly through an evening lecture with a bird in his mouth (catch and release).

Robin: If I wanted to make a non-cash donation to help Dunn Gardens, is volunteering my time the best way to do so? And/or, do you have a donation wish list?

Sue: Come be a docent! The camaraderie, the chance to learn this fantastic collection, field trips, classes with Glenn and Charles, are all very, very rewarding. We’re building a relationship with Seattle Works, so it’s possible to volunteer to work here in the gardens as well. We’d like to build more volunteer opportunities, so watch the website as we begin to formalize that opportunity too.

Robin: I know the gardens are closed during a few months of the year. Why is this, and what are the closure dates?

Sue: The gardens close for the month of August, just to give all the residents some down time. Then we close the tour season at the end of October, and reopen the first of April. Things are still humming in the garden though, the curators traditionally lecture in November, we hold a Solstice Stroll in December, and our wonderful working board members meet to oversee the objectives of preserving the gardens throughout the year.

Yellow Trillium at Dunn Gardens

Yellow Trillium at Dunn Gardens

Robin: Why doesn’t Dunn gardens offer events like private parties and weddings? (Or does/will it?)

Sue: We’re still a small organization with limited parking and resources, so we’re considering these fund raising options, but want to do so carefully and with respect for our neighbors who have been totally supportive of the gardens. We try to be very careful about our impacts and welcoming at the same time. It’s a bit of a juggle, but I think we do it well. That’s the trick too isn’t it? I love our events and continue to dream up all sorts, but there’s a part too that feels that this is an historic treasure, a hidden gem in our midst, and we should support it so that it can just continue to be.

Robin: What are some of the exciting additions to look out for in the garden in 2009?

Sue: This year we’re focusing on the link to the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition Centennial which will happen from June to October. Since the Olmsteds designed the fair grounds (U.W. campus) in 1909, and then did the Dunn Gardens design in 1915, we felt there were unique lessons to be learned. Its an opportunity for people to get a present day feeling for what that historic event must have looked like. We’ll have open days on June 6th and 7th (a joint event with the SS Virginia V, of that era also), with lectures by the Friends of Olmsted Parks on the AYPE and a mini display paying tribute to what was done on the UW campus. Then our ArtWalk in July (18th,19th) will also tie into the theme of the AYPE showcasing the bounty of the region. Don’t miss this event. The mix of singular Washington state artists siting their own works in the gardens is really thrilling. This year Andre Ferriante will play at the Preview Party, and the Mad Froggies Marimba Band plays on Sunday, so it’ll be quite something.


Robin
: Is there anything else you would like to share with Garden Help readers about Dunn Gardens?

Sue: I hope you’ll come visit, enjoy and help ensure that the gardens remain vital and growing here in our community.

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Exploring Garden Treasures Series Beginning with Dunn Gardens

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Beginning today. Beginning with Seattle’s Dunn Gardens, I will begin a new Gardenhelp.org series, Garden Treasures, introducing readers to fantastic public and private gardens, farms and great outdoor spaces.

Naturalized Beauty at Dunn Gardens

Naturalized Beauty at Dunn Gardens

It’s been just under a year since I discovered Seattle’s Dunn Gardens. For years horty friends have urged me to visit them, but it wasn’t until their wine tasting fundraiser last year that I finally made it to the gardens. And what fantastic gardens they are! I signed on as a member and continue to support the gardens in various ways. I encourage you to consider visiting the gardens, and if you like wine, you might start with this year’s winetasting tour at Dunn on Sunday, May 17, 2009.

In the meantime, here is the first in what will be a three-part interview with my friend Sue Nevler, Executive Director of Dunn Gardens. Additional segments will be posted over the next few weeks, so stay tuned in!

Robin: I discovered Dunn Gardens last year after hearing from many horty friends that it was a must-see garden destination in Seattle. I can’t believe it took me so many years to make the visit. What brought you to the gardens and what keeps you working on its preservation?

Sue: I came to the gardens through rowing friends. Gretchen Hull was the first docent coordinator, and she invited me to check out the gardens which were right in my own Broadview neighborhood. Once I realized what a beautiful, interesting place it was, I was hooked, became a docent, docent coordinator, spent 6 years on the board and was invited to be the first executive director last year. Each year I’ve spent in the gardens I am more convinced of the necessity of preserving such a uniquely important landscape.

A Vast Space in the Larger Garden

A Vast Space in the Larger Garden

Robin: What does it take to maintain a garden of this size in Seattle? It must be expensive, and it must require a lot of dedicated volunteers!

Sue: The garden is 7.5 acres, so it does take work. Our curators Charles Price and Glenn Withey maintain the curators’ garden behind the house and work on special projects throughout the gardens. Our head gardener, Roger Lackman has been with us since the gardens’ inception in 1994, and Zsolt Lehocsky our staff gardener does an amazing job of keeping up with the maintenance of such a large garden. We totally rely on donations and membership, so that support is critical for us. The docents all volunteer their time to lead the tours. They are exceptional in their dedication as ambassadors of the gardens. We are now benefitting from Seattle Works volunteers coming periodically too, and that has been essential this year. We’ve had to cut all staff hours due to the economic downturn, so that’s been a little scary (so don’t forget contributions really count!).

Robin: What is your favorite time of year at Dunn Gardens and why?

Sue: That’s a tough one.. I tend to say early spring as there’s just so much happening, the snowdrops, magnolia, trillium, erythronium, hellebores, hepaticas, and more. But each season as I walk through the garden something new pops out and grabs my attention. I have to admit, this winter when I spent time in the snow covered gardens, that was totally enchanting.

Trillium, Azalea and More in Spring

Trillium, Azalea and More in Spring

Robin: Every garden goes through a cycle of living and dying. During your tenure with the garden what has been the saddest loss in the garden?

Sue: Sorry, that hits a personal note. My husband died this year right after we’d held a firepit fundraiser in the gardens. That’s been extremely hard, but I have found solace in seeing my loss within the natural cycles of life and death in the garden. I think that’s one of the most valuable lessons learned in a natural setting. I don’t think you find that comfort in a fabricated environment. You gain perspective through the natural world. But horticulturally for the gardens, we did lose a very large Scarlet Oak to disease this year, and that has taken some time to adjust to it’s absence too.

Robin: Dunn has several fundraising events each year. Can you tell me a bit about each of them. For instance, when do they occur, what do they cost, how much do they raise for the garden fund, who are some of the artists in the art tour/wineries in the wine tour/etc, and how can I attend?

Friends Enjoying Wine at the Dunn Gardens Tasting Fundraiser Tour in 2008

Friends Enjoying Wine at the Dunn Gardens Tasting Fundraiser Tour in 2008

Sue: I’d counsel checking the website for all the details: We do have a changing list of exciting events throughout the season, so keep checking in there. The next event is the wine tasting on May 17th, Sunday 4-6pm. That’ll be a delight with 7 wineries this year: Domanico Cellars, Efeste, Firesteed Cellars, Sparkman Cellars, Thurston Wolfe, Yellow Hawk Cellar and Long Shadows. I think it’s a really outstanding lineup and its a critical fundraiser for us in this wobbly economy (it’s $50, so a good value too). We do this each May in honor of preservation month. You’ll want to RSVP to the office as soon as possible. And for the ArtWalk, we’ll have more details coming out soon, but the lineup there is stellar too.

___________________

That wraps up part one of my interview with Sue. Read Part II here.

If you are involved with a garden of merit and would like to participate in this new series, please get in touch here. If you’re on the board of a private garden, a hardworking volunteer in a public park, have a sustainable farm to feature, or if you just love a local garden in your neighborhood, feel free to get in touch to suggest it for this series!

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Northwest Flower and Garden Show Opens Tomorrow

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

Tonight’s the Arbor Eden fundraiser gala opening for the garden show. Tomorrow the show itself opens up, and sadly this may be the last year. During this week every horticultural professional is going to be slammed. I’m no exception. In addition to running Garden Mentors, where I focus on providing premiere garden coaching and award-winning landscape designs in the greater Seattle area, I’ll be attending the garden show as much as possible. And, not only will I be attending, but I’ll also be speaking over the weekend and hosting the WSNLA show garden for a few shifts.

Waterfeature in 2008 NWFGS Show Garden

Waterfeature in 2008 NWFGS Show Garden

If you’re planning to attend the show, I hope you’ll drop by one of my seminars. Remember, kids under 5 get in free, and free, on-site child care is provided in case you need some time without the little ones to shop!

Who Wants Garbage for Dinner? The Wonderful Way of Worms!
Saturday, February 21st at 2pm & Sunday, February 22nd at 2pm
Summary: As we worry about building a better environment for the future, we should start teaching our children ways they can contribute.  In this lively hands-on session for kids and parents, we’ll look at the “naked-eye” creatures that come to live in worm bins!  How do worms eat our garbage, and what comes out when they’re done munching on fruit and vege scraps, coffee grounds and egg shells.  Kids will love this, and parents will too!

More on Vermicomposting and Robin garden coaching kids here.
Got Dogs? Gardening with Canine Companions
Sunday, February 22nd at 9:45am
Summary: Does your dog enjoy your garden even more than you do?  Gardeners who share their gardening spaces with canine companions face special challenges like spotty lawns, chewed shrubs, unwanted planting bed excavations, trampled perennials, and poopy piles in all the wrong places. Join gardening coach Robin Haglund, who has cared for dozens of dogs and solved a multitude of dog challenges, and Lisa Wogan, author of Dog Park Wisdom and Unleashed, for useful tips and training tricks to bring the best out of the garden you share with your best doggie pals.

I hope to have time during the week to add garden show update posts here. And, I’ll try to resist the urge to put out too many spoilers after attending the gala tonight!

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Free Tickets to the Northwest Flower and Garden Show

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

This just in: Here’s a great way to get free tickets to what is likely to be the last Northwest Flower & Garden Show. All you have to do is sign up, make the cut, attend the show, and then participate as a guest blogger on the garden show’s blog site.  Even if you don’t think of yourself as a writer, there is so much going on at the show that it won’t be hard for anyone to fulfill the blog posting requirements that go along with these tickets.

So what are you waiting for? Sign up here right away.

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Robin Haglund at the 2009 Northwest Flower & Garden Show

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

The buzz around the 2009 Northwest Flower & Garden Show is getting louder. Can you hear it? Flora’s Blog for the show recently posted part one of a two-part interview with garden coach Robin Haglund (moi) about the kid and family-focused program she is putting together for this year’s Sproutopia! stage. Read the interview here.

I’m very excited the show has invited me to bring this program to the garden show this year, and I hope to meet many of my readers at the show for my Worm composting presentation and/or my gardening with dogs presentation with Lisa Wogan. Here’s more about each program:

Who Wants Garbage for Dinner? The Wonderful Way of Worms!
Saturday, February 21st at 2pm & Sunday, February 22nd at 2pm
Summary: As we worry about building a better environment for the future, we should start teaching our children ways they can contribute.  In this lively hands-on session for kids and parents, we’ll look at the “naked-eye” creatures that come to live in worm bins!  How do worms eat our garbage, and what comes out when they’re done munching on fruit and vege scraps, coffee grounds and egg shells.  Kids will love this, and parents will too!
Got Dogs? Gardening with Canine Companions
Sunday, February 22nd at 9:45am
Summary: Does your dog enjoy your garden even more than you do?  Gardeners who share their gardening spaces with canine companions face special challenges like spotty lawns, chewed shrubs, unwanted planting bed excavations, trampled perennials, and poopy piles in all the wrong places. Join gardening coach Robin Haglund, who has cared for dozens of dogs and solved a multitude of dog challenges, and Lisa Wogan, author of Dog Park Wisdom and Unleashed, for useful tips and training tricks to bring the best out of the garden you share with your best doggie pals.

As the show approaches, I’ll post updates…and may even offer a contest for free show tickets. Interested? Keep reading and sending in your great gardening questions!

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Sustainable Gardening Use for Junk Mail

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

Junk mail, newsprint advertising fliers, and paper envelopes pile up in our house fast! We’ve opted out of as many lists as we can, but the paper keeps coming. So, we’re looking at ways to make better use of this trashmail.

In the past, most of this material has gone directly from the front door mailbox to the backdoor recycling bin — sometimes making a stop at the dining room table where it piles up until it runs through a shredder. Occasionally, some of it would go into the outdoor firepit to start summer evening marshmallow toasting events. Rarely, did it go to use around the house.

Today, we’re implementing a new plan. Non-glossy or plastic-window-containing trash paper is headed for the worm composter. This stuff makes great bedding for the worms. It helps insulate the worm bin to keep them warm, and when push comes to shove, the worms and their decomposition buddies will eat up the paper, composting it for the garden.

Teach Kids about Worm Bins

Teach Kids about Worm Bins

I’ll be writing more about vermicomposting in the coming months. Interested in building a worm composter or having one built for your Seattle-area garden, check out Bob Albert’s post on the new worm bin he just built for a Garden Mentors client. Need to find worms or other supplies for your worm bin? Check out the new composting section of the Garden Help Garden Store.

And I invite you to join me at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show on February 21st and February 22nd at 2pm on the Sprout stage for my kid-focused, family-friendly introduction to composting with worms. Find more information on this presentation and buy tickets to the 2009 Northwest Flower and Garden Show here.

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Organicology – An Organic Education & Networking Event!

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

This just in — a consortium of organic growers, educators, researchers, propagators and plain-ole-gardeners are coming together in late February 2009 in Portland, Oregon to network, educate and discuss the world of organics. As the Oregon Tilth website states, “Seed producers, farmers, brokers, distributors and retailers, researchers and educators, logistics supporters, materials suppliers, chefs, food policy activists, and, of course, eaters of great food – all will find topics of interest and sources of inspiration at Organicology.”

Of particular interest to me are seminars discussing the true state of genetically engineered crops, the state of the world food crisis, and a seed swap exchange program. I’m sure there’s more coming too!

Interested in attending, sponsoring or just learning more? Check out the Organicology pages on the Oregon Tilth Website here. The event runs February 26-28, 2009 at the Portland Doubletree Hotel.

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A Way to Win Free Garden Coaching

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008
Don't Miss This Event!

Don't Miss This Event!

Tomorrow is the Seattle Tilth educational program fundraiser, Taste, Toast, Twirl. I feel strongly about this organization, so here I am mentioning it again as a last effort to encourage you to go buy tickets. And, in case this is an added incentive, Garden Mentors has donated two garden coaching sessions to Tilth to give away in their raffle. So, I suppose the coaching session won’t be completely free. But raffle tickets are cheap, proceeds go to a good cause, and gardening coaching isn’t the only thing you might win.

Plus, your ticket to this event will buy you a fantastic array of wine, beer, cider and soda tastings AND fantastic locally grown and prepared foods AND two bands. Oh, and don’t buy yet…with this purchase you’ll also get to support a great cause and spend the evening with like-minded, horticulturally inclined gardeners and farmers. And, if you look hard enough, you might find a garden mentor in the crowd as well.

See you there!

Buy Tickets Here.

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Seattle Tilth Localvore Fundraiser

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Seattle Tilth is a fantastic organization that focuses on providing educational resources in organic, sustainable gardening practices to the community. Everything from their composting and city chicken programs to their spring edible plant sale brings our community together and helps build better gardens and gardeners all over Seattle.

Don't Miss This Event!

Don't Miss This Event!

Later this month, on November 12th to be exact, Seattle Tilth will be celebrating 30 years in the community by offering a fantastic fundraising event at The Herban Feast. Tickets start at $55. And that’s a bargain for what you’ll get — two great live bands, freshly prepared local foods, and a wide array of great wines, ciders, sodas and beers to taste. And, yes, the beverages are all locally made as well. Yours truly even got her hands sticky pitching in to help make the wines at Domanico Cellars!

Domanico Cellars will be premiering their first commercial vintage at this event. Owned by Jason and Jill Domanico, this winery is truly a community effort and a labor of love. Jason, the wine maker, started out making wine as a hobby. Quickly, he learned that he’s pretty dang good at it, so he jumped through a maze full of hoops to become licensed and bonded. The Domanico Cellars 2006 vintage is the first available for sale, and you won’t want to miss the opportunity to taste it (and buy some) at this fundraiser for such a good cause. Jason and Jill will be on hand to discuss the wines, as will my husband Bob,  who is the assistant wine maker at Domanico Cellars. I’ll be there too to raise a glass in support of Seattle Tilth. I hope you’ll join me to Taste, Toast and Swirl!

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Yoga for Gardeners

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Okay gardeners! How many of you have aching backs, sore feet or throbbing fingers after a long day in the garden? We reach, yank, shove, lift and twist into all sorts of contorted positions to perfect our gardens — often without thinking about how this will affect our bodies later in the day or in the years ahead. Don’t get me wrong! I encourage the fresh-air, chlorophyll-induced exercise that gardening provides. I never feel better than exhausted after putting my all into eradicating dock weed or cleaning dead branches out of a Japanese Maple. But, it’s true that with that elation often comes a few aches and pains.

Soaking in a hot tub with epsom salts or dead sea salts is my favorite way to start winding my body down after a cool season gardening day. The salts draw out toxins and the warm water, well, it just feels good. A bit of arnica gel on bumps and bruises helps them heal up quickly. But, most importantly stretching ensures my body stays limber and strong to face the beginning, end and future of my gardening days.

Relaxing & Releasing Legs-Up-A-Wall

Relaxing & Releasing Legs-Up-A-Wall

Recently, in my regular column for Roosevelt Family News (soon-to-be-renamed American Family News), I shared an interview with Diane Anderson, 25+ year yogi and owner of Northwest Community Yoga. Diane and I discussed challenges facing gardeners, and she provides a variety of simple yoga poses that just about anyone is capable of achieving. From pulling in our tummies to protect our low backs to resting with our legs up a wall, embracing yoga empowers gardeners to not only build stronger gardens but build stronger, more supple selves along the way.

Read more about pose specifics in the August Issue of Roosevelt Family News.

And, whether you’re an experienced yogi or have never tried a yoga pose in your life, consider joining Diane (and yours truly) for a special yoga workshop focused on the needs of gardeners. (And really, its open to anyone.)  Specifically, within a complete yoga practice, Diane will help us focus on stretching the hamstrings, quads, hips & groin. We will also practice some medium backbends, some hand stretches, and end with an inversion to facilitate a “well rounded” yoga experience. This work will also be helpful to ease & release low back tension. Diane is experienced teaching mixed classes with students of all levels, so she welcomes everyone to participate. For more information:

Really, the big message here is take care of yourself. If you’ve ever suffered from injury, you know that one season without your body able to garden is one season lost to weeds, soil erosion, and overgrowth. Frankly, that’s a season of my life that I work hard never to revisit.

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