Beauty in the backyard

AMENIA — Last Saturday, July 11, the sun was shining in abundance, and after a cool and wet spring, there were prime conditions for The Garden Club of Amenia to put on its annual garden tour.

This year nine gardens participated, and homes and yards opened their doors and gates to the public from all the way down on Sinpatch Road (Julie and Allan Shope’s Listening Rock Farm) to Alexis England and Scott Small’s Small Garden at the top of Perry’s Corners Road, bordering the town of North East.

The garden at Mead Farm House is owned by George Fenn, who is a one of the founding members of the Garden Club and now its treasurer. The story of his perseverance on that property dates back to 1964, when Fenn bought the property and started planting.

“There was nothing here when I moved in,†he said. “Maybe a few shrubs by the driveway.â€

It’s hard to imagine that looking at his property now, with hundreds upon hundreds of varieties of flowers shooting up. One of the most visually arresting areas is his small natural pond, home to both animal and plant life.

There is an obvious art to gardening on this level; the same property could be unrecognizable in the hands of different artists. For example, Mead Farm House couldn’t be more different from Jade Hill, owned by Paul Arcario and Don Walker and located a bit south of the main light in Amenia.

With three ponds, including goldfish and lotus, a “tea house†(in which tea has never actually been consumed), and a bamboo grove, Jade Hill has an obvious Asian flavor. Both Arcario and Walker have spent time living in Taiwan, and Walker said they both brought back some of those Eastern sensibilities.

Jade Hill’s gardens are built around a combination of floral and architectural arrangements, and it’s the collaboration of two heads that produces the final result.

“I like the architecture, and Paul’s passion is the plants,†Walker explained.

Meanwhile, over at Churchill Gardens, located on top of Morse Hill Road in the middle of The Kildonan School campus, Bob Lane and Jerry Wall have created a “respite†against the trafficked triangular crossroads of the school. Lane is the academic dean at Kildonan, yet in the last six years the two have transformed the Churchill House into a private sanctuary with a gorgeous view looking out into the Harlem Valley.

As every one of the property owners will tell you, building and maintaining any garden, let alone ones of this magnitude and scope, takes time, patience and a healthy dose of trial-and-error.

Some, like the Mead Farm House and Churchill Gardens, are nearly done expanding, and many of the gardens are so time-consuming (and the properties so full) there just aren’t enough hours in the day for more planting. Lane estimated that Churchill Gardens requires approximately 30 hours of work a week to maintain.

On the other hand, Walker explained that he and Arcario have purchased several parcels (blank canvases to a gardener) adjacent to Jade Hill, and have no intention of slowing down their progress. Their gardens only take about six hours a week to maintain, but with plans for an aviary for Asiatic pheasants in the works, those hours might be increasing soon.

Plenty of people made their way through different gardens on Saturday; Fenn said that he had counted nearly 50 about halfway through the day. This was the tour’s 12th year, but as Fenn explained it was only last year when the tour “started getting more organized.†Lunches were available at the Kildonan School and pamphlets outlining the different gardens were distributed as well.

All the proceeds from the club’s garden tours and from local businesses that sponsored the event (there were 22, with 12 new sponsors this year) will go toward further enhancing Amenia. Last year the club gave away 10,000 daffodil bulbs for town residents to plant on their property or anywhere throughout Amenia.

“What do I get from these tours? Mostly envy,†joked Elaine Clancy, who traveled with her husband, George, from “the other side of the river†for their second tour of Amenia’s gardens. “I just think it’s wonderful that they share these.â€

She also pointed out that fellow gardeners walked away with tricks of the trade and helpful advice that they could take back to their own backyards.

While the tours might be over, these gardeners are far from finished working in the dirt. It’s a strong passion for their craft that drives these hard-working planting machines, as well as a pride in their finished products.

“I think in a lot of ways it’s similar to being an artist,†Lane said. “You’re playing with textures, colors, compositions... and you’re learning about horticulture as well.â€

Maybe there’s a little bit of friendly competition thrown in, too.

“Paul is on the mailing list for every plant company in the country,†Walker said, laughing, although he stressed he was completely serious. He pointed out a variety of bamboo that only flowers every 100 years (it flowered last year) as an example. “There are at least a dozen plants here that plant nerds would go crazy over.â€

Got an itch that only planting a variety of hardy winter hazel, Caryopteris and Metasequoia can scratch? Get your toes wet at  ameniagardens.com.

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