Monday, February 23, 2026

Dirt Therapy in Vancouver, WA, during Study Weekend

Study Weekend 2025 officially wrapped on Sunday, June 29th, however there was small a line-up of gardens to visit north of Portland, in and around Vancouver, Washington, on Monday. The location provided those heading home to the Seattle and Vancouver BC areas a chance to stop and visit a few gardens on their way out of town. I fully intended to make the most of the offerings, but sadly I only managed to visit one garden, that of Phillip Oliver and Michael Scott. Phillip blogs at Dirt Therapy, hence the title of this post.

Phillip and Michael hosted a gathering of bloggers many years ago (2016?), when they first moved to the PNW from Alabama. That was the only other time I've visited their garden. I'd link to that visit if I could find a blog post about it, I'm sure I must have done one. Even though I follow Phillip's blog, and have seen photos, I was shocked at how different the garden looks now, it's all grown up and filled in!

I was so excited to go through my photos, relive the visit, and share it here on the blog. So, I was tremendously disappointed when I saw just how awful the photos were. 

I arrived at the garden around 11am that day, the high was 94, I remember it already being extremely hot as I walked around. The shadows were impossible to overcome... I lightened a lot of my photos to try and show garden details, but with only limited success. It's a beautiful garden lovingly created and tended by two charming men. Hopefully some of that will come through here.

It's not your imagination. You did see (above) fabric wrapped traffic cones in the street in front of the garden. Michael covered the cones with fabric when an organizer for a previous tour commented on how harsh the orange cones were. What a fabulous custom touch.

Part of the garden description from the tour booklet: "Our garden is in its ninth year. When we first arrived, it was a blank slate with only grass and a dogwood tree. It is on a quarter-acre plot with a small, narrow front garden and a larger, partially terraced back garden. Now packed with plants, it is an eclectic, cottage-style garden, and the only grass remaining is on a pathway. The front garden consists of long borders filled with trees, conifers, shrubs, and roses (mostly David Austin and old garden varieties)."

I'm still standing in the street to take this photo.

Now I've walked up onto the driveway and I'm looking into the front garden, I followed that grassy pathway.

There were a few of these wonderful "gathered bloom" highlights placed around the garden...

Variegated Abutilon.

Still walking the front garden...




Now we're walking further down the driveway and about to enter the back garden. The horizontal green arrow is where we've been, the vertical one points to where we're going.

More of the garden description: "You enter the back garden at the base of the terraces, which are filled with a variety of plants including hydrangeas, perennials, and more roses. Steps from the terrace lead up to a gravel courtyard area with a large pergola and deck. A purple stucco wall divides the courtyard from the Pan garden, which is a small area with perennials and annuals that surrounds a statue of Pan. Phillip is an avid plant lover and is always trying to add more, although space is dwindling. Michael is a crafter, quilter, and loves to sew. He has added many creative touches to the garden including a sprinkling of buttons, jewels, beads, etc., to the gravel courtyard. One of our main goals is to provide a sanctuary for bids, insets, and of course ourselves."

You can see the steps up the various terraced levels...

As mentioned, there were roses. I know nothing about roses other than I appreciate them when I see them, or smell them.

These photos are so bad! In person I kept saying "this is all so good!"...



Rusty blooms.

I love this cement block pedestal.

Duckies! Do you notice color sprinkles in the gravel?

They're buttons and other fun things. I failed to get a good photo, but they were fantastic! As you read above, Michael sews. The buttons were such a perfect custom touch and I loved them.


Hydrangea looking fantastic, completely unfazed by the temperatures.


The purple wall, yes it's purple, trust me. You can read about the making of the wall in this post on Phillip's blog.

And there's the Pan statue with a fine headdress.

You can read about the making of this pebble mosaic here.

Michael is on the far right in this photo, answering questions from some of the many garden admirers. I didn't manage a photo of Phillip but he was doing the same out in the garden.


There were many gorgeous clematis in the garden.

More big hydrangea blooms...

I caught a glimpse, or two, of a twig fence woven along the back of the garden.

And these mushrooms fooled me, for a minute.

Such a wonderful garden, I hope you somehow managed to see that despite the horrible photos. 

The Bit at the End
Today a gift article from the NYT: Who Is That Masked Man? The Orchids Aren’t Telling. Mr. Flower Fantastic, guest designer for the New York Botanical Garden’s Orchid Show, lets his art speak for itself, never showing his face.

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Friday, February 20, 2026

Dairy Creek Meadows, during the HPSO Study Weekend

Unlike a Garden Fling event (when you're on a tour bus and the schedule is set for you) the open gardens on Study Weekend are meant to be toured at your own pace, in whatever order you desire. Dairy Creek Meadows, the garden of Craig Quirk and Larry Neill, was the last stop of Sunday for my friends and I...

If you attended the 2014 Garden Fling here in Portland then you visited Craig and Larry's previous garden, Floramagoria. If you're a frequent reader of my blog then you might remember my previous posts on this, their new garden, here and here.

Part of the description from the event brochure: "After retiring in 2023, we left city life and our beloved garden, Floramagoria, to embrace a peaceful 30-acre retreat surrounded by forest and an alder-lined creek. Dairy Creek Meadows, our naturalistic perennial garden inspired by Piet Oudolf, is the heart of the property. At it’s center are two interconnected glasshouses that serve as a living space, propagation area, and showcase for an interesting cactus and succulent collection.

The garden, designed with Laura Crockett of Garden Diva Designs, features beds and paths enclosed by a deer fence. Surrounding the greenhouse is a masterful crevice garden created by Kenton Seth and Chris Dixon—its stonework a true piece of art. Nearby, raised and in-ground bog gardens house a fascinating collection of carnivorous plants. A vegetable and cutting garden with a cozy potting shed, along with a dedicated garden work area for seed sorting and potting, complete the fenced section
." 

I "borrowed" this overhead shot from Craig's Instagram account. It seems like a good way to orient you to the garden before I jump in and share a bunch of photos. Starting on the far left, under the grain bin, are the carnivorous bogs, greenhouses are the in the middle, veggie and cutting garden above the greenhouse to the right, and at the very top of the image the driveway and the house.

The carnivorous bog gardens...

This part of the garden had been newly completed since my last visit, it was fabulous!

Marcia Donahue artwork...

These planters were part of the garden at Floramagoria, it's nice to see them here.


James DeRosso artwork.


Not all of these pitchers are plants.

It will be interesting to see what this grouping turns into.


At the base of the grain bin.

Plants in waiting.

I believe this is what was referred to as the "dedicated garden work area"...

The moment you've been waiting for, let's go look at the greenhouse(s) and the crevice garden...

Can you even imagine? 


The crevice gardens have a smattering of plants in place, I'm sure filling all of those crevices is going to take awhile.

Inside the greenhouse, it's starting to fill up...



I love that the crevice garden is part of the scenery from inside.

Future propagation space, I believe.

And plant staging...

The Pachycereus schottii f. monstrosus (on the left) used to be mine. It made me very happy to see it living a much better life here than in my care.

Dustin Gimbel totems.


Back outdoors...

The grain bin and work space...

The Agave ovatifolia have plenty of room to grow.

I think these pieces (there are a pair) are also Dustin Gimbel's work.


Yes you're right, I am absolutely smitten with the greenhouse.

I did manage a couple photos of the surrounding meadow planting...

Also from Dustin Gimbel (on the left)...






As you leave the greenhouse headed towards the house (or the veggie/cutting garden)...


Entrance to the the veggie/cutting garden.


And then my photos skip ahead to the natural pond behind the house. The area around the pond has been planted up since my last visit.

Crossing the creek...

Above the large pond.

With it's resident swan (yes the lucky ones get to take the swan out for a spin).

Pond view.

And wrapping it all up down at the creek...

The Bit at the End
What's involved in heating a commercial greenhouse? This post from Plant Delights/Juniper Level Botanic Garden shares some of the details.

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All material © 2009-2026 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.