Friday, October 25, 2024

Paxson Hill Farm, my last Philly Fling post

Paxson Hill Farm, my last post on the Philadelphia-area Garden Fling that happened back in September of 2023. Ya, it's been over a year and I'm finally wrapping up my coverage. This was the second to last stop for me (there were two buses that visited this garden and Mill Fleurs opposite each other). We got off the bus and had no clue what there was to see. Was it a nursery?





Or a garden?


Well there's a path, and we have an hour, so let's explore...


Oh my...

This place is huge!




One of my issues with "garden art" is when you are faced with multiple different styles, themes, materials, etc, all competing for your attention in a small space (gnomes, flowers made of old teacups and saucers on a spike, a wordy sign or two, a cement pig, and on...) but in this garden the different elements were all separated by so much space they were almost in their own worlds. 



I wish the basket for Life's Joys had been larger than...

...the basket for Life's Di ap  intme ts, but as I recall they were the same size.

Eve

And Adam. They stare at each other across the pathway, connected by a metal arbor.





Researching the garden after my visit I rediscovered Pam Penick's 2022 visit which she broke into a series of posts.

I missed so much during this visit!

Then again, I also managed to see a lot.

Word is that the nursery and garden are no longer open (here), so I am glad I got the chance to visit this fantastic collection of spaces.






This bridge was seriously scary, when you're all alone in a huge garden, in the rain, where every surface is slippery and you have no cell service. (I only occasionally ran into another person during my exploration, I had no idea where I was, or where they were most of the time) 



So delecate...




I knew I was back near the entrance now as I ran into a couple of other Flingers who were also moving fast, not wanting to miss the bus.

I didn't even get a chance to explore that side of the nursery!

While this post wraps up my Philly Fling coverage, I still have many posts to share from last summer's Garden Fling in the Puget Sound area... and next year's Fling is fast approaching! Memphis in June... more info here.

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All material © 2009-2024 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

The Gardens at Mill Fleurs

This was the last garden I visited during the Philly Garden Fling in 2023, but I wanted to save Paxson Hill Farm for my last post (on Friday) so today we're visiting The Gardens at Mill Fleurs. The contrast between Paxson Hill and Mill Fleurs could not have been greater. At Paxson Hill we got off the bus and there was nobody to great us, to tell us where to go and what to expect. At Mill Fleurs we were greeted and toured, no stepping out of line here! Someone in our group dared to go down a path the wrong way and they were quickly corrected. 

After getting off the bus and scurrying across a busy street this the first thing I saw. Not bad! No dawdling however, we needed to march on to the starting point.

This extra-wide pathway is also a driveway.

Complete with a charging station for their car. I know this only because while we were touring with Barbara her husband Robert "Tiff" returned and we all waved.

The rock wall is rather impressive.

The gardens are on a steep, rocky, site right along Tohickon Creek (which was raging in the background during our visit). The buildings on the site include a 1790's Lumber Mill and a 1742 Grist Mill that now are the Tiffany's home.  

There is also an ice house...

Which we met at (the upper floor, visible in the above photo) for cookies and cider, it was the trade off point where our two groups switched tour guides. Karl Gercens (our Fling organizer) covered the lower garden while Barbara led us through the upper garden.

Did I mention it was raining?

That's Karl in the flipflops.


And Barbara with the purple umbrella. 


I have no doubt I would have loved this entire garden on a better day (Barbara is a foliage gardener who loves variegation and plants with an eye to massing and color), but on this grey day the colors in the garden area around the house really stood out.



Barbara was undaunted by the weather and worked her away around the garden pointing things out and telling stories.

Aristolochia gigantea in a pot.

The flowers...

The pleated rhododendron foliage showed well in the rain.

And we're back at the top of the garden with the greenhouse...

... and the agaves!

There's a small nursery space with plants for sale, and it looks like they might also teach classes?
Or maybe the chairs are just meant to encourage you to gather 'round the pond?

This Disporopsis pernyi looked like a winner (that's Heather in the back ground) but I wasn't about to try and get it on the bus and back home successfully under these adverse conditions.

Time to get back on the bus, but not before I spied this cool lower level greenhouse.

What's up with that!?

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All material © 2009-2024 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.