Friday, December 26, 2025

The next Study Weekend garden; Wynton Pajunas

This was the third garden I toured during last June's Study Weekend in the Portland area, and like the last garden I'd been here before—for the 2014 Garden Conservancy event.

From the garden description: "Our home and gardens have undergone great transformations in the 18 years we have lived here. The yards were initially primarily lawn, and the house was white. The ranch style of the house creates the opportunity to interpret the garden styles in many ways. We didn't start out with a style in mind, but over time we have come to define it as "Wild Urban Modern.""

"We built our gardens together. Mike removed the lawn by hand in the rain and built all the stone pathways., which were designed to look like riverbeds. Marina designed the layout in the front and back yards. Marina dreamed of the curvy steel vegetable beds one night, and the next day we installed them together. Rain gardens to manage storm water runoff, native hedgerow for privacy, water features for the birds, and sunny front yard planting beds indulge Marina's desire to experiment with plants and indulge her fascination for the incredible variety of perennial flower structures. The backyard is Mike's territory, and it illustrates his love of the natural world, plants, and gardening. Mike was inspired one day to build the boardwalk along the back property line: a shady walk and sitting place among nature. The backyard oasis is where we hang out, take naps, entertain and chase our dog around."


The mentioned curvy vegetable beds...


I love how much Marina and Mike have packed into their small space. In my prior post on the garden (here) they reference having a smaller than average city lot. There's is 55 ft wide x 87.6 ft deep, standard for Portland is 50 x 100 (ours is 45.5 x 111).



This shady pathway leads to the boardwalk that runs along the back of the property.

In my prior post I shared photos inside the sweet little hideaway at the end there, this time too many people were crowded in to take photos.

To help you get a sense of the space, if you look below the umbrella on the right you can see the curvy vegetable beds against the west-side fence. The boardwalk is behind me on my right, the hideaway is directly behind me.






It looks like a rock puzzle below the manzanita.

No space wasted! This is the east-side fence with storage on the right.

Looking back at the storage side.

I took a lot of photos looking down. I didn't want to miss a single detail.


And with that, this visit is fini!

The Bit at the End
If you attended the 2024 Puget Sound Fling may have met Grace Hensley. She is plant and garden photographer (among many other things) who grew up visiting Heronswood Garden with her photographer mother. In this short (32 minute) video—a presentation she gave for Bainbridge Island Senior Community Center—Grace shares some of her gorgeous photos of Heronswood and gives tips for really seeing a garden and taking great photos: A Heronswood Journey with Grace Hensley.

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All material © 2009-2025 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Thursday, December 25, 2025

Wishing you...

 A very saguaro Christmas!

That's a drawing Andrew did, we decorated bags for a friend who was making bagged lunches for charity. I loved this one so much I had to scan and share. Happy Holiday!

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

It's Christmas Eve, and so I can't resist

Let's face it, not much gardening is happening in the Northern Hemisphere on December 24th, so I'm gonna go ahead and let my Christmas joy take over today. First up, the Santa Clones. For several years now I've shared photos of the 400 blow-mold Santas that gather somewhere around Portland. Their location always a bit of a mystery and to find them you follow the clues. I set out to hunt them down on a night we had an incredible sunset. As I drove I watched people stop and turn west, phones held high, it was great fun. This is the best shot I got.

Once parked I beat feet to where I thought the clones were this year, only to discover I was wrong. Not too far off though, since this is what I saw.

Thankfully I've been at this long enough to know that looking up and scanning for the red glow will usually pull you in the right direction. The large shiny face is Splash by Michael Benisty.

The clones...

The clone gathering began in 2010, this is their 15th anniversary.


Andrew asked me why I needed to go again this year. Hadn't I already seen them?

Yes I have. Many times. But I will continue to go every year. Isn't that the point of having an annual holiday tradition? The repetition marks the season and the celebration. The family or community involvement brings people together. I've had many interesting conversations with strangers while visiting the Santa Clones over the years.

Looking back to the building where I thought the clones were hanging out. It's a 1940's Pepsi Cola bottling plant.

Speaking of tradition, yes of course I did a Grinch drive-by!

I love him so!

New this year, Andrew and I finally took a stroll through the holiday lights at The Grotto, after talking about doing it for (nearly?) 20-years! "The National Sanctuary of Our Sorrowful Mother, The Grotto, is an internationally-renowned Catholic shrine and botanical garden located minutes from downtown Portland, serving over 300,000 visitors annually" (from their website). Andrew and I had visited once before, back in 2010.

The purple lights illuminate the cliffside that separates the upper and lower parts of the garden. The cave itself (the grotto) is some 30' wide, 30' deep and nearly 50' high. I read somewhere that it was carved out of the face of the cliff in 1923.

We got there just after opening at 5pm but the crowds were already intense, on a random weeknight! I took a lot fewer photos than I normally would have, simply because of the number of people. This was a calm moment in the crush.

Truth be told I was extremely bummed when I learned the event (and thus all visitors) was restricted to the lower part of the garden. No taking that bizarre elevator up to the heavens above.

Their lights were done up nicely though and it was good to finally see what we'd been missing all these years.

Back home I'm thrilled one of my neighbors has put up her own Christmas Grinch, and his dog Max too! However you're spending the holiday (if you celebrate) I hope you have a warm and joyful day.

The Bit at the End
Perhaps you've already seen this short on Instagram, after all it has nearly 1.5 million views. It makes me smile every time I see it, just a group of Scottish school boys ringing someone's doorbell and singing Last Christmas to get them in the Christmas spirit. 

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All material © 2009-2025 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Monday, December 22, 2025

Artful—a fence and a space

I've lived in Portland long enough to know how to get from where I'm at, to where I want to be. However, the route I come up with in my head isn't always the fastest, especially if there's a road closure, an accident, or any of the other many traffic snarling issues that can arise. Because of this, if I'm going far (or somewhere new), I usually ask Google Maps for a suggested route. Using mapping software has the added benefit of taking me through neighborhoods I've never seen, I love that! That's how I recently ended up driving a new-to-me stretch of Belmont Street, and how I discovered this cool metal fence with botanical cut-outs.



The gate, with a big tree echo...


Each panel of the fence was slightly different. A few shapes were repeated along the way, but no two panels were the same.

I figured it must be fairly new, since there's minimal rust. I looked all around to see if there was any information on the artist behind the design. I wasn't able to find anything.


Once I was at the end I peeked over the fence to see the space between the fence and the building.

Mahonia are blooming all over town, these have been pruned up—maybe an attempt to get the spiny leaves up and out of the way.


Once I was back at the other end I decided maybe a video was the better way to share the botanical artwork? You be the judge—it's probably best to click though and watch it on YouTube rather than here on the blog.

Once home (while editing and uploading my photos), I decided to go looking for information on the building, which I assumed was an apartment building. Nope. It's listed as single family residential, what? Dating to 1921 the building is just shy of 10,200 sq ft and last sold in 2024 for $1,400,000.

Naturally, since I was researching, I took a few screenshots of prior years from Google Maps. Here's May of 2009. The fence borders what was lawn on the left-hand side.

Here's June 2019.

And April 2025, it's all so very curious!

Later that same day (December 13th) I stopped by a space I'd wanted to see for awhile now, slow poet (art space + vintage shop). I took these photos in the fabulous outdoor space behind the gallery.

Pretty cool right?

It was all very inspiring.


Kim (owner of slow poet) inherited the mural, and has plans to update it. I thought it was kind of old Portland fabulous, like '70's t-shirts, vintage Nikes and Rainer beer.


So that's my sunny warm day (in December!) spent exploring...

The Bit at the End
I guess I was in an arty headspace that day because later the same evening I ended up watching several of the NYC loft visits/interviews on Joshua Charow's YouTube channel. They're kind of addicting. 

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To receive alerts of new danger garden posts by email, subscribe here. Please note: these are sent from a third party, their annoying ads are beyond my control. 

All material © 2009-2025 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.