I was part of a group invited over last weekend for a launch party to make it official, and as of today—May 20th—Bearberry PDX is open for business! This is the cheery landscape that greeted me when I arrived.
This too, how can you not love a carport with grapevines?
Heading down the steps along the side of the house, a view of the Willamette River and Forest Park comes into view. Not to shabby...
Turning to look back up the steps, the poppies were all sorts of wonderful (although I don't think I managed to get a single one in focus).
The plant tables are spread throughout Chris and and his husband Richard's back garden, it makes for a shopping experience like no other...
Just a couple of Ceanothus x 'Midnight Magic' sitting on a fabulous fungus covered log.
Philadelphus lewisii, maybe ‘Snow Velvet’? (I didn't manage to take a photo of the plant tag!)
Arctostaphylos for sale that day included A. viscida 'Sweet Adinah'...
...and Arctostaphylos pajaroensis 'Myrtle Wolf'.
What a place to shop for plants, it is off-the-charts fantastic!
I was pretty tempted by this Eryngium petiolatum, having never met an eryngium I didn't love. In the end I decided the fact it loves moisture ("great for rain gardens") meant I should probably leave it behind.
I was going to ask Chris for ID on the garden plants I wasn't sure of (I know this is a Callistemon, but which one?). Then I decided that was a bonus of making an appointment to shop, you get Chris as part of the deal and you can ask him ID on the plants around his garden that catch your eye. Fun right?
Okay I did ask about this one (because it's GORGEOUS!), it's Arctostaphylos glauca 'Canyon Blush'.
I love it in combination with these Diplacus (Mimulus) 'Changeling'.
What? I'm falling for a monkey flower? Craziness.
Moving on...there were so many different Arctostaphylos/manzanita planted around the garden. I should have thought to ask Chris just how many.
Fabulous place to sit for a moment and take it all in...
Propagation area...
Have I mentioned just how stunning the location is?
No those dots in the blue sky are not splatters on your screen, they're just a few of the many buzzing pollinators all over this Ceanothus.
I only managed to catch one in action on the plant.
Yep, more propagation.
At this point (if you're lucky enough to be local) you're probably wondering about shopping at Bearberry? Chris is now open by appointment (book one here) Wednesday-Sunday, 10-6 all summer. Plant availability is listed here.
Milkweed for days (not yet blooming)...
And more poppies...
I have to admit I lusted after this tan oak—Notholithocarpus densiflorus, that is if I got the ID right. Could those leaves be any more beautiful?
A big thanks to Chris for inviting me over for a sneak peek and letting me help spread the word about Bearberry. In these strange days spending time in a beautiful garden so grounded in its place (did I mention that most of these plants are Western natives?) and getting to talk with someone so excited about plants that he's opening up his home garden to make them available to others, well, it just doesn't get any better...
The Bit at the End
Wondering about the name, Bearberry? From the Missouri Botanical Garden: “Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, known by a large number of common names including common bearberry and kinninnick…Fruits are technically edible for humans, but are generally considered to be mealy and lacking flavor. Meriwether Lewis described these fruits to be “tasteless and insipid.” On the plus side, bears, birds and small mammals love the fruits. Genus name comes from the Greek words arctos meaning bear and staphyle meaning bunch of grapes in reference to the fruits (often in grape-like clusters) which are commonly eaten by bears. The specific epithet comes from the Latin words uva meaning grape and ursus meaning bear thus bear’s grape, also in reference to the fruits serving in the wild as bear food. Bearberry nickname means the same thing, namely, that bears eat the fruits of this plant.” When I asked Chris why Bearberry he said “I figured I should choose something manzanita-adjacent, and since The Little Apple is already a grocery store at the coast, Bearberry won. Also, it's just fun to say!”
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