On the way home from our road trip, Chris and I decided to make a small detour and come home through San Jose. My Twitter friend Laura (@Interleafer) has been telling me I should come visit her since we connected, and gosh darnit I wasn't going to miss out on meeting another cool person from Twitter!
Laura lives in San Jose, about 2.5 hours away from Folsom. She lives in USDA Zone 9 (Sunset zone 16), and has an amazing garden/landscape. Being a landscape designer, I'd expect no less!
Laura's front yard is VERY MUCH like what I have in mind for our front yard. We have a small slope, and she contained hers with concrete blocks harvested from the landscape previous to what you see here. It was the first time I saw this technique, and the concrete looked like beautiful stacked stone.
Captions above pictures
The short fence in front gives privacy and intrigue about the courtyard that lies beyond. The front yard is welcoming and we immediately knew when we'd reached our destination. I very much enjoyed all of the plants Laura chose, and it seems a good many of them came from cuttings or overstock. I especially like the walkway set in decomposed granite.
Walking up said path, the view that intrigues the visitor comes into view. We sat on her porch for much of the visit "talking shop" as she pointed out plants and told us the story of the landscape and how it came into being. The porch was added onto (behind large shrub in picture below), and you can't tell the difference between old and new - such attention to detail! It is amazing. A sit-in porch on a ranch style house in San Jose? Very rare indeed.
Once past the gate and truly in the courtyard, visitors are immediately drawn to two water features. First is the glazed urn with recirculating pump that breathes life into the front of the house. Laura said that when they had to shut it off for a few days, it was as if all the life in the front yard ceased and was silent. A landscape without water creates a vacuum! Water definitely plays a large role in her garden (and designs, I'd imagine!). Second is the rain chain which gives the idea of water without actually using any! Laura says this is her "winter garden" and loves to bask in the low winter sun on the front porch. She also uses these amazing drippers for her drip system, which I WISH I would have known about a week sooner.
The courtyard was a private place to visit and chat, and as the plants grow in, will become more private. It wasn't until I looked at these pictures that I even noticed the neighbor's houses! The courtyard serves as another room, visually expanding the living area of the home. I appreciated the limited use of hardscaping because I tend to feel that sometimes it is overused and harsh. I could have sat on this porch all day long, talking with Laura!
Moving into the backyard, visitors have to walk through an amazing little area complete with beautiful basketweave pavers, and a potted garden that would make even the best gardener jealous. (My pots do terribly. Must be the heat. Yes, the heat. That's it.) Although it was warm when we visited Laura's garden, the plants and greenery visually and physically turned down the thermostat and made the yard a joy to sit in.
The patio also contains an amazing fuchsia specimen! This patio opens into another garden room...
...under the red umbrella!
The rustling of the bamboo was so pleasant, and if there was any noise from the surrounding neighborhood I sure didn't notice any. We asked Laura about the bamboo (mainly because I would love to do something similar on the North side of our backyard), and she explain how she trains her bamboo. She chooses which shoots to keep (some are cut back), and then she uses heavy gauge wire to push them apart from one another into the umbrella shape she desires. Many bamboos are thick, but with a little work, Laura created an airy looking bamboo that still rustles in the wind.
The dappled shade of the bamboo on the red umbrella was a little magical.
To see pictures of this room before Laura worked her magic was interesting - it was a blank slate (she has a great post on her blog about the before shots). I especially loved the ground cover. She said it was blue star creeper but with white flowers. After starting as a single flat of plants placed between the pavers, it has reached its way across the pathway in both directions and creates a nice lush carpet in this part of the backyard. The mirror in the background gives the illusion that the yard is much larger than it is - this is the first time I've seen this done in person, and let me tell you, it TOTALLY works.
The ground cover reaches almost all the way to another urn fountain, and Buddhist statue. The blue of the stones and statue, the red of the pot, the green of the plants, and the gold of the star really set this particular area off, and is quite pleasing to the eye.
On our way out, I had to take a shot of this fence. Laura's father is a retired "putterer" - the porch expansion, fence, and other projects were all lovingly completed by him. This fence is such a work of art, and showcases craftsmanship that is hard to come by nowadays. You can see that each board was cut and routed to create the curve you see. While someday this will be covered with a vine, it is nice to enjoy the beauty of the gate while still uncovered.
I think 2009 will be the year of meeting other gardeners. I feel enriched by each person I meet, and love to talk shop as if we've been friends forever. I'd like to thank Laura for taking a couple hours out of her day to share a couple beers and the story of her garden, and life.
Thank you.
Jul 3, 2009
Garden Tour: @Interleafer
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11 comments:
Very nice.
If I didn't have annoying family members in California I'd love to move back there some day. If y'all can have them kicked out of the state or something to hasten the process please let me know.
I want a garden with lots of cacti & succulents.
Wow, Katie, I'm kind of speechless! I've never seen my garden through another's "lens" so to speak, and I like it!!! Even glad you captured my notorious 'Boston Ivy Fail' (dead section behind Kuan Yin statue, the result of Roundup over-spray by neighbor...GRRR!) I do have to say I owe the garden's lush looks (especially those pots) to a 1st-class irrigation system on a good timer; my plants are grateful that we won't have a repeat of last summer's drought-or-deluge.
Thank you so much Katie; I too have so enjoyed meeting the faces and the stories behind the tweets. You are welcome under the Red Umbrella any time!
Wow, it's a beautiful garden, but the photographer's talent helped just a little bit!
OMG. What an unbelievably welcoming and relaxing space!
Love that you met this virtual friend and made her a real one, and vice versa. What a cool garden! It can be a challenging climate, especially when striving to be water-wise. She shows what you can do if you have the vision and knowledge to make it work. I'm jealous of the puttering relative, I could use one of those for sure! That gate is amazing. Life under a red umbrella, sounds pretty nice to me.
It's a beautiful garden. I especially like the front entry. Creating a room out front with a low, open fence makes such a difference in how you can enjoy being in "public" without feeling exposed to neighbors and the street.
It's fabulous. What a contrast between the stone-dominated front and the lush greenery of the back. Obviously a garden that belongs to a skilled designer.
How interesting to see Laura's garden through someone else's eyes and words. Thank you for sharing it. I wish I lived in a frost free zone and could leave pottery outside all year!
It's a beautiful garden and that fence and gate are incredible. You are going to be giving Pam some competition Katie.
wow! lots of inspiration to be found here...
OMG... B-e-a-u-t-i-f-u-l!
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