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hunt4carl

Are 'Garden Tours' worth the time and cost?

hunt4carl
14 years ago

This is a copy of a thread that I posted recently on another (regional) forum,

and quickly realized that I should have posted it here to reach the wider

gardening community:

In a current post on this forum, there was some discussion about the relative

cost/value benefit of a particular tour of Beacon Hill gardens. Never having

been on this particular tour, I can't offer an opinion on it; but I did think it might be interesting to hear people's thoughts on garden tours in general.

Over the years, I've been lucky enough to visit/tour virtually hundreds of gardens, and don't really consider a single one of them a waste of time (maybe money, though!). . .like any other art form - and, yes, I think putting together a diverse collection of plant material is artful - the more you actually SEE in that art form, be it dance, music, theatre, sculpture, painting, gardens, you name it, the better able you are, as an an individual, to appreciate and distinguish between the good, mediocre, bad and ugly. And as the old adage

says: "Imitation is the highest form of flattery." I cannot begin to confess to

the number of design ideas and color/form combinations that I have happily

"borrowed" from other gardens - if a couple of the NE gardeners whose gardens I have visited where to stop by here this summer, why they'd surely

recognize certain familiar elements in THIS garden ! In short, touring other

people's gardens is one of my great passions - not only do you get to see some totally terrific stuff, but I invariably meet some delightful people. It's

just a win-win situation. . .and it sure beats trolling the mall. . .

Soapbox Time: on the slimmest chance that someone out there (perhaps a

newbie) doesn't know about them, let me briefly introduce you to the easy

answer to successful garden touring in America - The Garden Conservancy,

and more specifically, their splendid Open Days Program. This is modeled on

the original English program, whereby the Conservancy publishes a directory

each Spring, listing all the gardens that will be open across the country that

year, with specific days and hours for each, brief descriptions, and complete

instructions for finding each garden. There is a flat fee of $5.00 charged as

you enter each garden; Garden Conservancy members are eligible to buy

books of tickets which works out to a mere $2.50 per garden visit - BUT, and

this is important to know, you DO NOT have to be a Conservancy member to

attend any of these Open Days. Nor do you have to be a member to buy the

annual directory - it's available to anyone for $21.95 - or, for no money at

all, you could log on to their website all the time and get the current listings.

A membership, of course, gets you a FREE directory, plus the added bonus of

being able to visit Garden Conservancy Preservation Projects - the stabilization and maintenance-in-perpetuity of significant/historic American

gardens, of which there are currently 14, two of them in New England!

For me, having that directory literally allows me to block out my traveling

schedule the six months of their Open Days Program; all my other activities get arranged around the garden tours - have you figured out yet that I'm fanatic about this? :o)

On the same subject, I've scanned the list of forums available here on GW and I don't think I see one that specifically lists Garden Tours. Is this something that would be of interest to any other gardeners: a comprehensive

listing of garden tours, big and small, national and specifically local, that all

of us could post to with new listings which would include dates, cost, hours

of opening, and travel information?

Carl

Comments (13)

  • david_5311
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Hi Carl! I for one enjoy touring other private gardens immensely and I too have learned a lot from them. There are far more tours in the east generally, at least NE and the mid-Atlantic, than there are in this area. My old garden was on a Garden Conservancy tour more than 15 years ago, but the GC runs few tours in this part of the midwest, and Ann Arbor specifically is no longer a tour site as it was at least then. The local Farm and Garden women's group runs tours annually which are well attended. i have been on local garden tours that I just stumbled across in other parts of the country. I for one would love a national 'compendium' of all garden tours across the US, so that if I were travelling somewhere I could check the list and see what tours might be available.

    I like to have people come through my own garden and like visiting others too. One thing that is sort of disappointing is that most garden tours are very clustered in June and July, and there relatively few tours that highlight gardens in other months (though yes of course, areas with wonderful springs, Charleston, Virginia of course) often have spring tours. My own garden has interest from March (some years anyway) into November and sometimes I wish there were more available in the way of tours that showed garden beyond their single best season or weekend. How many 'hellebore weekends" or "fall color" weekends are there in northern gardens that show what can be done in gardens to extend thier normal season beyond that which all local gardeners recognize? I think it would be great to be able to see individual gardens through a much greater sequence of seasons than most tours highlight -- though of course, seeing any interesting garden at a single timepoint is worth it.

    David

  • Donna
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    I have often wished for a list of garden tours that I could easily refer to when planning a trip to a different part of the country. I make it a point to seek out botanical gardens and even garden centers wherever I go. Some people bring home souvenirs....I bring home plants! :)

    I have seen the Garden Conservancy advertised in gardening magazines but never really understood out it worked. Thank you for the information.

    And yes, I think a forum that listed outstanding gardens to visit would be wonderful. I have, on a few occasions, visited advertised gardens that were just not my cup of tea. And, I have visited gardens I chanced upon with no prior knowledge of them that were a delight. It would be nice to get recommendations by other gardeners with no profit to be gained by their opinion.

    I had the privilege of visiting Butchart gardens two years ago while on vacation. That was the most I have ever paid to visit a garden, but still less than a day at Disney World. I'll take Butchart anytime! :)

  • hunt4carl
    Original Author
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Good point about too many of the tours occurring during "peak" months of
    June/July. . .in my own gardens, I let the flowering shrubs and a few bulbs get me through the Spring, but most of my focus this past decade has been toward developing a lengthy Fall garden, from late August right into November - it has definitely become my favorite garden period, but with a little research (and touring other gardens during that time span!). I have discovered there is a wealth of plant material that thrives late in the season. But things may be changing here on Northeast garden tours: there are currently 13 Open Days listed for NY, NJ and New England in August, September and October, which means we'll get to see dozens of late season gardens this year.

    A lot of the best gardens to be seen early or late in the season tend be public gardens - I'm thinking here of Winterthur, or Chanticleer, or the New York or Brooklyn Botanical Gardens. . .I suspect the same is true for you in the northern reaches of the mid-West. By the way, you mentioned your own garden is part of a Fall tour: how about details, so that a bunch of us GW folks can hire buses and descend on you from every direction ! :0)

    Carl

  • PRO
    Kaveh Maguire Garden Design
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    I can't think of a single Garden Conservancy tour Open Days garden that I visited that wasn't worth the trip. And they usually have them set up so that you can visit a few gardens in a day. This was all in Connecticut and upstate NY when I lived back east.

    I think I looked into it for here in the L.A. area when I first moved out here but if I remember correctly it was all done in this weird hush hush way for secrecy where you had to go some place and buy the tickets and then you got directions on where the gardens were. So I ended up passing. But maybe I will check it out this year.

    But yeah anyone in the CT/NY area really should check them out. The gardeners are often very nice to talk to as well.

  • hunt4carl
    Original Author
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Clematisintegrifolia: there are three Open Days in your Los Angeles area this year, in April, May and June, as well four more days in the SF area, if you head
    north at all.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Open Days 2010 Schedule

  • PRO
    Kaveh Maguire Garden Design
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Yeah my issue with it last time was that I like to plan ahead and I swear the way they did it here was like some kind of weird undercover drug deal. lol

    It was like "The homeowners really like their privacy so we are not going to publish the list of gardens. You show up at this appointed spot with your money and we'll give you your tickets and a list with directions."

    I'm more of a Google Maps so I can tell exactly what kind of traffic I will be dealing with, and get an aerial shot of the garden so I can get some clues ahead of time if it is something I am going to be interested in, kind of guy.

    I'll have to see if I have one of the Open Days books handy. If I looked at a list of the CT/NY ones it would probably jog my memory of some of the excellent ones that are must sees.

  • flora_uk
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Slightly off topic, well just a bit. If any of you keen garden tourers ever come over to the UK try to get hold of 'The Yellow Book' before you arrive. It's a national list of gardens, both private and public, which are open to visitors. Gets you into all sorts of places, some huge estates and some tiny back gardens but all interesting.

    Here is a link that might be useful: The Yellow Book

  • david_5311
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Well OK, I have a fall tour here Sept 19, I share Carl's feelings about the joy of a fall garden, and most local gardeners have long gone to sleep or planted a few mums, the garden equivalent....even in the cold ugly upper midwest z5, gardeners should get every inch of interest out of April-November, and it is possible even in a small garden, with effort........but I do wish I lived in a more benevolent, year round climate. Just returned from Portland OR and NW Garden nursery in Eugene, to see that a garden can be completely sublime in mid-Feb is a joy, and you folks in Atlanta, NJ, hey anywhere milder than ME, shouldn't be far behind....

  • chills71
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    our local gardening society is mainly run by little old biddies (no offence to anyone who feels they may be one) who pooh-pooh non-native plants and who use the gardening tours as a means of socializing, gossiping and the like. I went one year, with the intent of trying to put my own garden on the tour in subsequent years, but the conversations from the venerated members soured me to the idea.

    This is a town where I was asked (ok, threatened under penalty of a fine) to trim bushes (which were vines atop a 6-7 foot trellis, fully laden with ripening fruit) due to their being visible from the street (but only if you step into my driveway) and the garden-club wrote about an elderly gentleman growing tomatoes in the cracks in his driveway, which he has been doing for the past couple years since he lost his license.

    The mother of a co-worker of my wife's is a member and she clues me in to their annual native plant sale. Twice I've bought plants only to find out in time that they were mis-identified. I haven't been back since.

    ~Chills

  • tlacuache
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Well, on behalf of biddies everywhere...

    No, seriously, bless your heart! That sucks, dude. My condolences. If you don't mind, though, I would appreciate it if you could post some pictures this summer of the old guy with the tomatoes in his cracks. That sounds like a hoot, so pass it along if you get a chance. In the meantime, hang in there. Give the "venerated" folks my best.

  • DYH
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    The Garden Conservancy Days tend to be in September here in my area. I usually go to a few, but not all of the gardens as all the gardens are in the next city over.

    Flora - thanks for the Yellow Book link! WOW!

    I just wrote about the gardens in my area of North Carolina and noted which are free and which aren't.

    It would be great to have this information from other folks. For example -- the Buffalo Garden Walk folks who have open gardens in July. I'd love to go, but it's a bit of a drive from NC to NY.

    Cameron

    Here is a link that might be useful: Ten Gardens to Visit in the North Carolina Triangle

  • david_5311
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Hey chills, I would be curious where the "old biddies", z 6b part of the Michigan gardenind community is. I guess there can only be a few areas, since most of Michigan is WAY colder than that, must be Berrien Co, maybe Traverse City or somewhere withing a few miles of L Michigan, or maybe right alond Lake Erie N of Toledo. We are z 5b here, maybe 6a with optimism. But we have not had mild winters the past few years -- not like the early-mid 90s. Those were good years for the stock market AND gardens. David

  • chills71
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Think East side of the state, north of Windsor, Ontario. And you're right, I'm hugging the water. My mother in law 3 miles west of me sees a zone colder temperatures.

    SCS Yardners (the club of biddies)

    I've got wireless thermometers all over my yard and this year (and 3 out of the last 5) I've pulled a zone 7a. (assuming this winter doesn't throw anything else cold at us)

    ~Chills PS...you must be in the suburbs of Detroit yourself I'm guessing by your zone rating.