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Tuesday, March 29, 2022

April 2022 Newsletter of the Sandy Spring Museum Garden Club

 




Garden Club News



Tussie Mussies and the Language of Flowers
Sunday, April 10
 2-4 pm

Don't know what a tussie mussie is?  Tussie mussies were small bouquets popular during the Victorian era.  Each flower, which was assigned its own meaning and message, allowed the
giver of a tussie mussie to send a subtle note of affection to a friend or lover.  Educate yourself on the language of flowers and the history of this craft while creating your own tussie mussie (for yourself or for a loved one!) We are planning for an in-person program in April. You may register HERE


May 21   10-4

Tickets available April 4th on the Garden Club Website


Garden One


Located on what was once Quaker farmland in historic Sandy Spring, the nearly two-acre garden includes beautifully managed vegetable, fruit, herb and flower gardens as well as an apiary. Residents maintain the gardens, employing organic practices that emphasize sustainability and land stewardship.  The joy and satisfaction of nurturing a garden and being outdoors provide therapeutic and pleasant experiences for many.  In recent years, an increased emphasis has been placed on making the garden more accessible for all residents as well as practical for aging gardeners. 

Resident gardeners may request private plots for their personal use.  There are also a number of community beds that grow fresh produce for residents who do not garden.  Specialty gardens such as the rose garden, the butterfly garden, the Shakespeare garden and cutting gardens provide enjoyment for all residents and visitors.  Just outside the garden fence is the greenhouse which is used for starting plants from seed and caring for houseplants throughout the year. Greenhouse plants are displayed in the common area called Flower Alley for all residents and visitors to enjoy.  From the greenhouse, paver paths lead past the cutting beds to a pergola where small groups often gather. Within the garden are four compost bins for which the gardeners have won awards from the Montgomery County Recycling program for the composting operation.  A unique feature is the apiary which provides honey that is sold to help fund garden activities.           

                                                                                                              Garden Two




This three-acre property is a secluded paradise of garden rooms and patios.  Twenty years ago, faced with the triple challenge of heavy shade, dry soil and abundant deer, the homeowners designed and defined the garden with natural hardscaping and a changing palate of bushes, trees, perennials and bulbs.  Visitors will discover a shady and peaceful garden room aptly named the Retreat Garden.  The rock lined space is filled with deer resistant hellebores, ferns and spring ephemerals.  Wander down the sloping hillside and discover a comfortable patio and winding rock lined rooms filled with a variety of shrubs, trees and perennials. The gardens serve to absorb runoff from the sloping hillside.   An abundance of spring bulbs, Virginia bluebells, and ferns bring an accent of color and brightness to shady nooks.  Paths lead visitors to plantings of rhododendrons, ferns, Japanese maples and another patio and sitting area.  Weeping cherries, more delicately twisting Japanese maples, climbing hydrangeas, tree peonies and rows of grass outline the stone paths.   A third, elegantly curved flagstone patio offers a sunny space for the family to enjoy the garden

and the natural surroundings.



                                                                                               Garden Three


 When the homeowners purchased their historic home and 14-acre property 24 years ago, the grounds had been neglected and overgrown.  The owners began a surge of interior and exterior improvements, including the restoration of the old perennial bed and the creation of several other garden areas.   As you enter the property you are greeted by many native specimens and a whimsical garden “bed.”  You also have a spectacular view of the Triadelphia Reservoir and across the lake lies the Brighton Dam Azalea Gardens. The kitchen garden is home to dogwoods, rhododendrons and azaleas as well as a variety of shade loving perennials.  An antique black iron fence is covered with fragrant blooming vines.    Sedums overflow a garden bathtub and grow voluntarily on and around the old pump and greenhouse.  The patio garden is filled with brightly colored lantana and purple daylilies.  A lovely old stone wall is a backdrop for a riot of daylilies, oriental lilies, iris, roses, black-eyed Susan, salvia, poppies, coreopsis, redbud, boxwood, hydrangea and much more.  Outside the stone wall is a magnificent variety of peonies.  The pasture side of the house sports mature hickory and maple trees with a shady understory of shrubs, hosta and heuchera.   The continuing development and transformation of the gardens has made the venue for many local garden tours.  Relax on the open porch, patio or pool deck with a glass of lemonade and take in the serenity and amazing beauty of the place. 


                                                                                         Garden Four 


.

These homeowners call their garden Helmut’s Little Arboretum and understandably so.  They have been filling their quiet suburban yard with a varied and vast collection for over 40 years.  Helmut graduated from the University of Heidelberg and worked in the arboriculture field in Germany, Sweden, Switzerland, and Holland.  In 1961 he accepted a job at the legendary Behnke’s Nursery and managed their woody plant areas until he retired. A love of gardening and nature inspired their gardens, which continue to expand under their care.  Helmut’s love of evergreens forms the core of the gardens that is accented with many unusual plant specimens.  Garden spaces are unified with an assortment of dwarf evergreens, ferns, perennials, bulbs, stone and garden art. Ornamental grasses, shrubs and architecturally pruned trees accent magical garden sections.  The effect is a stunning watercolor and a blended contrast of color, texture, size and shape.  Flowering and fruiting vines decorate fence property lines.  A working greenhouse and garden house provide space for Helmut and Linda to propagate new plantings. In the Spring the back patio becomes home to an exotic jungle of tropical houseplants.   A front pond with horsetail, iris and other water plants provides a natural setting for wildlife and a home for the spring and summer frog chorus.


                                                                                                               Garden Five





This garden on a wooded three-acre lot is a prime example of how to design and develop a garden on a difficult lot. With slopes on three sides of the property, the owners needed to build a garden that combined practical applications to prevent runoff and erosion as well as to create an aesthetically beautiful landscape. Faced with the task of mowing a very steep hill on the side of their property, they created an impressive, triple level stone terrace. The tiers are filled in with tree peonies, roses, spirea and perennials providing year-round interest and seasonal colors.  Ground plantings of lavender blue mazus, iris and bright primrose rim the stately tall trees that sit atop the terrace garden.  Strategically placed decorative faux stones blend in naturally with the wooded area. 

Follow the steps down the hill to the back and enjoy a mass of ice plants, spirea and fragrant lilac. The cracks between the flagstones of the curved patio have been hand planted with mondo grass to inhibit weeds and prevent soil loss.  A sunken bed with wet feet is home to cheery yellow creeping jenny.  A special separate patio includes a stone fire pit where the family can relax and listen to the trickle of the creek.  Another stone terrace secures the hill leading to the stream valley.  The garden is an ingenious and extraordinary example of practicality and beauty.

Annual, vegetable and herb plants will be for sale at garden number five.






                                              The Garden Club is a body of the Sandy Spring Museum

Learn more about our activities and how to join the Garden Club.
https://www.sandyspringmuseum.org/programs-and-events/garden-club
email:  gardenclub@sandyspringmuseum.org or call 301-774-0022.
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