Happenstance Garden Visit

Posted by WiseAcre on Aug 22nd, 2008
2008
Aug 22

I happened to make it to Carol’s garden in Amherst, Mass the other day.

Garden Gate

It was a spur of the moment trip even though I’ve planned on going since there was snow on the ground. A combination of circumstance led me there. I just happened to stumble into blog world and was reading quite a few before I started mine. One of the first things I came across was talk of a ‘Spring Fling” at Pam’s Digging. Well it doesn’t take much to put an idea in my head. Unfortunately Texas was a bit too far to go just to have a good time.

By now Mr. Brown Thumb had managed to coax me into starting my own blog.  I’ve learned since then I better rely on my photographs.  A few one liner comments doesn’t qualify me as a writer. But still I try and participate since it’s a way of sharing.  It’s a world tour of personal gardens and I’m still waiting for someone to show me a gardener that can resist showing off theirs.

That’s how bloomingwriters - Garden Blogger Geography Project steered me to Carol’s place. No big deal. It was one of numerous blogs I visited. But going through some old posts of Carol’s I learned she had used her little car to haul some fairly large rock to build her steam and pond. Now there was something I could relate to. Anyone who drives around the countryside kidnapping rocks and putting them to ‘work’ is my kind of person. Not just anyone knows how to outsmart the big ones.

Carol's pond

If anyone deserved another rock I figured Carol qualified. I pretty much made up my mind right then and there to make a drive by rock drop off. Sooner or later I was going to be within 60 miles of her place and figured it was a good excuse to revisit some old rock hunting grounds of my youth.

Carol's stream

As you can see I made it to Carol’s and saw the pond. It almost didn’t happen. We both had limited time and mine was running out. Getting lost in western Mass. is not a good idea. Relying on memory of roads taken so many years ago isn’t a good idea either if the storage medium gets corrupted. I managed to make a 50 - 60 mile trip turn my odometer over 100.  At home, 40 miles isn’t considered a long drive but driving the back roads in western Mass is painfully slow. What really hurt was losing over an hour before I really had my bearings.

Buttterfly

But i did make it and before you know it I broke off the conversation and chased another visitor out of the garden.  I only wanted a better shot but the butterfly refused to cooperate.

Carol's Fire Pit

Turning the corner from the sunny garden I saw the fire pit.  It was very nicely done but I couldn’t help but feel a bit sad. It will never hold a ‘north country bonfire’ with flames dancing wildly 20 feet high. Carol’s fire pit is more reserved and I imagine the conversation will be a bit more subdued too.  She has neighbor’s to contend with after all.

Chairs

In the background you’ll see why Carol better be discrete. Besides living in the center of town Carol has a big box of old folk living next door. Not the kind of people you want to build a huge fire or have a raucous party in front of. Note the progress being made to fence them out :)

Carol's Peacocks

If these come up missing don’t look at me. Go look in my garden.

I prefer Great Blue Herons but those Peacocks would fit in any garden.

bug on flower

This was new to me. I lost the note I made when i got back in the truck.

It was quick. The visit was over before we really had a chance to get going. I dropped the rock (it was heavy) and had a whirlwind tour before we had to part and go our separate ways. I’ll be back sometime. I never did get to the old rock hunting grounds. By the time I left I had just enough time to get home before dark. I figure both Carol and the rocks will be around a while longer.

Here is what all the fuss was about

Just a Stupid Rock

- a stupid rock (none have a very high IQ)

DOH! I forgot Carol’s link and had to come back and post it.

Tera Nova Design

Now you can go and tell her I sent you to look at her ‘new garden tool’

5 Responses

  1. Aiyana Says:

    Interesting tour, and great photos. As far as rocks, I’ve known a few that were smarter than some people I’ve run into.
    Aiyana

    Aiyana,
    It was too bad the visit never got going. I can spend hours garden chatting.

    Guess that’s where we get “Dumb as a Rock”. Although I prefer quotes from Foghorn Leghorn”

    “That boy is about as sharp as a bowling ball”
    “That boy’s as strong as an ox and just about as smart”

  2. Joy Says:

    I now suffer from “rock’ envy” let alone space for a big beautiful garden with water feature ENVY !
    That was very sweet of you to deliver such a gorgeous rock .. note to self .. try not to tease WiseA** too much .. he is a sweetiepie ^..^
    Joy
    PS .. what does it mean when some of us are fascinated by rocks by the way ? .. some deep psychological meaning, or low, simple, attention span ? haha

    Joy,
    Rock envy is going to weigh you down. Maybe it’s best you stay away from water features.

    I wasn’t sweet - just acting on a whim. BTW - I like being teased and being able to tease back as long as it’s all done in fun.

    I can’t say why others are attracted by rock - for me it’s hanging around my intellectual superiors in the hopes I learn something

  3. Benjamin Says:

    Well, it IS a very pretty rock–a rock one could curl up with in bed on a rainy, cold autumn night. Oh. Right.

    I visited Amherst once. Drove in from Boston after my flight landed to check out UMass for grad school (never went, WAY to pricey to live there). The drive was gorgeous though, and, as you see, a bit convaluded. I remember visiting a bookstore downtown and thinking to myself “it’s gorgeous here, but what’s that smell? And why do I feel like I’m being stared down?”

    Benjamin,
    Curled up in bed with a hot rock is a winter thing. Heat on wood stove, wrap in a big towel and tuck it under the covers for a warm cozy feeling.

    I guess that’s a New England thing - ‘You can’t get there from here’.

    How short are you?

  4. Annie in Austin Says:

    Even a short meeting is better than no meeting at all, WiseAcre!

    The rock looks wonderful - the moss wouldn’t last long here, however!

    Your purple butterfly magnet appears to be Verbena bonariensis - a short-lived perennial here but I grew it as an annual in Illinois. Butterflies love it!

    Annie at the Transplantable Rose

    Annie,
    Yep nothing like meeting in person and actually walking in their garden.

    Texas the Moss Free State?

    Thanks for the ID. It all comes back now (replaces the VERvain I had stuck in my head and knew was incorrect) I liked the tall airy habit. And the butterfly did seem to have a taste for it.

  5. Pam/Digging Says:

    Mini-Spring Flings are popping up all over. I’m glad you got to meet a fellow rock-wrestler and garden blogger closer to home. Carol has a beautiful garden, and she’s lucky to have that rock.

    Pam,
    Aren’t you lucky you live so far away. Carol isn’t lucky. Now she has to decide where to put it. I looked at it for 10 years and never could.

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