What's Blooming: September
Strike Up the Band for Helen's flower!
A Return to Garden Structure
Recently I migrated every post from the original Elizabeth Lawrence House & Garden blog, which was begun in 2009 and on the Blogger platform (not integrated into the Wing Haven website, as this one is). …
I re-read every post. In so doing, I realized that there are more layers to some of those topics than meets the eye, and what has been learned in the years since the posts were written should be shared. …
Red-letter Relics
When I began my work here at the Elizabeth Lawrence House & Garden in November 2010, I had a lot to learn. I think it was about 2012 before I thought it would be a good idea to take at least a visual inventory of everything that was in the house. I set about on a search through every closet and cabinet to see what was there. In one of the hall cabinets, I found a collection of metal items. Among them was what I thought at the time might be a curtain stay.
A Single Bulb, A Legacy in Bloom
What's Blooming: June
What's Blooming: May
What's Blooming: April
Garden-worthy Gems, Plants to Know & Grow
I truly wish this plant had a common name, but apparently it does not. What it does have, however, is three solid seasons of subdued attractiveness in the woodland garden. So what is this plant, you ask?
Pachyphragma macrophyllum is a nearly evergreen perennial. It is not a showy top-billing plant, but rather nicely fills a supporting role under larger shrubs or at the edge of a path.
What's Blooming: March
Meet Charlotte's "Daffodil Man"
What's Blooming: February
What's Blooming: January
A Bouquet of Flowers & 55 Years
In her article for the Charlotte Observer “Bouquet Picked from a Garden on a Bleak December Morning”, published December 18, 1966, Elizabeth Lawrence wrote, “On the fourth of December, after a night when the temperature dropped to 20, and on a day when it did not rise above 35, I went out to pick a bouquet for Mrs. Stuart Gaul who was in the hospital.”
The Beauty of Autumn, Part 2
In the two weeks since my last post, I have continued to see vignettes of nature’s autumnal brilliance. Thanksgiving is a time for remembering to be grateful. Gardeners rarely need a holiday or calendar to remind them; I am grateful every day for these glimpses of beauty, so, once again, I thought I’d share.
What's Blooming: October
Lovely Lycoris, the Bewitching Bulbs, Part 2
Lovely Lycoris, the Bewitching Bulbs, part 1
There are few flowers that I long more to see each year than those of lycoris. There is something bewitching about these bulbs. Perhaps it is the way they spring from the ground seemingly overnight; perhaps it is their brief but spectacular flowering. The anticipation is like a siren that lures me in more every year.