• Gaiety Hollow: Elizabeth Lord and Edith Schryver

Lord & Schryver Conservancy blog

~ A personal look at the ideas, inspiration, and hard work that go into the Lord & Schryver gardens.

Lord & Schryver Conservancy blog

Monthly Archives: September 2014

Brick Update

24 Wednesday Sep 2014

Posted by Lord & Schryver Conservancy in Gaiety Hollow, Garden, Lord & Schryver

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Tags

brick pathways, Friends of Bush Gardens, Gaiety Hollow, Lord & Schryver Conservancy

I thought you might like to see the group that helped Gaiety Hollow with the bricks…here are the Tuesday Morning Gardeners of Friends of Bush Garden…what a nice looking group they are:

FOBG

they worked hard…digging…

bricks 3

bricks 1

bricks 2

and sweeping…

bricks 5

well…MOST of them did anyway…

bricks 4

Thanks for your help FOBG!!

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Newspaper Mulch

19 Friday Sep 2014

Posted by Lord & Schryver Conservancy in Gaiety Hollow, Garden, Lord & Schryver

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Tags

Aegopodium, Deepwood, Gaiety Hollow, Historic Gardens, Lord and Schryver, newspaper mulch, weed control

Friday morning at Gaiety Hollow, sunny and bright…

8

Gretchen was already there with a load of mulch…

1

They are putting down a newspaper mulch to keep down the aegopodium.  The method is as follows:  water heavily the night before, place newspapers all over the desired area,3wet newspapers fully…

2

layer mulch—3-8 inches dep7ending on the situation…on top of newspapers

cover newspapers fully with mulch…

mulch

cross fingers for a good result.

NOTE:  The tea garden at Deepwood IS a Lord and Schryver design, but no planting plan exists so the restoration has included a bit of guesswork according to what was in the garden and the plant lists favored by L&S.

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Maintaining Brick Paths

17 Wednesday Sep 2014

Posted by Lord & Schryver Conservancy in Gaiety Hollow, Garden, Lord & Schryver

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brick pathways, brick restoration, Deepwood, Gaiety Hollow, garden volunteers, Historic Gardens, Lord and Schryver

Its been a long time since my last news bulletin on the garden at Gaiety Hollow.  The National Garden Conservancy team was here for a visit in August, and a LOT of work has been done…done by volunteers.  The Gaiety Hollow Garden welcomes volunteers on Friday mornings from 9:00-12:00 and let me just add that not only is it work/fun and you are helping an amazing cause, it is an excellent short course in pruning, brick restoration, invasives, transplanting, and numerous other garden activities and techniques.   Just showing up to take pictures, I’ve learned a LOT!  (…and there is always somebody there who really knows what to do and instructs…as well as providing coffee…)

The project this month has been the brick paths.  As lovers of Lord & Schryver gardens know, L&S LOVED brick paths…nowhere more than here, in their home garden.  Over time though, brick paths get weedy and the Gaiety Hollow paths had begun to look like this:

summ er 2013:2

summer 2013

here’s me last spring taking some pre-easter egg hunt photos, but note the brick with a new bunch of weeds beginning to take hold in the April rain…

spring 14

So The Tuesday Morning Gardeners from FOBG (Friends of Bush Gardens) came across the street and started the process of digging the weeds out from between the bricks.  BUT, as Gretchen Carnaby pointed out…you have to dig DEEP to also get rid of the weed SEED.  I arrived at Gaiety Hollow at the end of the process,

bricks 4

bricks 2

bricks 1

bricks 3

so today I went to the little Tea Garden at Deepwood Estate to watch the FOBG Tuesday gardeners work the brick paths there.  This garden was planted in 1932 and though no planting plans exist, we’re fairly sure it was done by Lord and Schryver for Alice Brown.  The restoration work in this garden began in 2007, and it was a joy today to see it looking absolutely beautiful…but I digress.  My mission was to see the team at work on the weed-seed-clearing and they were in full swing when I arrived…

Deepwood 3Deepwood 4

Deepwood 2

Deepwood 5

I went back later in the day to check out their work and it was looking very good…with lots of sand to sweep in later after a bit of watering…

Deepwood 6Deepwood 7Deepwood 8

To see this garden looking so beautiful after seven years of hard restoration work was wonderful.  Heavy pruning, installation of a drip system throughout (coming to Gaiety Hollow at the end of September), replanting, weeding, tending…well I think you should go take a look.  This garden is just down the path from the parking lot at Deepwood Estate, on the right.  It looks absolutely beautiful at the moment…a calm oasis.

Deepwood 9

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