February in the Garden

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Lots has happened at Gaiety Hollow in February…sorry I can’t show you the garden under 3 feet of snow, but I couldn’t get out of my driveway to take photos!

The day before the snowstorm arborist Woody Dukes sent these photos of what looked like spring on the way…

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Hbird 3

Hbnird 1

and work continued on the removal of the giant ten foot tall oak stump…It turns out that age is calculated by diameter not circumference, and the tree once thought to be almost 275 years old was found to be more like 140…still venerable

diameter

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and then the stump was dug out and ground…

stump 1

stump 2

Almost time to replant.   Interior renovations are almost complete…stay tuned for a pictorial update.

January in the House and Garden

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Gaiety Hollow has been a beehive of activity of late.  Luckily today arborist Woody Dukes was on hand to explain the activities of last week when the stump of the old oak was cut down, the badly overgrown crab apple near the front door was removed, and also the overgrown katsura tree in one of the beds near the allee…take a look at the process of removing the huge stump…

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when the stump was down they began to saw it into pieces which was difficult due to all the metal inside…denoted by the black marks…

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several pieces still had the spaces where metal receptacles for 2×4’s were inserted in the trunk to support a bench…

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bench

The crab apple and the katsura, flowering trees planted by Lord and Schryver in the 1930’s, had become hugely overgrown…the crab apple will be replaced with another smaller crab apple.  The original tree had been injured when it was small but new wood hard formed around the injury…

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Meanwhile inside the house work has begun.  First up was removing some paint with lead in it from the living room woodwork and repairing a leak that caused a wallpaper problem (the self-stripping wallpaper!)

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wallpaper

It almost feels like spring…(though Woody reminded me that the garden has a different camellia blooming almost every month!)  Stay tuned…

camellia

Happy New Year!

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Back in 1973 David Duniway, former State Archivist…then Executive Director of Mission Mill Association, wrote a short bio of Elizabeth Lord who was honored that year in Panegyric II, an event that honored contributing citizens.  He quoted Elizabeth Lord as saying:

“Salem people have never seemed to realize the great privilege we possess to make this city one of the outstandingly beautiful cities in our country.”

Consider volunteering this year in the Lord and Schryver gardens at Gaiety Hollow, Deepwood or Bush’s Pasture Park.  Consider donating to the Gaiety Hollow fund to secure the purchase of the home garden.  Consider visiting all of Salem’s garden resources this spring and summer.  Consider thinking of Salem as a gem.

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House and Garden Tour

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Gaiety Hollow is right across the street from another Salem historic house and property…the home of Asahel Bush II, a beautiful Victorian house museum built as the Bush family home in 1877-78, and lived in by family for 75 years.  The house was once an estate in the center of a working farm, but is now a city park with walking paths, an art center, an historic greenhouse.  Here’s a vintage photo of the house…

vintage Bush House

In the 1930’s and 40’s Lord and Schryver planted many crab apple trees on the edge of the Bush family farm, with Sally Bush’s blessing.  As the property was right across Mission Street, Lord & Schryver could observe the growth patterns and hardiness of the various sample trees, which helped them in choosing the right tree for the right client garden.  These days the Bush house is a museum, housing much of the Bush family material, furnishing, photos, etc.  As part of the volunteer structure that supports the museum, there is a committee that oversees restoration efforts, acquisitions, etc.  Tuesday they came across the street to take a tour of Gaiety Hollow…both house and garden.  They were welcomed by Bobbie Dolp, president of the L&S Conservancy, and garden designer, Lord and Schryver historian and plantswoman Gretchen Carnaby.  Bobbie is the woman in the red coat (so we could keep track of her)…

Tour 1

It was a cold and damp Oregon day, but a very good time to visit the garden as the garden structure…”the bones” if you will…are apparent.  And here Gretchen Carnaby points out a crab apple tree by the front door which will be receiving a heavy pruning this winter…

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tour 4 planting design

Then we took a look at the “allee” planted with broad leaf evergreens so it has both a distinct Spring and winter look.  At the far end, from the planning of the garden until 2011, there was a beautiful 300 year old oak tree…

tour 6 tree photo

tour 7 spring allee

a tree that has been sadly lost…

tour 8 winter allee

…but that is really the essence of any garden, perhaps the lesson that gardens teach us…individual plants die and then we make a plan taking into consideration the new set of conditions.

Here’s a vintage photo of the flower gardens in their hey-day…

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and the blank slate the Conservancy has to recreate the gardens as designed (the planting plans exist)…

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tour 13 gravel

We moved into the house…where we got an over-view of the house construction (Architect Clarence Smith, date: 1932) and we were reminded how masterful the garden design was as there is a beautiful aspect from every window…

Front h all

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We also talked a bit about the boxwoods…original plants to the garden and now VERY overgrown.  They will be heavily pruned this spring, and to get ready for that “windows” were made in the tops of some of the hedges to encourage light into the dark interiors of the plants…

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the ribbon boxwoods will probably lose a full foot in the pruning…

tour 11 boxwood

we’ll keep you posted.

In the meantime, we wish you a very happy holiday from the Lord and Schryver Conservancy.  Consider including the Conservancy in your year-end donations so this good work can go on.

snow on the allee

ALMOST Snow

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Very luckily we have a correspondent who lives across the lane from Gaiety Hollow and is willing to send photos.  She was in the garden yesterday and recorded the almost snow day…

Susan 1

and this photo reminds us of our next topic…pruning hugely overgrown boxwood to bring the garden more in scale with it’s original plan…stay tuned for news on the upcoming pruning…you can see it IS needed…Susan 2

Thanks Susan!

 

The Garden Bench

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Gretchen reminded me that the vintage image of the garden from the house needed to be “flipped”, and when I made that correction I got looking at the image…here is a larger version…

flipped garden image

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and here’s that same view from the second floor of the house this past year…

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and the garden seat this summer…

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and again this fall…

bench this fall

and here are Irene and Jon using this lovely spot as a “photo op”…

Jon & Irene

and I suspect this isn’t the first time.  Wouldn’t it be fun to find some other photos in this same spot?

The House

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Here’s a vintage view of the front of the Lord and Schryver house…

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designed for Elizabeth Lord and Edith Schryver by the architect Clarence Smith, with whom they worked extensively in Salem.  Built in 1930 with the garden designed and installed by L&S by 1932 to embody all of their principles of house and garden, inside/outside/ flowers/greenery, “informal formality”…the garden survives today because of the long stewardship of the Strand family who purchased the house in the mid 1980’s, selling the property to the Kingery family this summer.  The Kingery “kids” grew up in an L&S garden in Portland

Kingery plan

and generously have purchased the house and garden, giving the L&S Conservancy five years to raise the money to purchase the garden for future generations to enjoy and study (this MIGHT be where you got out your check book to make a donation?… to raise the funds and repay the Kingerys’ investment in garden history…?)

When the Strands moved out this year, some of us were allowed to do a walk-through of the rooms and take a few photos.  The house is small in scale by today’s standards, but is totally oriented to the garden and garden views…take a look…(clicking on any individual photo will enlarge it for you)

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and check these beautiful tiles from the master bedroom fireplace surround…

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Once the garden and house were habitable, L&S lived and gardened here all of their days…for Elizabeth Lord (left below) until 1976, for Edith Schryver until 1984.

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house

Congratulations to US!!!

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The Historic American Landscape Survey (HALS) is a federal program created to document historic landscapes in the U.S. (administered through the National Park Service).  In 2013 HALS ran a challenge: “Documenting the Cultural Landscape of Women”…and it was announced November 16, 2013, that Gaiety Hollow won first place!!!!  There’s a cash prize which hopefully can be put toward the purchase of the garden…don’t forget, we’re still raising money!  Help preserve this treasure right in our own town!

If you want to volunteer to help in the garden on Fridays (roughly from 9-12) contact Bobbie Dolp at bobbie.dolp@gmail.com.  Weeding is underway…(weeding is almost ALWAYS underway, I’ve noticed!) but the schedule may vary during the holidays.

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