The Recreated 1939-1940 Flower Bulb Planting Plan

This has certainly been one of the more rewarding projects during my horticultural career!  To take a planting plan drawn 80 years ago and to try to recreate it as closely as possible certainly comes with its difficulties. But now, as I watch each tulip come into bloom and reveal its unique color and shape, the reward is realized.

Many of the older Tulip varieties are no longer available in the trade. In that case, should one try to match the original color, such as the infamous ‘Tokay’ wine-colored tulip? Or should one try to match the flower type, such as Lily-flowered, single, or Peony- flowered? This decision-making process made me consider what Edith and Elizabeth would have seen in catalogs and flower magazines of the day.

Elizabeth and Edith knew the Gaiety Hollow garden so well, and in the late 1930’s were doing some of their best work to present it. My next few blog posts will document this important effort. Of course, I want to thank all the volunteers who put in the hard effort of planting hundreds of bulbs, tracking down antique flower bulb catalogs on eBay, assisting in archive research and all the other tasks that went in to making this unique garden project what it is.

Sunny and warm in the forecast with no rain in sight!

Cheers,

Mark

Good Friday

Being of Slavic descent, Easter was always one of the biggest holidays of the year when I was young. Days before, my siblings and I would head to JC Penny with my Mom and Grandparents to purchase new pastel-colored Easter outfits. Then on Easter Day, we would be up at the crack of dawn for sunrise services, followed by an Easter egg hunt, candy and roasted lamb with mint sauce – memories I still relish today.

The gardens at Deepwood and Gaiety Hollow look wonderful as we head into the Easter weekend. Although there may be fewer visitors than in the past due to COVID – 19, the many Lord & Schryver gardeners and supporters can rest assured that we have created a stunning flower display for this annual holiday event.

We hope you are staying safe and healthy. Even if we can’t be with loved ones this Easter, we are hopeful that reunions and better times will be soon be here.

From all of us at the Lord & Schryver Conservancy,

Have a Happy Easter!

Garden Update

After enduring a good spell of rain these last few weeks, the dry days ahead are certainly welcome! Gaiety Hollow’s Camellias are about mid-bloom now, and quite a few other flowering shrubs are coming into bloom as well. The Tulips will no doubt love a respite from the rain.

The fragrant Osmanthus delavayi located right inside Gaiety Hollow’s back gate is almost finished blooming. I’ve enjoyed arriving to work in the early mornings and being greeted by its scent. This wonderful shrub was named for Abbè Jean Marie Delavay, the French Missionary in China from the 1860’s to the 1890’s. While in China, Mr. Delavay collected over 200,000 specimens with some even named after him. He was investigating the flora of Northwest Yunnan when he contracted the Bubonic Plague in 1888.  After becoming ill, he returned to France to recuperate. Sadly, he never fully recovered and passed away in 1895.

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Osmanthus delavayi

 

Enjoy the sunshine!

Mark

The late 1930’s

“This is the sweetest time in the garden. Tender green perennials coming up – with fresh tulips & early ones blooming.” Elizabeth Lord, April, 1938

The late 1930’s was a busy time for Elizabeth and Edith as they had numerous commissions in Lake Oswego, Sandy, Portland and even Walla Walla, Washington. We also know that they were working closer to home, as a project at Salem Senior High School dominates the early spring journal entries from 1938.

“March 23 – 24-25. H School work March 28-30. H. School work, Edith finished. I continued with finishing. April 1-2 and returned for overseeing Monday, a.m. April 4th – by finishing job for Banks. Making 11 days total outside work. Very bad weather for planting.” E. lord 1938

I often admire Elizabeth’s journal entries and her grousing about the weather. Any good gardener knows that the weather is the ultimate boss in the garden. You may think you have everything lined up perfectly when one good hailstorm changes it all.  A warm February can wreak as much havoc as a frosty April.

If I were to grouse about the weather this week it would be to complain about this incessant rain. Oregon’s liquid sunshine has been prolific the past seven days. Here’s to hoping that hail doesn’t arrive and damage Gaiety Hollow’s recreated 1939 Tulip show that is beginning to reveal itself.

Stay healthy,

Mark

The Big Deepwood Cleanup

It was a busy week at Deepwood as we welcomed the start of spring. A very generous donor made it possible for the Conservancy to contract Elwood’s Tree Service to clean up the tree canopy. This long overdue task is a responsibility that should fall on the City but for some years now they have not had arbor work done in the parks. After seeing the difference that Elwood’s arborists made in three days of deadwood removal, maintenance pruning and shaping the trees in the Lord and Schryver gardens, the contrast is remarkable.

I stayed busy helping Elwood’s crew drag brush to the chipper and, in between, worked on regrading the paths in the teahouse. The brick edging had sunk over the years, and the paths were well below grade. They are now back to where they should be just in time for the spring season.

I have been with the Lord and Schryver Conservancy for just over a year now and I want to say how proud I am to be able to be a part of this organization. The work is very rewarding, even though it may be frustrating at times working in a park like Deepwood with fewer resources than I wish we had, and the sometimes-conflicting priorities of the City Parks Department and other organizations involved.

What a positive transformation has taken place in the Deepwood gardens this past year! It has been amazing to work with our volunteers who give and give tirelessly. The generosity of the donor who funded last year’s renovation work is greatly appreciated. It shows that a community of people who care about a place can truly make a difference.

Thank you for giving your time and attention to the Lord and Schrvyer Conservancy. I feel fortunate to be a part of an organization that is making such a significant contribution to our community.

Stay healthy and happy,

Mark

Happy St. Patricks Day!

“May good luck be with you wherever you go. And your blessing outnumber the shamrocks that grow.” (Irish Blessing)

With warm days filled with sunshine, it’s feeling like spring as we hit the middle of March. The flowers are coming on strong now, with the cherry trees in full bloom and the Camellias and Hyacinths well represented too. The Tulips will be along shortly, and the Daffodils are looking lovely.

We have a beautiful new potting bench at Gaiety Hollow, thanks to the wonderful craftsmanship of volunteer Chet Zenone! Just in time for the warm weather to push the seedlings and transplants along.

Cheers to a warm and healthy spring!

Mark

Winter Happenings at the Lord and Schryver Conservancy

It’s been a busy winter here at the Lord and Schryver Conservancy. We are pleased to have wrapped up some large winter projects and are eagerly awaiting the return of spring.

The primary project was the restoration of the Reserve Garden at Gaiety Hollow. This area served as much more than a tool shed and storage area for Edith and Elizabeth. Their journal entries frequently mention plants being lifted from the garden and set in the reserve. Edith and Elizabeth used this area to hold plants while they worked on the ever-changing color schemes of the flower garden at Gaiety Hollow. We are delighted to have this area restored to its former functional purpose.

A big thank you goes to Premium NW Landscape for the work they did on this restoration project. We will be adding a custom-made potting bench to the Reserve Garden in the next few weeks.

In other garden news, Mark spent much of the winter months at Deepwood working to restore some of the brick work in the Teahouse garden. Moss was removed, bricks were cleaned, and brick joints were resanded. Much of the settling brick edge was lifted and returned to the proper grade to better define the flower beds.

We are excited to welcome spring which, with last week’s warm and sunny weather, appears to be hiding just around the corner!

Cheers,
Mark

The Travels of a Gardener

Edith and Elizabeth were well known travelers, as noted by the many lectures they gave to Garden Clubs and other interested groups. I was fortunate to follow in their footsteps this winter, as I joined Jane McGary, a good friend of mine and longtime botanical editor for Timber Press, on her eighth trip to Chile.

During our adventure, we drove over 1,500 miles from north of Santiago all the way to the Lakes District in the south. We met some wonderful people, saw amazing birds and wildlife, enjoyed some local gardens and observed many beautiful plant species in their native habitats. Chile has a fantastic diversity of habitats. Our travels took us from arid steppe to subtropical forests and from sea level to over 11,000 feet in elevation.

We encountered orchids growing on recent volcanic lava flows, dramatic waterfalls covered with ferns and gunnera and mountain slopes with giant araucaria trees. The diversity of wildlife was amazing as well, with birds from burrowing parrots to the giant Andean condor, I was even lucky enough to see wild culpeo fox!

 

 

I have about 3,000 photos to organize! I’m working on a lecture that covers this amazing trip which I plan to share with supporters and friends of the Lord and Schryver Conservancy this February.

Stay tuned for this don’t miss event!

 

 

Winter Projects Update

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While most gardeners have put garden to bed for the winter and are enjoying the crisp, frosty mornings of the Holiday season, the Lord and Schryver Conservancy has been busy with several construction projects.  One is the much anticipated second phase of the Deepwood Lower Terrace Pathway project.

Robert Crown and his crew from Riverdale Landscape Construction have begun removing the old brick retaining wall and steps for renovation. This excavation work has revealed the footings for the old Rose Tunnel. This metal structure was likely the home for 12 climbing roses that were originally planted in 1934 and then again in 1949. One can only imagine what it must have been like to stroll under the Rose canopy when it was in its full glory in the late 1930’s and early 1940’s.

The Addendum to the Historic Deepwood Estate Historic Landscape Report suggests this structure is not currently suitable for replacement due to the deep shade cast by the  overhead tree canopy.  However, the location of the original footings has been carefully documented and perhaps someday if the tree canopy were opened up, this element could be restored to the garden.

For now, the focus is on restoration of the pathway, steps and retaining wall to a more structurally sound version of its former self. We are adding drainage behind the wall as well as channel drains to alleviate the runoff issue down the steep path. The pathway will get base rock and a stabilized, decomposed granite surface that won’t wash out during the heavy rains.

The Lord and Schryver Conservancy is extremely grateful to a generous donor who made this project possible. Without such help, the wonderful Deepwood gardens would be but a shadow of its former glory. It’s exciting to be working toward the restoration of this gem of a City Park.

Mark Akimoff

Garden Manager|Curator