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Tag Archives: Gaiety Hollow

New Sidewalk!

19 Wednesday Mar 2014

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

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Gaiety Hollow, garden, root removal, sidewalk replacement

The public sidewalk in front of Gaiety Hollow was in rough shape, mostly due to tree roots heaving the pavement upwards.  The morning of my last visit the City of Salem crew had demolished the old sidewalk, and it was all captured on film by arborist Woody Dukes.  Woody said that the old sidewalk was poured directly onto the soil, allowing the tree roots to grow under the concrete and eventually cause the sidewalk to buckle.  First they broke up and removed all the old concrete,

-6

then they removed offending roots (and here Woody says we’ll just have to wait and see if the trees can survive…)

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then they built the forms for the new sidewalk, giving the tree roots a little extra space…and put down gravel under where the new concrete will be poured…

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-8

Today the city crew poured the new sidewalk and it looks pretty good…let’s hope the trees can survive…

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(I’m not sure HOW Woody got this next shot…but it’s clear the new sidewalk will be good looking!)

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Camellias, Boxwood and the Renovation

15 Saturday Mar 2014

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

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Tags

boxwood, camellias, Gaiety Hollow, garden, garden design, Historic Gardens, house remodel, Lord & Schryver, Lord & Schryver Conservancy, pruning boxwood hedges, white oak

When I got to the garden today the crew was just finishing up the Friday morning work party…trying to rid the garden of “invasives”…a thankless task…

goodbye invasives

and I checked the boxwoods…the severe pruning has begun…

radical trim

but you can see from this view of the unpruned on the left, recently pruned on the right, that this will be the right thing to do…

both

and then the camellias are all in bloom…

c 4c 3c 2

c 6C 1c 5

…a quick check of the new tree…

new tree

and then I headed inside where the renovations are almost complete.  The former living room has become the meeting room…

inside 2

inside 1

the dining rooms views remain the best in the house…

dining rooom 1dining room 3dining room 2

and upstairs, the room over the garage that was Lord and Schryver’s office will become the “library”/”archive” room…

LIBRARY 3LIBRARY 1LIBRARY 2

and the carpet has been removed from the stairs…

taIRAS

A quick fond view…

last

and I was off.  Next time: the removal of the front sidewalk…will the trees live??

 

 

 

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The End of the Day

01 Saturday Mar 2014

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

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Elwood, Gaiety Hollow, garden, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver Conservancy, stump grinding, stump removal, tree planting, white oak

The last photos have rolled in this evening showing the oak in situ, the magical machine that grinds stump by remote control, and the Townsend’s warbler doing a good imitation of a hummingbird.

After we left the intrepid team worked on and on (THANK YOU ADAM!!!) and the tree is in place.  It went like this…

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-8

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And earlier Gretchen was telling me of the miraculous stump grinder from Elwood that works remotely…the guy hardly even needs boots…

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It was a long day for our intrepid crew…a day that proved above all else that FOCUS and PERSEVERENCE are part of the L&S story.  Congratulations Gretchen, David, Woody, Joyce, ADAM….hooray!

and here are Woody’s photos of that Townsend’s warbler pretending to be a hummingbird.

warbler 1warbler 2

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The Garden Comes Back to Life!

28 Friday Feb 2014

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

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camellias, Gaiety Hollow, garden, Garden in winter, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver, pruning, pruning boxwood hedges, pruning camellias, snow damage, tree planting, white oak

Gaiety Hollow is an old garden, as you know.  The lovely small hedges and decorative trees have become huge, so the problem of scale is now on the agenda…big time!  The problem becomes how to strike a balance between the original intent when the garden was planted, and the fact of maturity in an historic garden.  It took Darin 12 hours to prune the massively overgrown hedges at the front of the house.  He saved some sections for infill and when we got there today Gretchen Carnaby, David Lichter and Joyce Zook were hard at work…take a look…

hedges 3

hedges 4

hedges 2

blue wheelbarrowhedges 4.5hedges 5

hedges Joyce

He didn’t prune the inside of the hedges…Gretchen said next year or the year after for that…when the street-side has filled out…

Hedges 1

but the BIG news for today was the arrival and planting of the new white oak to replace the fallen giant, the donation of John Miller.  Adam volunteered to work on digging the chips from the old oak out of the dirt left in the hole.  Any chips of the old tree will rob nitrogen from the new tree and retard healthy growth…

Adam 1

David and Joyce jumped in to help, along with arborist Woody Dukes assessing the chip-to-dirt ratio… (it looked a little like a needle in a haystack…)

chip removal

COFFEE BREAK!

equipment

coffee break

(I DIDN’T get a shot of the Townsend’s Warbler with it’s nose in the camellia)

camellia

Woody pointed out the snow damage in the camellias…

snow damage

and worse yet, the squirrel damage.  The squirrels are killing off the tops of various camellias by girdling the trees to eat the bark.  Look just above Woody’s finger and you can see where the bark has been gnawed off…

squirrel damage

just below the stripped trunk is a strong shoot in healthy bark, so in due course Woody will remove the now yellowed and dying top and the new shoot will fill in.

Gretchen pointed out to me one of the next projects…an espaliered camellia that is very overgrown, and is going to be massively pruned…here it is today, with Gretchen’s note that it has a strong interior structure…so stay tuned for the results…

future prune

interior

On our way out we checked the new little white oak, waiting to be planted…

new oak

A lot of activity for the sunny and bright last day of February!

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The February Snow

24 Monday Feb 2014

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

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Gaiety Hollow, garden, Garden in winter, Snow in the Garden

Gaiety Hollow neighbor Susan Miller sent along these images of snow in the garden…beautiful, but (we hope) just a memory, for this year anyway…

L&S Snow 4

L&S Snow 3

L&S SNow 2L&S Snow 1

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February in the Garden

20 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by Lord & Schryver Conservancy in Garden, Uncategorized

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Gaiety Hollow, garden, Garden in winter, Historic Gardens, hummingbirds, stump removal

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…

Hbird 2

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

cranbe

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.

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January in the House and Garden

17 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by Lord & Schryver Conservancy in Gaiety Hollow, Garden, House, Lord & Schryver, Uncategorized, Vintage Photos

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Gaiety Hollow, garden, garden benches, Garden in winter, house remodel, iron in tree, Lord & Schryver, tree removal, white oak

 

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…

stump1

stump 2 stump 3

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…

trunk sectiontrunk slab

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

2x4

Image 11

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…

injury

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!)

IMG_0718 IMG_0719 IMG_0720 IMG_0721

wallpaper

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

camellia

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Happy New Year!

01 Wednesday Jan 2014

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

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Tags

Deepwood, Gaiety Hollow, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver Conservancy, Volunteering

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.

gate

Gate 2

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House and Garden Tour

19 Thursday Dec 2013

Posted by Lord & Schryver Conservancy in Gaiety Hollow, Garden, House, Lord & Schryver, Uncategorized, Vintage Photos

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Asahel Bush II, boxwood, Bush House Museum, Clarence Smith Architect, Gaiety Hollow, garden, Garden in winter, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver, Lord & Schryver Conservancy, pruning, vintage garden photos

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…

tour 3tour 3 a

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…

L&SArchiveImages1108 050 vinatge garden view

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

tour 12 vintage flower garden

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

tour 14 window side garden tour 15 window dining room tour..

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…

tour 10 atour 10 btour 10 c

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

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ALMOST Snow

12 Thursday Dec 2013

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

≈ 1 Comment

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boxwood, Gaiety Hollow, garden, Garden in winter, Lord & Schryver, pruning, Snow in the Garden

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!

 

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bonniehull

bonniehull

Bonnie Hull is a painter. Transplanted from the urban mid-west, she works in Oregon's capital city living in a mid-19th century house. Studio, garden, quilting, coffee, preservation, the Oregon art world are among her topics.

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