• 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

Tag Archives: pruning

November News…

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

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

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Tags

boxwood, Gaiety Hollow, garden, garden design, Garden in winter, Historic Gardens, Historic House and Garden, Lord & Schryver, pruning, pruning boxwood hedges

We entered the garden through the back gate today, late in the afternoon, and there was a meeting going on so the lights were all on and the house looked inviting…

lights on

A walk through Gaiety Hollow this blustery afternoon revealed that MUCH work has been done in my absence…volunteers have finished trimming all the boxwood and it looks very good, even on a dark, wet and dreary day…

alle looking north (1)

-25

Elwood’s Tree Service has done some professional trimming (best done by somebody nimble on the top of a ladder)-26

-28

-4

-7

and the holly hedge is amazing…-27

-39

holly 1

holly 2

There has been lots of planting…two white lilacs…

Lilaclilac 2

a crab apple…

crabapple

and a beautifully shaped Japanese maple near the house…

Japanese maple

a small holly near the back porch…

-41-42-40

lights on (1)

always more to do though…foundation plantings…

foundation

and then the wear and tear of time and weather always brings new projects…

fence 1 (1)

fence 2 (1)

but in spite of the wind and rain, this garden always makes me happy…and now beginning to feel festive…!

skimmia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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October in the Garden…

07 Wednesday Oct 2015

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

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Tags

boxwood, Deepwood Gardens, Gaiety Hollow, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver, pruning, pruning boxwood hedges, vintage garden photos

Fall is here, but the zinnias are still going strong!

profusion of z's

zinnias

Last weekend we were hosting the meeting of the Pacific Northwest regional affiliates with the national Garden Conservancy…a chance for them to take a road trip and see what is really happening in our garden.  It’s always fun to welcome new people to Gaiety Hollow and its delights, but in preparation for the Saturday workshop, the Friday crew was doing a little seasonal pruning and hedge-trimming:

on the lawn

David

Bobbie

Shirley’s clippers looked light-weight and sharp…

Shirley 2

the familiar garden views still delight…

view through arbor with Jay tools tidying up

and the next project up will be re-plumbing the fountain and getting it in working order…

next project (1)

Correspondent Woody Dukes sent along this vintage photo of the urn when it was in the scroll garden at Deepwood…and then a photo of the urn in it’s new location…

Note ivy cut-out in terrace.

urn 1

Now we’re just waiting for some fall rain!

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An Exciting Week…and a Garden Party!!

08 Friday May 2015

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

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Gaiety Hollow, garden, gates, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver, Lord & Schryver Conservancy, pruning

Gaiety Hollow was a busy place this week…both the house and the garden.  George Crandall’s beautifully crafted gate (built from the original L&S design) was installed this morning, symbolic of the huge progress the Conservancy has made in this last year at Gaiety Hollow.

gate in place

George Crandall crafted the new gate and David Lichter did all the research turning up many historic photos including these (please excuse the bad “screen shot” images)…here’s a drawing of the gate Elizabeth/Edith did on a table cloth back in the day…

83C1Tv93wuL6SxoB1oQPkp2WSeNSKgbgdp4cqvQLsLAA4Z9VdoX9LNA2eHQcb1OJMqphdxJ0_8fQuzuqmUvJSHNEKSKq2KnJGT7klW7gnW7Aj3KKc84mKZ2yU3beHTXjMI8C-Fxsma6MFQLfsH_O4MvFHMCwysUN7cdNcokG08xhHyKSZHhh5ahwagT80u4QpkNxN_ (1)

The house in 1934 with a gate which was the original one…

IMG_5333

IMG_5332

and in the garden, the mulch arrived…

truck

mulch 1mulch 4mulch 5

mulch 3

mulch 6

IMG_5312

and in the house, the reprints of some of the many original drawings now in the collection of the Knight Library at the University of Oregon arrived and were hung in the living room and dining room…adding a wonderful resonance to the rooms…(and keep in mind here, this is NOT a house museum but it a working space devoted to gardens)

Hanging Wynnhie-Lea

This was Schryver’s thesis project at the Lowthorpe School in 1923, an imagined garden called Wynndie-Lea…

Wynndie-Lea

scroll garden

IMG_5326

and Thursday night we all trekked to Portland for a delightful party honoring the work of Lord and Schryver in an L&S garden of the 1930’s.  The garden has been cared for beautifully for 30 years by Thayer and Jon Willis, though was originally designed for Mary and Gerald Beebe in 1932.  L&S Board member Marilyn Kingery asked the Willises to open their garden so that the many Portland people who have L&S gardens, or garden remnants, could come see, enjoy and get solid information about Lord and Schryver and their work.  Marilyn gave thoughtful and touching remarks about the L&S garden she once enjoyed, and Landscape architect Steven Koch talked about the interest and importance of the design work of the team.  (Koch now owns the Wallace Kay Huntington house near Champoeg…Landscape architect Huntington was mentored by his life long friends Lord and Schryver and worked with them several times)

Marilyn SK

But, of course the real star was the beautiful garden with allees, views, focal points and plants of particular interest…this garden has it all…and Steven Koch’s remark about the L&S tendency to “compression” was immediately apparent on entering the house and looking through to the garden and the exceptional crabtree allee…OLD but very small crabtrees, boxwood and Yew hedges, nothing else…

crab allee

and the view back toward the house…

crab allee looking toward house

and now you are free to roam the garden…(psst..this brick feature is not a shed…it’s gate to the side yard…)

gate 1Gate 3

View of Mt. Hood

sunset view

through the gate to the parterre garden…

view from gate

terrace 2

and the espaliered pear…

espalier 1

espalier 2

By this morning though, back in Salem, our intrepid Board president Bobbie Dolp was hard at work pruning the overgrown laurel hedges on the back alley…with help from Jay Raney…

Bobbie and Jay

and Ann…who I have often photographed quietly working away…

IMG_5310

The Lord and Schryver Conservancy is so VERY grateful for all the hard work and thought and devotion that the many volunteers put into furthering the legacy of Elizabeth Lord and Edith Schryver and their gardens.  Thank you Thayer and Jon Willis, Marilyn Kingery, Ruth and Don Roberts, David Lichter, Ross Sutherland, Brandy O’Bannon, Bobbie Dolp and Gretchen Carnaby, Valerie McIntosh, George Crandall, Woody Dukes, the Raneys, and many many more.  This is good work.  Come join us.

 

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A Cold and Rainy Friday Report

25 Saturday Apr 2015

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

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camellias, Clarence Smith Architect, Gaiety Hollow, garden, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver, pruning, vintage garden photos

It was cold and overcast when I checked in this morning at Gaiety Hollow.  Undaunted, Woody was on a ladder putting the finishing pruning touches on the sasanqua camellia for this season…

pruning

He explained about opening the interior of the plant this season and waiting for the new buds to form before he can prune front to back next year…

pruning 2

There were tools everywhere…

tools 1 tools 2 tools 3

evidence of pruning…

pruning 3

David showed me the old gate that had been stored in the Deepwood coach house…this one designed by L&S about 10 years after the house was built…they replaced the architect Clarence Smith’s gate with one of their own design.

old wooden L&S gate

…similar in feel to this one they designed for a client in the 1930’s…

gate drawing

After about 60 years of service, it was replaced with this metal gate….

newish iron gate

but now David and George have made a new wooden gate which will soon go here…

gate space

The allee and the flowering shrubs were in bloom…

Allee from lawn

Allee 3

Allee 2

but I thought you might like to see some of the vintage photos of the garden at this time of year…here it was in 1950…

Knight Library Home Garden Dogwood + Focal Point, West Allee May 1950

and more…

Home Garden - West Allee 1 (DS)

1952…(the garden was 20 years old)

Home Garden - Evergreen Garden looking north (DS)

Home Garden - Evergreen Garden looking S (DS)

and the tulips…

Home Garden - Flower Garden 1 (DS)

See you next week!

 

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Pruning and Tulips

11 Saturday Apr 2015

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

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Gaiety Hollow, garden, Historic Gardens, Lord & Schryver, pruning, sasanqua camellia, spring garden, tree peony

It’s been a busy couple of weeks in the garden.  LOTS of pruning has been going on including work on the sasanqua camellia near the back door…Here it is when arborist Woody Dukes was just under way…

NxQ2q_HbcXwMlLMdSb99IrX4wK23zGkYyUtMusVl1doqPttPwEqD6_hwtpXxaTdOLiDRfPE76xFw9CA_wFC_AmpzGRWxVS6xnnagUcj379_kv1dL40kU3VDv34FstqJ8-UEU3TOEKR67cNf43fGB2egi6loN__Fzg2uQ8AIMrdgYCM8p_SHYs9ryu_FbpfgdqopQAl

and here’s a photo from 1988…

7M5vEQDMB8EEDGKQMfR4Q1g4X6auAXdVMwqMrWk7bpkUe5ZVueyg17YRY2WEFNJwTR5uWV-Fkt-nxcoZrM3pBXDzx0AY2c8EiwKwLhCWOpr-vS6VxvIQFpJKzz3gOhbBb0_LqVqJbhVsO0aVzGQpQUFJcqDo7F9zYghsoRyPxUD8klQq_cbH3VOfby0WsBXeAkvg5c

Woody kept working…

QcnoAKL45Noz_dAe8cPyREENZy7eMMPXlktMRvUy1IugOAH8Q9zMq29ijKyxwM1Deql_v8Sqs6YWKx90uT89ZUEVLRRTMdIbrO-EsnNZ98rI9mRzwEWcqhv7Bv3316VlGJ_ltiNCPCg_is4VQfRlsE_cK_jCHCaeKZlaYwsO2u2160Ie3u1OiCdhugWNKfGGP2lXwH

In the meantime garden volunteers Shirlee Sliger and Jay Raney worked on opposite side of the big central pergola….

qWN05AunM4w6z6Qm61rLe8HZUDjneDMPaKRVxWBugayJWYbRWBPAfB3mjOvRopPuexozLg4cSU1Z7J_LmrWBPNBOYZKDRUp60s6awS1Jf_tYxjfgzCLSv2r9vy9XcUU4yDnBefcDSlqoKI74s_kIxvqC5gqkeJ2tGUlSvAyBsbdXV8_njsjoZUJBfKnzQuxzW9OHMX

0OyIzxvVpOjfZkyhxrhnHhOxfybCO18K_p9bENZsEeJhgaIWNhfZlnGraj7u45uSJGabwmrrosi3JIcSQqVpQtPXQbPOOcbTq0yKORr7md7WqyuUgNCV84_yMRhAotXcBidko6wedDpsyln3butRHUE5Eczems7Kt-3VE9GjJ1AYN8JV_JdXjuL2F52WHhtDLJ4tQD

xGWkM3_kMPYhPGWlhSa2AHgG3cSZwZvKe32h00Q9g6J7MV2jYoAUuD2omLGQ5Hdg0ZA_xLcVS0zWJBkthV9ImQz32N96mb83T3qe2SjR-bS34lEjvFPaAF3pYZ9O4zsLmuj7hFs7GTyxFkOHFeb-cVN9cynmU9jllLPbPgje4gU5-dSMRcJe3LSAuey9hzeXMdLQM3

The two tree peonies are beautiful, though taking a beating in the rain…(I sometimes wish they didn’t bloom so early…)

WSzWoV2_uGuUDPuKzb0BDEmc3c1AfAJKt9qIaVQi505WQFXInbYW1p23qIiNZh4GbcHgx67vVdSA3q7vBoWCsEuYTn4Na4mfQH9F1aoWjPJYcjmNjWPZw-eEiOuDorPFQE3KCCIw54zC6J6wc7IyPgnGmEqby926q4hGlqdgaqKBOxzH8FSipAoryYuWaDprBQdKu0ChVBU5hnD4ytEzQ1Upi_1kxO8EBuiWaU4dm-tkKlgwbjDODqmw1Fy1qco7c5MmyC2q9hnCLnO6cF3Wr1u9V_tBLEFXPbNvd-o5bxe6VuL-cfSpqDf-P_8yUMvcJTbs1N5euCQ-1LeHIyMHUENni0a3afzoxbHcNT7WlskiXhhtYzRzLGmHoXfh4uwvmgl5V3ab75X1

and though Woody sent me all these nice pruning photos, I really wanted a quick walk through the garden this morning by myself.  It was cool, sunny, a little wet…the birds were singing and the tulips were up…I was happy to be there!

tulips

view north

You can almost smell these lilacs, yes?

Lilacs

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Fall Pruning

24 Monday Nov 2014

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

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caring for historic gardens, Gaiety Hollow, Lord and Schryver, pruning

My favorite correspondent, volunteer and arborist Woody Dukes, sent along these photos of the pruning going on at the Gaiety Hollow garden last Friday.  These photos are his.

Here are Jay and Anne Raney working on the “tall and straggly sarcococca under the dining room bay window…”

against the house...

with Molly O’Dea packing off the cuttings, here and after pruning the untidy laurel hedge on the alley…

Woody Dukes and Bobby Dolp worked on the osmanthus (on the right over the cart) west of the holly hedge.  They hand-pruned instead of the shearing that worked for the holly hedge.pruning 2

Woody says that last week Gretchen Carnaby worked to get the rose on the alley fence back in bounds…here’s what it looked like in the summer:

oses file photo

and here when Gretchen finished…

Gretchen pruning

Stay tuned for the pruning of the camellias and rhododendrons as weather permits…

 

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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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Tags

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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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

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Tags

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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