Interesting being at the Lurie Garden
in Chicago after such a viciously cold winter and seeing it all
coming back to life, garden director Jennifer Davit tells me that
“everything” of Piet Oudolf's planting has survived. All down to snow cover – with a
decent depths of snow you can get away with a lot. Its great to see
everything coming back to life and the first bulbs, which are almost
over at home in England, so I feel like I'm getting a second crack at spring.
Muscari do well here, this is the support act for the Salvia River later on but they do not spread like they do at home. |
What's so great about the Lurie Garden
is the intensity and diversity of the planting, you can look at a bit
a few square metres across and say “there's so much going on here,
I could imagine having this at home” which you couldn't with a
classic Oehme van Sweden planting. It's what convinced me to work
with them on doing the little book, a sort of primer for gardeners:
Gardening with Perennials: Lessons from Chicago's Lurie Garden.
One colleague I had breakfast with,
said he thought the Lurie was too much an “intensive care unit for
plants” which isn't really fair, as although it takes a lot of
work, some of it done with volunteers, the comparison you have to
make is with the convention of summer bedding, which takes vastly
more work, an annual expenditure, offers only the most temporary home
for biodiversity and raises so many sustainability issues. The fact that it does take effort to maintain is actually a way of getting public engagement with gardening.
It's such a great place, this time I
felt, not its scale, but actually its intimacy, it is quite a small
area compared to the vastness of the whole lakeside park area. Which
helps, I think, get the message across that this is something
relevant to home gardeners. And if you are here, make sure you check out the plantings on lake side of the Art Institute of Chicago too, designed by Roy Diblik. Who, by the way has got a very good new book out.
Euphorbia polychroma 'Bonfire' in Roy's planting at the Art Institute. |
The new book looks fascinating. Can't wait to request a copy from my library!
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