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IssuesNovember 2006Home & Garden

Wreath Sale: A Circle for Life

These wreaths help support a homeless shelter

by Tovah Martin

Christmas lights twinkle in a greenhouse in Tiverton, Rhode Island. People haul unwieldy stacks of evergreens from car trunks and the backs of pickups and station wagons through the frosty night. The greenhouse at Manchester Tree & Landscaping pulsates with conviviality while pruning shears snap to the Supremes' Christmas Collection. It is the night of the Lucy's Hearth Wreath Workshop.

For the past few years, right around the first of December, the Little Compton/Tiverton contingent of the workshop has convened like clockwork. (Satellite workshops meet in the Rhode Island towns of Newport, Portsmouth, West Kingston, and Middletown.) The event is not advertised, but Daune Peckham, a local landscape designer, disseminates the date broadly by way of the botanical grapevine. By 5 o'clock on the prescribed evening, workstations are full and berried branches, pinecones, seedpods, holly branches, and rosehips are clipped, wired, and readied for wreath-ability. For the next few hours, the flash of florist wire threading between boughs punctuates the night. And gradually, a stack of creative, unique, and sometimes quirky holiday decorations mounts to be delivered to the Lucy's Hearth Annual Designer Wreath Sale.

Founded 22 years ago, Lucy's Hearth is a nonprofit organization providing shelter for homeless mothers and their children. This facility, situated in a former convent beside St. Lucy's church in Middletown, houses women over the long haul, providing accommodations for months at a time -- and often as long as a year or year and a half -- while also offering classes in parenting and money management. Most nights, the shelter is filled to capacity.

The wreath sale, held at the Rotunda ballroom at Easton's Beach in Newport, donates all proceeds to Lucy's Hearth (last year's sale netted $14,000 for the shelter), and it is for this good cause that so many volunteers donate their creative skills during the workshops. For most attendees, it's just a night shift of what they've been doing all day. The Little Compton/Tiverton group is like a "Who's Who" of wreath making, with Rick Peckham of Peckham's Greenhouse (no relation to Daune) being the undisputed expert among a cognoscenti crowd. He's the realist in residence, advocating "shake tests" and "drop tests" to ensure that the wreaths will weather the full brunt of occupational hazards -- including gusting winds and rigorous door slammings -- at their future homes.

For anyone who's experiencing a wreath-making block, Rick willingly shares his formula: Use a mixture of different textures and subtly diverse colors. "It's no different than making a perennial garden," he says. Diversity ensures that you can see the trees in the forest, so to speak, in each evergreen composition. Coupling pointy pine with, say, complementary false cypress (Chamaecyparis) plumes is an effective design strategy, but he cautions that it's "better not to combine too many textures or colors."

To enhance the palette, local landscapers have been saving their prunings especially for the event. Berries in particular are prime ingredients to add a colorful accent to evergreen compositions. But not everything works in wreaths -- atlas cedar, for example, tends to drop needles after a few days, and accents such as sedum and dried hydrangea blossoms can also shatter prematurely. Several professional tricks are employed. For example, to keep laurel and broad-leaved evergreens prime, they're sprayed with Wilt-Pruf. And, as a hard-and-fast rule, everything is wired in -- so it will pass those crash tests. (The earmark of an expert wreath is that all the wire is hidden from sight.)

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