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IssuesMarch/April 2009Home & Garden

Early Blooms in New England

Three garden ideas for color in April and May

by Virginia Small

Flowers and Pot
Credit: Richard Brown
Tulips pack the biggest punch around the Silk/Emery terrace in Farmington, Connecticut.
Flowers and Trees
Credit: Richard Brown
Flowering trees -- redbuds, magnolias, and sand cherries -- vie for equal attention as they form a dazzling backdrop on the Silk/Emery Connecticut property.
Gordon and Mary Hayward
Credit: Richard Brown
Gordon and Mary Hayward take a stroll amid the crabapple trees they planted in their Westminster West, Vermont, garden 15 years ago.
Phlox
Credit: Richard Brown
Woodland phlox create a beautiful ground cover in the Haywards' garden.
Honey and David
Credit: Richard Brown
Honey Sharp and David Lippman relax in the garden in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.

Gardeners know winter really does end, and spring color always returns.

Pansies, daffodils, and forsythia commonly herald the vernal transition, but still other blooms also contribute to a stunning early-season display.

Here's how three New England gardens host diverse plantings that strut their stuff in April and May.

Spring Bulbs

Garden designer and author Steve Silk loves to create lavish spectacles with bright-colored spring bulbs.

His wife, Kate Emery, shares his enthusiasm for eye-popping displays at their garden in Farmington, Connecticut. "We're starved for color after winter's monochromes," Steve says, "so we're not shy about using a bright palette."

Each fall, Steve and Kate choose a different color scheme for the hundreds of tulips they plant. They strive to produce the most drama along the walkway leading from their driveway to a fieldstone terrace along the back of their Colonial-style home. One recent extravaganza featured yellow and fiery-orange tulips.

For photos and commentary, visit: clattervalleygardens.blogspot.com

Crabapple Majesty

The garden around Gordon and Mary Hayward's renovated circa-1770 farmhouse in Westminster West, Vermont, just north of Putney, relies on a sense of formality in its layout. An important aspect of this framework is an allee of crabapple trees. Serving as the entry into the garden, this symmetrical "orchard" invites visitors to enjoy a leisurely stroll.

In midspring, the crabapple trees they planted 15 years ago evoke an ethereal majesty when cloaked in their wispy blooms. "For me," Gordon notes, "it's an echo of my childhood growing up in an orchard in New Hartford, Connecticut."

The Haywards chose three different varieties that bloom simultaneously in mid-May. Malus 'Prairie Fire' produces pinkish buds that open to whitish-pink blooms; 'Sugar Tyme' features pink buds that burst into fragrant white flowers; 'Adams' bears carmine buds that open into reddish-pink flowers.

The crabapples continue to earn their keep throughout the seasons, especially in winter, when the leafless trees add shapely architecture to this garden. Each variety also produces abundant fruit in shades of red. The small fruits start appearing in September and persist until a flock of cedar waxwings finishes them off in late March.

Growing beneath the trees are hardy geraniums, barrenworts, and a dark-red-leaved bugleweed, inspired by a design the couple saw at a garden in England's Cotswold Hills, near where Mary grew up. A path of stepping stones provides access through the allee and is punctuated by a 'Winter Gem' boxwood in a large terra-cotta pot, another touch gleaned from British gardens.

The Haywards clearly enjoy merging influences from New England with those from "Old" England to create a welcoming garden that resonates with personal meaning.

For group tour dates, visit: haywardgardens.com

Native Plants

The entry garden that graces Honey Sharp's restored 1789 farmhouse in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, showcases spring blooms from subtle to showy. From the driveway, an iron gate opens to a path that meanders through a woodland and then melds into a sunny garden next to the front terrace. The varied light conditions let Honey, a garden designer, play with a wide-ranging palette of plants. She's especially drawn to ones that tie in with the barn-red color she chose for her home.

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