Reinventing a Meadow at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden

When I visited the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden in late March (on a special tour with my Facebook friend Frédérique Lavoipierre), the main event for visitors was the iconic meadow that greets them as they enter the gates.  ‘Spectacle’ is an understatement, for this flowery expanse stretches back towards a shrubby border in the near-distance, live oaks in the mid-distance and the rimmed Santa Ynez mountains on the far horizon.  It’s an impressionist masterpiece painted in sunshiny California spring hues.

The meadow at the Santa Barbara Botanical Garden in March 2014, halfway through its renovation.

The meadow at the Santa Barbara Botanical Garden in March 2014, halfway through its renovation.

So perfect is the composition, the vertical brushstrokes of blue succulent lupines (Lupinus succulentus), yellow tidytips (Layia platyglossa) and orange California poppies (Eschscholzia californica) rising from the brilliant background wash of goldfields (Lasthenia californica), that it surprised me a little to learn that the meadow is actually just halfway through a major renovation.  Or perhaps that should be a return to its historic roots.  

A classic blue-and-yellow spring combination of succulent or Arroyo lupines (Lupinus succulentus) in a darpet of goldfields (Lasthenia californica).

A classic blue-and-yellow spring combination of succulent or Arroyo lupines (Lupinus succulentus) in a carpet of goldfields (Lasthenia californica).

Meadows are relatively easy to make and impossibly difficult to maintain.  Ecologically (that is, with no human interference and excluding stable alpine meadows), a meadow is usually just a pretty way-station on the evolutionary path to climax, meaning every native shrub and tree is itching to shoulder aside all those charming annuals and perennials and transform the sunny painting into shady woodland.  Then there is the more immediate problem of exotic invasives, weeds that fling themselves into the sunny space and soon outcompete the natives, ruining the show and causing a headache for public gardens hoping (or mandated) to treat pests and weeds organically. Drought is an issue, especially in a place like Santa Barbara, where an official multi-year drought makes irrigation of the meadow necessary. Finally, a meadow in a public garden can suffer over time from the conflicting objectives of the people who oversee it.  

Tidy tips (Layia platyglossa), an annual flower native to Western N. America.

Tidy tips (Layia platyglossa), an annual flower native to Western N. America.

Historically, the meadow began in 1929 as Bermuda grass – “a grassy space across which one looked at the mountains – an interval of green silence amid chords of color.”  In the 1940s it alternated between beach strawberries (Fragaria chiloense) and annual wildflowers; it spent the 80s as a mix of grasses and wildflowers; then in the past decade, took a strange left turn into patches of mown lawn that undermined the integrity of its early design.

Unlike most native bees, honey bees are flower-faithful, meaning they seek nectar and pollen from one flower species at a time. The millions of tiny blossoms of goldfields (Lasthenia californica) in the meadow offer a rich food source for them and the native pollinators.

Unlike most native bees, honey bees are flower-faithful, meaning they seek nectar and pollen from one flower species at a time. The millions of tiny blossoms of goldfields (Lasthenia californica) in the meadow offer a rich food source for them and the native pollinators.

Recognizing all that, SBBG developed a new plan for the meadow, an approach designed to provide a “homogenous mix of species that provides seasonal color, year-round interest, educational opportunities, and reduced maintenance.”  However, wrote Betsy Collins, Director of Horticulture, in the garden’s Summer 2013 newsletter, “it is important to try a new approach if we hope to avoid the weedy outcome that has resulted from so many previous efforts.”

A California bluebell (Phacelia campanularia) in the meadow gets a visit from a nectaring honey bee.

A California bluebell (Phacelia campanularia) in the meadow gets a visit from a nectaring honey bee.

She went on: “Drawing on the expertise of our Executive Director, Dr. Steve Windhager, a grassland ecologist, and Conservation Manager, Denise Knapp, a restoration ecologist, we intend to develop a comprehensive weed abatement plan that uses the principles of habitat restoration.”  Weed-abatement methods to eradicate bindweed, Bermuda grass, oxalis, etc. include solarization (plastic sheeting to heat and kill weeds, seeds and pests) and grow-till-kill cycles where weeds are encouraged, then tilled, the process repeated until the weeds are gone.

Appropriately, a hummingbird nectars on hummingbird sage (Salvia spathacea) in the border at the back of the meadow.

Appropriately, a hummingbird nectars on hummingbird sage (Salvia spathacea) in the border at the back of the meadow.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
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What I saw in March at SBBG was the brief glory of the spring wildflower show – a brilliant extravaganza pleasing visitors and pollinators alike – before the designers get back to work on their mission.  The new meadow will feature lots of new plants, says Collins: “We anticipate growing upwards of 70,000 grass and perennial plugs for planting in the fall of 2014. Any remaining weeds that appear will be removed by hand while the plugs are established. A blanket of annual wildflowers will be seeded in early winter for a spectacular show in the spring of 2015!”

During my visit to SBBG, the sun shone so brightly most of the day that the plants were difficult to capture in a good photo.  But I made lots of images anyway, and found they lend themselves to the art filters that can transform so-so pictures into colourful impressionism.

California poppies, given the impressionist watercolour treatment.

California poppies, given the impressionist watercolour treatment.

 

A technologically-assisted 'impressionist' version of the meadow. Fun with art filters!

A technologically-assisted ‘impressionist’ version of the meadow. Fun with art filters!

Special thanks to SBBG Education Program Manager Frédérique Lavoipierre for giving me the grand tour.

Santa Barbara Botanical Garden is open daily. Check their website www.sbbg.org for information.

Lotusland

House & Cacti

Good day.  My name is Madame Ganna Walska and I am pleased to welcome you here to Lotusland.  I hope you found your way without trouble – these Montecito hills can be confusing to visitors.  And I know you are a great lover of plants, so I trust you will find much to delight your eyes.   Ganna Walska

Ah, you wish to know about me?  Well, I was born in Poland in 1887 – my name then was Hanna Puacz, I hadn’t yet taken my stage name, which means “waltz” in Russian.  And I’ve had..…well let’s just say I’ve had a rather colourful life.  I eloped with a Russian count when I was a teenager, and I was just nineteen when the Czar himself selected me to have my portrait painted as the most beautiful woman at the royal ball.The Czar's Painting

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

But I grew tired of the Count and moved to France.  It was a wonderful time to be in Paris, la Belle Époque. But then war broke out, and in 1915 I moved to New York and became a singer. I made my concert debut three years later – Enrico Caruso was on the same bill!   My second husband, a doctor whom I met when he treated my sore throat, died just four years after our marriage. I was overcome with grief.  But then on a ship to Paris I met my third husband.  Sadly, it wasn’t a happy marriage and in 1922 I divorced him.  I married my fourth husband in Paris. He was a very wealthy industrialist; some say the inspiration for the film ‘Citizen Kane’. And very generous – he bought me the Theâtre des Champs Elyseés in order to pursue my opera career.  I made three concert tours to America over the next six years, but the reviews for my singing were not always favourable. I preferred to live in Paris and my husband, who lived in Chicago, sued me for divorce, claiming desertion.  But I found comfort in my spiritual studies, in mysticism and astrology and Indian philosophy.   Buddha

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1937 I married again, but it wasn’t a happy marriage; he was egotistical and jealous. When the war broke out, I was able to escape France on the last ship before the Germans occupied Paris. Before leaving, I managed to bury the little grotesques, those statues you see in the Theatre Garden, in my French estate. Peptides are manufactured around the world by spego to the robertrobb.com viagra sales francet companies who sell their products to researchers and scientists to help them conduct their research daily. Kamagra Soft Tabs are an alternative way to take the medicine keeping the mind of its starting time. http://robertrobb.com/2019/06/ viagra 100 mg Keeping distances from stressfulness- Stress is the main cause for deepening the relationship. viagra 25mg online Safed Musli plays a vital role brand viagra no prescription too in improving stamina and strength.  That saved them. Theatre Garden

It was my yoga master Theos Bernard – they called him the White Lama – who encouraged me in 1941 to buy this estate. It was called La Cueste then, and there was already a beautiful garden on its 37 acres.  I renamed it Tibetland in honour of the monks we hoped to bring here on retreat.  Alas, they never came.  We married in Las Vegas, Theos and I, but I made him sign a prenuptial agreement to protect my wealth.  When we divorced in 1946, I changed the name to Lotusland after the beautiful sacred Indian lotus. 

It gave me such pleasure to indulge my gardening passion in these lush California hills.  I had good help, of course, and able assistance from landscape architects and designers, including Lockwood de Forest, Jr., Ralph T. Stevens, William Paylen, Oswald Da Ros, and Charles Glass.  They helped me assemble my plant collections. My bromeliads are world-renowned. Bromeliads

And I sold off my jewelry in the 1970s to finance the purchase of my rare cycads.Cycads

Throughout my life, I have been an enemy of the average. In fact, it’s been my motto.  And though I loved beautiful things, I also gave my time and money to good causes.Performer & Spokeswoman

Now I must leave you. Be sure to see the rest of the estate. You’ll love the blue garden.  Martha Stewart had her picture taken there not long ago.The Blue Garden

And you mustn’t forget the horticultural clock garden.Clock Garden

And the clamshell fountain and crescent pool in the aloe garden. Those are abalone shells lining the pool.The Crescent Pool

 My cacti are wonderful of course; they come from all over the world.

Cactus-garden

Before you leave, take a moment to sit on the terrace and enjoy the view.

The terrace at Lotusland.

The terrace at Lotusland.

And stop by the gift shop, if you’re feeling generous. The foundation needs all the profits it can make. Gift Shop

I’m sorry the lotuses aren’t in bloom; it’s too early in the season. I always loved the pink ones.  Au revoir. Enchanté. 

(A conversation imagined with Ganna Walska, based on Lotusland’s history.  Reservations must be made to visit Lotusland.  Visit their website http://www.lotusland.org/ for more information.)

Lotus

Behold the Jade Vine

In March, when the streets of Toronto are still lined with dirty snowbanks and the temperature hasn’t moved much above freezing for months, you can step into the jungle heat of a tropical rainforest as quickly as parking your car in the little lot behind Allan Gardens.  And there, just as you walk into the humid air of the first greenhouse, is a pendulous vision in turquoise.  Or is it celadon?  Or perhaps jadeite, the pale, blue-green mineral that fetches a fortune when it’s carved into pendants and rings?  Yes, that’s the colour exactly and why the sight of the jade vine in bloom is so transfixing, for it’s a colour found rarely in nature, and certainly not arrayed as impressively as this long dripping necklace of flowers, which can reach 18 meters (60 feet) in the wild, but is kept well-pruned here and in a second tropical greenhouse at Allan Gardens.

One of two jade vines at Toronto's Allan Gardens.

One of two jade vines at Toronto’s Allan Gardens.

Jade vine (Strongylodon macrobotrys) was discovered in 1841 on the jungled slopes of Mount Makiling, on the Philippines’ Luzon Island, by members of the United States Exploring Expedition led by U.S. Navy Lt. Charles Wilkes.  One can only imagine how startling that apparition must have been, but we are left only with the description of the Harvard-based botanist Asa Gray, who had locked horns with Wilkes previously and elected not to join the voyage.  As part of the task of describing the thousands of plants collected by the multi-ship expedition, which ranged from Honolulu to Antarctica and involved several violent skirmishes with the natives (Wilkes was court-martialed at the end of the expedition, but acquitted), Gray named the vine in 1854. Its species epithet macrobotrys means “large grape cluster”, referring to the fruit.  The genus name derives from the Greek strongylos or “round”, and odon or “teeth”, referring to the rounded teeth of the calyx.  A member of the bean family,jade vine is bat-pollinated in the wild, thus it must be hand-pollinated in greenhouses to bear its fruit, which can grow to be melon-sized. This has been done over the years at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew Gardens in England, where seed conservation is an ongoing focus, especially in the face of loss of rainforest habitat.

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Jade vine flowers hang in long trusses, or "pseudoracemes".

Jade vine flowers hang in long trusses, or “pseudoracemes”.

If you love this colour of blue-green and would like to bring it to your own garden, remember that paints and stains can introduce any hue of the rainbow, even those that are only found in the rarest of plants.  For me, that was as simple as adding a turquoise Muskoka chair to my cottage garden, where it offers a perfect perch from which to enjoy my wildflower meadows.

A Muskoka chair at my Lake Muskoka cottage - not quite jade-vine coloured, but close.

A Muskoka chair at my Lake Muskoka cottage – not quite jade-vine coloured, but close.