Lilactree Farm

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

I’ve got several deadlines on tap, a chipped filling that has exposed something that should not be exposed, and a bad case of writer’s block, so today’s post will be nearly wordless. These photos were taken on a trip to Shelburne several weeks ago to visit Brian Bixley’s garden, Lilactree Farm.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Brian and his wife purchased the property, a former cattle farm I believe, in the late 1960′s. They’ve divided up the land nearest to the house into garden rooms that are surrounded by tall hedges and filled with trees. It was open and treeless originally. Many of the rooms radiate from this bird bath.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

They’re waiting for me to stop taking pictures and catch up. We haven’t even entered the property by this point. I could have spent my life exploring the flora on that road!

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Perennial sweet peas and geraniums have self-seeded alongside the road just off of the property.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Gorgeous and easy to maintain, but they don’t have that signature sweet pea scent.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

When the country road was expanded, Brian tossed seeds of thyme and other drought tolerant plants into the ditch. That ditch is nicer than my street garden. If I had it to do all over again….

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Joe Clematis, in Bloom

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I promised a follow-up photo of Clematis x cartmanii ‘Joe’ in full bloom and here it is.

This small clematis from New Zealand makes a gorgeous potted plant, but keep in mind that it is not hardy in a colder climate like Toronto’s (around zone 5b-ish) and must be overwintered in a cool greenhouse. Meanwhile, if you’re looking for climate context, cold hardy clematis that are grown outdoors are only just beginning to put out buds here in Toronto.

Two other varieties, ‘Cassis’ and ‘Vienetta’ also do well in big containers. They are a bit hardier than ‘Joe’, but here in Toronto still seem to require a protected place to spend the winter. My friend Barry (clematis enthusiast) says that if you don’t mind losing a plant to experimentation, it might be possible to overwinter either outside. He hasn’t tried it yet.

Check out Barry’s blog where he talks about how he has achieved the compact, spiral growth shown here (it’s his plant).

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Hey Joe, the Clematis

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I took this photo of Clematis x cartmanii ‘Joe’ a number of weeks ago in my friend Barry’s greenhouse, just before the buds opened. In a day or two I’ll update you with a photo of what it looked like today, with the blooms wide open.

Meanwhile, Barry has also posted about his plant with a bit of background information.

By example and his own enthusiasm, Barry has really opened my eyes to the diversity in the clematis world. I finally get what all of those nutty clematis spotters are going on about.

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December Blooming Clematis

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This is one of several types of clematis I have discovered in bloom on treks around the city recently. I’m sorry I can’t tell you which clematis this is specifically, but they just aren’t my area of knowledge.

We’ve been enjoying a deliciously mild late fall season and not a touch of snow, although the temperatures have begun to drop since I took this photo, just in time for my tropical trip to begin. I’ve been doing a lot of air punching in celebration of bypassing early winter… at least for now.

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Barry’s Garden Open House

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

I have written here several times about fellow Toronto, Parkdale resident, Barry Parker and his exceptional backyard garden since meeting him this past spring, but I have never shown any wide view pictures. Well, as luck would have it, Barry is hosting a garden open house this coming weekend — those of you who live locally will have the opportunity to see his beautiful garden in person. So for the rest of you who can’t make it, I’ve got off my butt and compiled a series of photos showing some of the seasons in Barry’s garden as I have experienced them on my visits since the spring.

First, the details:

    When: Sunday October 4th from 1.00 to 4.00 p.m.
    Where: 11 Melbourne Ave, Toronto
    Admission: $4 Proceeds going to the Canadian Women’s Foundation.
    Additional: Barry would like you to know that if you make it out to the open house he will be giving away paw-paw and persimmon tree seedlings, free to good homes. He grew them all from seed!

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These two sculpted bushes break up the long, narrow space and are seen when you enter the yard.

Barry has been gardening in his long and narrow downtown Toronto backyard for 23 years. He’s an artist with plants. He knows how to shape them, pair them, and it is a pleasure to watch the garden unfold as plants have their season and then make way for the next. No space is left unnoticed or unattended.

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Walking through the bushes takes you into a hidden back garden that is mostly comprised of woodland plants. Here’s what it looked like in early fall. I wish I had a springtime photo because it was absolutely incredible then.

Barry’s gardening style is quite formal and sculpted, but it is infused with his charm, warmth, and true sense of delight in plants that makes the garden very comfortable and inviting rather than rigid and stuffy like most formal spaces tend to be.

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Looking to the east.

For that reason I have begun to think of Barry’s style as decisive rather than taint it with my own obvious bias against formality. He knows what he likes and pursues it rigorously. He likes to experiment and try out new plants but when he’s sure something isn’t working, he’s not afraid to pull it up and get it out of there. If only I had that skill!

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One of the smaller break-away paths to the west.

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Variegated Solomon’s Seal (Polygonatum ‘Silver Wings’) this past spring.

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Yellow Trillium (Trillium luteum), also photographed this past spring.

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A view of the space looking north as you emerge from between the two bushes.

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Two of Barry’s many clematis plants in flower this past July.

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Clematis ‘Elvan’

Barry is an avid clematis collector. There is always something unique and incredible in bloom throughout the summer months, including shapes and sizes I had no idea existed in the clematis world.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Looking east at the front part of the garden.

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Alpines flank the steps of the deck.

Alpines are another of Barry’s loves. When I first visited his garden, the sheer number of alpine troughs (both hypertuffa and stone) took me by surprise. Each one is lovingly tended and many have to be brought indoors to over-winter. That’s commitment!

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I think I like this pot stuffed tight with tiny sempervivums, best.

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Or maybe it’s this small stone trough with neatly shaped compartments.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Or could it be this one with plants that hug the edges of the pot?

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

This table on the deck is used to showcase seasonal plants of interest. On my first visit it was covered in specimens from Barry’s extensive agave collection; and on another occasion, a particularly impressive begonia.

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A wide view of the deck showing legions of alpine troughs. There’s that orange begonia in the background.

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Barry had a small, unheated greenhouse built sometime after he bought the house.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

There is always some fantastic experiment in the works inside the greenhouse. It currently houses rows and rows of unusual cyclamen that Barry started from seed.

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I hope I have done Barry’s garden justice with this presentation. There is so much going on there, it would take days to feature it all. When I first visited the garden I was so overcome, I barely lifted the camera to take a photo. But while I may have been too stunned to take pictures, I rushed home invigorated to get back and do better by my own plants.

I don’t often feature gardens, but Barry’s has been an inspiration this summer and better than most botanical gardens I have visited. As I mentioned above, it’s not only that he puts an incredible amount of work into maintaining the space, but that it captures the charm and personable warmth of his character so well. Most gardens of this ilk are tended by many, and reflect that. Barry’s garden is all him and his infectious enthusiasm for plants. A true plant geek.

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