Terrain at Styers

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

I spent Arbor Day weekend in the countryside outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, speaking and conducting workshops at Terrain, the new garden center opened by the company that owns Urban Outfitters and Anthropologie, among others. The best word or phrase I can come up with to describe Terrain, besides stunningly beautiful is well-appointed. It is by far the most perfectly organized and detail-oriented garden center I have visited to date. I could have set up a cot in a corner somewhere and moved in for a month, and I would have been comfortable and engaged for the duration. Not only was the overall space beautiful and harmonious, but every single inch seemed to be accounted for.

The effect on my brain was simultaneously relaxing and overwhelming. As a result I took very few pictures, barely enough to provide you with a tour.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
This is the outdoor cafe in the early morning before customers arrived. By lunch this place was packed, but you know, it was a special weekend and they had barbecue and beer on tap. For a special treat, I recommend booking a reservation in the fancier cafe area.

I was at Terrain for two days yet I did not have nearly enough time to explore… after all they had brought me out to do a job and that was my primary focus. I’d love to go back again as a regular customer and have the full experience over the course of a full day: slowly meandering among the plants and displays from building to building, followed by lunch in the cafe. When they first told me there was a cafe on site I was sold. Spending hours labouring over plant-buying decision-making is hard work! But the cafe at Terrain doesn’t just serve any old food, they serve GOOD FOOD. Again, I was always either too hungry or too rushed or without camera to take a photo but every meal they prepared for me was delicious and beautifully presented. When I arrived at my hotel after a long day of travel there was a boxed meal waiting for me prepared by the chef. It contained: a microgreens salad topped with seasonal asparagus and Parmesan shavings. The salad dressing was perfect, and not too heavy on the vinegar as is often my complaint with most restaurant salads. This was accompanied by some kind of whitefish (I’m not sure what but it might have been poached) and a side of what I believe was basil-infused oil. There was also a box of toasted baguette slices with herbed butter. I generally try to avoid sugar, but the desert was an espresso-soaked tiramisu presented in a glass jar. How could I NOT eat that? And then I pretty much didn’t sleep that night, but it was worth it.

On day two my lunch contained a similar salad (I requested it again because it was THAT good), although this one had yummy, soft white beans instead of asparagus. There was also a split pea soup served in another glass canning jar and a miniature bread loaf baked and served right in a tiny terracotta pot! I wish I’d got a picture of that but I didn’t have my camera on hand. On Saturday my guests took me out to a local restaurant that featured a 100 mile menu. The food was great but the highlight was actually a Mexican ice cream place called, La Michoacana where I chose the most unusual flavor on the menu, corn ice cream topped with chili powder! Folks, I had corn ice cream in a small town in Pennsylvania! Who knew?

And now I am hungry, having just described food for two paragraphs.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
This was where I conducted my workshops. Nice little set-up and the weather was beautiful!

Back to Terrain. While conducting workshops I was introduced to their potting soil, specially prepared for Terrain by Organic Mechanic. It is by far the most beautiful potting soil I have ever used. I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE that potting soil. I could not stop running my hands through it. It has the absolute perfect texture and consistency, and is comprised of all of the best ingredients including coir instead of peat, rice hulls, and worm castings. Why can’t someone over here make a prepared potting soil even remotely as good as this one?

Some other highlights I managed to photograph:

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
The Mushroom House. This is where they do production work preparing mixed containers and the like. Apparently, this area is the mushroom capital of the world and mushrooms were once grown in this little house and several more like it that used to sit on the property. I was especially impressed by the little display food gardens in front.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
I’m kicking myself for not buying one of these wooden pots. I’m a sucker for weathered wood. But then I would have had to fit it in my luggage and that was not possible since I avoided baggage mayhem by bringing carry-on only.

terrain_gang.jpg

This is Tim and Shannon, two Terrain employees who generously helped me out, and showed me around the area. They rule! Also, Tim and his wife own a seed company called Happy Cat Organics, and recently sent me some tomato seeds including a variety called ‘Tim’s Black Ruffles’, a cross between two of my personal favorites, ‘Black Krim’ and ‘Zapotec Pink Pleated’ crossed and stabilized by Tim himself. I have a bunch of seedlings going right now and will be growing it this year! I predict it will become a favourite.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Inside “The Shed”. I’m only showing you this picture because they’ve got those excellent OXO brand watering cans hanging in the foreground. I was so excited to see them in person I might have squealed. Out loud. I would have bought one but I shifted my allegiance to a different, and dare I say, “better” watering can about a month ago.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
One of my favorite displays was this box setup outside The Shed showing every kind of mulch and soil amender they had available for purchase.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
One of my favourite spots, “Vegetable Alley.” The beans are a bit early, even for Pennsylvania but… They had a really nice assortment of lettuces, and I’ve only recently outed myself as having a small lettuce addiction so I’ll just say that it was kind of my version of heaven.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
This is another one of those little charming details that I appreciate. All of the potted plants were displayed in old wooden and mesh trays instead of those ugly plastic things the rest of us have to live with. If only I could find some of these for personal use.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Even the fencing area is beautifully arranged. You can see a hand-painted sign in the background that directs people to the cafe.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
A close-up on the sign.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
My book on display. Even that was well-presented!

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
And here’s what I bought. I came out relatively unscathed since I didn’t have a lot of time to shop, can’t take plants over the border, and didn’t have much room in my luggage. I think I’ve left a few odds and ends out, but I am already forgetting what it was. The two seed packets with vintage-inspired illustrations were purchased at Terrain but the others were purchased across the street at Target. I purchased several more than are shown but they have already been opened, sown, and scattered somewhere among my various seed storage methods. We don’t have Target here in Canada so the trip was a bit of cultural anthropology in itself. Shannon and I spent a good hour or more walking up and down the aisles marveling at the curious items and getting high on off-gassing plastics. I also bought water flavored with mint, which I’ve got to say was oddly unpleasant and seemed kind of silly since you can simply add some mint to water to achieve the same effect.

You’ll recognize the old-thymey letter-press cards from my Holiday gift round-up. I’m not sure how the metal globe thing is supposed to be used, but it looked like something I could have fun experimenting with. Amy Goldman’s “The Compleat Squash” was a total score since a friend just recently informed me that it is out of print, and to top it off I got it for half price from the sale section. I was so excited to discover it on sale I mentally patted myself on the back as if I had achieved something miraculous in finding and then purchasing it.

Leave a comment

Event: Terrain at Styer’s

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Hello Pennsylvania! I’m going to be giving two workshops and a presentation this coming Earth Day/Arbor Day Weekend at Terrain at Styer’s in Glen Mills, PA.

Where: Terrain at Styer’s
914 Baltimore Pike, Glen Mills, PA, USA

When: Saturday, April 25, 2009 and Sunday, April 26, 2009.

Saturday: Windowsill Herb Gardening Workshop 11am & Container Gardening Workshop 2pm

Sunday: Presentation on Growing Food 12pm {Book signing and discussion to follow}

As you may know, Terrain is the garden center recently opened by the company that owns Urban Outfitters and Anthropologie. It will be interesting to see first-hand how they have adjusted their retail approach to gardening. Although, I will say that the fact that they have a delicious-sounding cafe on site already gives them a big plus one in their favor. Debra Prinzing of Shed Style recently uploaded some photos she took of the store and it looks like a place capable of prying a few dollars out of my wallet. F-A-N-C-Y.

Fortunately, they have priced the workshops affordably so that a variety of people can attend. And of course, I will have lots of thrifty tips and tricks for you.

Contact Terrain directly for more info and registration.

Leave a comment

Welcome and Seeds of Diversity 25th Anniversary

saturdayapril4_09.jpg

Hello fellow gardeners. If you’re coming from today’s Globe and Mail article, the full story about the tobacco gardener is here. If you’d like seeds, I’ve got loads (I’m not going to grow them) and am happy to pass them on in the spirit they were given to me. Please send a self addressed stamped envelop to my P.O. Box and I’ll mail a few to you. Sorry everyone. I meant the tobacco seeds only. Have been inundated with seed requests (of all sorts) and have no more left to give.

If you’d like a peek at my gardens, there are a few more recent images and stories here.

———————————

Tomorrow is the Seeds of Diversity 25th Anniversary Celebration. Seeds of Diversity is Canada’s national heritage seed conservation effort, specifically focused on preserving and promoting non-hybrid plants of significance to this vast country. I am extremely proud (and consequently a little nervous) to be speaking as the keynote in front of a group of gardeners I hold in very high regard. The event will also include seed buying tables (last call for seed starting season!) and lunch is included in the fee. I believe tickets are still available.

Leave a comment

San Francisco: USF Talk on Garden Literacy

gayla_palmtree.jpg

I’ll be traveling to San Francisco this week to hug some palm trees and give a talk at the University of San Francisco to a group of students on the topic of Garden Literacy. The talk is open to the public so anyone is welcome to come by and hear me discuss writing about gardening online, my own evolution as a garden writer, and the effect Michael Pollan’s “Second Nature” and Lorraine Johnson’s “A Gardener’s Manifesto” have had in reexamining my relationship to nature as a city-dweller and the positive role I can play as a gardener. Phew. Believe it or not that all ties together in a progressive and logical way.

The talk and subsequent discussion is very much geared towards the the students’ curriculum and their own explorations in finding their voice and being creative online, but I hear rumors that there will be snacks and I will be bringing buttons. And really, that’s pretty much how I lure in my audiences these days. They come for the buttons, but they stay for the awesome power of my public speaking might. Or they fall asleep and snore in the back row. That has happened too.

Leave a comment

Public Service Announcement

Photo by Gayla Trail

Gaze upon this lineup of vine-ripened tomatoes I photographed last fall in my pal Amy’s garden. Remember fresh, ripe, sweet, rich, juicy tomatoes? On toast. With fresh, homegrown basil. Don’t forget to get your tomato seedlings started so you can enjoy these babies come August!

And if you’re in Toronto next week I’ll be giving a hands-on workshop on starting seeds at Grassroots Environmental Products Store.

    Get your hands dirty and learn the ins and outs of starting veggies, herbs, and flowers from seed in this hands-on, organic growing workshop. Thrifty hints and tips for beginners, apartment dwellers and small space gardeners. Participants will each take a seedling-to-be home with them.

    When: Monday, April 23, 2007. 7:30 pm
    Where: 372 Danforth Ave, Toronto (at Chester subway)
    $10 ($5 students/seniors/unwaged)
    Pre-registration and payment is necessary to reserve a space.
    Space is limited to 20 people. Register at either Grassroots locations or call (416) 466-2841.

Leave a comment