Friday, March 28, 2025

We Fling at Heronswood

It was great fun to visit Hersonswood Garden last July with my fellow Flingers (the same day we also visited Windcliff, Dan Hinkley's current garden). I think there were roughly 90 of us, but the garden is so large (15 acres) we quickly dispersed and only occasionally would we cross paths. Since I'd been a few times before, I was able to stroll at a leisurely pace and not try to see it all, I felt sorry for those folks who had to rush. Here are my highlights...

I started in the Rock Garden...

So cute, so fuzzy, so dangerous...

Pellaea gastonyi

Polystichum imbricans

Heading over to the Renaissance Garden (ferns!) you pass by some stately agaves...

The perfect wall for drainage and heat.


Lovely purples with the cotinus and acanthus.


This is the first time I've seen the Raining Wall (at the entrance to the Renaissance Garden) complete.

The fern table...
Tiny treasures planted in the table include...Dryopteris affinis 'Crispa Gracilis'

Blechnum penna-marina

Rhododendron valentinioides

Selaginella tamariscina 'Golden Sprite'
Calling out a few ferns planted in the garden; Polystichum polyblepharum.

Adiantum x mairisii

Adiantum aleuticum 'Subpumilum' (on either side of the moss).

Blechnum microphyllum

This was interesting to see. When at the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden in February I spied a plant that looks a lot like this. I called that one out as perhaps Polygonatum mengtzense. But I had a phone screen shot in my files noting this plant as Maianthemum oleraceum. The plot thickens!


I've taken a photo of this container on several visits. Parts change, parts stay the same.

Okay, here's a confession. I love this...

I hate this...

I've felt the extreme love/hate ever since my first visit to the garden. One seems like an interesting way to raise up planters above the ground level, the other seems overly contrived and out of place.

Moving on...

I suppose you could call this artful hedge contrived, but it's plant based, not artificial. 


Ditto for the potager.

I used to dislike the chanterelle fountain, but it's grown on me.

Imagine rinsing your vegetable harvest here after picking them from the potager...


Lillies, the flower of July...

I loved the dusty hues of this vignette.

Globularia incanescens

Empty pot as framing device, it works. It really does.

A little further into the same planting.

The tree ferns! These have been here for years, surviving the seasons, unlike some newer tree ferns in the Renaissance Garden.

Dryopteris crassirhizoma

I feel extreme plant lust every time I look at a photo of this fern.

A last look at the tree ferns (Dicksonia antarctica).

Making my way out of the garden and back to our bus I passed this totem pole that had been left to rest, decay, and return to the land.

It was a great reminder that the garden is now owned by the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe and going forward the garden will meld their vision with that of it's famous founder, Dan Hinkley.

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All material © 2009-2025 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

17 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing your tour of Heronswood. I was one of those that felt in a rush throughout and in retrospect felt I should've skipped lunch. Also, I got several texts from friends alerting me to the news of Biden's withdrawal from the presidential race in the middle of things, which became very distracting as word spread among others receiving notice from friends and family. I entirely missed the wonderful Renaissance Garden!

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    1. The news of Biden's withdrawal definitely affected the garden touring experience, it was a little surreal.

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  2. Hi Loree, you have the Polygonatum and Maianthemum correct. If you look at your Polygonatum picture closely, you can see the peduncles from last year's flowers/fruit remaining in the leaf axils. The Maianthemum inflorescence is terminal. Cheers, Dana

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  3. Earlier in March I took a great long time meandering the grounds on the occasion of the Hellebore sale. Heronswood is good in any season, though I'd like to return for summer of fall. The level of lushness is through the roof then, as your photos so clearly show.
    The thickening plot of Polygonatum mengtzense vs. Maianthemum oleraceum. Catching either one while in bloom may shed light on the mystery... following it down a rabbit hole is fun too.
    During my visit, I was gifted a baby Hellebore 'Kingston Cardinal', a variety that was propagated at Heronswood years ago but is difficult to locate these days. It made my day!
    Chavli

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    1. Yay for plant gifts! See the comment above for more info on Polygonatum mengtzense vs. Maianthemum oleraceum.

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  4. Great photos of the garden. So many interesting elements. I find the potager kind of jarring as the rest of the garden is so jungly. The crisp hedges around the beds and the weird ribbony hedge just look odd. However, so much to see you can't like everything.

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    1. Interesting, have you been in person? I think it makes much more sense in real life, my coverage just makes it seem jarring.

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    2. perhaps that's the ticket. I haven't had the opportunity to visit so just going off pictures I have seen. Unfortunately, will be a while before I venture back into the States.

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  5. I didn't see any of that, except a few of the almost last pics with lilies. No way I could. At least I got to thoroughly examine a few areas. What a fabulous place it was.

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    1. Is it better to run around like that chicken with its head cut off, or leisurely investigate a few parts up close? Tough call.

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  6. The fern table was magnificent. There were so many creative ideas. In regards to the ruins around the fountain - I think it sticks out as contrived because they aren't ruinous enough. I would have more ferns cascading off the top and vines/ferns/moss climbing up the columns so that it feels like the whole thing is decaying back to nature. It's just too nekkid given the surrounding vegetative lushness.

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    1. You make a good point, I'm still not sure I would like it more ruinous though.

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  7. I liked that ruin fountain better in the Seattle Fling garden we saw years ago. Very similar pond and columns: https://www.penick.net/digging/?p=13102 . How did you feel about that one?

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    1. I wasn't terribly fond of it in the Lane Garden during the Fling, but saw the the garden again in 2022 as part of a Study Weekend event (below) and it had been painted, I was even less of a fan. http://www.thedangergarden.com/2022/12/denise-lanes-garden-part-of-npa-study.html

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    2. Of course what I think doesn't matter at all, as long as the owners are happy.

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