Friday, March 27, 2026

Renee Moog's garden, an HPSO open garden

For this garden visit we're time traveling all the way back to last August 17th. There were a few Hardy Plant Society of Oregon open gardens that day. I already wrote about the first one I visited, Jeanne DeBenedetti Keyes' garden, but somehow I never got around to posting photos of Renee Moog's garden. So today is the day!

I started my walk around the garden right here by the front door to Renee's home.

The wire trellis, vine, and ceramic birds were a great introduction to the creative garden I would be touring.


Purple ruffles basil and nasturtium make a great combo in the edible garden. 

Goji berries, I believe.

From the garden description: "Renee likes to tell people she has a 2-bedroom house and a 12-bedroom yard! A ½ acre stand of western red cedar directly behind her property serves as “borrowed landscape” to a heavily planted 1/3 acre. Large scale artistic installations include a 4’ stacked stone sphere fountain, a 50’ long bottle fence, oversized birds nests made with kiwi vine and a 15’ natural wooden arch. Native plants share the stage with a colorful array of perennials, over 30 kinds of interesting small fruit like medlar, paw paw and goji berries and a growing collection of shade loving ferns, rodgersia and mayapples. Whimsical garden art, large ceramic pots and found object sculptures are scattered throughout. Foragers will find something to tickle their tastebuds from wasabi to cornelian cherries; the plant lover will find treasures from hardy orchids to a bog full of sarracenia, the bird lover may catch a glimpse of a heron on its way to nearby Johnson Creek and the permaculturist will appreciate the use of natural materials throughout."

Into the back garden...

Bottles are used extensively throughout this garden.

And the mulch is full of interesting bits...



Steps up to the deck off the back of the home.

And that 4' stacked stone sphere fountain mentioned in the description. I immediately fell head over heals in love with this...



So simple, so perfect.

A video so you can see just how wonderful it was...

More bottles! This is part of the 50' long bottle fence...



Everything's better with grapes.



A bottle patio in front of the garden shed.


A work in progress.

There were interesting plants throughout the garden, I had to keep reminding myself to photograph them too (not just the creative building projects).


On the right, Asplenium scolopendrium (hart's-tongue fern)? 

If so it looks better than any I've seen before.


The garden description notes: "Last year a crew installed an integrated drainage & irrigation system which includes a French drain and percolation pond for the overflow of a 3,000 gallon water tank feeding a timed drip irrigation for the veggie beds."



On the right is a rebar dome shelter covered with hardy kiwi, I wanted to take close-up photos but there was a group enjoying the space (with wine, crackers and cheese) and I didn't want to invade their privacy.

Along the side of the property was a box car with these treasures leaning against it. I wonder what was inside! 

Thanks for opening your fabulous garden Renee!

The Bit at the End
Need more garden fabulousness? A link to another dreamy garden, on a Gardenista post: Garden Visit: A Wooded Wonderland in Western Hills Garden

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5 comments:

  1. Great garden, the stacked stone fountain is amazing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Dorothy DanielsonMarch 27, 2026

    A lot of Years of Doing and Enjoying

    ReplyDelete
  3. Love the stacked fountain. I'm intrigued by the kiwi dome, but understand why you didn't go in there and swing around. What a nice walk around. Yeah, what's in there!?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Jeanne DeBenedetti KeyesMarch 27, 2026

    Wow! Love that beautiful bottle fence along with stack stone fountain. Just gorgeous. Thanks for the tour as I haven’t seen Renee’s garden. Hopefully this year. Looks like a calm, green paradise.

    ReplyDelete

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