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Alex Bates: An Interview with the Cofounder of Bloomist and Avid Gardener

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Hardest gardening lesson you’ve learned:

Not being realistic about gardening in wetland conditions and thinking plants will survive if I plant them high enough. But even some of the hardiest can’t stand up to salt-water floods. I have had to let go of my love for boxwood hedges, which were wiped out in Hurricane Sandy. I try to focus on native shrubs and hardy plants. My vegetable beds are very high now as well.

Unpopular gardening opinion:

Above: The Rosa multiflora on her property provides food and shelter for the birds.

I have embraced the invasive species that the birds help spread. Planting on a barrier island with climate change evident in the rising waters and frequent, bigger storms presents many challenges, to say the least. The season starts with yellow flag irises surrounding the house to the multiflora rose explosion in May and finally capped off with a profusion of purple loosestrife in July to August.

Gardening or design trend that needs to go:

A gardening practice that has to cease is the use of toxic pesticides that are killing us with cancer-causing chemicals seeping into our water and killing the pollinators, birds—destroying the food chain. It’s unbelievable that the US has not banned Roundup yet. There are so many old-school, inexpensive, non-chemical options readily available.

Old wives’ tale gardening trick that actually works:

Always plant lavender by your doors to ward off evil spirits (this has been a pretty happy little house for 30 years so who’s going to say it doesn’t work?) Coffee grinds to keep critters away.

Favorite gardening hack:

Growing marigolds with tomatoes to helps enrich the soil and deter pests; cardboard to suppress weeds when laying in new gardens.

Favorite way to bring the outdoors in.

Above: Found natural treasures on Alex’s fireplace mantel.

Cuttings from whatever is blooming outside. love the drama of the long arching canes of multiflora roses, so dramatic in our little cottage, or the tall stems of drying fennel and grasses, mixed with bits of nature, fallen birds nests or antlers shed from our local deer. Then there are the rocks, they are everywhere; collected from beach walks and travels, it’s a problem.

Every garden needs a…

A bit of white to contrast against the shades of layered greens, from variegated leaves to sweet autumn clematis, hydrangea ‘Limelight’. And a little bit of chocolate for contrast—I love the stark contrast against greens—chocolate cosmos, black cornflowers, hollyhocks ‘Blackknight’, coral bells.

Lots of flowers planted amongst the vegetables for the pollinators—particularly African blue basil—they love the blue flowers when it goes to seed and it smells so great when you brush up against it.

Favorite hardscaping material:

Above: River rocks line a planting border.

River rocks. Living with wetland conditions, we wanted a way to elevate our beds in a rambling, natural manner.

Tool you can’t live without:

Lindsey Taylor introduced me to my favorite Japanese hori hori knife a few years ago—so many uses. Sneerboer Narrow Perennial Spade is a recent purchase and a game-changer.

Go-to gardening outfit:

Vintage French work top I bought from Marston House years ago at a garden show pop-up, great pockets and faded fatigues. Gardenheir clogs on dry days and BOGS boots for the wet weather.

Favorite nursery, plant shop, or seed company:

Seeds from Grace Alexander Flowers, special unexpected plants from Issima, topiaries from the charming Ken Selody of Atlock Farm. Also love Planting Justice for their mission and offerings.

On your wishlist:

A trip to Daylesford in the Cotswolds and a spin through a few of the storied English gardens

Not-to-be-missed public garden/park/botanical garden:

Jardin du Plantes in Paris. And the transporting experience of Tokyo’s Nezu Museum garden + teahouse. I always welcome green refuge on busy work trips.

The REAL reason you garden:

It keeps me sane and nurtures my soul; providing much needed quiet and reflective time away from screens with my hands in the dirt.

Thanks so much, Alex! Follow her on Instagram @mybloomist.

See also:

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