This week, we are revisiting some of our favorite summer-centric Gardenista stories. Remember this one?

A few summers ago, photographer Alison Engstrom and I took an early morning Amtrak north from New York City to Hudson to visit artist Helen Dealtry and Dan Barry in their clapboard house, tucked behind a hedgerow in the small upstate town of Claverack. The light was too harsh at midday to photograph the gardens, but after we finished shooting the eclectic interiors (see An Artist’s Circa-1830 Home in Claverack, New York), we noticed early-evening dappled light—and stepped outside to capture a few shots of the quiet gardens, just in time. Here’s a look.

Photography by Alison Engstrom.

The circa-1830 house is set back from a main street in Claverack, where tall hedgerows abut the road and conceal the historic houses and sprawling gardens behind.
Above: The circa-1830 house is set back from a main street in Claverack, where tall hedgerows abut the road and conceal the historic houses and sprawling gardens behind.

The couple was living in Brooklyn when they discovered the house online in the fall of 2016. The gardens, by landscape designer Peter Bevacqua, were mostly in place. Bevacqua has become a friend: He lives down the street amid sprawling, intricate gardens. On the day we visited, Dealtry pointed out two long, oval pieces of honeycomb in their dining room, a gift from Bevacqua and his bees.

Hedge maintenance is a running joke in the neighborhood: It’s rumored some spend tens of thousands of dollars on their upkeep. (For their part, Dealtry and Barry say, they hire a crew to trim their double front hedge of hornbeam and boxwood, plus some trees, a few times per year.)

The front entrance, seldom used by the couple, with trailing potato vines casting shadows on the steps.
Above: The front entrance, seldom used by the couple, with trailing potato vines casting shadows on the steps.

Just to the side of the house is a gravel driveway with the only addition the couple has made to the landscape: a swinging wooden gate that marks the entrance into the back gardens. “Using a limited plant palette of hornbeam, boxwood, arborvitae, and linden for the garden’s bones, I created green walls for privacy and to divide the long narrow property into rooms,” Bevacqua said.
Above: Just to the side of the house is a gravel driveway with the only addition the couple has made to the landscape: a swinging wooden gate that marks the entrance into the back gardens. “Using a limited plant palette of hornbeam, boxwood, arborvitae, and linden for the garden’s bones, I created green walls for privacy and to divide the long narrow property into rooms,” Bevacqua said.

Source link

You May Also Like

How to Grow I’itoi Onions

In 2015 when I took the Master Gardener classes, they gave each…

How to Use Anise as a Spice | Gardener’s Path

Humans have been cultivating and harvesting anise (Pimpinella anisum) for thousands of…

Holiday Decor Ideas: 3 Festive, Easy Orange Peel DIYs

It’s been five years since eco-activist-author-shop-owner Priscilla Woolworth relocated from Los Angeles…

Growing Guide for Helianthemum – Backyard Gardener

How to grow Helianthemum From the Greek helios, the sun, and anthemon.…