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Louise Wrinkle: ‘A Garden in Conversation’ Is About the Landscape in Alabama that Inspired Her Gardening Journey
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“I think time is the fourth dimension,” says Louise Agee Wrinkle, in the kind of Southern accent you’d hope to find in Alabama but so rarely do. She continues in a way that is dramatically unhurried: “Time, and change, and the garden, all tied together. Every time you deal with plants, you’re dealing with change.” In a remarkable half hour film presented by The Garden Conservancy (A Garden in Conversation: Louise Agee Wrinkle’s Southern Woodland Sanctuary), we are pulled into Louise Wrinkle’s world, the one she grew up in, and the same garden that she called “the jungle” as a child. On returning to the garden and the town of Mountain Brook 40 years ago, she was not tempted to give it a more formal and conventional look. Her approach, summed up in the title of the new edition of her book, Listen to the Land, is more responsive: “I’d rather stand back and look at the landscape, and let the landscape speak to me.” Let’s go for an amble.
Photography courtesy of The Garden Conservancy.
The region around Birmingham, Alabama, is mountainous and essentially wooded, with an enviable abundance of native flora. Mrs Wrinkle’s decision to gently guide the woodland rather than aggressively cultivate was logical, especially when described in her own no-nonsense voice: “The design is what nature gave me to work with,” she says, noting that there would be little point in pursuing an English, French or Japanese-style garden. “They are an imposed pattern on the landscape.”

In forging her own path as a gardener, Louise Wrinkle has had a great influence in her region, and was a founding member of The Garden Conservancy, while taking an active involvement in the Garden Club of America. Now in her tenth decade (having published her book in her ninth), gardens all around Mountain Brook have held on to a strong sense of place, even with development going on all around, because of visits and advice from the informal garden doctor. Recalls one member of the Little Garden Club, Louise would point to a garden’s essence, with the mantra “Play up, and clear out.”

Louise Wrinkle assembled some of the region’s most interesting garden figures to help her in reinvigorating the garden. John Wilson of Golightly Landscape Architecture points to the rock work along the creek bed: “They look like they’ve always been there but every rock was meticulously thought out.” Landscape architect Norman Kent Johnson, a member of Louise’s original team, describes the garden as collaborative; it is not the result of garden plans, but was designed on site.

A Garden in Conversation is the longest film that The Garden Conservancy has made so far (beautifully photographed by Michael Udris), and it is the first one to interview a garden’s creator. James Brayton Hall, CEO of the Garden Conservancy told me: “It’s a wonderful thing to hear a living person talk about how they design their garden, and why they garden. The Garden Conservancy is not about the ‘how’ of gardening; it’s about the ‘why’ of gardening. Gardening is a cultural activity and as Americans we’ve lost sight of that a little bit.”
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