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Maria von Brincken APLD
Certified Landscape Designer

978-443-4540
maria@mariavonbrincken.com

Landscape Design • Planning •
Construction Coordination

Beautiful gardens that add to your life

Providing eco-friendly
landscapes since 1990







Copyright 2013 Maria von Brincken. To use photos or text please contact maria@mariavonbrincken.com

Boston Flower Show a Beauty in sights, sounds, and scent

Photo by Maria von Brincken 2012

Photo by Maria von Brincken 2012

The Boston Flower Show open through March 18th stimulates all your senses. I’ve so many great photos of  beautiful garden rooms with lovely details and features. Difficult to choose one photo, but the enchantment in the exhibit designed as a children’s garden featured above won my vote this morning.

As a landscape exhibit Judge representing the New England Chapter APLD (Association of Professional Landscape Designers), it was the first year that we presented an award. The exhibit we selected is shown below.

Labeled as a roof top garden, this outdoor room could be done almost anywhere–urban or suburban. It was really hard to choose the award winner for our category–two or three exhibits were really close, but the “runners up” all had a major drawback in design. Maybe a transition didn’t work or a feature contradicted the theme and so on. This one worked on all levels. Yet, all the exhibits would be great in anyone’s landscape. All beautiful and superbly crafted. Lots of ideas for the home gardeners and professionals alike.

The smells of flowers, the song of birds, the rich textures and colors of  hardscape materials and plantings offered so much welcome stimulation to winter tired senses.

I loved the way the sculptural silver “plants” were used in the water features and tucked here and there unexpectedly within the exhibit.  The design featured a simple classic geometric shape based on a cross–highly functional and bold structure framing the outdoor room that included nooks and views in and out. But the diversity of plantings, containers, water features, views, seating areas offered an intimate friendly space invited you in to pause, look, listen, and most importantly, relax.

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The  judges shown in this photo are myself, Maria von Brincken,APLD to left, then Joyce K. Williams, APLD, and Ellin Hanlon, APLD. We are all international certified designers.

Flower Shows offer many great ideas as well as welcome sensory delights. Hope you all get to explore one soon.

Subtle Pallet Awaits You in Winter’s Woods

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

This subtle pallet drew me to this woodland winter place. Indeed the hues of white, silvery green, blues, brown, and charcoal color my living room. I love the contrast of large and small, vertical and horizontal.

Tree trunks of varying widths painted with splotches of silvery green lichen contrasts with narrower branches of saplings and shrubs. The horizontal layers of sky, cloud, shoreline, and water add a depth and tonal texture to the strong vertical textures of bark and lichen.

The subtle influence of sunlight keeps the misty tones happy rather than sombre.  Winter tones are not always drab as I was happy to rediscover on a road in the Catskills Mountains in New York State that I traveled mid-February on my way to WinterSong (a magical song writer’s weekend of workshops, performances, and jams). Perhaps there’s a song to be inspired by this winter woodland patch.

I know there’s a garden inspiration from it somehow somewhere. I think songwriting and landscape design share the task of creating a place and taking you on a journey. Designing garden places and the journeys that offer treasures that ask us to linger, pause, breath deeply and restore us to the present is my lifework. The gift this winter woods offered to me was to pause, linger with the beauty, and include that wonder in my day.

Arnold keeps its Promise

Design and Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Design and Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Away over President’s Day holiday weekend, I returned to find the Witch Hazel ‘Arnold’s Promise’ in full bloom! This wonderful Hamamelis leads the way to springs’ bounty. Depending on the winter it blooms from anywhere from late January or early February to April. In last year’s record- setting cold and deep snow cover winter it bloomed in April in my garden–a few branches above the snow had flowers.

Some people think it’s an early blooming Forsythia because it’s a yellow mass in the landscape.  But the Witch Hazel form is upright and a vase-like.  Multi-stemmed, I prune out the suckers to form a small tree in my landscape. It will grow to 12ft in 10-15 years and 20ft to mature height. Pruning it as tree allows me to grow perennials underneath. When your garden space is limited, this technique allows a fuller planting for four season abundance. Notice the pale green budding Hellebore in the photo’s left corner next to the variegated broad-leaf evergreen mound. Yes, that’s a Rhododendron bud in the right corner. Spring bulbs pop up beneath it before the Daylilies and Ladies Mantle appear. Below this text, see the photo taken from the other direction. The broad-leaf evergreen Rhododendron helps you see the vivid yellow flowers, so good to plant this with contrast in mind.

It’s flower petals, four yellow ribbons, unfurl on warm days only to close tightly with the cold. They repeat this response to warm and cold for 6-8 weeks. A lemony fragrance that I don’t seem to smell is a bonus to those that can. I enjoy the flower bud that form on the branches in the fall all winter long.

The summer leaves are rounded and textured and fall color adds to it’s charm in the garden. That’s another reason that I plant it where I can see it coming and going all year long.  In the designs I create for my clients, sometimes I use it singularly or in groups to echo nature’s plant communities. However, it’s used in full sun or part shade, Arnold keeps its promise to bloom first in spring!

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Winter Wonder Found on a Chilly Morning

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Twenty degrees Fahrenheit at 9am on a Sunday morning.  A cold January New England day with a wind chill factor of 0!  I spotted this evergreen fern thriving in this hundred fifty year old foundation wall. Cold or not, I paused to admire and dig out my camera. The field-stone wall retains the glacier made hill to the rear of the horse stalls built when the town and the church shared the Meeting House.

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Then the horses stayed in the stalls nibbling hay I imagine or chewing the boards as one can see that evidence.  Anyway, now-a-days, we park our cars in front of the space. During church fairs, crafters enjoy the shelter from wind and the southern exposure on sunny days.

Stopped in my trek from car to building, I marveled and continue to marvel at the fragile seeming fern living so well in this protected crevice–a kind of outdoor room if you think about that. I also appreciated the shadow play from the post structure and the diagonals of the chain that keeps cars out of the stalls. Nice composition that probably drew my eye to the fern in the first place. I ‘m awed by its good health and also wonder if a fern has flourished in this crack since the time of  the horses parked in here. Then I wonder if the horses nibbled it. I suspect not but I don’t know if horses eat ferns.

A nice bit of wonder to add to my day. Hope you find one, too.

Enjoying My Winter View

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

I snapped this photo on New Year’s Day–Just before I took down the Christmas tree.  I so enjoyed the view of the tree, the deck containers filled with winter greens, and the forest landscape beyond. I also like the way the railing pickets’ shadows and the lower containers’ foliage create patterns on the deck. And then there’s the orange cat who adopted me last year waiting patiently for me to let him in.

Photo and design by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Photo and design by Maria von Brincken copyright 2012

Another shot.  In each the containers filled with winter arrangements of white pine, rhododendron–green and burgundy colored foliage, spruce, and red winter berry stems add so much to my daily vista. I love the way they form the mid ground–framed by the window –and leading into the longer view of the winter forest.  I’m particularly taken by the lingering brown oak foliage that opens to reveal the light bark of the grey birch beyond.

Of course, last winter, there was so much record breaking snow that I could barely see the containers so with this warm and snowless winter to date I’m enjoying a different view. And the orange cat enjoys a snooze becoming part of this picture as well.

Solstice Sky–A New England Winter Vision

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Inspired, I snapped this enchantingly beautiful sky. Conversing with a friend in the Historic Town Center in Sudbury, Massachusetts I happened to look up and out, and was stopped in my tracks by the sky’s stunning beauty.

New England offers such beautiful skies. Especially, I love the crisp and brilliantly clear night skies at this time of year.

And, often, I wonder about the English settlers looking at this sky and thinking about another sky on the other side of a large ocean.  I’ve lived here long enough that I don’t think too often of the ‘big’ skies I watched growing up in Northern California. If there is anything I miss about California it’s the ‘long views’ and the ‘ big skies’.

Here I start really noticing the night skies sometime in the late fall, as I can’t help but wonder at the the stars. The late fall alignment seems particularly bright to me and calls out to me to look and marvel. At this time of year I can’t help thinking about the carol phrase ‘It Came Upon a Midnight Clear’. I don’t know why and don’t remember the verses, but something about the song and the phrase suits what’s I’m seeing and feeling.

There’s something powerful and beautiful about this winter late afternoon sky.

this Hellebore thinks It’s England, not NEW England

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Winter Solstice Day I noticed this hellebore in my front garden. But it felt more like a discovery as it’s  fully budded and this in not England where they bloom at this time of year.

Because it was such an unusually warm day–50 degrees to start the day–I took the opportunity to cut back my large ornamental grass that was under a snow bank this time last year and the year before. While out there I continued to fill the “lawn” bags for pick-up later that day for the yard waste recycling.  The grass alone would have overwhelmed my compost bin in my small garden. Clipping away at long gone late blooming chrysanthemums, I noticed the hellebore. The ‘noticing’ stopped me in my tracks.

I’m fairly certain that this is actually the Helleborus niger or the ‘Christmas Rose’ (white blossoms) rather than orientalis or foetidus.  In the Boston western ‘burbs it blooms in March, if we’re lucky, but usually sometime from March thru May. As I write this Christmas Eve on a freezing winter day, I just peeked out my door, and the buds persist. Amazing. This is why it’s called the ‘Christmas Rose’ in England. In New England, we’re lucky if it blooms at Easter, more like May Day.

It’s leaves persist thru our winters which is why when my horticultural buddie Marylyn gave me piece a year or two ago I planted it in my front garden. I chose that spot so I could see it’s “evergreen” leaves in combination with a nearby ‘evergreen’ variegated plant. (See it in the photo’s lower corner–it’s a plant that I’ve not successfully identified, but looks great and does well).

The orange chord you see powers the tiny colored lights on the nearby conifer to celebrate winter and the birth of the new year.

I’ll let you know if this crazy weather pattern lets the hellebore bloom–I’ll check tomorrow–Christmas Day–just in case.

Hope your Solstice was happy and your Christmas is Merry whether you celebrate these holidays or not!

Pretty in Pink–Gardens Move Indoors

Photo & Design by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Photo & Design by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Design & Photo by Maria von Brincken 2011

Design & Photo by Maria von Brincken 2011

Mid-December in New England our landscapes and gardens are more about form, structure, and texture than flowers. We can still create delight in our winter landscapes but no flowers. The plants that summered on the shady patio and then were moved indoors in mid- September to avoid the first hard frost to a holding area (just the other side of the glass doors, but now indoors)–now it’s time to selectively move some of them to tables near windows to showcase them.

Currently, it’s the combination of foliage and flowers that enchants me.  The pink Cyclamen (a gift from horticultural friend Melinda years ago) creates more buds and open flowers each day. It combines beautifully with the pink orchid my horticultural friend extraordinaire Marylyn gave me. She says it might be Oncidium” Twinkle”. The fern and the other orchid foliage add to the composition.

And the moss.  The moss I added to the containers unifies the compositions and makes the container plants look great.  Also, helps retain moisture, I imagine. I find it amazing that “sheet moss” bought at a garden center in a plastic bag can do so much in so little time (it probably took me all of 5 minutes start to finish).

So while my winter views are enhanced with the outdoor containers filled with winter greens arrangements rather than empty pots–I’ll post a blog on those soon–my indoor gardens are beginning to bloom and make me smile. And these long blooming indoor plants will continue to bloom to celebrate the Winter Solstice and Christmas Holidays. It won’t be long before the ‘Paperwhite’ Narcissus begin their fragrant enchantment and add to New Year’s celebrations.

This Squirrel a Friend of Yours?

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

This squirrel’s enjoying the rose hips offered by Rosa ‘new dawn’. I thought rose hips were eaten by the birds only. Imagine my surprise looking out my window at the rose trellis and coming eye to eye with this fellow.  By the time I got my camera out, he or she had turned but you can still see the orangish rose hip in its paws.

Making friends with squirrels or other critters involves the leap of thought from “mine” as in my garden to “all” as in this piece of land is also the home for many critters. I’ve learned if it bothers me that the groundhog eats all the asters and so, then I won’t plant them in that area. That way the groundhogs will eat what’s in the wet meadow and forest behind my garden.

Same with the squirrels–I’ve squirrel proofed the bird feeders because while I didn’t mind the squirrels helping themselves to seed–I found out how fast squirrels can empty feeders.

But the raccoons have no problem with squirrel proof feeders and have even learned how to open the ‘locking” galvanised container.  So for most of the summer I stopped filling the feeders. The raccoons made such a mess–seed all over the place. And they brought babies who used the planters as step stools–thereby breaking plants!I’m going to try filling the feeders again as its winter and I’m home to see the birds feed. But I’ll keep the seed indoors and perhaps only use one feeder. We’ll see.

But I like thinking of animals in a friendly way rather than as enemies. I don’t need to stress my body with anger and hate at animals. Thankfully living in this century and place I don’t need to fear them either. Peace. Harmony. Got to start somewhere.

Creating Place, a unique ‘Home’ Place, and Solving Drainage Problems

Design and Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

"After" Design and Photo by Maria von Brincken copyright 2011

Before

Before

Arriving at this home before this landscape renovation (see ‘before’ photo below), you may well wonder why this landscape needed renovation. After all, the lawn looks great and the plantings are okay. That’s it.  Just looked ok.  But the great lawn can’t make it a special place to live.

Walking the path on a dry day, you may wonder why the wood planks at the step bottom.  You may wonder why the walk wasn’t built at the best grade to begin with. Indeed it seemed the walk was built as a “swale”. That’s a term used to depict a shallow ditch used to direct water.  In this case as the majority of the front landscape is much higher than the foundation of the house, it was used to keep water away from the foundation. But it didn’t work for humans walking in and out of the front door especially on rainy days. Rainy days that seems to occur more often and with great volumnes of rainfall in our New England area.

Designing these series of beautiful welcoming entry gardens included the important grading and drainage issues but overall the goal was to create a ‘home’ place.  A place that embraced people while enhancing and setting the house within the landscape.

Working with my clients, my intention was to create a landscape that reflected my homeowners and was an extension of themselves. Previously there was a mature conifer forest that he wanted to restore. Also, wanted enough lawn to serve as a playing area as the back lawn was small. And the existing walk was terrible as well as a grading issue. She wanted a landscape of texture and contrasting forms with boulders –she handed me a photo of pacific northwest style contemporary landscape. But they own a traditional New England style house.

The resulting custom landscape design works 24/7, 365 days a year. A newly installed brownstone walk now curves on higher ground. The native blue spruces will need light pruning each spring to keep them from overgrowing their spaces–that’s the concession to get the plantings and keep the lawn as big as possible. But meanwhile, the after photo shows the project just mulched after the deciduous trees have lost their burgundy colored leaves of spring and summer. However, still plenty of “color” from the blue in the spruces, the yellow of the chamaecyparis, the green and white of the vinca ground-cover, and the winter leaf color of the broad leaf evergreens of pieris and  native leucothoe. The low growing “yak” rhodies and boxwood add to the textural composition as well as the architectural drifts and forms.

Many design details like the shaping of the beds and the walk to create sinuous broad curves within the landscape that all connect to create a shaped space reveal themselves in your body as you walk to the door or wander to the bench or from the second floor window views. And I haven’t even mentioned the night lighting.

So many design details contribute to the sense of place or “genius loci” now residing here. It’s magical.

Before Grading Problem--Walk too low for step also 'attracted' water
Before Grading Problem–Walk too low for step also ‘attracted’ water