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The garden wasnt
always this way. When I first moved in it was mostly a
plot of dead trees. The dirt was so dry and hard-packed
that not even weeds would grow. I didn't have the vaguest
notion what having a garden entailed, but I wanted one,
one that would be like another realm. So I hired a friend
of artistic sensibilities who was an avid gardener, and
together we began to plan the transformation. The first thing we did was cut down the dead
trees and chop out what seemed miles and miles of dead
tree roots, leaving three trees and a few lilac and
quince bushes. One tree was a very tall, sparsely leaved
sycamore right next to a sickly pine tree, each sapping
the others strength. The third tree was an enormous
deodora cedar with two identical tops, equally dead and
orangey-brown, that stood out garishly from the rest of
the tree, which was a lush green. We chopped down the
sickly pine, topped the sycamore, cleared out the
deadwood, and topped the deodora and strategically
planted various fast-growing trees to camouflage it.
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computerized watering system and proceed to water the
earth to soften it and prepare it for landscaping.
Meanwhile, we sank a pond with a waterfall, built a stone
retaining wall, a flagstone patio with a trellis, a grape
arbor, and began to build the gazebo. Pile and piles of
large stones had been dumped in the yard to be used later
in landscaping. I was not
prepared for what happened next. First, an invasion of
toads moved in and decided to breed in the pond, hundreds
of them, which made thousands of offspring. There were
toads everywhere.
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Then a most beautiful
profusion of wild flowers sprang up, and as each wave of
color would die away, another would take its place, the
most lovely of which was a field of lowly petunias that
had gone to seed and had returned to their original state
not the intensely colored, foot-high versions one
finds in nurseries, but two-foot high ones loaded with
white and violet blossoms with a fragrance that rivaled
the lilacs. Plants started growing through the crevices
in the rocks, things which at the time I had no idea what
they were, and before I knew it a jungle had emerged and
begun to attract wildlife, including a raccoon, an
occasional duck, and a flicker which kept pecking holes
in the bat-house. Large swallowtail butterflies fluttered
among the flowers, and all of a sudden it seemed a crime
to landscape against it, but landscape we did, slowly and
carefully, keeping as much wildness as we could. We planted all kinds of fruit, as well as every
herb and spice that would grow, and randomly placed
vegetables, and somehow a balance was achieved,
beautiful, fragrant, practical, with four complete
seasons, still attracting wildlife. The sycamore tree is
now a full towering giant, and the deodora has grown out
into an interesting shape with a charming rock garden off
to the side, and the young trees have grown.
People often comment that walking in my
garden is like walking into another world. I have
successfully created my sanctuary, and new surprises
abound from it all the time.
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