Liz Lange’s Restoration of Grey Gardens

Liz Lange’s Restoration of Grey Gardens

Liz Lange does not believe in ghosts. In fact, she’s dismissive when asked whether Grey Gardens, the 1901 East Hampton, New York, estate she and her husband recently restored, is haunted. “I didn’t expect to see ghosts because I simply don’t believe in them,” the creative director and chief executive officer of women’s luxury fashion and lifestyle brand Figue says of what it felt like to move in.

grey gardens east hampton exterior

On the front porch, Lange wears a Figue caftan. Wicker furniture, Bielecky Brothers. Floor color, Parma Gray by Farrow & Ball

Pascal Chevallier

Which isn’t to say the past is not present at Grey Gardens. Shortly after purchasing the home in late 2017, the fashion entrepreneur embarked on an extensive restoration of the storied estate, working with architecture firms Ferguson & Shamamian and Bories & Shearron to modernize the operation of the house while preserving much of its original design.

This involved digging a full basement to conceal contemporary mechanical and other functional spaces, shoring up the home’s foundation and structure, protecting original elements like the Dutch front door and foyer banisters during construction for restoration and, when needed, reconstruction, and adding back period-appropriate details like diamond-paned windows and doors with restoration glass—all while leaving the house’s footprint and exterior design nearly unchanged. “Liz and her husband knew that the architectural background they wanted to live in was the one that was built in 1901,” says architect Mark Ferguson, whose firm oversaw the restoration.

 

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Plans for the original house—an L-shaped, shingle-clad structure with dramatic gabled rooflines and brick chimneys, faint echoes of the English Arts and Crafts vernacular that seeded the American Shingle Style—were designed by architect Joseph Greenleaf Thorpe and commissioned by Fleming Stanhope Phillips. But Phillips died before his vision was realized. Instead his wife, Margaret Bagg Phillips, who famously inherited his estate after fending off challenges to the will from Phillips’s brother, built the house later that year.

grey gardens east hampton breakfast room

In the breakfast room, Mark D. Sikes composed a symphony of soothing blues. The rattan chairs (Soane Britain) are painted Lulworth Blue, while the custom china hutch is Cook’s Blue, both by Farrow & Ball. Floor color, Harbor Fog by Benjamin Moore. Chandelier, Paul Ferrante

Pascal Chevallier

To summon the spirit of the original house, Lange changed its flow as little as possible. While some minor floor plan reconfigurations were necessary for the house to live at today’s standards—opening the kitchen to a breakfast room, adding a back stairwell—other alterations, like punching out attic dormer windows on the street side, were avoided to retain the integrity of the original building. Says Lange: “One of the reasons it still feels like an old house is that we forced ourselves not to make it perfect perfect. The floors still creak a little bit, and they are not entirely level.”

The thoughtful revival of its gardens is but another invocation of the property’s past. Lange worked with landscape architect Deborah Nevins on a thorough overhaul of the grounds, planting new gardens in some places and restoring historic elements in others, and facilitating as much outdoor living as possible. Most notably Nevins restored the walled garden, pergola, and thatched garden hut, which had been added by prominent horticulturalist and author Anna Gilman Hill, the second owner of Grey Gardens (from 1913 to 1924) and the first to describe it as such. When reflecting on the garden spaces, Lange describes a distinctive magic. “There’s almost a quietness and you feel like you don’t even know where you are. It has this strangely magical, peaceful, beautiful atmosphere.”

Perhaps ironically Lange’s family history in East Hampton—childhood summers and weekends spent in a rigorously modern house by architect Charles Gwathmey—fueled her passion for Grey Gardens in the first place. “I loved it,” she says of her parents’ home, “but it was not lost on me that the other houses on the street were these older houses…often Shingle Style cottages built at the turn of the 20th century with mature properties and older trees. I grew to think that I wanted a house like that when I had my own.”

It was her love of the house, not its provenance, Lange insists, that prompted her to buy when it came up for sale. She and her husband had rented the house for a summer several years prior and had become smitten with its details, proportions, layout, and gardens. “The landscape struck me as familiar,” she says. “The flow of the rooms just made sense, and it has a really cozy feel, and it’s a very bright house. I worried about it feeling dark, maybe in that haunted way although I don’t believe it’s haunted, but it doesn’t. It’s a very sunshine-y, happy house.”

Lange, who hails from a family who experienced very public financial booms and busts (as she chronicles in The Just Enough Family, her podcast with friend and journalist Ariel Levy) and who became a household name at a relatively early stage in her career with the success of her eponymous maternity brand, is the sixth in a string of prominent, artistic, even visionary women to inhabit the house, each casting a reflection of herself within its design. She bought it from author Sally Quinn, who, along with husband and Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee, brought the house back from its near-condemned state, restored many period pieces that came with it, and summered there for more than 30 years, hosting legendary parties with star-studded guest lists until Bradlee passed away in 2014.

The Washington power couple had purchased the estate in 1979 from Edith Bouvier Beale. “Little Edie” lived with her mother, Edith “Big Edie” Ewing Bouvier Beale, at Grey Gardens from the early 1950s until the elder Edie’s death, both in increasing isolation and squalor as they ran out of money to maintain the estate. The juxtaposition of their flamboyant personalities with their decaying, animal-infested environment was exposed in the 1975 cult-classic documentary film Grey Gardens—and has been memorialized many times over in other films, books, and even a 2006 Broadway musical.

Today the interiors of Grey Gardens are a far cry from dereliction—or even the gently worn summer cottage aesthetic one might expect to find inside a century-old shingled seaside home. Instead different essences of femininity filter throughout: A dreamy, romantic spirit pervades the bedrooms; the kitchen, breakfast room, and pool and tennis cabana effuse a bohemian, almost exotic élan; and the wild foyer, sultry dining room, and groovy living room radiate an irresistible gusto not all that dissimilar from the 1960s, ’70s, and ’80s style celebrated to enthralling effect on Lange’s Instagram feed.

It’s a singular mirroring of Lange’s persona and the result of her collaboration with designer Mark D. Sikes, artists and artisans from around the world, and close friend and designer Jonathan Adler, who helped her add a layer of glamour to the living spaces on the first floor. “It’s a lot to live up to, such a famous house, so the decorating had to be bold and original,” says Adler. “Liz has always embodied a true idiosyncratic style with swagger. You can see it in the way she lives and in [her creative direction of] Figue,” which has launched a line of tableware under Lange’s lead.

Of course, idiosyncratic style has permeated the house from the beginning. “A lot of Shingle Style is a reinvention of something else. It’s a vehicle for dabbling in eccentricities,” notes architect James Shearron. “How wonderful that Grey Gardens fell into the hands of someone who has the same kind of spirit as its most famous owner.”

Even with a thoroughly reimagined point of view, the house is not entirely exorcised of the Edies’ presence. Lange tasked a handful of artists with interpreting their spirit: In the foyer, a painting of Little Edie in a headscarf by Helen Downing offers a charismatic greeting, while the second-story landing features papier-mâché busts of Big and Little Edie by artist Mark Gagnon; illustrations of the pair by Jason O’Malley float above a guest room headboard. The works represent “a wink or nod to the former owners,” says Lange—or ghosts, perhaps, of her own making.

VERANDA Magazine

VERANDA Magazine

Featured in our January/February 2023 issue. Interior Design by Jonathan Adler and Mark D. Sikes; Architecture by Bories & Shearron Architecture and Ferguson & Shamamian; Landscape Design by Deborah Nevins; Photography by Pascal Chevallier; Styling by Hilary Robertson; Produced by Cynthia Frank and Brad Comisar; Florals by The Bridgehampton Florist; Written by Steele Thomas Marcoux

Online and off, gardening ‘addicts’ connect over their passion | Home & Garden

Online and off, gardening ‘addicts’ connect over their passion | Home & Garden

The other night at about 2 a.m., I was intently scanning gardening websites in search of a unique carex (sedge). I paused, considering I had last but not least absent around the edge. Must I be sleeping or binge looking at Perry Mason as an alternative of scrolling the net for a plant? 

A single way to explain my powerful curiosity in a plant is to say I am a “collector.” A collector, according to good gardener and writer Ken Druse, has a passion. “If it is scarce we want it. If it is small and extremely hard to grow, we have to have it. If it is brown, appears to be lifeless and has black flowers, we’ll get rid of for it.” He describes plant geeks perfectly. In our young days, my husband and I frequented nurseries in various states, normally earning particular outings to deliver one thing residence. Age has quite a great deal stopped these marathon browsing sprees having said that, I have develop into an qualified on the web discovering from others wherever the goodies are, and adept at prying open containers with 20 mammoth staples.

I know the delivery individuals by title (it is Jacksonville) and they comment with a smile “Mrs. Blanton, crops.”

On this distinct night time, I was identified to locate my concentrate on. After twenty minutes of googling, good results! This charming sedge is on my kitchen area nursery till the weather conditions warms. On a browsing expedition, when my cart is full, a be aware informs me my decision is temporarily out of stock I typically get a little bit impatient — all that exertion and no results. I enter my e mail address in hopes this awesome plant will quickly be in my yard.

The phrase “crazy plant lady” often crosses my thoughts I will confess to that description. This week’s haul bundled miniature succulents, decorative shrubs, solid iron crops and Japanese maples amid other individuals.

The classy amaryllis I ordered 4 months back from a magnificent amaryllis site are on the carport waiting to be potted to grace my kitchen area table. We stopped taking in there prolonged back, when it turned a nursery.

I wanted a several pots to plant this year’s crop of amaryllis. It could possibly be good to have some shiny river rocks to decorate the tops. A person click on Amazon and there was a “thank you for your purchase.” Perhaps some particular soil for my small succulents was a excellent plan: click on.







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Etsy and eBay have a lot of intriguing crops (for good rates as long as you look at the vendor’s testimonials) lots of bins quickly arrived at my doorway.

The smallest vegetation can encourage a problem. How excellent to locate it. I am positive my community delivery individuals may perhaps be curious about what is in all those boxes from California.

How several collectors have been up in the center of the night time browsing for a plant? Wherever do all the other insane plant folks go? Straight to Fb where no a single ever would seem to snooze. There are 1000’s of sites devoted to gardening and crops. In truth, the plant people today were up and posting: gardeners bragging on their successes, searching for sympathy for their failures, or assistance on locating a plant. The web site “Addicted to Gardening” appeared to explain all those of us who need to have a probable intervention. There are worse behavior than an passion for carnivorous plants. We are not only dedicated to proudly owning them, we are fully commited to raising them. Crops are a high servicing object to acquire they do not just hold on the wall.

In Britain, there are 3 million individuals in 6,500 gardening teams. The British are amazing gardeners, as about the top rated as we are.

I could not locate a selection of gardening groups in the States but I did see gardeners posting from all corners of the globe. If there is a plant, there is a Fb group. Some are personal, not allowing for a lurker to examine except you formally join. I questioned what mysteries they were being publishing about, so I began signing up for them. A single page (Crimes in opposition to Horticulture: When Bad Taste meets Electric power Resources) illustrates hideous illustrations of bad pruning. Very terrifying things there. You unquestionably do not want to see your backyard garden snapped by a passing Fb reader and posted there. Steve Bender, the Grumpy Gardener, keeps us entertained with his marginally skewed model of his ridiculous gardener persona. Some of the internet pages experienced hundreds of 1000’s of followers. By means of the miracle of the world large world wide web, I am now connected to mad plant folks all in excess of the world.

What is about gardening that draws us in? We are like bees exploring for nectar. We will search and glimpse for the reward and rejoice when we find it.

Through the pandemic, hundreds of folks joined the legions of gardeners who now knew that gardening is a panacea for nearly anything and anything that is wrong with our environment. Gardening delivers joy and pleasure (and, sure, from time to time disappointment), and a definite drain on our credit score playing cards.

These rookies rushed in throwing warning to the winds. They had been lined up at Lowe’s pushing whole carts. I surmised quite a few of them were being clueless about the plant or what to do with it. Hopefully, they have done some homework and have created one thing lasting, joining the legions of us who are addicted to gardening. (I frequently expend time in Lowe’s encouraging a hapless human being find a plant for the right place, a further joy of gardening.)

Throughout all those weird months, stores offered out of crops leaving vacant shelves. Who would have known that the planet would flip to plants when everyday living turned difficult? I hope these plants and their owners are thriving.

As I seldom remaining the confines of my home and back garden all through those people quarantine days, I honed my capabilities as an web shopper. It took some exercise, but I can estimate at minimum fifty locations to locate a perennial.







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Nothing at all is much better than when a box comes marked “live plants.”

I rejoice when I make a new pal who enjoys vegetation and gardening as considerably as I do and does not regard me as an alien simply because my knees are filthy and I use a backyard garden blower to clean up my car. Gardening keeps kindred souls related who consider miniature succulents are charming.

Later on that day, soon after an in depth buying spree (and 1 e-mail from my credit history card organization to see if in simple fact I was genuinely buying all those goods), I determined to analyze my attachment to plants and gardening.

The yard is under no circumstances even now transform goes on twenty-4 several hours a day, bringing us a feeling of new generating existence far more intriguing Viewing the leaves adjust shades this time of the calendar year is an occupation that fascinates even the non-gardener.

The garden is beautiful, even in the course of summertime droughts, surprise snows in December and rainy days covering the flowers in smaller drops of drinking water.

Camellias are demonstrating out. The backyard garden glows with their wonderful blooms framed in opposition to shiny inexperienced leaves. Just about every day is “like a box of candies.”

The Japanese maples are altering colors, every a single at its individual speed and time and in its individual color scheme. My yard is glowing.

Oct shined as the summertime bouquets had been blooming facet by aspect with the freshly opened fall bouquets making a collage of colours, textures and fragrances. The smell of the ginger lilies enticed me from all the corners of the back garden.







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Gardeners nurture. We tend our “plant children” as I contact them I usually discuss to them to really encourage them to do their best.

While we get huge enjoyment from our gardens, gardeners not often brag. We might bemoan a person misplaced plant when hundreds are incredible. In our hearts, the exquisite handiwork helps make us smile. We carry pleasure to the bees, the butterflies, the hummingbirds, and the four calendar year previous who thinks blue flowers are the finest.

On the worst working day, a back garden stroll can carry our spirits and provide us pleasure. Pulling a handful of weeds, taking away a number of spent blossoms, or smelling the gardenias can assistance us forget the issues weighing on our hearts.

Gardening is a hobby that merely can not be dismissed. It involves electricity, awareness and, previously mentioned all, passion. For me, the pure act of sitting up near and particular with a pansy forces me to enable everything else go. Gardeners detect anything, a thing as tiny as a crocus poking its head out is bring about for celebration. Our crops are living evidence of our determination and hard work.

We pay out near awareness to just about every modest alter, knowing the backyard garden alterations over the several hours. The daylily blooms just one working day, disappearing the subsequent day.

We view plants expand and modify from the 1st tiny leaf to the past crumpled flowers. Just about every day is just a small bit different. We have to be speedy or one thing will move us by.

We make our properties wonderful and give a reward of beauty to anybody who passes. Demonstrating a unique flower warms my heart. Although site visitors may well not backyard garden, they enjoy our efforts. Gardening connects us. There is absolutely nothing I love extra than a vacation out to J and M Crops on Bynum Leatherwood Street to converse bouquets and take a look at the pansies. Test it. It is improved than an antidepressant.

Gardening teaches us to be very individual. We view for the very small seed to come to be a excellent purple zinnia. We know that the fat bulb we plant in December will be a stunning daffodil when spring days arrive. We look at for the butterflies to visit our bouquets. We hope just one of the visiting monarchs will depart us eggs to grow to be caterpillars and an additional era of monarchs. I fill my garden with parsley in circumstance a hungry caterpillar decides to stop by.

I grew delectable ‘Sungold’ tomatoes in my driveway backyard very last summer and snacked on them although I worked. Talk about prompt gratification.

When we back garden, we yard to accommodate ourselves. There is no race to acquire, no quality to get, no winner, our passion is our reward.

Gardeners adore to provide other individuals into their fold . We are prepared to stand for several hours to exhibit very best tactics or display to young children how bouquets mature. We hope to build a different passionate gardener.

What a lovely globe if we all have been even somewhat addicted to gardening. Gardening is about the gardener and the plant. We learn to deal with annoyance, but we also practical experience fantastic gratification.

Gardening absolutely has made me more healthy. I devote hours functioning in the beds pulling weeds, eradicating litter and carrying jugs of drinking water to needy vegetation. I am mentally healthier when I backyard, I do not imagine about the sorrows — only about the plant in my hand. Research has shown time and time yet again the rewards of gardening on head and entire body. Even remaining near to the soil increases our psychological overall health.

Gardening is challenging get the job done and normally taxing when the climate does not cooperate or creatures snack on our flowers. In the prolonged run, the excellent feeling of success can not be surpassed by a compact tragedy.

As a gardener, I am undertaking my element to make a much better entire world, doing the job really hard to support the pollinators carry out their responsibilities of pollinating veggies and, of class, bouquets. My back garden delivers a safe and sound refuge for the birds who invest their days in the shelter of my crops, boosting their young and snacking on a continuous supply of foodstuff.

I am hoping in this getaway time we have a few more joiners in the gardening earth as individuals decide on a live Xmas tree finally to grow to be aspect of their landscapes.

Having near to mother nature is a amazing factor and currently being addicted to gardening only makes it simpler. Potentially, currently being addicted to gardening is actually a good matter, not a unfavorable one particular.

Sherry Blanton, “The Southern Gardener,” writes about gardening for The Anniston Star. Speak to her at sblanton@annistonstar.com. Abide by her on Facebook at Southern Gardener-Anniston Star.

WaterSmart makeover: Welcoming a sense of whimsy

WaterSmart makeover: Welcoming a sense of whimsy

Cathy and Mike Godfrey’s most recent front yard landscape project was not their first rodeo. The couple, who bought their Carlsbad house in August 1997 and are empty nesters with two adult daughters, are avid gardeners and DIYers.

Twenty years ago, Cathy dug 40 holes to sink posts for the white picket fence that encircles their small front yard. They reduced the scale of the lawn (mostly to discourage neighborhood dogs being walked from pooping on their property) and, for a tropical look, added palms and decorative plants like red fountain grass, which Cathy said they regretted.

“It’s beautiful, but maintaining it is terrible. It spreads everywhere,” she said with a sigh.

Before, the Godfreys’ grass lawn was surrounded by tropical plantings that had been added two decades ago.

Before, the Godfreys’ grass lawn was surrounded by a white picket fence and tropical plantings that had been added two decades ago.

(Google Maps)

When the time came to refresh the yard again, the couple wanted to create a waterwise landscape to reduce maintenance yet still have an interesting curb appeal. But this time, the couple made the decision to hire professionals.

“I was like, ‘We’re too old. I can’t. I just can’t,’ ” she said. “I wanted somebody else’s input. I was on the NextDoor app one day and somebody posted that they use Claudia Kuepper with Gardenscapes by Claudia. I called her, but it was during COVID, so everyone was home wanting to do something new. She told us it would be six weeks before she could come, but we were in no hurry, and it gave us time to kill off the yard.”

The homework they did during that time, their collaboration with Kuepper, and the heavy lifting by the crew of DB Landscape earned them the 2022 WaterSmart Landscape Contest award for the Olivenhain Municipal Water District, for which they received a $250 check.

Grevillea plant in the waterwise front yard garden at at the Godfrey home.

A ‘Superb’ grevillea’s large, brushlike flower nestles among lacy leaves.

(Eduardo Contreras / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

The inspiration

Cathy, who recently retired from a career in human resources, and Mike, an electrical engineer, decided to create a theme of succulents and arid plants — the more Dr. Seusslike, the better, according to Cathy.

“I wanted a whimsical look that looked fun and interesting, not typical,” she explained. “I didn’t want just shrubs. We wanted a nice colorful variety in different textures.”

The couple also wanted to switch out their pop-up sprinklers for drip irrigation, create a path from the front of the house to the gate leading to their backyard, and install new lighting.

The details

Once the Godfreys decided they were committed to relandscaping and had secured their designer, they took to the streets, driving to neighborhoods similar to theirs to check out plants and designs they liked, photographing their finds, and sharing them with Kuepper.

“When she first came out, she had somebody who came with her who did all the measurements,” said Mike. “They then created a dimensional scale design. She then added all the notes with the specs of what she wanted for the landscaper to follow.

“We iterated with her a couple of times,” he added. “We had an initial meeting and then she went off to produce her first cut. I think we had some suggestions. We had continued to look out in the community for different plants we liked. So, she changed things, and added new plants.”

Blue chalkstick plant in a waterwise front yard garden.

Blue chalksticks, prized for their shape and unusual color, dot the landscape.

(Eduardo Contreras / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Cathy said Kuepper had suggested carving out a little patio in the front, but the couple vetoed that because they had what they felt was a perfect patio in their backyard. Kuepper also wanted to take down the picket fence, but the Godfreys were attached to that and feel it’s a useful boundary.

What they agreed on was that the centerpiece of the space would be a dry creek bed with river rock, punctuated with boulders. While the end of the bed leading to the street is lower than the ground, to help disperse rainwater to the plants in the garden, Mike pointed out that there’s actually a pre-existing drain that goes out under the curb that they tied into.

“We did this because we were getting flooded in the low part of the yard where it was accumulating water,” he explained.

The couple also installed new lighting and a path of quartz charcoal flagstones with crushed rock in between them that leads to the backyard. They pulled the sprinklers and installed a full drip system that waters the plants approximately every four days for about 10 minutes.

A cone bush plant in a waterwise front yard garden.

Bright-reddish bracts of a ‘Jester’ conebush add color and height.

(Eduardo Contreras / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

The Godfreys, whose home is east-facing, get full sun until late afternoon. Knowing that helped with their design theme of succulents and arid-type plants, most of which came from Briggs Nursery and Tree Co., in Vista. Their choices provide plenty of color, with succulents like kiwi aeonium, purple aeonium, variegated agave, and ‘Little Gem’ aloe, which produces coral-colored flowers. ‘Ripple Jade’ crassula with its rippled blue-green leaves offers a unique shape compared with other jades. Their ‘Jester’ conebush, with its bright reddish bracts, and ‘Superb’ grevillea, an evergreen shrub that produces long-lasting spiky clusters of coral flowers that attract hummingbirds, are planted near each other by the white picket fence.

A long-standing trio of huge palms was removed, and Kuepper grounded the garden instead with a ‘Dark Shadows’ tea tree. ‘Color Guard’ yucca, variegated snake plants and blue moor grass create spiky contrasts to the petite mounding aeoniums. She also strategically placed small boulders from KRC Rock Natural Stone & Boulder Supply in San Marcos to create mass and visual interest.

A side yard view with trees in a waterwise front yard.

In keeping with the Godfreys’ wish for Seusslike touches, three trees — a tree aloe, flanked by two giant yuccas — add spiky interest along the driveway.

(Eduardo Contreras/The San Diego Union-Tribune)

In the slice of garden space on the far side of the driveway, which also has a dry creek bed, are three trees: a tree aloe (Aloidendron barberae) and two giant yuccas (Yucca elephantipes). With their dramatic, sparsely branched trunks, they are the most Seusslike in their structure. A cape rush below offers spiky texture and height in contrast to the surrounding small succulents like blue chalksticks and elephant bush succulents, also known as elephant’s food.

The Godfreys dedicated a lot of time to their pot selections and found just the right ones at Green Thumb Nursery in San Marcos and Madd Potter in Encinitas. They took advantage of El Corazon Compost Facility’s program for Carlsbad residents, which gives compost away for free.

Elephant bush plant in a waterwise front yard garden.

Elephant bush, a succulent resembling jade, adds a pop of vivid green.

(Eduardo Contreras / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

“We were surprised at the need to re-mulch the yard within the year, but it was super easy and inexpensive,” Cathy said. “It’s easy to spread in the yard to give it a fresh appearance, too.”

For the Godfreys, low-water gardening is a mindset change.

“By going from a tropical-type garden to a desert-type garden, you really have to accept that the plants do not like a lot of water,” Cathy said. “It seems that you are ‘starving’ them of moisture, but that’s what makes them thrive.

“We love the low maintenance with the nice, clean curb appeal,” she added. “It’s been a year and we have made small plant changes when we see something that looks interesting, but nothing major. It’s fun to change plants out once in a while. And we’ve gotten a very positive reaction from all of our neighbors.”

A dry river bed in the waterwise front yard garden.

A purple aeonium (center) adds color by a dry creek bed of river rock that carries rainwater to surrounding plants. Water previously collected in the low-lying area.

(Eduardo Contreras / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Costs

$18,000 to $20,000, including hardscape, lighting, irrigation and labor. It was very close to the initial budget. Later, they received a $250 check from the Olivenhain Municipal Water District. They didn’t apply for a grass removal rebate because they felt the application process wasn’t worth the time and effort.

Water saved

It was a modest improvement from their previous $50 to $60 monthly bills.

Entry walkway through the waterwise front yard.

Cathy and Mike Godfrey’s front yard, once a flat, grassy expanse, now features plants of varied colors, textures and heights.

(Eduardo Contreras / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

A closer look: Cathy and Mike Godfrey

Plants used:
kiwi aeonium (Aeonium ‘Kiwi’)
purple aeonium (Aeonium ‘Plum Petals’)
variegated agave (Agave attenuata ‘Variegata’)
agave (Agave victoriae-reginae)
‘Little Gem’ aloe (Aloe rudikoppe)
aloe (Aloe var.)
Bunny Blue sedge (Carex laxiculmis ‘Hobb’)
small cape rush (Chondropetalum tectorum)
dracaena palm (Cordyline ‘Red Star’)
‘Ripple Jade’ crassula (Crassula ‘Ripple Jade’)
‘Superb’ grevillea (Grevillea ‘superb’)
‘Dark Shadows’ tea tree (Leptospermum ‘Dark Shadows’)
‘Jester’ conebush (Leucadendron ‘Jester’)
elephant bush (Portulacaria afra ‘Variegata’)
variegated snake plant (Sansevieria trifasciata laureatii)
blue chalksticks (Senecio mandraliscae)
blue moor grass (Sesleria caerulea)
‘Color Guard’ yucca (Yucca flaccida ‘Color Guard’)

A dry creek bed of colored stones winds between a small cape rush plant and small succulents that include blue chalksticks.

On the far side of the driveway, a dry creek bed of colored stones winds in between a small cape rush plant and small succulents that include blue chalksticks.

(Eduardo Contreras / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Estimated costs: $18,000 to $20,000
Who did the work: Claudia Kuepper of Gardenscapes by Claudia created the plan. Dan Barton and crew from DB Landscape did the landscaping.
How long it took: One month, August 2021
Water savings: Modest improvement from previous bills of $50 to $60 a month
Advice:
• If you have the means, using a landscape designer is a good way to go, as they can help you see the potential of your yard and tie all the pieces together.
• Before starting your design, spend weekends traveling around similar neighborhoods with similar homes to see what others do, and take photos of what you like.
• Stick to your vision. Your landscape designer can be invaluable in developing your design and establishing your vision. But stick to your guns if they veer away from that.
• Propagate your plants as they grow, and don’t be afraid to move around plants that aren’t thriving to spaces where they would do better.

About the series
This is the second in an occasional series on winners of the annual WaterSmart Landscape Contest, conducted in partnership with the San Diego County Water Authority. To learn about entering the next contest, visit landscapecontest.com.

For details on classes and resources through the WaterSmart Landscape Makeover Program, visit landscapemakeover.watersmartsd.org. Landscape rebates are available through the Socal WaterSmart Turf Replacement Program at socalwatersmart.com.

Golden is a San Diego freelance writer and blogger.

Class publishes new home and garden magazine in Oglethorpe Echo

Class publishes new home and garden magazine in Oglethorpe Echo
The full Home Grown magazine team gathered to celebrate the publication's release on Thursday, Dec. 8.
The full Property Grown magazine crew gathered to celebrate the publication’s release on Thursday, Dec. 8. (Image: Jackson Schroeder)

Those people who picked up the Dec. 8 edition of The Oglethorpe Echo newspaper observed a new journal, Property Grown, slipped amongst the paper’s web pages. 

Dwelling Developed, which is also accessible on the net, is a product or service of Journalism lecturer Lori Johnston’s Household and Garden Reporting course. It was manufactured doable thanks to a stipend from the UGA Libraries and the Center for Training and Learning’s Distinctive Collections Libraries Fellows method, created to bring archives-concentrated understanding into lecture rooms.

“As I regarded how to greatest use the funding from the software, our College’s energy to save this nearly 150-yr-old weekly newspaper led me down the highway to Oglethorpe County and the plan for a distinctive print and digital publication,” Johnston wrote in her editor’s notice on the magazine’s initially whole web page. 

Grady School and The Echo entered into a partnership in October 2021, and journalism students have served as the paper’s producing employees for the previous 13 months.

The semester-extended venture for the Property and Backyard Reporting class commenced in the archives of UGA’s Distinctive Collections Libraries, in which pupils pulled archival materials, such as maps and archived images of properties in Oglethorpe County, to build a basic comprehension of the county’s record and aesthetic. 

They furthered their knowing of the area’s tradition, as well as its architecture and style and design kinds, by interviewing inhabitants, artists, preservationists and gardeners in the county about their households, gardens and artistic passions. 

A quote card that reads “Being a part of this course and contributing to the Home Grown magazine has been a challenging and rewarding experience,” said journalism major Ashley Balsavias. “It’s great to have a final product to show as a testament to our diligent work for the past few months.”The 16-web page magazine involves profiles, how-tos and other tales depicting how inhabitants of Oglethorpe County express themselves as a result of their residences and gardens. They manufactured tales, images and movies for the publication, which was created by Amy Scott (AB ’20).

“Being a portion of this course and contributing to the House Grown journal has been a difficult and fulfilling working experience,” reported journalism significant Ashley Balsavias. “It’s excellent to have a closing merchandise to present as a testament to our diligent operate for the previous number of months.”

For one scholar, journalism key Christa Bugg, the undertaking strike near to house. Though sifting by the library archives, Bugg located a photograph from 1978 with a caption reading “Bugg Residence cr. 1710-20.” The single-bedroom cabin, which sits on 150 acres of land hugging the Oconee National Forest, transpired to however be in the household, and Bugg, following contacting up a relative, experienced the chance to tour it. On webpage 14 of Household Developed magazine, Bugg tells the whole tale. 

Print editions of Residence Developed magazine can be obtained in Oglethorpe County at Bell’s Food stuff Retail outlet, Golden Pantry destinations or the Echo office environment in Lexington. 

Date: December 12, 2022
Creator:  Jackson Schroeder,  Jackson.Schroeder@uga.edu