May 13, 2026

A Spring Garden Tour Around My Farm

Spring is always a wonderful time for a garden tour.

Every now and then, I agree to open my gardens for a small number of private walking tours. Yesterday was the first one of the season. It was for two winners of a charity auction run by the Seattle, Washington based nonprofit FareStart. The guided walk took them through various gardens, groves, and allées. They learned a bit about the history of my farm, the many changes I've made over the years, and about the plants and trees they saw along the way.

Here are some photos, enjoy.

May 12, 2026

Planting in the Pinetum

Planting a pineutum, an arboretum of pine trees and other conifers, provides shelter and nesting sites for small birds, and continuous, year-round interest and greenery in the landscape.

I started my pineutum about 20 years ago, and every year I try to add a few more specimens like pines, junipers, spruces, cypresses, etc. in a variety of sizes and forms. Yesterday, my outdoor grounds crew planted a handful of pines, including Japanese varieties Pinus parviflora 'Tanima no yuki' and Pinus parviflora 'Bergman.'

Enjoy these photos.

May 11, 2026

A New Rose Garden

Sometimes a garden simply needs a complete redesign - to incorporate fresh new plants and to revitalize the space.

Earlier this year, I decided to transform what was previously my lilac allée. This area also had many roses, so my thought was to make it a more formal rose garden - adding more rose bushes and surrounding them all with boxwood. The project took careful planning and patience. My gardeners and outdoor grounds crew removed the old plants, tilled the soil, amended it with compost and fertilizer, and then started planting. It was quite an undertaking, but it looks great.

Here are some photos, enjoy.