El Dorado News-Times

Botanical Gardens

Where serenity takes root and blossoms

- By Alexandra Pecci

One minute I was smack in the middle of the real world, standing in a nondescrip­t parking lot during a global pandemic, hot and sweaty under the mask I wore to fend off the deadly virus.

The next minute I was walking under a white trellis covered in snaking vines, through a narrow evergreen hedge, and into a garden where roses bloomed pink, red and coral in neatly cut beds.

My daughter, Chloe, and I were alone in this little oasis at Fuller Gardens on the New Hampshire seacoast, so we

slipped off our masks. Misty ocean air cooled my face as I breathed in the smell of flowers. A fountain tinkled, a rabbit hopped across the grass, and the world beyond the garden hedge seemed to melt away. I felt like Alice in Wonderland, disoriente­d but eager to explore this pretty and peaceful world.

Like so many Americans, I have been taking the same three walks around my neighborho­od since March, thanks to the novel coronaviru­s. I canceled my 40th birthday vacation and got a refund on flights for work travel. I’m grateful for my backyard, but I’m frankly tired of staring at the same patch of grass every day.

I won’t be traveling this summer — or anytime soon — but my desire for novel experience­s and new places hasn’t gone away. In fact, it’s gotten more intense knowing I can’t have it. So when an acquaintan­ce told me about a local public garden that had recently reopened after shutting down because of the pandemic, my imaginatio­n went into overdrive looking at pictures of it online. It was beautiful. One spot reminded me of a place I’d visited in England the summer before. Another evoked a dewy fairyland. I looked at the garden’s address and saw that it was a short drive from my house, yet I had never visited.

Intrigued, I typed “botanical gardens near me” into Google and saw even more pictures that called to mind bucket-list places such as Japan and Versailles. These gardens were close to my house — many less than a 30-minute drive — but I hadn’t visited any of them. It was time to change that.

I’m not alone in my sudden desire to visit local botanical gardens. Data from around the country is showing an increase in visits to outdoor spaces this summer, and public parks, including botanical gardens, were the top spot that visitors to cultural institutio­ns planned to return to in the wake of pandemic closures, according to Colleen Dilenschne­ider, data analyst and publisher of Know Your Own Bone, a market research website for cultural executives.

To find places near you, PublicGard­ens.org, the website of the American Public Gardens Associatio­n, includes a map of its member gardens that’s searchable by garden name or Zip code. Searching by location yields all the gardens within 150 miles.

“Botanical gardens are a known entity,” says Joan Thomas, director of external relations for the associatio­n. “They’re places of sanctuary, refuge, and calming places to be.”

Plus, “they’re cared-for spaces,” she adds, natural but organized, alive but orderly, combining the structure of a museum with the outdoor space of a park.

Eager for something new but still wanting to stay safely outdoors, Chloe and I hit the road. Our first stop was Bedrock Gardens in Lee, N.H., where two miles of paths link 20 acres of cultivated gardens with woodland and meadows.

“It is designed as a journey,” Jill Nooney, who co-founded and owns Bedrock Gardens with her husband, told me later. “A journey has to have a destinatio­n, and it has to have adventures along the way.”

At Bedrock Gardens, themed garden “rooms” connect to one another along meandering paths like “beads on a necklace,” Nooney says. The landscape also is peppered with pieces of Nooney’s art, much of which she built with found objects. Some pieces recall the property’s former life as a dairy farm — a pitchfork and shovels become the crowning pieces of a sculpture, and metal tractor seats transform into swivel chairs.

Each garden room has a whimsical name that echoes its theme. The “Wiggle Waggle” is an undulating, narrow water channel dotted with lotus and lilies, and “ConeTown” is an ode to the dozens of conifers that grow there.

While it’s possible to simply wander around and enjoy the landscape without any context, be sure to grab the map that comes with the suggested $10 donation for admission. It will deepen the experience, teaching visitors about everything from horticultu­re to history.

“There are aspects in this garden that are based on French formal gardens, Asian gardens, medieval fruit growing,” Nooney says.

Chloe and I weren’t the only visitors that day, but at times it felt like we were nearly alone in the 37-acre landscape, which was perfect for social distancing.

“There aren’t many things you can do safely with kids. Because it’s so large it can easily incorporat­e 300 people,” Nooney says. “People are starved for safe outdoor activity. People are starved for something that refreshes the soul.”

Seeking to refresh our souls a little more, Chloe and I got back into the car and headed 20 miles southeast to another, very different place: Fuller Gardens in North Hampton, N.H., which former Massachuse­tts governor Alvan Fuller built at his summer estate, Runnymede-by-the-Sea, in the 1920s and ’30s.

Whereas Bedrock Gardens felt quirky and fanciful, Fuller Gardens is decidedly more manicured, reflecting its elegant country estate history. An English perennial garden, formal rose garden, classical European sculptures and fountains, conservato­ry, dahlia display garden, and neat paths and hedgerows give the place an Old World feel.

A few days later, Chloe and I visited yet another garden near our home, the one at the Stevens-Coolidge Place in North Andover, Mass., which is also part of a former country estate.

Behind the estate’s historic house, we explored around a French garden’s vegetables and fruit trees, an elegant sunken walled garden with intricate wrought-iron gates, and an exuberantl­y flowering perennial garden filled with bearded iris, phlox and plume poppy.

Visiting such gardens is not only good for the spirit; it’s also good for the gardener’s imaginatio­n. After all, gardening is another activity that’s gotten a boost during the pandemic.

“Ideas are free,” Nooney says, encouragin­g budding landscape designers to take inspiratio­n from the art within Bedrock Gardens’ landscape, maybe by piling up some stones to make a cairn or inverting a pot to see how it looks.

“There are tremendous things to be learned from botanic gardens around the country and around the world, but by focusing on local gardens, you can really see what will grow best in your own community,” says Joann Vieira, director of horticultu­re for the Trustees of Reservatio­ns, which manages the Stevens-Coolidge

Place and other properties throughout Massachuse­tts.

Local botanical gardens could also help you satiate your wanderlust when far-flung travel isn’t possible. At Fuller Gardens, you might feel transporte­d by the Japanese Garden, where a traditiona­l bamboo farming device called a shishi-odoshi — which uses water and noise to frighten away crop-eating animals — and a pond filled with bright orange koi add meditative, liquid sounds to the hushed space.

Or you might feel dropped into a classic British novel. Wandering around the manicured rose beds at Fuller Gardens, I half expected to see Elizabeth Bennet strolling along the hedgerows with her nose stuck in a book, or Alice herself, chasing after the white rabbit.

That global feeling is evident at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, a 281-acre Frederick Law Olmsted landscape that’s free and open to the public.

“We’re a tree museum. So when you come to the Arboretum you have the opportunit­y to see trees from all over the temperate world,” says Arboretum spokespers­on Jon Hetman, pointing to collection­s from China, Japan, Korea and Europe. The Arboretum’s broad landscape and wide, paved walkways provide ample space for people to safely explore outside, he says, though the website suggests avoiding peak visitation hours. (The visitor center and indoor exhibits are closed.)

Hetman believes that visiting botanical gardens can remind us of the “restorativ­e power of nature,” and after being in some of these beautiful, serene places, I have to agree with him.

“While people are really feeling adrift and uncertain, gardens and nature itself can really offer a way to decompress and provide some guidance and solace,” Vieira says.

 ?? Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci ?? The dahlia display garden at Fuller Gardens was in full bloom during the author’s visit. Fuller Gardens is a formal estate garden that also features more than 100 rose varieties, a Japanese garden and European art.
Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci The dahlia display garden at Fuller Gardens was in full bloom during the author’s visit. Fuller Gardens is a formal estate garden that also features more than 100 rose varieties, a Japanese garden and European art.
 ??  ?? Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci A view from the entrance of Fuller Gardens in North Hampton, N.H.
Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci A view from the entrance of Fuller Gardens in North Hampton, N.H.
 ?? Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci ?? A fountain within a walled garden at the StevensCoo­lidge Place in North Andover, Mass.
Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci A fountain within a walled garden at the StevensCoo­lidge Place in North Andover, Mass.
 ?? Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci ?? ■ A scenic overlook at Bedrock Gardens in Lee, N.H.
Photo for The Washington Post by Alexandra Pecci ■ A scenic overlook at Bedrock Gardens in Lee, N.H.

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