The Morning Call (Sunday)

Minn. garden offers ‘series of puzzles’

Retired teacher turns his backyard into a horticultu­ral museum of sorts

- By Nancy Ngo

ROSEVILLE, Minn. — As a child growing up in Minnesota’s North Woods, Chuck Levine spent his free time studying plant life.

He foraged for and pressed plant leaves. Neighbors gave him flora to bring home and grow. His family nurtured his budding green thumb, too.

“My mom would buy the plants, seed packets, and I started growing things like orange trees in the windowsill,” he said. “I had a whole indoor fruit orchard — pineapple, pomegranat­es, papayas.

You can grow all kinds of fruit indoors.”

His fondness for studying fruits, vegetables, ornamental plants and more turned into a fulltime career for Levine, who recently retired as a horticultu­ral educator.

His affection for plant life didn’t end with his day job. The 1-acre garden at his Roseville home is a testament to his life’s dedication to plants. His plant catalog is sizable, estimated to be in the thousands, with hundreds of varieties, including rare finds from around the world.

The garden in the backyard of his house is a horticultu­ral museum of sorts, with Levine the tour guide and walking encycloped­ia of cultivator knowledge.

‘An environmen­tal science’

“When you study horticultu­re, it’s really an environmen­tal science,” said Levine, who taught horticultu­re at Hennepin Technical College in Brooklyn

Park for three decades and is a former consultant for the Chicago Botanic Garden. “I really like the way of conserving through cultivatio­n.”

One of his main goals is to create an ecosystem.

During the growing season, a redbud tree is an abundant source of nectar and pollen. A weeping mulberry tree “invites birds and other creatures to the yard” because they come to nosh on the berries from it, Levine said.

The flowers and berries of a pagoda dogwood and an Amur chokecherr­y tree also do their part to attract pollinator­s and other wildlife, the latter serving as a nesting site for birds.

A low-growing arctic raspberry plant is another

source for berries, as well as provides ground cover. Varieties such as Scarlet runner beans, nasturtium­s and salvia attract butterflie­s and bees, not to mention hummingbir­ds.

“We mainly get the rubythroat­ed hummingbir­d. I see them daily,” he said.

Some parts of the garden have a tropical feel, with plant life that includes lush ferns, giant elephant ears and rare pineapple lilies, while variegated Japanese hops climb up trellises.

An awe-inspiring 100 varieties of ginkgo trees can be found dotted throughout in what Levine calls the Enchanted Ginkgo Forest. There, he studies one of the world’s oldest living tree species, as well as the environmen­tal role they

play.

“I like the look of the ginkgo tree, and it’s very tolerant of toxins. It absorbs the toxins from the highway,” he said. And “I like a lot of Asian plants. The climate here is similar to climates in Korea, Japan.”

The lay of the land

As far as landscapin­g, brick- and rock-lined garden beds hold prairie plants, succulents and more. Shingle-lined walking paths lead the way to several themed areas.

“The garden is really a series of puzzles,” he said. “I search the ads and make the garden with what I can get for free.”

Items in the garden also carry personal history, ranging from tiger lilies that an elementary school teacher gave to Levine as a child to Golden Glow coneflower­s from his landlady (from the farm where she grew up) when he studied horticultu­re at the University of Minnesota Crookston. Peonies are from his mother’s garden.

Other items in the yard are there to appease the next generation­s.

“I have currants and gooseberri­es because my children wanted them. They thought we have to grow something edible for ourselves that we liked,” Levine said.

Toys and dinosaur figurines also can be found. “The grandkids like to do scavenger hunts in the yard,” he said. “They’re always finding new and interestin­g things to put out here.”

The bounty from his garden is shared with the community, too. Each year, Levine holds a large plant sale. And his showstoppi­ng double-petaled tiger lilies from France have made their way down the aisle more than once.

“I’ve used these flowers to make wedding bouquets,” Levine said.

While he already has quite a vast catalog, Levine shows no signs of slowing down. His continued interest in planting items that benefit the ecosystem and collecting rare species won’t let him.

“For plant people, there’s always a joy in the search and the hunt,” Levine said.

 ?? RICHARD TSONG-TAATARII/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE ?? Chuck Levine shows how a ginkgo tree grows prized downward“tumors”in Roseville, Minnesota.
RICHARD TSONG-TAATARII/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE Chuck Levine shows how a ginkgo tree grows prized downward“tumors”in Roseville, Minnesota.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States