Download On Walnut Hill - The Evolution Of A Garden
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On Walnut Hill - The Evolution Of A Garden
Download On Walnut Hill - The Evolution Of A Garden
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Review
Kathy Hudson s On Walnut Hill: The Evolution of a Garden, is not just a well-told tale of A.C. and Penney Hubbard s 46-year learning curve on a sunny, two-acre hillside on the outskirts of Baltimore. It tells and shows, with Roger Foley s eloquent photographs how two beginning gardeners, with three small children, rooted their lives in the steeply sloping land. First they planted those ubiquitous rows of red tulips and daffodils then later, sweeps of grasses and rare trees, as they embraced an entirely different aesthetic through the eyes and guiding hand of Kurt Bluemel. His nursery in nearby Baldwin was famed not only for its plants but also for his masterful sense of space and scale. The Hubbards square spaces gave way to curvilinear paths; masses of perennials and groundcovers began to weave themselves beneath layers of trees and shrubs; terraces shaped the old sledding hill; hidden paths descended gently down wide rocks into the woods. Now, grandchildren live next door, taking their own little path to the rock ledge pool. Any great garden changes with the seasons, and every hour of the day, but this one has changed the Hubbards and become their world. --Anne Raver, former garden columnist for The New York Times.There's just something about a good coffee table book the luscious photos, the poetic words, the feel of the thick, shiny pages. At a time of year when hostess gifts are in high demand, this chronicle of the Hubbard family's five-decade quest to turn their two-acre property in Ruxton [Maryland] into a garden might be just the ticket. This isn't just any garden, mind you, but a lush, pleasingly designed masterpiece that melds foliage and flowers with architectural elements such as rock walls and sculptures. But it's the Hubbards' story, paired with depictions of the garden throughout the year, that makes this book a pleasure for all season. --Gabriella Souza, Baltimore Magazine
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From the Inside Flap
For more than four decades, passionate gardeners, A.C. and Penney Hubbard, collaborated with the renowned plantsman, the late Kurt Bluemel, to transform a hillside near Baltimore, Maryland, into a horticultural masterpiece. In On Walnut Hill: The Evolution of a Garden, writer Kathy Hudson chronicles the story of the garden and the Hubbard family in their garden. Award-winning landscape photographer Roger Foley brings to life the elegant garden as it changes over the course of a year — from a still and stately winter garden to its spring profusion, strong summer color, and final autumnal splendor. Foley’s exquisite photographs showcase the artistry, nuance, and horticultural diversity in the Hubbard garden. Guided by Bluemel’s genius for bringing life and movement to the landscape with his trademark grasses and perennials, the Hubbards transformed the two acres surrounding their 1937 Colonial Revival house into a world-class Eden. On Walnut Hill invites readers to accompany the Hubbards as they grow from weekend gardeners to respected horticulturalists amassing outstanding collections of conifers, acers, perennials, rare and unusual trees, and sculpture. Listed in the Smithsonian Archives of American Gardens, the Hubbard garden has been featured in Baltimore Style, Baltimore magazine, The Baltimore Sun, Professional Builder & Remodeler, Better Homes and Gardens, and Southern Living. It has been included on numerous local and national tours of the Horticultural Society of Maryland, Ladew Topiary Gardens, The Garden Conservancy, The Garden Club of America, and the Perennial Plant Association. On Walnut Hill offers an intimate, behind-the-scenes look at the creation of a world-class garden. It is a story of passion, artistry, and, above all, a family’s love for the land on which they live.As Anne Raver, former garden columnist of The New York Times, says: "Any great garden changes with the seasons, and every hour of the day, but this one has changed the Hubbards and become their world."
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Product details
Hardcover: 275 pages
Publisher: Hillside Press, LLC.; 1 edition (October 5, 2015)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1495163091
ISBN-13: 978-1495163098
Product Dimensions:
10 x 1.2 x 11.2 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.5 out of 5 stars
10 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#675,094 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
not really about gardening. mostly a gossipy, family history. Even the beautiful, arty photos don't show much garden detail.
Kathy Hudson's On Walnut Hill: The Evolution of a Garden is one of those rare garden books that does far more than tell the story of a showcase garden. Hudson's spare prose, combined with award-winning landscape photographer Roger Foley's lush photos, paint a verbal and visual history of this spectacular garden, which utterly transformed a sunny hillside near Baltimore over the course of 46 years.It helped, of course, that the young couple who bought the house and grounds in 1969 -- and did all the work themselves for years -- was able, later, to fund what started as a dawn-to-dusk, weekend hobby into what ultimately became their life's passion and work.It also helped that early on they began working with a European garden designer who was one of the pioneers advocating the replacement of staid, static rectangular patches of lawn and flower beds with sumptuous curvilinear sweeps of perennial plantings and ornamental grasses.Designer Kurt Bluemel laid out an overarching plan for A.C. and Penney Hubbard's sunny, two-acre site: an evergreen background, a middle ground of shrubs like rhododendrons, viburnums and azaleas, and a foreground of annuals and perennials. Just as important as the plantings, however, were Bluemel's stunning hardscape plans -- the low, dry-laid stone walls that curved throughout the property, and his meandering pathways, large enough for two people to walk side by side, conversing.A rock-lined fountain wall with multiple cascades of water, the rough, wide stone stairs that curve and twist up the hilly site, the seemingly random but perfectly placed stone accent pieces -- all add to the tamed wildness of the garden's appearance. Novice gardeners -- like those who find themselves regularly moving new acquisitions until both plant and gardener are happy -- can take heart here: when Bluemel announced that a rock-lined pool would be sited where the Hubbards already had a stand of conifers, the trees were dug out, moved to a temporary holding bed, and re-planted after construction.Unlike most garden books, On Walnut Hill serves up a seven-season year that mirrors the actual stages of garden life: one winter, one autumn, but two springs (early and late), and three summers (early, midsummer, and late). Foley has chronicled each of those seven seasons in long, evocative photo essays.As testament to the strength of the Hubbards' garden as well as to Foley's photographic eye, each of the seven seasons delights and beguiles. Foley's winter photos -- the curve of a snow-covered dry-laid stone wall overlooking a distant valley; an Asian sculpture with a ruff of snow on a terrace wall; the riotous bark of a leafless, rust-colored paperbark maple -- are every bit as captivating as his spring and summer shots -- the glory of tiny white bleeding heart mingling with enormous Hosta "Big Daddy;" a granite column seemingly strangled by electric purple clematis trailing across a blue spruce; towering yellowed Allium "Mount Everest" rising out of a green sea of bottle brush Amsonia hubrectii.Each of Foley's seven photo essays is introduced by a prose poem in Hudson's lean style that clearly reflects decades of her own gardening life. One has to spend endless hours in endless gardens to understand how "After snowfall comes the deepest stillness of the year," or to describe those early spring miracles, "to see again ... coiled fern fronds and scrolled hosta leaves pushing through the earth."Perfect for giving at any time of the year, On Walnut Hill will drive winter-bound gardeners to their seed catalogues. All the rest of the year, they'll be driven outdoors, in hope, and brimming over with ideas.
I curled up one afternoon during the recent blizzard with a cup of tea and this book and was lost to the world for the next several hours. The photography is stunning and moves effortlessly between botanical studies of plants and portraits of the garden as a whole. Kathy Hudson's prose poems are lovely and I imagine I will reread them as the season the change for many years to come. The book tells the story of a family as well as the garden and it makes one want to start working on one's own garden immediately.I recommend this book to gardeners and lovers of gardens of all stripes, those who are always mucking about in the dirt and armchair gardeners alike. While the story is grounded in Baltimore and is delightful to read for those acquainted with the city, my aunt, who has no particular connection to Baltimore, also loved the book.
"On Walnut Hill" is a rare story of one family and the remarkable garden they created. Kathy Hudson beautifully narrates the passion and hard work devoted to a garden that was never "just a garden" - but rather has been the center of the Hubbard family's days, through the seasons of the year and the seasons of one family's full life with exquisite photographs by Roger Foley.
With Kathy Hudson’s almost painterly essays and Roger Foley’s striking images, On Walnut Hill will inspire gardeners of all kinds. Whether you’re planning to transform your entire property or simply tweak around the edges, this lovely book is full of ideas, shown in Foley’s award-winning photographs and told in Hudson’s elegant prose.
Gardening is personal. This book is the story of the intersection of people and place: a family, their intimate geography, a gifted plantsman. A garden is temporal. This book is a time machine, showing a space that developed over decades as well as seasons. It is still changing. With Kathy Hudson's prose and Roger Foley's photographs, this book is a treat that you will want to savor.
This book is well written and researched with stunning photographs. You can sit and read it in one sitting or dip into it here and there; it never gets old and I seem to find something new every I open the cover. I do not garden and possess very little gardening knowledge. Yet, I find it all interesting and not overly esoteric. Weaving in the family history makes it even more entertaining, and you certainly do not need to know the family personally to get a kick out of reading about them and their relationship to what is a truly unique spot. I gave away 12 of these as Christmas gifts! The presentation is so lovely that the book has wide appeal.
This is more than just a stunningly beautiful book. It's the story of a family who turn a suburban hillside into a lush landscape, the design and variety evolving over more than 40 year's care and effort. Kathy Hudson's telling is engaging and amusing, with insight into the personalities who created the garden giving an added dimension. This, plus lyrical description of the garden through the seasons.Steve Elkins
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