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News / Life / Lifestyles

New love for old flowers varieties

Traditional blooms rediscovered in landscaping trend

By DEAN FOSDICK, Associated Press
Published: May 2, 2020, 6:05am
4 Photos
Bleeding hearts taken in a residential garden near New Market, Va., are typical of the old standards commonly found in the grandmother&#039;s gardens that were popular landscape fixtures several generations ago. They consist of flower varieties frequently remembered from our childhoods and ancestral homes but that have grown unfashionable today.
Bleeding hearts taken in a residential garden near New Market, Va., are typical of the old standards commonly found in the grandmother's gardens that were popular landscape fixtures several generations ago. They consist of flower varieties frequently remembered from our childhoods and ancestral homes but that have grown unfashionable today. (Dean Fosdick) Photo Gallery

Even before the coronavirus crisis sparked renewed interest in vegetable gardens and victory gardens, there’s been a movement toward more traditional gardening aesthetics.

For example, there are what’s known as Grandmother’s Gardens. These old-fashioned, naturalistic flowerbeds rich in color have much to recommend them in contemporary settings too, said Leonard Perry, horticulture professor emeritus with the University of Vermont.

“Often appearing haphazard or growing at random, these gardens actually were designed as paintings with an eye for composition using color, shape and texture,” he said.

Grandmother’s Gardens are the dated offshoots of American cottage gardens, which contain a diversity of plants, including vegetables and flowers for cutting.

Re-creating them means designing landscapes rich in hardy perennials, annuals and Native American plants, Perry said. And with their abundance of old-fashioned flowers, Grandmother’s Gardens are not the easiest sites to manage. It takes thought to plant the right combinations of historic flowers, and effort to start heirloom plants from seed.

These gardens also call for more maintenance.

“With so many more distractions and choices for our time than our grandmothers had, most gardeners now strive for simpler gardens,” Perry said. “(But) as gardeners add more flowers back into beds for pollinators, or combine flowers with edible herbs and vegetables, they are beginning to recreate gardens with a few traits similar to what their grandmothers may have grown.”

Grandmother’s Gardens, with their more relaxed aesthetics, were popular landscape fixtures from the end of the Civil War until the early 1920s.

“They differed from gardens abroad, such as English gardens, in that they were most often the work of one person, usually a woman, instead of a team of gardeners, usually men,” Perry said.

Many of the old standards like nasturtiums, English primroses, bachelor’s buttons, sweet peas, gladiolus, hollyhocks, lilacs, foxgloves and columbines — flowers many of us remember from childhood — had become as unfashionable as typewriters, videotapes or fur wardrobes. But every fashion provokes a reaction, which leads to new movements that rediscover traditional materials, and that includes plants, said Scott Kunst, founder and former owner of Old House Gardens in Ann Arbor, Mich.

“Hardscaping and backyard kitchens do little to connect us with nature, but working with plants does, which is something I learned from my grandmother,” he said.

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