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Posts Tagged ‘Montrose’

Organic Gardening Magazine

January 2nd, 2012

The February-March issue of this vital magazine features an article on my North Carolina garden, Chatwood. It shows a picture of the back of the house, which is on the historic register. It was built in 1806 as an inn and tavern for the grist mill–still standing–down the road. It’s a rambling Federal farmhouse  with a front porch and the old millstone at the base of the steps.  The primo joys of the house are the spicy scent inside that reminds me of ancient Italian churches, its leisurely gardens and meadows and walks along the Eno River.

With six acres of camellia and azalea swaths, a butterfly garden and many large perennial beds, plus a three-room walled rose garden, the upkeep of the property, to put it mildly, remains a challenge. Or, you might think of it as a calling. The cover photo was taken in the rose garden.

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I love the 1770 barn and the nine outbuildings, even the funky forties greenhouse–don’t touch that wire!–where Willie and I now have an ongoing project. He grows gourds in summer. They’re like kudzu–just take over whatever space they can.  All fall they dry out in the greenhouse.  Around Thanksgiving we begin to drill round holes in some of them and to scrape them out. The insides, packed with seeds, are SO primitive.  The gourd has a mighty evolutionary drive!

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We clean them with steel wool, spray with sealer, run wire through the top, drill a little drainage hole in the bottom–and there’s the birdhouse. They’re hanging in trees everywhere and they also are Willie’s Christmas presents to friends.  Bluebirds like them, especially, and many are home to little yellow finches. These are still drying:

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This is such a satisfying project!  As the gourds dry, I love the mottled surfaces, and the cheery shapes seem like little creatures!

Back to the Organic Gardening article!   Lovingly written by my friend Kim Sunée, there is a recipe for easy strawberry semifreddo from our soon-to-be-released The Tuscan Sun Cookbook, and other recipes are included on line at organic gardening.com/tuscanrecipes

When Kim wrote Trail of Crumbs, her editor asked me for a blurb. I read the manuscript and we have been friends ever since.  She came to Tuscany twice to help Steven Rothfeld and me with the food prep and styling when we were photographing for the cookbook.  In North Carolina, we had a very fun day with photographer Peter Frank Edwards styling the food, trying to photograph the semifreddo before it melted, and picking bouquets.

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One challenge of the land is the number of volunteer trees all of whom want to choke out the others. For Christmas, Ed gave me two orange tools that grasp and uproot saplings.  The tools are made by The Weed Wrench Company, www.weedwrench.com .  They were recommended to us by Nancy Goodwin, whose lovingly curated garden, Montrose, is the major one in our area. She thinned a woods for a magical garden full of cyclamen, primroses, ferns, snowdrops, peonies–a secret poem of a garden. Nancy has all measures of these simple and amazing tools.

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Their secret? Jaws and leverage. You fit the trunk into the maw and as you pull back, it closes and the leverage lifts the offending tree out of the ground.

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The instructions say over and over “don’t fall backwards.”  We are clearing some of the woods of underbrush so that the meadows and woods become seamless rather than the meadow abutting a stop-view wall of weeds, vines, and volunteer pines. Good winter work–a corrective for all the feasting of the holidays! On New Year’s Day, I spotted two daffodils in bloom! The garden is just waiting to burst forth again.

Happy 2012! May we all foster our inner selves–read and feast and travel and act boldly and rest and pursue private dreams.

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Resolutions

January 1st, 2010

2010 has a good ring. You can say “twenty ten” naturally, and don’t have to say the whole “two thousand nine.”  At a table for ten friends last night, talk turned to resolutions.  Two vowed to be kinder. One to be more tolerant. Only one said “lose weight,” which is a perennial for me and simply goes without saying now!  Ed resolved to protect his solitude for writing from the vicissitudes of our house.  We both want to read Dante’s Inferno in Italian. (This now that I’ve finally finished Proust—for years a seductive soporific on summer afternoons.) Workouts, genealogy and remodeling a kitchen were mentioned. And everyone wants to travel.

My main resolution is to work on creating more enchantment in the garden. I am reading The Secret Garden to my grandson and remembering vividly the childhood world of the garden, surely as close to Eden as we get.  I want more bolting poppy beds, more roses tangling in trees, more patches of lilies of the valley, more big-faced hydrangeas, more wildflower swaths.

We’re lucky to have Panciuto as our neighborhood restaurant in Hillsborough, NC.  http://www.panciuto.com/chef.html

Chef Aaron Vandermark cooks Italian food with the local North Carolina produce and cheeses. The highlights of his end of the year celebration were the chestnut soup and the five games of tombola we played.  The small restaurant was packed with local people.  Ed and I walked out into the chilly new year, recalling the Italian cenone, the long, lavish feasts we’ve had on this night in Tuscany. Cena, dinner, is enlarged by the amplifying suffix -one.  (Not to be confused with cenacolo, the last supper.)  Cenone–that is one big dinner!  And here, surrounded by wonderful friends, it was the same ambiance.

The Roman custom of throwing out junk into the street on New Year’s Eve has waned.  It used to be dangerous to walk along the sidewalks—a broken chair or unhinged suitcase might halt your plans for the evening.  But the impulse is strong at the end of the year to clear out, reorganize, start a new project.  I get the urge to rearrange furniture. Today we’ve dragged a chest downstairs and all of a sudden the dining room looks finished. I borrowed a desk from my daughter and now have more work space in my study.  I immediately hauled upstairs an armful of gardening books and for the coming winter days, I’ll be sketching and musing.

For reading and dreaming of gardens, I recommend Montrose: Life in a Garden (Duke University Press) by Nancy Goodwin. Montrose is a heavenly garden in Hillsborough, NC and can be visited by appointment.  I’ve visited all the great gardens in England, Wales, and Scotland.  Montrose is the most imaginative. After visiting for the first time, I had fantastical dreams for a week. The book fascinates not only because of its immense lore of knowledge and by its charming illustrations, but because of the austere and powerful prose style of Nancy Goodwin. If at all interested in gardens, you must be transformed by this book.

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Frances's Links:

The Tuscan Sun

Festival del Sole

Tuscan Sun Festival

Travel Dynamics International

Laneventure

Wildwood Lamps

Drexel Heritage

www.broadwaybooks.com

www.therecipeclub.net

www.crownpublishing.com

Steven Barclay Agency

Curtis Brown


Sites to See:

Tuesday Recipe

Steven Rothfeld

Bob Krist

Images by Al Hurley

2or3things.blogspot.com

Good Bones Great Pieces

Kim Sunee

Chef Robin White

Cannelle et Vanille

Borgo di Vagli

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