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Jay Sifford Garden Design

Eclecticedwardian, if you are ever in my area, I'd welcome you to spend an afternoon in my garden. I think you'd like it and would be impressed with the variety of wildlife here. I have a great variety of plants including hundreds of natives that live underneath 300 or so beech, oak, poplar and sweet gum trees. In between all of that I have many of the conifers and Japanese maples that make me so happy.


I believe, from my personal experience and observations of others, that we all approach gardening (not to mention life in general) through our unique tinted lenses. I am an artist and approach my garden and the other gardens I design from that perspective. If I need a particular texture or foliage color to finish a vignette, I'll plant what that vignette calls for. Others approach their gardens from a botanical proclivity, or an environmentalistic proclivity or a purely functional one. I appreciate people who bring each of those to their gardens. It makes for a wonderful and rich experience.


So, please, if you're in my area, stop by. Thanks.

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catbirdfarm

@eclecticedwardian: hear hear! Well said! We have passed the point where it's enough to choose a plant simply because we like the way it looks. As you say, we have an "urgent moral imperative" to consider how our choice affects the entire eco-system. Thank you for speaking out.

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catbirdfarm

Here is a wonderful (very short) article from the good folks at Cornell U that every gardener should read before making a single decision about the land (however small) they are fortunate enough to be stewarding:

The Domino Effect

   

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