Originally published Saturday, June 5, 2010 at 7:01 PM
Northwest Living
A grand garden in Edgewood keeps a human scale
In Edgewood near Tacoma, a sprawling lawn is transformed into a series of smaller, well-detailed scenes to create a grand garden that still feels friendly to humans. Thousands of trees and shrubs have been planted, screens have been put up and a huge pond installed to help define the scenes, which range from a shade garden to a bird sanctuary, alpine-rock and Japanese gardens to an emerging vegetable patch.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
A shrine at the entry to the fenced Japanese garden holds a sculpture of Tara, a Tibetan goddess, carved in sandstone.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Cobbles pattern a pathway leading to sunny sitting areas in a garden that used to be grassy as a golf course. Now about a dozen of Edgewood Garden's 32 acres are cultivated with a wide variety of ornamental and edible plants.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Poker primroses (Primula vialii) bloom into June in the shadier, damper parts of the garden.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
The view of Mount Rainier helped draw Ilga Jansons and Michael Dryfoos from their Juanita-area garden south to a property that was not much more than potential when they first saw it.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
The pink and white arbor garden is reflected in the waters of the pond, which sets the scale at Edgewood Garden. The pond covers a half acre, is 15 feet deep and holds more than a million and a half gallons of water.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Because the garden is so often held open for tours and charity events, Jansons has studded the landscape with haiku signs related to specific plants.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
The 1970s house, updated with 90 new windows, a new roof and solar panels, serves as backdrop to a long, cobbled pathway wandering through borders planted in a tapestry of shrubs, trees, perennials, bulbs and grasses.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Japanese-inspired screens help cut the insistent wind that blows through the Puyallup River Valley. The screens also separate areas of the garden into (relatively) smaller garden rooms.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Foxtail lilies are going to seed in Jansons' garden, where she's planted thousands of perennials and bulbs.
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Jansons designed the Japanese fencing from photos she took while visiting Japan. Carpenter Mark Sloy built all the fences, arbors and structures on the property.
See this and more on tour
Edgewood Garden, along with five other private gardens in the area, will be on view as part of the South Sound Garden Conservancy Open Days, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., June 12. Admission to each participating garden is $5 per person. Order tickets at 1-888-842-2442 or www.opendaysprogram.org. Or you can e-mail ilga@edgewoodgarden.com for directions to Edgewood Garden.
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photographed by Mike Siegel
EVEN AN idle browse through Internet real-estate listings can be perilous. Just ask Ilga Jansons and Michael Dryfoos. In 2003, they found an online listing for 32 acres in Edgewood with its own irrigation well. Such words are catnip to a serious gardener like Jansons, who spent years developing a spectacular wooded hillside garden in Juanita. She and Dryfoos had no idea where Edgewood was, but took a Sunday drive to find out.
The couple was so taken by Mount Rainier's snowy slopes looming over the sunny, open acreage that they were able to overlook the rundown house in foreclosure. "Ilga decided in 10 minutes," says Dryfoos of how quickly they made up their minds to move south to the Puyallup River Valley.
Seven years later, this ex-Microsoft couple have restored the 1970s house by replacing windows and roof and installing a solar hot-water heating system. The previous owner cut down fir, cedar and hemlock for a look more golf course than garden; Dryfoos and Jansons are well on their way toward reforestation. "I've already planted 6,000 shrubs and more than 700 trees," says Jansons.
From grand gates to a formal pond (which at 27,000 square feet is really more of a lake), the large scale of the property is daunting. Yet Jansons seems unfazed. She brought with her from her Juanita garden rhododendrons so huge they had to be installed with a crane. A broad, shrub-filled border replaces the old basketball court; she's also created a shade garden, bird sanctuary, Japanese garden and alpine rock garden. Pots of green treasures line the driveway and nursery area, all waiting their turn to go into the ground. Jansons points out little oaks she's raised from acorns and trillium with flowers so double you'd think they were gardenias.
The couple found treasures as they dug up lawn and more lawn, like the mossy stones in the Japanese garden. But they also found trouble. "My No. 1 enemy is Canadian thistle; No. 2 is horsetails," says Jansons of her constant war with weeds. She battled the windiness of the valley by building Japanese screens to shield intimate sitting areas within the larger landscape. As copper beeches, poplars and horse chestnuts grow up, they'll serve as windbreaks, as will the 60 different kinds of lilacs. Can you imagine how sweet the garden smells every April when all those lilacs flower? And again when the dozens of 'Hot Cocoa' roses bloom? Planted with espresso gladiolas and the ground cover Ajuga 'Chocolate Chip,' the chocolate garden echoes the theme of a popular fundraising party the couple throws every summer.
Jansons most recently took on a large vegetable garden, building brick beds for potatoes, peas, onions, figs, cherries, plums and currants. Less utilitarian is the romantic pink-and-white part of the garden, with old windows set into white fences and an arbor beyond all expectations of the name. At 112 feet long and 13 feet high, the sturdy structure holds 30 kinds of clematis, honeysuckle, akebia and various pink roses like 'Kipsgate' and 'Cecile Brunner.'
One of the pleasures of "upsizing" for Jansons and Dryfoos is that the new garden accommodates so many guests at the 50 or more events they host every year to raise money for horticultural organizations. With Mount Rainier right outside the kitchen window and plenty of water from the well that coaxed them into buying the property in the first place, Edgewood Garden has proved a huge and happy endeavor for this hospitable pair.
Valerie Easton is a Seattle freelance writer and author of "The New Low-Maintenance Garden." Check out her blog at www.valeaston.com. Mike Siegel is a Seattle Times staff photographer.
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