BOOKMONGER Green thumbs of the Pacifi c Northwest A resource for horticultural inspiration and garden eye candy ‘Private Gardens of the Pacifi c Northwest’ is by Brian D. Coleman. NEW GO KART TRACK NOW OPEN! GO KARTS MINI GOLF GYROXTREME ROCK WALL KIDDIE RIDES AND MORE! SEASIDE, OREGON HWY 101 (1/4 mi South of Seaside) • 2735 S. Roosevelt • 503-738-2076 OPEN DAILY 11 A M T O 6 P M 14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Years ago, I gifted my mother, a won- Japanese-style garden infused with wilder- derful gardener, with a sweatshirt that ness notes that reminded him of a sacred said, “When the world wearies and ceases mountain he’d visited in China. to satisfy, there is always the garden.” Wolfe hired a backhoe to create a I’ve since learned the quote is an streambed, and a mobile crane to place abbreviated version of a line written by not only tons of boulders, but also sev- British poet Minnie Aumonier, who passed eral mature rhododendrons and Japanese away in 1962. maples. But after a late summer fi lled with daily However, that doesn’t mean he’s above doses of geopolitical chaos, environmental getting his own hands dirty. Every spring, “code red” and COVID-19, Aumonier’s Wolfe candles his 25 black pines — this comment seems cogent in the 21st cen- involves pruning back thousands of the tury, too! long, slender buds. And in the fall he Gardens do keeps busy clear- indeed provide ing the cedar green solace, and detritus from his This week’s book a new book called moss garden. “Private Gar- Other garden- ‘Private Gardens of the Pacifi c Northwest’ dens of the Pacifi c ers, too, share sto- by Brian D. Coleman Northwest” pro- ries of clearing Gibbs Smith — 256 pp — hardcover, $50; out invasives, dig- vides pages of kindle $22.49 ging their own balm. Perhaps it’s ponds and cre- more than coinci- ating paths and dence that Seat- seating areas. They’ve fashioned planters tle-based author Brian D. Coleman is also out of recycled materials and built tree- a practicing psychiatrist. houses and aviaries and stumperies ( yes, Together with photographer William stumperies ). They’ve amassed plants that Wright, Coleman gained access to 20 complement one another in terms of sea- unique gardens for this project. These pri- sonal succession, color palette or growing vate properties are concentrated primar- ily along the I-5 corridor between Portland characteristics. In Portland, Loree Bohl’s “Danger Gar- and Seattle, with an additional handful of gardens located on islands in Puget Sound. den” is a jazzy ensemble of spiky foliage. There’s just one outlier, a Lake Chelan On the Kitsap Peninsula, Nancy Heckler’s garden is a haven for hydrangeas. And garden, on the dry side of the Cascades. in Maple Valley, Tony Fajarillo has cre- That region, which presents gardeners ated a serene sanctuary around his bonsai with a much diff erent set of gardening collection. conditions, really deserves a book of its Wright’s photography for this book is own. verdant eye candy, and if you want to try Some of the gardens in this book were to replicate some of that magic, Coleman developed on a grand scale, where money thoughtfully provides both common and seemed to be no obstacle and layouts Latin plant names in the photo captions. might be conceived in terms of acres. But With this information , you can track down there are also several in-city gardens that some specimens to add to a haven of your condense horticultural inspiration into own creation. every available inch. The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd One of the gardeners with consider- able wherewithal is noted wildlife photog- McMichael, who writes this weekly col- umn focusing on the books, authors and rapher Art Wolfe. Inspired by his expedi- publishers of the Pacifi c Northwest. Con- tions to Asia, he wanted to transform the grassy yard around his Seattle home into a tact her at barbaralmcm@gmail.com