Nantucket Open Day

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The Garden Conservancy's

OPEN DAYS PROGRAM Thursday, June 23 | 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Nantucket Open Day NANTUCKET COUNTY NANTUCKET CARRIED AWAY 6 Salt Marsh Road 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. At Carried Away, you'll see a variety of unique garden spaces with different themes. From the boxwood parterre courtyard that is adorned with planters and roses, to the cutting garden mixed with unique varieties of specialty plants, to the expansive perennial borders that deliver you to the waters edge to view Nantucket harbor and a perfect view of town. Trellises of blooming roses abound the estate creating a dreamy feel as you wander this garden peninsula in Monomoy.

NEW From the rotary take Milestone Rd. Bear left at Monomoy Road, Salt Marsh road is the first road on your left. Please park on Monomoy Rd. and walk down Salt Marsh to the last house straight ahead.

LOW SHIMMO 42 Shimmo Pond Road 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. A family house for three generations, Low Shimmo, was originally the Shimmo Yacht Club when it was built in the late 1920s. A naturalist’s garden, Low Shimmo was designed for avid birders, attracting all types of feathered friends. The garden sits nestled into the dune at the bottom of Shimmo Pond Road and features sweeping views of the harbor accented by classic Nantucket hydrangeas on the waterside. On the entry side of the house are two

(Hours Vary) garden rooms. One is the entry garden highlighting a traditional perennial border. The other is an enclosed terrace garden featuring a steep grade planted with naturalizing perennials, annuals and grasses. The Stewartia in this area is noteworthy and thriving. This is the quintessential seaside house and garden.

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Access these gardens from the rotary take Milestone Road bear left onto Polpis Rd. Make a left onto Shimmo Pond Road before Moors End Farm, follow the dirt road staying to the left at every opportunity. You will reach 42 on the left; drive by the driveway and park in the Shimmo Associstion parking lot between 42 and 46 Shimmo Pond Road. Parking for this garden is at the Shimmo Association parking lot.

PATSY'S GARDEN 46 Shimmo Pond Road 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mrs. Walsh, a Philadelphia native, was greatly influenced by gardens she experienced living abroad with her family while her husband was with an international organization. Her first request of me was to create a garden of wildflowers on the harbor side of her home without disrupting the deep roots and fragile balance that keep coastal bluffs intact. Some years later it was time to open the garden at the front of the house to embrace the wonderful space and sky. Down came the tall fence and its confines, new garden layers created, a hedge more like a European hedgerow instead of the solid wall of invasive privet, bluestone paths to enhance a country feeling, and a double blooming white cherry overhead. Directed by her love of

the charming gardens kept by the Swiss train station masters near her chateau in Switzerland, including a pocket for favorite edibles – herbs always, tomatoes, rhubarb, the occasional small watermelon for its beautiful leaf – this garden was created as an exuberant country garden, mixed with wildflowers, favorite hollyhocks, wild sweet peas, cabbages, roses, hydrangea, Cape Cod rambling roses, and a ‘grounding’ of boxwood – a collector’s garden from a world traveler and gardener wanting to enjoy her summer season on Nantucket. A year later we removed ninety percent of the new garden in order to install an enormous new septic system so a small exercise pool could be added. As all available space was taken, Mrs. Walsh inspired me to simply fill in the only other place we could – the slope of the hill. A large retaining wall was built, filled, faced with native stone, the exercise pool installed, and the garden recreated while moving several of the large cherry trees outside the hedgerow to the slope.

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The garden was reinstalled and we continue to do what gardeners do – experiment, tweak, transplant, try new introductions, inherit heirloom plants, fight off clever bunnies and crafty deer. Ongoing is the challenge of living on an active harbor. A grandfathered seawall has been maintained. The terrible storms of 2012 – Hurricane Sandy and the ‘Noreaster the following week delivered severe damage to the bluff on the harbor side. Innovative restoration work on this bluff is proving successful in preventing further damage from erosion and seeing rapid establishment of critical coastal scrub plantings to hopefully withstand the next hurricane season.

Rounding the corner to the back is an unexpected treat—a riot of color framing an exquisite view of the harbor! Lush perennials, overflowing pots, stone walls, a blue stone terrace, an outdoor room, and a split-rail fence in the distance all add to the enjoyment of this garden. It's amazing that this garden is only one year old.

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Parts of garden are handicapped accessible

2014

Most recent year garden was open

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Gardens opening for first time

Photographs permitted

NEW | I Turn around and head toward Milestone Rd. on Monomoy Rd. Bear left onto Boston Ave which turns into Brewster Avenue. then bear left onto Cathcart Road. #16 is on your left.

NEW Parking for this garden is at the Shimmo Association parking lot. Handicapped/disabled drop-off is available in the upper driveway.

UNICORN'S DELIGHT 60 Monomoy Road 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Step through the privet archway into a jewel-box garden reminiscent of Monet's paintings of Giverny. Designed for summer enjoyment, this garden combines the sensibilities of self-sufficient plantings with playful expressions of calming colors, textures, and movement.

NEW | I Continue on Monomy Rd. following the road as it makes a right turn. 60 Monomoy is on the left. Please park along the road. Parking on garden's side of the street only. Do not block neighbor's mailboxes.

16 CATHCART GARDEN 16 Cathcart Road 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Traveling down the dirt road to this property one finds a house tucked among all native Nantucket woodland plants and beautiful specimen trees.

The Garden Conservancy

The Open Days Program

is a national nonprofit organization founded in 1989 to save and share America's outstanding gardens for the education and inspiration of the public.

began in 1995 as a means of introducing the public to gardening, providing easy access to outstanding examples of design and horticultural practice, and proving that exceptional American gardens are still being created.

Do you love gardens as much as we do?

Do you love VISITING gardens as much as we do?

Join us in preserving, sharing, and championing gardens by becoming a Garden Conservancy member.

Learn more about us and see the full Open Days schedule at:

Visit www.gardenconservancy.org/join

www.opendaysprogram.org

The Garden Conservancy's Open Days Program www.opendaysprogram.org | P.O. Box 219, Cold Spring, New York, 10516 | T: (845) 424-6502 / F: (845) 424-6501 / Toll-free: 1 (888) 842-2442 | E: [email protected]