Archive for October, 2009

Christie’s and Watkins Funeral Home team up to design and build a Garden Park as Part of their Legacy

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Karen Watkins called me last spring to talk about building a park to celebrate the legacy of 4 generations that had created and run Watkins and Son’s Funeral Home.  I knew she was really serious about having something designed, built and maintained.  She used the words “inspiring” and “amazing”, which is right up our alley.

WatkinsWe met on a piece of property adjacent to her business, which had been left empty after a building on the site had been razed. The soil was dry, uneven and strewn with cement chunks.  Karen and her aunt, Valerie, talked about how they wanted the site to be a spot where their clientele could sit and be uplifted after the death of a loved one. A place to celebrate their lives on earth, instead of being saddened by their physical loss.   What better place to do that, than a garden filled with Nature?

There was also to be an area in the garden for people to install a memorial stone.  The stones were to be engraved with a loved ones name, and a phrase fitting their spiritual selves.   We chose 2’ by 2’ bluestone pieces 2” thick, and lay them in the gravel walkway in a checkerboard pattern.

Karen Watkins devotion to the project was monumental.  With Kevin Barry’s help, co-owner of Christie’s, weeds were kept down in the new beds at minimal cost by spraying them judiciously. Kevin worked closely with an employee on the watering needs of each plant.  Their employee, Ben,  did a fabulous job in the heat of July and August keeping everything alive and lovely… looking after his “babies” in the garden.  One of Christie’s client’s in hearing about the project, was so moved that she donated 4 lovely Japanese maples to be planted at the 2 openings of the stone walkway.

Last week it all culminated at a Legacy Reception where there as an  unveiling of the exciting plans that Watkin’s has for the metropolitan area.  Karen’s interests lie not only in running a caring and professional business, but also in  helping a range of students from All Saints High School. These students include orphans,  children from foster families,  from underprivileged families and  from caring loving families.  She has also reached out with Global projects of developing a teaching curriculum for dance and art in Guatemala.  She has also done research on how to be a  part of the “greener industry “for funeral businesses.

So if you drive by 2700 North Ave on Richmond’s North side and come upon a clearing of blue sky and green grass…slow down.  Take in the locust trees, roses, limelight hydrangeas, lilacs, smoke bushes and meandering path with stone benches. You can’t miss. It is a healing place… a private park to be inspiring to the public at large through the generosity and love of the Watkins family.

What Frank Lloyd Wright and Christie’s designer, Ric Erickson have in Common

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

If you read reviews about the 7 wonders of America, the first “must see” listed is the Grand Canyon, while the second is Frank Lloyd Wright’s masterpiece of design, Falling Waters in Mill Creek, Pa.  This is the destination that Ric Erickson and his wife took last weekend. He decided that rather than just look at the picture of Falling Waters that he has had over his mantle for years, he would finally experience it in person.

In hearing about his trip, I mulled over the question, on how Ric was influenced by this genius of architecture. Ric has brought so much to Christie’s “Wow” factor in design. Like Wright, he has a great talent in weaving designs through Nature. We as a company  try to utilize Nature’s strength in each site and blend it into our gardens, rather than obliterating it’s strong points. Ric and our talented crew have a strong,  hands on execution of all aspects of our garden designs. Because of our integrity in giving the customer  sound construction and art, we have become one of the premier landscaping companies in the Richmond area.

It is through this paraphrasing of the following comments of Wright, his apprentices and landscape rivals that we most identify.

We ‘…Add grace to the landscape rather than disgrace.’

‘Our construction  is as important as our art…’

We ‘ …transform  Nature by passing it through the soul…which is the closest that we get to God.’

Our gardens help ‘create the universe we inhabit’ and ‘make people different to live in it.’

Our outdoor spaces ‘Serve everyday needs…. and at the same time grab you in your gut – you feel it- you can’t say it.’

So – maybe all of us, like Ric, should take a field trip to Falling Waters and experience the awe of  Nature and Architecture combined.  Maybe someday you’ll want to give Christie’s a chance to give you a little piece of that feeling in your own backyard.

© 2009 Christie’s Fine Gardening

Featured Garden of the Month – October 2009

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

This past month we had the great fun of doing over a large yard in Manakin- Sabot, Virginia.  We had worked for this family about 8 years ago, and were back this time to help landscape their entire yard after they had enlarged their deck, and built a free standing garage/ guest room.

The project flowed beautifully. Plans were drawn up, pricing agreed upon and a few trees dropped to open up the woods which came up to their deck. We worked around their contractor who was finishing up his part of the new garage, and went for the deadline of a neighborhood party they were having in a few weeks.

Because of deer, the lack of an irrigation system, sun and shade exposures, an acre of lawn, lousy soil, and two goofy but loveable white labs, we kept it simple and bullet proof.  Trees like crape myrtles, vitax, styrax, and a hornbeam were used for structure and leaf or flower color.  Bushes like Knock Out roses, Davidi viburnum, and oak leaf hydrangeas were installed as well as ornamental grasses, hellebores, ferns were and hypericum.  Wow! What a pallet!

In the hardscaping department, one great benefit was that the home owner had a few tons of Tennessee ashlar stone that had lined their long driveway.  We used it to build a few retaining walls for a really great look.

These before and after pictures say a lot.  It looks really rough in some parts, because we had just aerated the lawn, but the bed lines, the stone walls and plant placement tell a lot.