As we all struggle to recover from the negative speculations of some of our financial institutions, I thought it might be fun in an ironic way to look at a similar situation that occurred in Europe in the 17th century.
Tulipomania was the name attached to the period of time early 1600’s in northern Europe. The Dutch were one of the first to go nuts over the tulip which came from Turkey. (The Ottoman Empire in later years will be so enthralled by the flower, that the period from 1718-1730 will be called the Tulip Era.) What one has to realize with Tulipomania is that tulips were so different from every other flower know to horticulturalist. The colors were more intense and concentrated than other blooming plants up to then.
In the Netherlands, the development of the range of tulips was reflected in the number of books produced on the subject. Prospective clients and country estate owners decided on what to buy from watercolors bound together in catalogue form, and often times painted by well-known artists. This paralleled the great American pastime of window shopping. The prices for these tulip books were sometimes exorbitant. The most expensive book sold for an equivalent of 1.5 million US dollars of today.
Around 1630, lured by big profits, the market grew quickly while the number of tulips to be harvested did not. It takes 7 years to grow 1 bulb from seed. Bulb prices rose, and the futures market in bulbs began. Some bulbs were changing hands 10 times a day. Tulip trader were found doing business in across the Netherlands in many of the Dutch taverns.
Speculation in the years 1634 to 1637 grew to the extent that bulbs were sold faster than they could grow. Consequently they were sold in advance, on paper (sound familiar?). These papers were re-sold before harvesting making prices higher and at a ridiculous level. Sometimes neither the seller nor the buyer had seen the flower. This tulip mania got out of hand so badly that bulb growers asked the government to ban the trade, but not before the market crashed. A compromised was agreed upon with brokers, where most traders were able to settle their debts for a small portion of their liability. The overall harm out to the Dutch economy however was negligible.
I hope we can make the same statement in a few years for our predicament to date.
We 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?
ast 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.
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.
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.
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.

We don’t often do Japanese gardens, but this project on West end Richmond near St. Christopher School was great fun. It had a great blend of stone, plants, and wood that made it work. We really hit the “Wow” factor with this one!




Our design talent with the clients help often includes being able to truly make , as the saying goes, a “silk purse out of a sow’s ear”.
Do Under Decks
Her pupsters can get to the deck and stay within the fence, as well as be let out on the upper deck to run down to the grass area below.
In the age of trillions of garden magazines and TV shows telling us what the trend for landscaping is, sometimes it’s just fun to go quirky! I have collected a few pictures in my travels that may give you some ideas for a different look on your garden and life!
Use an Old Tree Stump
Hummingbirds Anyone?
We Could Learn Something from this Redwood Tree
Not Every Plant is Perfect (but that’s OK!)




