




Hardscape in landscaping
is the hard, dead, heavy stuff that you can make a good buck on
during the installation
its the wood deck with a view and a cut out for the oak tree trunk
its the Sonoma field stone retaining wall
20 tons of stone you had to haul through an illegal in law apartment with narrow doors
its the flagstone slabs that came in a crate, but you ordered em too thin
and they kept on snappin one after another during transport, blame the laborers
its the long metal strip of edging border which wiggled and wobbled as you set it in place
its the bags of concrete, poured and screeded, floated and edged
its the yellow grained decomposed granite in the back of your pickup, scratching the paint
hardscape all
Safety is foremost
in selection and in construction
say you design your client a flagstone patio
the red slightly uneven flagstone that reminds you of Arizona and javelinas and road runners
the client lives in the western part of San Francisco, in the Sunset district
all good
the patio gets installed in spring when the weather is nice and the winds are strong
come summer, in rolls the fog, nobody goes to the garden
its just too darn cold
algae spores find the nice gritty crevassed contours of the patio and make their home on it
by fall, the patio is a goopy slimy green mess
winter, more of the same
dad is slipping and falling
grandma is scared to go out there
client not happy, “You didn’t tell me that this would happen!”
you like, “All you gotta do is scrub it hard with a light bleach solution…”
client – “But what will happen to the thyme we planted in between the stones?” , “I thought you said this was going to be low maintenance?”, so on and so forth
so ponder function and use, climate and weather, choice of hardscape
before you make a design decision, before you order the 3 cubic yards of drain rock
Or in another instance, its the safety of the workers
you might consider
its one thing to pick out a nice boulder in the rock yard
the 15 ton granite one in the back that transports you straight to the rainbow falls of the sierras
its quite another to move and place that chunk of rock
into the 40’ x 25’ backyard garden, with no side gate or garage access
somebody is gonna get hurt
unless you budget for a crane…
Permeability and drainage is one more issue
that is a priority
say you visualize an absolutely beautiful stunning outdoor room
shining with blue slate tiles cut sharp and crisp on the ground
underneath the slate, a slab of concrete on which it sits, mortared in place
so when the rains come, this surface does not let any water down into the earth
it is impermeable
so when the water hits it, gathers volume and force, where does it go?
hopefully there is a drain, hopefully it slopes away from the house
if not, uh oh, problems
say bye bye to the elegant Persian hand woven rug soaked to the core
say adios to the bamboo floors warping and jackknifing
these are
problems that could be solved if you understand the forces of mother nature
problems that could be avoided if you sit outside in the winter rains and observed
problems that you create because you design in a vacuum of a screen
not in the ecology of the outdoors and the persistence of time
problems of poor planning and bad design
Rot is a conundrum
because wood is yummy food
not for us, but for a number of other creatures
especially when it gets wet
so if you go cheap and be like – oh just gimme the pine boards or bargain basement doug fir
or if your design is such that mud and soil gather atop your wooden bench day in day out
and the water works its way down the fibers throughout the 2 x 6
how long will the structure last?
when will the wood become nothing but shredded white fibers and crumblin’ brown blocks?
Along this same line of questioning:
There is a chemical treatment, pressure treatment that renders the wood less amenable to attack by fungi
the orangey green weighted wood with the staple marks called PT
packed with copper compounds, basically fungus poisons
then you are designing a nice vegetable garden with raised beds
a bed that you will fill with organic, compost-fed kale bush beans and cauliflower
do you use PT lumber for the raised bed? why or why not?
Hardcape
is endless decisions like these
you can ask the folks in the lumber yard, the kind people behind the counter of the stone yard
for advice and assistance
they understand quantities and volumes and weights and coverage
you can talk to the contractors who put stuff like this in all the time
how do you rat proof and skunk proof the low area under the deck?
is clear heart redwood worth the cost? is it even available? in what sizes?
do you work with ipe ironwood? why or why not?
I got pesky neighbors and I want privacy. how tall can I build that fence?
what do you know about bamboo?
Most importantly, it is the field gardeners who have the first hand knowledge
of watching a garden grow and change over time
thats the test and the outcome
remember that this creation this masterpiece this work of art
is not a machine with a one year warranty, tucked indoors away from the elements
nor is it an unbreakable hunk o plastic with a lifetime guarantee
it is a garden you are designing and building
a place with constant weather, insistent pests, and a whole lotta dynamic action all the time
Gardeners can best tell you how water and irrigation and algae interact with the hardscape
they can describe in detail –
how people get tripped up by a slight unintentional grade change
or how people become deterred by the aberrant flow of a pathway
gardeners know what designs don’t work
they know that the designer never shoveled a bucket of sand
they know that the architect never mixed up a batch of mortar
gardens that are the result of careless ignorance or mindful disobedience of nature’s workings
gardens where they cut corners and treat labor poorly
gardens where a skilled craftsperson or a knowledgeable horticulturist is nothing more than a slave or a serf or an indentured servant
“slap it together, get in n get out”
“do what I tell you to do or else…”
gardens where the selection of hardscape, and its placement, are inappropriate
So after a while, you begin to figure out what designs do work
cause the hardscape is strong and firm and holds up fine
cause it does what it is supposed to do
it entertains the family and friends
without causing hurt or harm
it provides a sense of order and structure and direction in the yard
and reminds you of the rocky hills and creek bottom drainages of comforting woods
it takes you to a happy place
year after year after year
This takes a little maintenance, of course
broom the leaves off the deck
clean the paths
weed around the stepping stones
pressure wash the tiles
and so on
Hardscape – lotta work at the outset, but so fulfilling in the long term
if it is done right, it ages gracefully into somewhat permanent magic
Compost and recycling in the garden
Everything goes in a circle
whether you like it or not
whether you acknowledge it or not
whether it is right or wrong or correct or left or front and center
In general
old timers do not like to waste stuff
stuff like food or building materials
because food was precious and scarce and took a lot of work to hunt or grow
because cutting a tree down, hauling it, milling it and drying it into lumber took weeks and months
because every little nail had to be hammered and forged
so then old timers became thrifty, economical, or saving, what have ya wanna call it
if you have tried to grow just one tomato and eat it, you know what I am talking about
its not easy, none of it was easy
everyday survival
These days
thanks to the industrial revolution, global trade, cheap labor, container ships, and so on
there is an abundance of stuff
some good stuff that lasts, lotta stuff so cheap it doesn’t matter if it lasts or not
when it breaks or crumbles or rots
just go buy another one…
so the leftover junk, flotsam and jetsam, day olds and spoiled
all end up in the dump of human civilization
piles dug deep into the earth
mounds of garbage spread far and wide
In nature, everything is used, nothing is wasted
Road kill possum by the guard rail:
turkey vultures are circling
raven is picking at the head
flies are swooshing down laying eggs, ants are carting off pieces of fur and fat
Tree falls down in the forest:
a crack and a thump
fungus is tearing it apart
beetles and termites are having a picnic
bacteria is scrambling for bits
Oil rig scaffold left in the ocean:
becomes a place to live
for creatures like barnacle mussel limpet and algae
drifting migrating spores and larvae find their way onto the steel
settle down, make their homes, and there they dwell
happily ever after
In nature, everything erodes, everything decays
nothing is ever lasting and permanent
she loves to take things apart
Headlands on the northern coast:
arches crags and thirty thousand ton boulders
so rock steady and firm, seemingly immutable
but
let the heat bake em
let the waves batter them incessantly
let the sands scratch and scuff, pepper and graze
and the crust underneath shifts and rolls, twists and subsides
and the formations change
within ten years, within twenty years, within the span of a human life span
you go back for a visit and you are like – what?!
I don’t remember it like this?!
this used to be….
well not anymore…
Monuments and buildings:
the pride of Mesopotamia
the glory of Rome
the greatest architecture of all millennium
million dollar mansions
then
revolution or downfall or lack of upkeep and maintenance
war and disease followed by pestilence
then it is abandoned, given up, forgotten
doesn’t take long
for spider, mouse, and cockroach to set up shop
for white rot and brown rot, tropical highs and riverine floods to work together
for screws to come loose, for rebar to rust throughout, for cables to untie, for a leak to spring
for a skeleton of a frame to meld, melt, and congeal back into the earth
Old chevy by the seashore:
salt wind and sand blasting it
iron burning in the air and wetness soaking thru
in a hundred years, what’s left?
maybe some rubber, some plastic, some foam
who remembers what model it was?
why somebody left it at the beach?
where did the memories go? all gone
In nature, everything comes around again
Who would have thought
that dead plants submerged
with heat and pressure and time
would end up as oil
and fuel our society and culture
maybe in twenty million years
all that plastic will be deposits
of oil again
until then – there it floats, drifts with the wind, goes up to the sky in low pressures
comes down with the hurricanes and monsoon rains
Who would have imagined
that mercury used to capture gold bits
back in the 1850 gold rush days
would flow downstream from the mountains
and still be in the sediment of the bay today
with the mud and the crabs and the tangled fish nets
how is it possible
that mercury would be filtered, sucked up, and become a part of
shrimp and sea anemone and clam
then taken in by sturgeon shark ray and people too
pooped out, then returned to the earth and sea
going around and around, in and out, in and out
Who can fathom
this endless cycle
of sunrises and sunsets
full moons and new moons
high water marks and low tide pools
going in circles orbits rotations
pretty amazing
all around
Ideally, in the garden, you practice composting, or at least use compost
cause it is great stuff for growing plants!
specifically – for growing domesticated food plants like radishes turnips swiss chard and the like
Compost is the end result of nature breaking down
then mixing with the soil
forming a thick layer of spongy rich growing medium for plants
bits of leaves, peels, seeds, branches, bone, flesh, and so on
in a matrix of fungus bacteria protozoa algae
Compost is the once-alive organic material that has been passed through the bodies and guts of
earthworm millipede pill bug round worm springtail and mite
it is a process that requires the basics of life – water and air, warmth and time
without any of those components, it does not proceed
In the tropical rainforest, matter decomposes quickly
somebody lays a turd, creatures are on it
cause one animal’s turd is another animal’s food
in the cold tundra where it does not rain
it takes a long long time for anything to break down
it just ain’t happening
you can leave a banana peel in the arctic
figure it’ll decompose in no time
but nope, it just sits there, and sits there, and sits there some more…
frozen most of the time
wondering when some bug or mushroom threads are coming to tear it apart
to release the potassium and magnesium and manganese
it had stored in its lifetime
So when we make compost
we are mimicking nature, and speeding up the process by which raw materials
become a useful agricultural or horticultural or natural product
Try to grow a carrot in rocky hard soil
what do the roots do? do they grow well?
then, grow a carrot in loose cultivated material full of compost
what then, is the shape of the root?
aha! compost!!!
alright then, let’s get to work
make some piles of fish skins, moldy cheese, rotting limes
add a truck full of brown oak leaves and chipped up elm branches
and a few wheel barrows of lawn clippings
if you’re lucky, bonus for some pond weeds or rinsed off kelp from the seashore
wet it down, turn it time to time to give it some air
give the feeding organisms some good ol’ oxygen to breathe
then like all things, be patient and wait for nature to do her thing
pretty simple, very useful
Like any fisherman or rancher or farmer or gardener will tell ya
mother nature does not waste
mother nature always wins
mother nature is a loop
old timers be like
what goes around, comes around…
that is how it is
that is how it always will be…
Your instructor Gus Broucaret always gives this funny story out as a handout to the class. Yes he is a gardener who has mowed and hedged all his life; but this story is reflective of his thoughts about the matter.

Humans and small internal combustion engines

Both do work and need fuel and maintenance over time
we will compare and contrast similar moving parts and functions
Small engines have an air filter made of wire screens or foam or cloth
it filters the dust and particle bits that would otherwise clog your engine
Humans got an air filter its called nose hairs and mucus
they catch the gunky stuff that would otherwise clog your respiratory system
Small engines have a fuel filter
it cleans the fuel so that the fuel burns cleanly
and stores the yuck yuck that would gunk up your machinery
humans have two filters
one filters the blood and makes piss, that one is called the kidney filter
the other also filters the blood of poisons and hazards, it is called a liver
Small engines use fuel to perform work
in some engines, fuel is pure unleaded gasoline ( a four cycle engine)
in others, it is pure unleaded mixed with some oil ( a two cycle engine)
gasoline is millions years old fossilized plants crud
black crude oil heated and refined into the stuff we pump at the gas station
humans eat plant foods for fuel
or we eat the animals that ate the plants for fuel
we use the glucose from rice, wheat, oats, sugars, and beer
we also use the glucose broken down from fats
for fuel
its all the same stuff more or less,
carbon spiced with nitrogen, lined with hydrogen
Small engines have pistons that go up and down
pistons driven by the combustion explosion of fuel and air
this up down energy can be converted into going around and around energy
with a crankshaft and a sprocket
this makes the chain on the chainsaw go around and around
or makes the cutting blade on the mower go in circles
humans pump their legs up and down running or walking
their shoulders rotate forwards and backwards as they swim and row and throw balls
the mechanisms are muscles joints, tendons and ligaments
as fuel is burned inside the cells
work is the end result of both systems
Small engines have a spark plug which causes a tiny explosion
electrical spark that ignites the mixture of the air and fine droplets of fuel
kaboom
humans need air oxygen and fuel to do work as well
this reaction happens in the process called cellular respiration
in the presence of oxygen
glucose fuel turns into ATP and carbon dioxide
ATP is the energy within all cells
it enables cells to grow and move, take stuff in and take stuff out, and replicate genetic material
Small engines get rid of the unburned spent fuel through the exhaust valve
Humans get rid of unused food, fluids, and gases – poo and pee and farts – outa holes called the urethra and anus
one is at the end of the bladder, the other is at the end of the rectum
Small engines have a switch called a choke
When it is flipped (the air is then choked), more fuel is drawn in
making a richer fuel mixture when starting the engine
engine cold, hard to start – more fuel
pull that cord!
later, engine warm, no need to choke it no more
sometimes there is a a little rubber bulb thing called a primer
this does the same thing – press it a few times – squirt squirt
more fuel for the start
Humans don’t have any such equivalent
the closest thing is a boost of caffeine in the morning, coffee or tea or yoco
to get a person moving and started on a day’s work
choking yourself in the morning as you get up
does not usually jump start the ATP’s
it would just turn you blue and deprived
Another valve that small engines have is called a throttle
it regulates the amount of air and fuel entering the engine, inside the carburetor
if you give it more throttle, the engine goes vroom vroom
the symbol on the machine goes from turtle to rabbit
vroom vroom
this is kinda like when you blow the bellows on a fire in the forge
give it some more air while smelting iron nugget ores
exposing more of that coke or coal fuel to burn
or blow blow blow on that kindling to start the camp fire
air and fuel
For people to get more air, hence more cellular respiration
you breathe deeper all the way down to the flap of muscle called a diaphragm
either hyperventilate and pack your system with oxygen before a dive
or slow and deep yogi style to slow down your heart rate
regulating the air inside your system
last but not least is the carburetor
a small device that blends the air and fuel mixture for an internal combustion engine
blending and mixing the air flow
making sure there is the correct amount of fuel – fine and even
to get it all ready for the spark plug to light it up and explode it into work
in humans this is probably the stomach or further down the digestive tract
where food is acidified and churned
where food fuel is broken down into small pieces to be absorbed and used
or stored as energy for later
not equivalent, but something similar in action
thats all for now
kinda the same
but very different
good luck working with the
small engines named
blower, string trimmer, chain saw, hedger
mower, rototiller, aerator, stump grinder, chipper and shredder
snow blower, brush cutter, ditch digger trencher, auger, pressure washer
or perhaps you have gone electric…
hahahahah
well then this is old timey stuff for you
next time, we can chat about volts and amps
chargers and cables
deep cycles and reserve capacities…
We are going to examine a few styles of gardens: Spanish Moorish, Chinese, wild and native Californian, arid and dry xeriscape, San Francisco eclectic, and a touch of Europe to close. As we go, consider the climate culture and mythology of the particular region, the function and use, the audience and client, the maintenance and care over time, the plant selection and placement, and the materials. Okay here we go!
Oh its so hot in the south! Olive trees dot the hills, thick white walled houses built of mountain boulders clay and mud, lime whitewash, tile roofs. Fennel and giant reed grass on fallow land next to grazing goats on oats.

Ride your donkey out to the farm to work. Come home on the narrow streets, tether the burro up, go inside for a siesta. Its so hot. Old folks be outside in the shade, chatting away, telling jokes, gossiping, watching the kids play in the streets, keepin’ an eye out.

The garden, the courtyard, the sanctuary is inside, beyond the arches and tile work.

Wrought iron gates, a table for afternoon snack time, and plants that will tolerate the shade, the heat, the container culture. Palms, ferns, leafy aroids, and some begonias. In a sunny spot, pelargoniums. The garden is a place of beauty, a space of tranquility somewhere between the home and the utilitarian work place.

Much influence in the south comes from the African Arabic moors who crossed over the strait of Gibraltar back in the day. Nine plus miles of sea separates the two continents – Europe and Africa. In the garden, this means ornate carvings honoring the prophet and Allah, horseshoe arches, water fountains that run down the middle, and an abundance of roses, fragrant herbs, and fruit trees the likes of pomegranates and figs. Tiles like these:

Patios like this. Aside from the intricate architecture and formal style of plantings, note that the garden often depicts symbols of power or totems of mythology. In this case, it is a ring of lions in the castle known as the Alhambra in Granada.

Okay. Leaving the Mediterranean California-like climate of Spain and headed off to the subtropical realm of south China and Taiwan Formosa. No more dry and hot. Now for the wet and sticky. Fogged up glasses and clingy t shirts.
At the Dragon mountain temple, the buildings are colorful and florific. The carvings – always more carvings and tiled roofs…

Strolling through the garden, you come across this rock on a pedestal. A rock on a pedestal? All craggy and pitted, with ferns and moss crawling all over it? Yes the Chinese have a very different aesthetic when it comes to their values and sense of harmony in the universe. Stay off the lawn!

All that walking makes you mighty tired. Let’s sit down for a bit. Well, here’s a little nook. But these seats. This table. Fresh soaked from a monsoon rain. Smooth but so ‘unrefined’. So simple. Look like stumps of a tree, like straight outa the quarry with a polish and buff. As if some rock or mountain spirit still dwelled within. Hmmm…

The taxi cab driver said “This is a good place, it is full of magic and nature spirit and if you are sincere and good the volcano mountain will grant your wishes and answer your prayers.” We like “ok”. Then, at the entrance to the mountain was these. Roots. Yeah. Roots. Not quite the symmetrical archway with neatly trimmed ivy. No this is a very different style.

So if that is the wood work, what about the stone work? Show us some dry stacked retaining walls or stairs. In the casual but labor intense look. In granite. Wobbly, side to side drainage, following the contours of the mountain all the way up without dynamiting the whole thing flat or cutting it only in straight angles. Built by hand. Hmmm…

This must be the land of dragons. On the roof lines, in the curves of the rocks and bends in the trails. Up there on the big rock, hidden, the statue is Matsu. The goddess of the sea, protector of fishermen and sailors. Back in Spain, she is known as the Virgin of Carmen, queen of the seas. Notice how there is painted and carved writing on the rocks. It is not looked down upon as graffiti, nor is it seen as somehow sacrilegious to pure and unspoiled pristine nature. It is one and the same. There is no conflict.

Before leaving Asia, saw this strange path liner to share with you. Remember that in design, a demarcation between spaces – between the lawn and the flower bed, or between the orchard and the perennials – is essential both as an aesthetic border, but also to establish that line of maintenance. So in wet humid zones, it is hard to keep cactus alive outdoors. The constant moisture leads to rot and death quickly. In order to showcase them, one must plant them inside of a greenhouse. Not so much to keep em warm, but to keep them dry. Here was one such greenhouse with an interesting use of a plant as a path liner in lieu of say redwood bender board or a metal strip tacked into the ground. After they sprout, outside you go!

Of late, because of a number of factors, the dry and arid landscape has become more popular. You go to a fancy neighborhood, and the lawn has been replaced with succulents, cacti, and ginger colored gravels. The annual show and sale of the Cactus and Succulent Society in Golden Gate Park – once it was a fringe specialist nerd hobby. Now it is lines out the door jam packed with people all coveting another small poky thing from the deserts of Chile or a webby squat little guy from the high mountains of the Alps. Many of these plants are ideal for our area. They are relatively low maintenance and require little irrigation. Many seem to like the well drained sands of the western parts of San Francisco. Most would probably like a little bit more sun, a little bit more heat. But in general, they tolerate the cool summers here. They are beautiful creatures.
It is important to go and meet plants in different places, on their own terms, so that you can learn to culture and grow them appropriately. This way you will understand the diversity and specificity of particular groups, and be able to plant them in the right place as a designer. At Cacti Mundo botanic garden in San Jose del Cabo Baja Mexico is a nice display. Notice the shade cloth stretched over the top. Shade? Cactus? What? You mean cactus can be burned by too much sun?! Yes. On the other end of the spectrum, some cacti grow in wet foggy high altitude forests in the crotches of trees! ?!?! So match the natural ecology of the plant with the cultivated garden where you want it to grow. Usually you cant just ram a style down nature’s throat cause that is what you want. Figure out the forces you are dealing with. Then harmonize with her and the garden will sparkle.

Yeah something like this. This would be a nice centerpiece for a dry garden style landscape… Well San Francisco, with its fog and wind, is not really the Sonora Desert. Growth is going to be slow. Rot and hard calluses will be an issue. Then the pests that sit in those wet soggy little wounds and feed and feed…

Around here. A nice lady named Ruth Bancroft really got into it. There is a garden for this style of landscaping in Walnut Creek close to Berkeley and Richmond and Oakland on the eastern shores of the San Francisco Bay. It works! Go check it out! Heard that back in the day, establishing the garden in clay soil, drainage and wetness was a problem. Cacti do not like those wet goopy roots. So they mounded the soil, added tons of volcanic rock pumice, and made it work. Established the plantings. Looks like:

With a garden of fantastic forms and unusual flowers, what kind of hardscape and cultural symbols do you match it with? Well that is the modern dilemma. No more lions and dragons and rigid symmetry. Try some art, ceramics, and a touch of whimsy.

Coming round home again. Native plants are another ‘style’ or fashion or trend that has hit hard in the last ten or fifteen years or so. Once relegated to enthusiastic weed warriors and grizzled folks hauling around a tome of Jepson Manual Vascular Plants of California, natives are now used everywhere. These days, every landscape architect’s plan – full of natives. So lets go back to the inspiration and the source and see why this style is making a come back.
This here in the mountains is the water source for San Francisco and some of the surrounding cities as well. In the foreground, bear berry manzanita.

In the garden then, one tries to replicate or imitate or mimic this ‘look’. This natural and fluid and at ease feel. My old buddy Luke Hass who took care of Jenny Fleming’s native plant garden in the hills gave us a tour of their epic native plant garden which took decades to grow and mature. One of the funny things he mentioned was that a favorite part of the garden was a beautiful manzanita growing over the swimming pool out of the rocks. It had the arching form, peeling magenta brown skin, and branching structure which took your breath away. And it had not been planted by humans, a little bird probably planted it back in the day and it grew and grew! Took forty years for it to look good. Wasn’t even part of the original ‘design’. So let that be a lesson to all y’all designers with clients who want their garden to look good ‘right now’! ‘Right away! I’ll pay top dollar!’ Mosses and lichens take time. Dense knits of ferns and grasses take time. A garden takes time.

Start to see the exquisite strangeness of nature, one that is not set in design rules that say ‘no you cant do that.’ Nature says ‘?’ Or she shakes her head and in the clearing of oaks and redwoods this madrone gestures like this:

Or, the oak tree in the mountains forgot to listen to the arborists. And survived in spite of:

Okay a little off topic. Back to styles and local color. San Francisco eclectic is a combination of the myriad of tastes and flavors of the bay area. In the concourse of Golden Gate Park you have the plane sycamores in a pollarded French kings style, the palm trees reminiscent of southern California or the desert springs of the middle east. And the new DeYoung Art Museum with its copper clad patina skin and tower into the sky. Modern?!

How about Shane Eagleton’s wood sculpture, his ‘acupuncture needle for the earth’? Set in the children’s garden of the San Francisco Botanical Garden. Where does this fit in on the spectrum of garden styles?

On 24th Street in the Mission, a little mini park sits. Thanks to the efforts of the community, Aztec mythology, and landscape architects from the City i.e. Marvin Yee, the park got a make over and a plumed serpent for kids to ride on in their fantastic voyage in the garden.

Tiled mosaics are a great addition to any garden space. They are durable and vibrant, and spice up that ten foot tall gray concrete wall with some stories and happiness. Artist extraordinaire Dan Stingle had this to say at a local elementary school:

A style that has had tremendous and major influence in garden design comes to us from Europe. It is the formal garden of medieval kings and queens, lords bishops and nobles. Symmetry, straight and clean lines, attention to detail. It is represented minisculey here at the Conservatory Valley in some beds of annuals, well mowed lawn, and a big glass Victorian age greenhouse:

The symbols and underlying mythology and origins are shown here, at the top of City Hall in front of the Civic Center Joseph Alioto Performing Arts Piazza. Nice caduceus!:

Okay. Heres the assignment. Look up 1) Versailles orangerie 2) the Potager garden (kitchen garden) at Villandry, and 3) the gardens at Filoli in Woodside. Google images and associated texts. Compare and contrast these formal gardens with another style. Either a style covered here in this blog, or one in the text. Maybe the gardens of Mesopotamia or Egypt, or the gardens of the Incas. Think about the plants used, the hardscapes of stone or wood or ceramics, the overall layout, and the cultural symbols. Who was the audience? What was the purpose of the garden? In addition, discuss the maintenance (high, medium or low) and labor (highly paid professionals, serfs, slaves, etc.). Lastly, tell me which one you liked better, and why. About two page essay, typed or handwritten. Due date announced in class…