Monday, July 1, 2013

Rose Society of Saddleback Valley Elegant and Enchanting- Part IV


Forever Young: The gardens of Patricia and Steve Buice enchant with stories abounding with what a life well-lived looks like. 


If you spent 4th grade in the California classroom you studied missions. Remember building a model of sugar cube "adobe". This rustic representation of our heritage in a rusted wheelbarrow rates an A++. 



Why should the inside dining room have all the decorative fun? The blessing of the Southern California region is how much time we can spend out-doors. Objects of art do not have to be expensive to be full of memories.  See them and dream. 

When my soul departs,  I would not mind if my remains were set in a ginger jar and positioned to watch over the garden. 



What makes Steve and Patricia's recessed entry so delightfully restful? Soft layers of design elements executed with the care of a traditional inside room. Colorful tile outlines the point of entry to the home. 
  
The expanse of a bare wall is tamed with a trio of art. A soft pad on the seat offers a place to put your feet up or a package beneath. Ferns. Fountain. A tracery of vines. 


Not just the portal for entry to their home- this is a place for private contemplation.  






Guests to the garden on the day of the tour were side yard guests, passing plump plantings of  sunshine  yellow iris then under the metal arch covered with roses set to shower their petals. 





Just past the gate, pet chickens welcome visitors. In a serious world it is important to find  triggers to childlike joy. To keep little farm animals makes one feel like living in a storybook farm. 



Nearby, a tea set is at ready for a party for two.  This is just one of many ideas I am saving up for when my granddaughter toddles under her own power):-  


Patricia shared that the late Bea Grow was a mentor to the couple. The doyenne of Orange County gardeners taught that when making a choice- "Go for the wow." In this case, with splashes of deepest blue. 


Little mice scampering between chunks of slag glass add just the right sense of humor. 




Ripe strawberries hanging off a a classic cement potted up  offer delicious contrast. 

Design note: the ancient appearance of the pot bridges the modernity of  the furniture to the many vintage elements of the garden. This is much more inviting than if an end table matching the set defined the furniture arrangement's outer edge.



If this garden had just this fountain, it would be enough. Lucky for us- there is still more. 


The lawn was as it should be, lush and large enough to play in. To lay on staring up at the stars then rollover to pick between all the shades of green; hunting for snails and other crawly and flying things. 



Fairies live in this garden. This one proudly showing off his fresh lilliputian harvest. 



Just to the side of the fairy's post is this lounge chair Patricia rescued from a garage sale. Steve reinforced it with rebar, stretching landscape fabric over the horizontal frame- forming the cushion on which his wife quilted a coverlet of moss and ivy. 



Shade is from above. At night- can you imagine the romance these vintage hanging lamps sourced from e-Bay have seen? Hubba. Hubba):- 


Steve explains to my friend, Marilyn Bowery, how he built the platform to the tree house from used lumber he was given in 1986. He is pointing up to where the little ice-cream soda style chair his daughter sat in when she was a sapling and the tree was not much taller than the railed platform. As the tree grew, they let the branches carry the chair to where it marks how far upwards the journey in life has carried them. 


Nature and art. This magic little scene is just below the bridge leading to the tree house. It seems a good spot to rest. Something a garden should have lots of are places to rest the eye. To contemplate that the real world is not just work and trouble. The real world is ripe with love and goodness. If we only care enough to look. To create. To enjoy. To give thanks for. 

Until we meet again, thank you for all YOU do to make the world more beautiful.



6 comments:

  1. What an absolutely lovely and peaceful place! xo

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  2. Oregon said what I was going to say. Lovely and peaceful.

    I love the tea table set up and oh what a wonderful idea for when grand daughters are old enough to enjoy such time with their grandmas! Love it!

    XO Trisha

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  3. Really beautiful in every way....! And Tranquil, too.

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  4. Oh, no wonder you've saved an entire post for this feature-rich garden! I must say, however, that your words about fourth grade and Missions did remind me this was when I discovered what a sculptor I was not (clay, not sugar cubes).

    Much cuter and beautiful is this rendition with those eye-catching succulents planted all around. Gorgeous.

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  5. What a delightful garden to explore--little treasures around every corner, it seems. I kept looking for the garage sale lounge chair in the photo until I realized it was covered with moss and ivy--what a clever and lovely idea! Love all the touches of blue.

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