Wednesday, December 9, 2009

White Roses on Wednesday

I  am sorry to have to tell you this ... are you sitting down?  These are the last of my white flowers photographs.  I searched all of my photo folders, and there's no more.  One last dozen ...




Paul's Himalayan Musk Rambler.  I saw photos of this once-blooming rose cascading from trees, and I fell in love.  Here, I have it planted at the base of a wild cherry tree beside the driveway, and it's happily scrambling toward the top.





Rosa Macrantha.  You know how much I love singles and stamens.  Isn't this beautiful?





Moonlight ... I have shown this rose before.  It's so photogenic.





Madame Plantier.  Pure white flowers, pale green leaves, nearly thornless canes and stems, good disease resistance ... this Alba hybrid rose is practically perfect.  Give her space, because she can become a big girl.





Dagmar Spaeth is a lovely smaller floribunda.  Sometimes her white flowers will have a small red stripe or two.





Secret Garden Noisette, found rose.  This class of rose was very popular in the early/mid 1800's ... and there have been many unidentified Noisettes discovered in abandoned sites over the years.  This one was found in the same garden as the more-well-known rose, Secret Garden Musk Climber.




Haywood Hall, another found rose.  I grow this one on a rebar tripod in my front border ... it blooms like crazy and smells wonderful.




White Killarney ... a color sport of Killarney, the famous pink hybrid tea rose from 1898.  I love the form of these early hybrid teas.




I think I might have used this photo of Leda in a Friday Flowers post a few weeks ago ... I love it so much, I'll use it here, too




Souvenir de la Maimaisson isn't really white.  The flowers bleach out a bit in the hot sun, and this photo made it look almost white.  SDLM, as it's abbreviated, doesn't like cool, damp weather ... but it's a fabulous rose in the heat of July, when many other roses are suffering.




I forgot to take a photo of the label for this rose, and I have no idea which one it is.




Our final white rose is Silver Moon.  Pure white flowers (which I love), simple single form (swoon) and look at those stamens.


I was thinking ... if I had been on the ball earlier this week, I would have gone out to the garden while we had snow and taken White Wednesday snow pictures.  Winter is just beginning, so I'll make a note to do that the next time we have snow.  (wink wink)

(written by Hartwood Roses.  Hartwood Roses blog)

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Another Beautiful Sunset.

Last night's sunset was so beautiful ... I had to share.


Enjoy!











(written by Hartwood Roses.  Hartwood Roses blog)

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Photography Workshop ... Project #3

This week's assignment was more difficult ... I took the time to do it correctly this time.  Here's exactly what we were supposed to do:

"Select a theme like simplicity,serenity, happiness,excitement or loneliness. Next go for a walk and only take pictures that fit into your theme. Create a set of 10 such photos. While this sounds simple it is more difficult than it seems. It will be hard not to photograph other things, but this focused approach will heighten your senses. It will also develop patience and the drive to look and hard for that particular theme."  Chris Orwig- Visual Poetry

My theme is Peace.

I started photographing in the house ... there's nothing much more peaceful than sleeping cats.  I then drove to Culpeper to take my mother to lunch (stopping along the way to photograph whatever I saw that fit my theme).  I made a few stops on the way home, too.

Here are my photos, in the order I took them. 



















Be sure to visit the other participants, to see which theme they chose.  For the list, click HERE.

(written by Hartwood Roses.  Hartwood Roses blog)

Friday, December 4, 2009

Flowers on Friday

The is weather gray here again today ... but we had a lovely, sunny day yesterday.  I worked in the greenhouse for a while, tending all the cuttings that will be next year's roses.  Most of them are coming along quite nicely.

For our Friday Flowers this week, let's continue our once-blooming theme that I started last week ... this time with some Old Garden Roses of European origin.


Apothecary Rose (Rosa gallica officianalis) is thought to be one of the oldest roses still in cultivation.  There are references to is dating as far back as the Middle Ages.




Rosa Mundi is a striped sport of Apothecary's Rose.  I think it's the standard against which all striped roses should be measured ... it's THAT good.




Charles de Mills (Gallica) is one of the best Old Garden Roses in the garden.  It is thought to date from before 1811.




Henri Martin (Moss)


Many people immediately dismiss these roses because they only bloom once a year.  I find this a bit puzzling, since we all readily plant azaleas, lilacs, forsythia, and other once-blooming shrubs




"Old Homestead" is a found Hybrid China rose.




Shailer's Provence, Hybrid China, 1799, is one of favorite roses ... I know, I say that all the time.  I mean it with this one, tho.  It begins blooming earlier than most of the other roses in the garden, and it's one of the last Old Garden Roses to finish.   It has a special place in my heart because it is one of the first roses I successfully rustled from a old house/construction site. 




The Bishop.  There are several roses in commerce called "The Bishop".  I grow three of them.  This one came from Vintage Gardens in 2007.  I have another one that was given to me by my friend Robert, and one that was discovered by Leonie Bell in Maryland (or was it Pennsylvania?)




Autumn Damask is the ancient, reblooming rose known in Europe and the Middle East in Roman times.  It blooms well in the spring and can have a modest rebloom in come climates in the fall.  Autumn Damask doesn't have the graceful shape of most of the other Old Garden Roses here ... I grow it mostly for its historical significance.




Bella Donna is another ancient rose.  It has been cultivated as a valuable source of Attar of Roses, which is used to make rose water.




I call this rose the Hazen Plot, because that's where the mother plant grows.  It's a modest-sized shrub that blooms profusely in the spring and sets a nice crop of hips in the fall.


I'll finish with a rose that never fails to make me smile ...


Banshee.  This rose is found in cemeteries and old home sites throughout North America, especially in the colder regions.  It is exceptionally cold hardy, and has survived without care in many locations.  We don't know the true identity of Banshee ... but it's widespread enough to have been a fairly popular rose in commerce in its day, and it appears to have been carried with settlers as they traveled across the continent.  When Banshee is happy, which is most of the time, it will sucker into a lovely thicket.  I use these suckers as gifts for rose friends ... which is how I got my first Banshee.

(written by Hartwood Roses.  Hartwood Roses blog)

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

White Roses on Wednesday

It's Wednesday, and the weather is gray and chilly here in Hartwood.  Let's brighten things up a bit with some white roses from the garden this summer.



Darlow's Enigma is an unknown rose, possibly a Hybrid Musk, discovered in Eugene, Oregon, by Mike Darlow.  It is very fragrant.





Mary Lovett is one of the Hybrid Wichuriana ramblers bred by Walter Van Fleet in 1915, and named for three Lovett sisters.  Mary, and her sister rose Alida, grow here on my Van Fleet fence.  I have a dark pink mystery rose that I am evaluating to see if it may be their lost sister Bess.





Rosa Moschata, the musk rose, was once thought to be extinct.  It was rediscovered in Richmond's Hollywood Cemetery, where it still grows today.  Though it is technically a once-bloomer, it starts to bloom in July (later than almost all other roses in the garden) and finishes in October ... and its scent is wonderful.





Ivory Triumph is a rare floribunda from 1961.





Baby Alberic looks just like a dwarf form of the famous rambler Alberic Barbier.  It is small, and round, with beautiful shiny foliage and creamy white flowers.





British Queen is a lovely old hybrid tea from 1912.





Out of Yesteryear, Hybrid Bracteata, 1989 ... nice shrub with snow-white flowers.





Unidentified Alba rose in the Doswell Plot in Richmond's Hollywood Cemetery.





Sir Thomas Lipton, a beautiful white Hybrid Rugosa bred by Dr. Van Fleet in 1900, is completely undeserving of its miserable ARS rating of 5.5.  It's fabulous in the garden here.  This is a clear example of what a mistake it is to use the ARS ratings to help you choose your roses.





Moonlight.  Beautiful, photogenic, white Hybrid Musk.  'Nuff said.

(written by Hartwood Roses.  Hartwood Roses blog)

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Our Barn Restoration

This is a VERY long post (my apologies to any of you who do not have a high-speed Internet connection), and it has photos of every step of the construction ... as we worked to save this feature of our landscape and bring it back to life. 

Enjoy!

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In order for you to appreciate the beauty of the finished result, I am starting the story of the restoration of our barn with an 'After' photo.  Our barn is beautiful and strong and sturdy ... but it wasn't that way when we bought this place in 2002.



This is what it looked like the first time I saw it, during our first visit here with our real estate agent in July 2002.



These next photos, taken taken a few months later, show just how sad and neglected our barn truly was.









Water had infiltrated the west gable end (the side with the big hay doors) and rotted the main support beam, two posts, the diagonal braces, and part of the loft floor framing.


The rot in the structural members put extra pressure on the rest of the frame, destabilized the barn, causing to lean ... pulling the posts and joists away from the walls.



After a particularly bad wind storm in the fall of 2006, I noticed a big shift in the barn and a new crack in a main post in the loft.  We had hoped that the barn was stable enough to wait a bit to restore it, but this latest damage meant that we had to do something QUICKLY.  Even the slightest bit of additional damage from another storm might cause it to collapse ... and we couldn't allow that to happen. 



We tried to find someone local to help us.  Everyone we talked to had the same answer, "We don't work on barns."  After some on-line research, we called Woodford Brothers in New York ... a company that specializes in repair of barns.  I sent them my photos and measurements, one of their estimators came to visit and assess the damage, and we agreed that they would straighten and stabilize this most-damaged west face of the building.

This is what the barn looked like, on the day before the cold January Monday when the Woodford crew arrived to work



After they unloaded their tools and materials, it didn't take long for the barn to look like this:



It got even more dramatic as they continued to deconstruct the west end of the barn.



I had no idea that the barn could stand with so little support like that.  As I watched the crew work, it reminded me of what it must have been like when Noah was building the ark.



The crew worked for four days, stabilizing the structure and holding it in place with a spiderweb of large steel cables.  By the time they rolled out of here that Thursday, the barn looked like this:



They used diagonal cables with winches to straighten the lean, and they reinforced some of the framing to keep it straight.  It was now stable, and could wait until I finalized the design for the rest of the renovation and found a local contractor to do the job.


At least I thought it was stable.  This is what I found the next spring:


The Woodford Brothers' use of cables to straighten the building had almost pulled the southwest corner of the barn off the foundation!  Here it is from the other side ... almost looks like it's hanging in space, doesn't it.  (Take this as a lesson ... when someone tells you it's okay to straighten your building with cables and winches, make sure they secure the structure first.  What Woodford's crew did to our barn could have actually caused it to collapse.  What we thought was a stop-gap emergency repair turned out to be a disaster.  Lesson learned.)



I had to find someone local to fix this, and I had to do it FAST.  A friend of ours suggested that I talk to a man named Randy Titlow, who he thought would be perfect for the job.  I talked to Randy, he looked the barn over, we shook hands, and he went to work.


The first thing was to bring in equipment and clear all the remaining brush and trees from around the barn.


As they worked, I was able to get a look at parts of the barn that I had never actually seen before.


They filled dumpsters with piles of honeysuckle, poison ivy, trashy trees, and assorted other overgrowth, along with the very rotten old cattle fence.



All clear now ... time to start work.



Randy began by removing some rotten framing that had been left by the Woodford crew (Grrrr!!), replacing it with new pressure-treated posts and beams.


See how this corner (the same one that was falling off the foundation earlier) is now correctly supported by a new 6 x 6 post that stretches the whole height of the building?  It's not going anywhere now.



Randy and his crew zig-zagged their way from one end of the barn to the other, working on one side then on the other side, replacing and reinforcing damaged framing as they went.  Instead of using cables to straighten and stabilize the structure (which stressed the barn and can cause more damage, as we saw above) he hired a heavy equipment operator to gently brace the barn in place as framing was removed and replaced, and push to the building straight when needed.  That's a 6 x 6 timber strapped to the bucket of the track hoe, which spread the force and created gentle pressure.



It was amazing to watch the barn being stripped of its skin, while the crew methodically removed and replaced the framing.














Within a few short weeks, the barn was completely naked ... proudly sporting a sturdy combination of old and new posts and beams.







We are fortunate to have a real live sawmill up the road from us, where we got rough-cut poplar boards for the barn's new siding.  (All of the old siding that was removed is stacked neatly inside, out of the weather, to be used for various projects in the future.)






The only change I made in the design of the barn was to add a few more windows for more natural light inside. 


There are now windows down the length of both sides, and windows at both ends of the loft.









The frames of the windows were built by a local carpenter, and the glass was installed by a glass shop in downtown Fredericksburg.  Each window is hinged at the top, so we can open them for ventilation.





After the siding was all on, and the windows were installed, the barn looked like this.





Every barn needs a good paint job ... red, of course.  Below, you can see a sample board with the two colors of red that we liked best.  Once we laid the board against the barn and stepped back, and it was obvious that the top color (Cabot solid stain in 'Indian corn') was perfect.  The bottom color looked more burgundy than red.



Here is the color going up on the building.  It looks really good!





The trim is around the windows and doors is white, of course.




All finished!!





The barn, now that it's beautiful and strong, is the perfect focal point in the landscape. 


It's comforting to know that our barn, which has stood in that spot on this property for so long, is strong and secure and will continue grace the top of the hill for decades to come.

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Thank you for visiting, and I hope you enjoyed the story of our barn.  There is not much online that documents a real-life barn restoration, and I hope this helps someone else in the future, who may be confronted with a situation similar to ours. 

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