Frogs Hide at Serendipity Gardens

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Frog in Pond 3

Frogs are everywhere at Serendipity Gardens. Real frogs, like this one on the rock, and fake frogs, too. They hide in the leaves, they welcome visitors, and they decorate the walls. Here is my story about how I got started with frogs.

Several years ago, I spotted a frog birdbath on sale at Dixboro General Store, a favorite place to buy interesting garden items, and I purchased it for my new grass garden. That stone frog has been there ever since, sturdily holding up its bowl for the avian wildlife. ... Read More

Seven Reasons to Like Winter in Serendipity Gardens

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Dwarf alberta spruce with snow

“Baby, it’s cold outside …” certainly applies to Serendipity Gardens these days — and to much of the rest of the country, too. I have to admit, I am not a fan of winter … though it does offer a few benefits to gardeners:

1. A little respite from the work of gardening

2. Time to dream about and appreciate the spring that will surely come

3. An opportunity to see the “bones” of the garden — a good way to think about what it needs at the structural level ... Read More

No One Rakes Leaves at Serendipity Gardens

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Leaves on ground 3

We see many people raking and bagging their leaves at this time of year, and we understand that they have good reasons for doing so. However, we have never raked them at Serendipity Gardens, despite the fact that over 50 trees grow here.

Here are three reasons why we do not participate in this annual autumn activity:

  • As the wind blows, the leaves blow, too, until they get stopped by a plant, like these plants in the photos below. It’s almost as though the plants are gathering the leaves around them, somewhat like a cloak. We like to think that the leaves serve as a small bit of insulation to help the plants weather the winter.
  • Our gardening philosophy is, as much as possible, to emulate the greatest gardener of them all, Mother Nature. She never rakes leaves, but rather leaves them to build the soil. How the leaves turn into soil remains a mystery. Sara Stein, author of Noah’s Garden, says, “It takes trillions of [tiny] to microscopic organisms of thousands of species to decay to soil those leaves … we haven’t identified more than a tiny fraction of these organisms, much less understood their individual contributions or imagined the complex relationships among them by which the task is done.” We like the idea that we are helping this mysterious process by leaving the leaves alone.
  • Piles of leaves provide habitat and nest-building material for small creatures, including some birds. We want those creatures in our garden, so it makes sense to lend them a helping hand.

The Last, Best Reason

The last, best reason for not raking is that we are, at heart, lazy gardeners. Like all gardeners, we like to look at our garden and appreciate it. Of course, there’s much work to do …  but raking leaves is not a chore that makes the list. Luckily, we live out in the country, so we have no suburban standards or town rules that our garden has to meet. We can be as messy as we like! ... Read More

Water, Water Everywhere in Serendipity Gardens

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Water

Water plays an important role in Serendipity Gardens, as it does in any landscape that offers habitat to animals. One of the four requirements of being a certified natural habitat is the presence of water.

Ponds and Pots

We have several ponds and two pots of water.

The ponds consist of a ground-level pond about seven feet in diameter, with a smaller pond about three feet in diameter  above it. Water from the small pond flows over rocks into the larger pond, and creates the water noise that adds so much to the ambiance of the garden. From the large pond, the water then flows through a little stream down and across the yard to another small pond. From there, a pump helps the water make the journey through hidden pipes back up to the top pond, where it feeds into the upper pond and creates the waterfall. ... Read More

Fall Color Memories at Serendipity Gardens

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While winter is not officially here in Serendipity Gardens, fall has pretty much ended — the beautiful colors of fall, that is.

That’s what photos are for. Here are three from the garden, taken just before that November rain gave all the leaves permission to fall.

From top to bottom are a faded but still lovely Endless Summer hydrangea blossom; texture on the ground, a mixture of dead nettle, Brunnera Jack Frost, and fallen yellow leaves; and a dwarf fothergilla shrub, one of the prettiest shrubs for fall color that I know. ... Read More