{"id":3686,"date":"2015-04-23T17:04:00","date_gmt":"2015-04-23T21:04:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2020-08-13T17:42:45","modified_gmt":"2020-08-13T21:42:45","slug":"rock-gardening-societies-beyond-rocks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gardern.co.za\/2015\/04\/rock-gardening-societies-beyond-rocks\/","title":{"rendered":"ROCK GARDENING SOCIETIES – BEYOND ROCKS – A SPECIAL GIVEAWAY"},"content":{"rendered":"
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NATIVE PLANTS SHINE IN THIS WATER-WISE ROCK GARDEN IN SANTE FE ON A TOUR WITH THE NORTH AMERICAN ROCK GARDEN SOCIETY – A SOCIETY WHICH CAN HELP YOUR UNDERSTAND THAT ROCK GARDENS ARE NOT REALLY ALL ABOUT ROCKS.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
TROUGH CULTURE IS A VERY SPECIFIC TYPE OF ROCK GARDEN WHERE HIGH ELEVATION ALPINE PLANTS ARE GROWN IN HYPER-TUFA CONTAINERS MADE OF A SPECIAL BLEND OF CONCRETE THAT MIMIC’S TUFA ROCK – A HIGHLY POROUS LIMESTONE ROCK THAT MANY ALPINES GROW WELL ON, BUT THE TERM TROUGH CAN MEAN MUCH MORE THAN THESE ‘SINK-LIKE’ CONTAINERS.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
Not that aesthetics aren’t important to rock gardeners, far from it, but rock gardening is about as far away from landscape design or outdoor decoration as a garden can get. In a nut shell, it’s more like recreating nature – think: habitat creation. Many rock gardens are like tiny zoo’s for plants. Want to raise a rare, high elevation saxifrage from the Alps? Then you will need to recreate the alpine conditions as best you can right in your own back yard – right down to the perfect drainage, soil pH and rocky outcroppings or screes where the specific genus once grew in nature. It’s a bit like creating a living diorama from a natural history museum – perhaps right in a small trough sitting on your deck, which is kind-of cool once you start thinking about it, right?<\/p>\n
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PURISTS IN THE ROCK GARDEN SOCIETIES STILL ENJOY ATTEMPTING TO GROW THE MOST CHALLENGING OF PLANTS – HIGH ELEVATION ALPINES SUCH AS THIS SAXIFRAGE SPECIES I SHOT IN ONE OF MY TROUGHS, BUT ROCK GARDENING TODAY CAN MEAN SO MUCH MORE.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
\nAlthough many rock gardeners focus strictly on alpine plants in the UK, in the US the boundaries blur between interests – ferns, woodland plants, bulbs, shrubs, cacti and succulents and true, high-elevation alpines. So even though the first rock garden movement in the 1910’s, kick-started by a British plantsman and explorer Reginald Farrer – the ‘Father of Rock Gardening’ -as he he ignited the trend back in the Victorian era and it grew into a specialist favorite throughout the first half of the 20th century. Near the end of the 20th century, the trend started to wane, to evolve into what rock garden is today – more about interesting plants and the people who crave them, than anything else. Some of use still raise proper rock gardens in the English style, others, do it with a twist, raising plants in troughs, raised beds or pots.<\/p>\n
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ONE OF THE BENEFITS OF JOINING A ROCK GARDEN SOCIETY IS THE SOCIAL ASPECT, TOURS, LECTURES, TALKS, ROUND-TABLES, PLANT AND SEED EXCHANGES AND CONVENTIONS. THIS TOUR IN NEW MEXICO WAS ORGANIZED BY NARGS LAST YEAR, AND INCLUDED HIKES, STUDIES AND PLENTY OF CHATTY MEALS.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
\nThat all said, ‘Rock Gardening’ expland into many tangential specialist groups including the Penstemon Society, the Primrose Society and many other highly specialized groups based around a single genus. Then, there is California and the water shortage, where rock gardening may mean a water-wise gravel or sand garden. Similarly, in Arizona, it may mean a cactus garden or a Steppe garden, or in Colorado and Utah a mixture of all three. In the North East, it may mean getting rid of your lawn and introducing native plants.<\/p>\n
There is still an identity issue here to those trying to wrap their arms around what rock gardening actuall is, but there is one thing clear to all rock gardeners – a rock garden is not simply a garden of rocks. It’s about creating an environment or a habitat where these plants can grow, as most will sulk in a regular garden. This may mean fast drainage, protection from winter wet, or sand beds, gravel mulches or tiny crevice gardens of clay.<\/p>\n
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A VIEW OF MY RAISED ROCK WALL ROCK GARDEN WITH A MIXTURE OF LOW GROWING ALPINE BULBS, SPECIES TULIPS, DWARF EVERGREENS AND PERENNIALS. I TRY TO NOT GET TOO GEEKY ABOUT STAYING TRUE TO WHAT A TURN-OF-THE-CENTURY ROCK GARDEN MIGHT HAVE HAD IN IT, I PLANT A LITTLE OF EVERYTHING, FROM ANNUALS TO TREES AND BULBS. I NEVER HAVE TO WATER IT.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
\nEven nurseries and garden centers are confused, often clumping together various low-growing or dwarf plants in areas and labeling them as ‘rock garden’ plants. There are only a handful of true alpine plant nurseries in North America, but as the term broadens to include woodland and shrubs and grasses, you can begin to see that a rock garden enthusiast could find a suitable rock garden plant in many aisles of a nursery, but the purist would most likely need to either join a local club, or order plants from a specialist nursery as few garden centers carry any rock plant beyond a sempervivum or a dwarf campanula.<\/p>\n
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WE DECIDED TO ELIMINATE THE LAWN IN OUR FRONT YARD, WHICH NOW LOOKS LIKE NEW YORK’s HI-LINE MEETS THE NETHERLANDS, BUT EVERYTHING IN IT CAME FROM INSPIRATION I RECIEVED FROM NARGS MEETINGS, EVEN THIS BLACK, DWARF IRIS, WHICH I BOUGHT AT A NARGS PLANT SALE.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
In many ways, the North American Rock Garden Society is stuck with a very unfortunate name. It may have been appropriate in 1930, but today, it can be misleading. First, the idea of a ‘society’ is limiting and off-putting to some, then there are the words North and American – it used to be called the American Rock Garden Society, but once again, Canada is left to fend for itself, so the name was changed. Even so, North America is limiting as well, especially as NARGS is a global society now. The word ‘Rock’ has many believing that rocks are essential to rock gardens ( and in many, they are), but as you can see here – rocks are only part of the story. What about bulbs, ephemerals, woodland plants, wildflowers, prairie grasses or ferns and mosses?<\/p>\n
Clearly, this is simply a PR and identity issue more than anything else. We should be smart enough to be able to overcome such issues, but changing names of large organizations is challenging, and although acronyms seem to only make the matter worse (NARGS\u2026really?), the future of these groups weighs more on the members and what they believe in more than it does what they are ‘in to’. It’s safe to say that NARGS, AGS and SRGC attracts the most intellectual of the plant people, sure, but it also attracts those who are curious, smart, adventurous and who love learning more about plants.<\/p>\n
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A GROUP OF NARGS MEMBERS MEET ON A SATURDAY FOR A BOTANIZING HIKE. USUALLY THERE ARE A COUPLE OF INFORMED LEADERS, AND EVERYONE ELSE TAKES NOTES AND INSPIRATION. THESE ARE ALWAYS A GREAT TIME FOR NOVICES AND EXPERTS ALIKE.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
\nOf all the benefits that are worthy with these groups, by far, the best part of membership are the sed exchanges. Annually, each of these clubs offered members a long, long list of fresh seed – seeds available from no where else – forget about saving heirloom tomatoes – what about an endangered plant from Brazil who’s habitat has been destroyed, thought to be extinct? I want to save THAT seed. Not a bean that I am saving because of some crazy, unfounded GMO fear. Make a difference in the world.<\/p>\n
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MY LOCAL CHAPTER, THE NEW ENGLAND CHAPTER A COUPLE OF WEEKS AGO, WHERE THE LUNCH-TIME TALK WAS ON GESNERIADS WHICH ARE ALPINES. YOU MIGHT THINK THAT THIS WAS TOO INTENSE, BUT EVEN FIRST-TIME ATTENDEES WHERE ENGAGED AND MADE MUST-GET LISTS, <\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
THE BRITISH SOCIETIES ARE VERY SOPHISTICATED ABOUT HOW AND WHAT ALPINES TO GROW, AND I TRY OCCASIONALLY TO IMITATE THEM IN THIS ALPINE HOUSE COLLECTION OF POTTED, TRUE ALPINES AND SMALL BULBS. NOT FOR EVERYONE, BUT I REALLY ENJOYED THE CHALLENGE.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
THE PLANT SHOWS OF ROCK GARDEN PLANTS IN THE UK ARE SPECTACULAR. MOST GROWERS RAISE THEIR ALPINE IN POTS AND IN ALPINE HOUSES, WHICH ARE ESSENTIALLY COLD GREENHOUSES. ALPINE HOUSES ARE DIFFICULT TO KEEP HERE IN THE US, BUT MANY OF US TRY.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
I kind-of knew that I could not raise such plants here in the US, but I have tried – unfortunately, our climate doesn’t’ cooperate in most of the US (unless one lives in Alaska or the North West), but I tried, and continue to try to raise alpine-type plants in pots and containers. I brought a few of these to my first NARGS meeting where I quietly entered them into a show – basically, a folding table near a window in an all-purpose room our local chapter rented at a state park. Most meetings occur monthly, and some include an opportunity for ‘show and tell’, where members can bring in a pot or even a cutting of a precious plant, and members talk about it – sharing how they grew it. There is usually coffee and treats, and then a presentation of some sort, usually a guest speaker. A great way to spend a Saturday.<\/p>\n
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FORMER NURSURY OWNER AND PLANTSWOMAN ELLEN HORNIG, THE PRESIDENT OF MY LOCAL CHAPTERS AUCTIONS OFF A RARE MONOGRAPH ON THE GENUS GALANTHUS (SNOWDROPS) AT OUR LAST MEETING. I LEFT WITH ABOUT 25 BOOKS! THE TABLE IN BACK WAS A SHOW AND TELL OF MEMBERS PLANTS. IT WAS MARCH, AND MANY PLANTS WERE LATE THIS YEAR.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
It was at this first meeting when I realized that although I knew so little about these plants, that everyone was taking notes, laughing, sharing stories about how they killed something, or triumphed with it. There was a plant auction ( it was spring) and members brought in plants that they grew or divided at home ( a note about this – NARGS members run the full gamut, from novice to expert – and it’s these experts, which most chapters have in one way or another, that make membership so special – in this way, NARGS is not unlike an elite country club. <\/p>\n
THE PAGES IN THE CURRENT JOURNAL OF NARGS SHOWS THE DIVERSITY OF WILD PLANTS IN NATURE, FROM PATAGONIAN OXALIS TO RARE PRIMROSES NOT IN CULTURE YET AND POPPIES FROM THE HIMALAYA. TELL ME – WHAT MAGAZINE FOR $35 OFFERS THIS SORT OF CONTENT TODAY 4 TIMES A YEAR? AND AT THE SAME TIME, OFFERS SEEDS OF MANY OF THESE PLANTS?<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of rocks in rack gardens – in particular, tufa rock, a porous limestone rock treasured by rock gardeners for true alpines, as they can root directly into the rock, but it is difficult to come by, and if you do, it is expensive. Hyper-tufa is a concrete mix, I think you’ve all seen it – people use it to make troughs or bowls in which to plant alpine plants. You may remember it being used in some classic Martha Stewart Living TV episodes, or from a few DIY craft blogs. If done right, it can look very much like rock, and it is the preferred method for creating troughs, a very specific type of alpine garden where high elevation plants are raised in carefully constructed troughs which mimic the stone sinks early rock garden enthusiasts used in England, but if done poorly, it could look like dinosaur poop.<\/p>\n
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TROUGHS, WHICH ORIGINALLY WERE WHAT FARRER CALLED SINK GARDENS IN 1900, ARE GAINING POPULARITY – EVEN IN THE SOUTH WEST – WHERE THIS ONE THRIVES IN THE SHADE OF A PINON PINE.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
A SPREAD FOR THE CURRENT JOURNAL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN ROCK GARDEN SOCIETY, THE ROCK GARDEN QUARTERLY FEATURING AN ARTICLE ON PLANTS FROM AFGHANISTAN AND MUCH MORE. THIS IS CLEARLY NOT GARDEN DESIGN MAGAZINE OR WILDER, BUT IT SURELY HAS SUBSTANCE.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
MY VERY SPECIAL GIVE AWAY<\/p>\n
So in an effort to promote rock gardening or alpine gardens, I am offering two precious copies of the latest journal of NARGS to two randomly selected readers who leave comments on this post – how great is that? In this issue, you will see articles on plants from expeditions to Afghanistan, to China, and Patagonia, but mostly, I hope that you will see that rock gardening is more about discovering the wonder of some of the most special plants in the world, be they endangered or threatened, curious or odd, or simply rare and undiscovered.<\/p>\n
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I AM OFFERING A GIVEAWAY TO TWO WINNERS – THE LATEST ISSUE OF THE ROCK GARDEN QUARTERLY, THAT I HELPED REDESIGN – NORMALLY ONLY AVAILABLE TO MEMBERS OF NARGS. BETTER YET, JOIN!<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
NATIVE PLANTS SHINE IN THIS WATER-WISE ROCK GARDEN IN SANTE FE ON A TOUR WITH THE NORTH AMERICAN ROCK GARDEN SOCIETY – A SOCIETY…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":3687,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[16,17,40],"class_list":["post-3686","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-alpine-plants","tag-alpines","tag-rock-gardening"],"yoast_head":"\n
ROCK GARDENING SOCIETIES - BEYOND ROCKS - A SPECIAL GIVEAWAY - Growing With Plants<\/title>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\t\n\t\n\t\n\n\n\n\t\n\t\n\t\n