ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
13.10.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Loving Long Island-Day Trips

Author: Dr. Richard Churchill Author Ranking Blue | Posted: 22-05-2006 | Comments: 0 | Views: 286 | Rating:  (58) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Related Videos
How to Make a Long Island Iced Tea Cocktail

Learn how to make a Long Island Iced Tea cocktail - a...

How to Make Blue Motorcycle. Art of the Drink 16#

As riders at the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally show off their bikes, Anthony...

NY MEDICAL MALPRACTICE-Top 5 Reasons Not To Sue Your Doctor

Listen in as Gerry Oginski, an experienced New York Medical Malpractice, wrongful...

Sign Up Now!

If you were to say to someone in Maine that you were taking the ferry to Long Island to visit public gardens, they would look at you and think, "What public gardens?" They would conjure up images of an outpost in Casco Bay populated by people who fish for a living and have little time to garden, and by summer residents who might have a small vegetable garden, flower bed or hedgerow of rugosa rose. But public gardens? There are none to be found. It's a simple place where the word "ostentatious" isn't used very often. I like Long Island, Maine — my kind of people and my kind of gardens.

Last year, I was asked to go to the "other" Long Island, the big island adjacent to New York City, for a Day Trip. Never having been there — and based on some of the things I had read about the Hamptons, the area I would be visiting — I really wasn't looking forward to it. Who wants to drive all day, take a ferry, then drive some more to see "McMansions" or rub elbows in an overpriced restaurant with high rollers from New York City? I did make the trip, however, and although it was quite different from Long Island, Maine, it wasn't what I had envisioned.

I had a little time to kill before taking the ferry from New London, Conn., so I took a moment to see the newly completed Athenian garden in a pocket park downtown. With a Greek-inspired mural and sculptures, it was well worth the visit. If you have more time to spend in New London, a half-day visiting the Connecticut College Arboretum also is a must.

The ferry ride across Long Island Sound to Orient Point proved pleasant aboard the 1,000-passenger MV John H. There were many interesting sights, including lighthouses and the Electric Boat shipyard in Groton, Conn., where sub-marines are built and main- tained for the U.S. Navy. One of the subs passed the ferry — something I had never seen in Casco Bay!

Disembarking from the ferry, I was ready for the glitz and glitter of Long Island. The first hour of driving, however, was through rural farming areas in Suffolk County, the leading agricultural county in New York. Tomatoes were ripe on the vine and potatoes were being dug. After another ferry ride from Shelter Island, I pulled into Bridgehampton, where BMWs, Jaguars and Mercedes replaced the John Deere tractors of an hour earlier.

No celebrities were sighted, but I was immediately taken by the miles of privet hedges, Ligustrum spp., most of them sculpted to sharp angles. They delineated property lines and prevented anyone from seeing through them or over them. I became fascinated with the hedges and tried to seek out Vincent Simone, a local woody-plant expert whose books I reviewed this year in PPP's Early Spring issue. Unfortunately, I was unable to contact him until I returned to Maine (see the sidebar at left). On every road I traveled, pruning crews high on ladders used power hedge trimmers to sculpt the naturally gangly privet into something that looked almost perfect. Back in Maine on Long Island, a privet hedge might only get pruned once a year, and sometimes that would be with a chain saw.

I soon arrived at the Madoo Conser-vancy in Sagaponack and the gardens of Robert Dash, who probably is best known as an artist whose medium is canvas. I quickly found that this multi-talented character — I was going to use the term "gentleman," but I knew he would disapprove — had an uncanny eye for develop- ing landscapes.

"I do not paint in the way that I garden

or garden as I would employ the brush, although the process is often the same — both are arts of the wrist, the broadest, largest sort of signature, if you will, highly idiosyncratic, the result of much doing, much stumbling, and highly intuited turns and twists before everything fits and adheres to the scale of one's intention," Dash wrote in Notes from Madoo: Making a Garden in the Hamptons (see Book Reviews on Page 132). I felt there could be no better representation of his art than that of his gardens.

In May of 1965, Dash first saw the land that was to become his passion. He bought the parcel — a raw piece of agricultural land with an 18th-century hay barn — and by 1967 was on his way to creating Madoo, which in an old Scottish dialect means "my dove."

Upon my arrival he quickly took me to his gardens, which were designed as a series of rooms. We strolled past the boxwoods of the knot garden and down the rose walk, which features a brick-lined rill. My eye was drawn through hoops entwined with climbing roses to an exedra, a Grecian brick structure with an oculus and a linear mirror to extend the sightline. This was just the first of many garden designs befitting an artist. I have seen ginkgo groves, for instance, but none that utilize tightly pruned boxwoods, or "box balls," as Dash's does.

"Rather a wild stroke," he said.

We passed four quincunx beds, with a fastigiate yew standing at attention at each corner of each square bed. There was a hermit's hut tucked into another garden, and Dash proudly showed me an oriental bridge surrounded by native plants. As we walked, he explained that the keys to successful growing are lots of manure and proper pruning.

Pruning? I was looking for privet that didn't look perfectly square, and I found what I wanted. Dash has taken mature privet and treated it in a way that will provide an opportunity for all gardeners with overgrown hedges — an opportunity to make a statement with plants that will have visitors saying "wow," as I did. Imagine 20-foot-tall privets — with trunks the size of small trees — pruned up a good 10 feet.

"Now aged and knobby, they still look like the legs of young ballerinas, but young ballerinas wearing old rehearsal stockings, pilled and raddled," Dash wrote in describ-ing the effect.

After walking through his many other garden rooms, it was time to have a glass of wine. The wine led to a discussion of what needs to be changed at Madoo, and the amount of grape juice consumed may have influenced the fate of the knot garden. We agreed that it interfered with the view down the rill to the exedra, and it must go!

Running late, I reluctantly left Madoo and arrived at the LongHouse Reserve just as it was closing for the day. A busload of visitors was being escorted out, which allowed for a look at the gardens without anyone else present, and the setting sun created lighting conditions that couldn't have been better for photography. But being late also meant I didn't get to spend much time with Matko Tomicic, the executive director, or any time with Jack Lenor Larsen, who created this wonderful landscape filled with works by artists ranging from Roy Lichtenstein to Yoko Ono.

Garden enthusiasts come to LongHouse not so much for the plant collections as for ambitious landscaping, and for a variety of spaces sometimes referred to as outdoor rooms. Among them are the Red Garden, the Dune Garden, the Grass Garden and the Lotus Pond, in addition to several allées. LongHouse receives about 6,000 visitors annually.

About 300 daffodil cultivars blossom in April and May, primarily in whites and pinks. The property also features 60 bamboo cultivars, ranging from low pygmies to combs 50 feet high; 100 conifer varieties, and 100 ornamental grasses.

The sculptures at LongHouse provide punctuation — and a destination. While many visitors might not want to walk the equivalent of several blocks to see a new tree, they are often willing to visit the Yoko Ono piece at the west boundary of the reserve, or to experience a new or famous work, including pieces in glass and ceramic by Toshiko Takaezu and Dale Chihuly.

While this garden art may be out of reach financially for many of PPP's readers, the concept can be transposed to most landscapes. LongHouse can inspire gardeners to go beyond the ordinary and take the chances necessary to make a landscape unique.

Another public garden in the area that is well worth mentioning is the Bridge Gardens Trust. The gardens had closed for the season the day before I arrived, but curator Harry Neyens was gracious enough to provide a description.

"Bridge Gardens Trust has 800 antique and new roses, a knot garden, a historical collection of culinary, medicinal, textile and dyeing herbs, a lavender parterre, an assortment of topiaries, a water garden, two shade gardens, a bamboo grove and specimen plantings," he said. "(We receive) 1,500 visitors annually."

The next time I visit Long Island, I'll make certain I get there before the closing date of Oct. 31!
If you enjoy visiting wineries, there are many on Long Island from which to choose. The soil (a rich loam), the climate (like Bordeaux) and the influence of the ocean all make for perfect grape-growing. A stop at the Wölffer Estate Vineyard in Sagaponack proved how well-suited Long Island is for winemaking. The Wölffer Estate Selection Chardonnay was rated "Best Long Island Chardonnay" by The Wine Enthusiast magazine. Even if you are not a fan of wine, the landscape and vineyard running alongside the winery make a stop here worthwhile.

There are many options for accommodations in the Hamptons, from bed-and- breakfast establishments to motels. I opted to head out to Montauk on the easternmost tip of Long Island. The town has an old summer beach community feel, with many old-style motels and 5,000 acres of public beaches to enjoy. It also has a lot of history: The Montauk Point Lighthouse was opened in 1787, and Montauk Point is where Teddy Roosevelt and his 30,000 Rough Riders landed after the Spanish-American War.

There are a host of excellent places to eat in Montauk, and I asked around about the best place to sample local fare. The locals all steered me to the Shagwong Restaurant, and a meal of freshly caught seafood proved their recommendations correct.

What is my most lasting memory of this Day Trip? The eccentricity of Robert Dash, the privet hedges, the sun setting behind the Chihuly glass wands at the LongHouse Reserve, or sunrise at Montauk Point? None of the above. As memorable as these experiences were, they can't beat my visit to Marders Nursery.

For a tree lover, nothing can compare to sitting on the rootball of a 20-foot ginkgo ready to be installed at the cost of $25,000. Yes, $25,000! This nursery in Bridgehamp-ton is beyond belief. It was started by Kathleen and Charlie Marder about a quarter of a century ago with the purpose of transplanting large trees by mechanical means. That they do, and in addition to the large trees they now have a full-service garden center, a landscaping division and an art collection on the grounds. If you need a large plant to anchor your landscape, visit them and ask to see the 40-foot arborvitae. If you think it will fit in your landscape, get the checkbook ready, because for about $40,000 it can be yours. And, of course, if Marders plants the tree, it comes with a two-year guarantee.

It was time to head back to Maine. Had I changed my mind about which Long Island I like best? Maybe, but I'll have to visit the New York one a couple of more times to fairly judge. Of course, if someone bought me one of those $25,000 ginkgos there would be no contest!

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/advice-articles/loving-long-islandday-trips-30003.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

http://www.ppplants.com

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Growing Tomatoes and Saving $$$ in Tough Economic Times
By: Penny | 24/06/2008 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

Hydroponic Supplements That You Must Try for Maximum Yields
By: Michael Straumietis | 07/10/2008 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

Beneficial Microbes - How They Can Help Your Hydroponics Garden
By: Michael Straumietis | 07/10/2008 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

Enjoy Winter Gardening
By: Louanne Baelde | 25/08/2008 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

Shopping For Plants With Garden Catalogs Is A Great Way To Go
By: Jerry Cahill | 20/01/2007 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

Gardening Tips - How to Build and Maintain A Garden
By: Peter Finch | 27/02/2007 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

The Four Most Common Errors Hydroponic Growers Make
By: Michael Straumietis | 06/05/2008 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

The Basic Guide To Organic Composting
By: Paul Hata | 16/08/2008 | Gardening
Gardening related articles, find free content for your Gardening related web sites or Gardening related newsletters. Submit your Gardening related articles for free syndication.

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Frequently Asked Questions

Care of pole beans
By: Bob | 29-08-2008
My pole bean leaves are not dark green very light green and some small holes in leaves and some black spots do you have a recomendation?

MeibuschHow do i control longicorn beatle on ...
By: sam | 29-08-2008
meibuschHow do i control longicorn beatle on tropical birch trees ?

Propogating Oleanders
By: Di | 28-08-2008
What are the Oleander seed pods? Can you propogate shrub with them?

White Fly Herbicide
By: Tompat | 28-08-2008
What is the most effective herbicide against white flies on gardenia schrubs?

Color for grandmother
By: shirley | 27-08-2008
Formal dress for grandmother of groom bride is wearing ivory, bridesmaid brown trimmed with ivory, mother of bride claret. mother of groom ???    I am grand mother of groom . What color should I wear ?

When to prune rose bushes
By: Ron | 27-08-2008
When is the best time to prune rose bushes in Az? The bushes are a year old.      

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Advice Articles

Get Your Golden Parachute
By: Carol Forsloff | 12/10/2008
Golden parachutes aren't just for rich people. Everyone can have one; it just takes a little planning and optimism. You need to know where they are in your life. After that you will have the soft landing you wanted to take care of you the rest of your life.

Self Defense and Self Protection 411
By: Mark Logan | 12/10/2008
What’s your self-defense IQ? Learn about ways to keep safe in your home, at work, and going through your daily routine with this easy-to-read guide.

Anandacharya's Predictions
By: Yuga Rishi Shriram Sharma Acharya | 11/10/2008
“Twenty four years before the 3rd World War and 24 years after it ends, will be full of turbulence for India. The preceding 24 years will see circumstances akin to those seen after Mahabharat war. The latter 24 years will be like dawn before the sunrise of a New Era. I will give up my body a few days after I see my motherland (India) attaining independence. Other people will see the extraordinary changes taking place in India after it gains political freedom. “

Shocking Tips To Get Your Ex Back That Work Like A Charm
By: Paula Snyder | 10/10/2008
A break up with a long time partner is a difficult time for anyone. However, there is still hope in getting your ex back if you know how. Shocking tips will reveal how and you will be amazed at the results.

Learn How Subliminal Message Software Can Re-Program Your Psyche
By: Kristi Ambrose | 10/10/2008
Most of the time we have grown to become so negative and critical of ourselves that even if we promise ourselves that we will try to do these affirmations, we fail. It's our mind saying things like "you can't do this, you can't do anything else, why would you be able to do something this easy?" or the ever annoying "this isn't going to help you, nothing will, you will always be a loser."

Should You Battle For Love?
By: Kristi Ambrose | 10/10/2008
First off, if you are engaged for several years that already should put a flag up, someone is afraid of commitment. Another flag should go up if you argue so much that you spend more time giving the silent treatment than actually conversing with your lover.

Behind the Language of Numbers
By: raphnix | 10/10/2008
Often associated with occult and astrology, numerology is any of the many systems, tradition, or beliefs in a mystical relationship between numbers and physical objects or living things.1 it is the study of numbers and letters significance.

Step-by-Step Love Guide Available!
By: Kristi Ambrose | 10/10/2008
If a bond such as marriage can be broken I would hate to even know the percentage rate for people just breaking up and being boyfriend/girlfriend! Break ups happen for all sorts of reasons but the most general reason is simple because the couple doesn't understand each other and this in turn causes a lot of unneeded fighting! So, what if you could fix this?

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below