On Sunday, April 21, 2013, hundreds of folks braved the weather and turned out to take part in the 2013 Private Gardens of Historic Orlando Featuring Lake Eola Heights Historic District Garden Tour:
Many visitors cited the recent Orlando Sentinel article by Joy Dickinson, and we are appreciative of her wonderful writeup and the attention and appreciation it drew to the event and Pine Green. It was a joy to participate and tell part of our story about the home and the work we've done so far. The tour also inspired us to get the landscape in great shape - so hopefully we won't have quite as much work to do on it in the summer!
Many thanks to everyone who attended, and those who helped make the event a success by devoting their time and talents. The tour featured plein air artists (several wonderful paintings of Pine Green were created as a result!):
Artist Terri Rickerson painting a scene in the back yard |
Also featured were several antique cars generously offered for display at various homes for the day:
1936 Ford on display at Pine Green |
In addition, Reid's sister Michele Pasternak installed some of her unique bottle sculptures:
Pine Green's landscape features over sixty species, a combination of Florida native, Florida-friendly, and other traditional and not-so-traditional plants to create a unique lodge in the woods oasis in downtown Orlando. While it still features many of the original plantings specified by Burt Foster (the famous 20th century Central Florida landscape architect), Pine Green's landscape has been significantly updated with the design of landscape architect (and our friend) Frank Joseph Brooks, whose designs were actually featured in three of the homes on the tour this year.
Below is Joe's contact information, as well as a listing of local suppliers we've used and some of the plants at Pine Green.
Exterior/interior design updates, color selection/restoration, and art by: Reid Pasternack (www.reidpasternack.com)
Some of the nearby plant suppliers we’ve used for this
landscape update:
Alfonso’s Tree Farm (for
Weeping Yaupon Holly Tree)
Apenberry’s (for
various flowers, shrubs, and pine straw)
Blodgett Gardens (for
Coontail, some succulents, and flowers/shrubs)
Bolling Forest Products (for
pine straw in bulk delivery)
Florico Foliage (for
Algerian Ivy)
Green Images, Florida Native Landscape Plants (for Saw Palmetto)
Home Depot (for various
shrubs, flowers, and succulents)
Landscape Resources (for
River Birch)
Lowe’s (for various
shrubs and flowers)
Lukas Nursery (for various
shrubs, flowers, grasses, and groundcovers)
Medallion Nurseries (for
Giant Apostle Iris)
Palmer’s Garden & Goods (for various flowers, shrubs, pine straw, and groundcovers, including
Kangaroo Paw and Sunshine Mimosa plants)
S & K Sod (for JaMur
Zoysia)
Some of the over sixty species featured at Pine Green (be sure to Google images of these, as many bloom at different times of the year, and some are just getting established at Pine Green so are not yet mature. For more information on specific Florida-friendly plants, visit www.floridayards.org):
Azalea Rhododendron
cvs. (Florida-friendly) :
Beautyberry Callicarpa Americana (Florida native) (grows small purple berry clusters in the fall) :
Azalea in bloom this past February |
Beautyberry Callicarpa Americana (Florida native) (grows small purple berry clusters in the fall) :
Blazing Star Liatris spp. (Florida friendly/ some Florida native) (definitely one to Google to see the bloom!)
Bromeliads Bromeliaceae (various genera, species) (Florida-friendly/ some Florida native):
Candle Bush (aka Popcorn Senna) Senna alata (only the seed pods were on display but this plant
makes marvelous yellow fall flowers) :
Cape Honeysuckle Tecomaria capensis (not currently blooming; flowers shown are from nearby Tabebuia) :
Coontail Ceratophyllum demersum (Florida native submersed plant):
Dahlberg Daisy Thymophylla tenuiloba :
Donkey Ear Kalanchoe gastonis bonnieri (produces bloom spikes in the fall) :
Flag Iris Iris sp. :
Giant Apostle Iris Neomarica caerulea 'Regina' :
Japanese Yew (Podocarpus) Podocarpus macrophyllus and cvs. (Florida-friendly):
Kangaroo Paw Anigozanthos ‘Gold Velvet’:
Lily of the Nile (African lily) Agapanthus africanus (Florida-friendly):
Perennial Peanut Arachis
glabrata (Florida-friendly) (this groundcover is just getting started; produces small yellow flowers) :
Pink Perfection Camellia Camellia
japonica 'Pink Perfection' (Florida-friendly) :
Pink Perfection Camellia in bloom this past February |
River Birch Betula nigra (Florida native) :
Saw Palmetto Serenoa repens (Florida native) :
Sunshine Mimosa (Sensitive Plant, Powderpuff) Mimosa strigillosa (Florida native) (no blooms shown but produces pink "powderpuff" blooms frequently):
Swiss Cheese Plant Monstera
deliciosa:
Wildflowers (various genera, species) (some Florida-friendly/ some Florida native - this year we used the "Save the Bees" seed mix purchased at Palmer's; we're expecting peak bloom in a couple of months) :