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learn : explore mount vernon : gardens |
Gardens |
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George Washington had a passion for gardening -- and no matter what the season, you can still find evidence of that passion around nearly every corner at Mount Vernon today.
Pleasure Garden
| | Pleasure garden. Click image for larger view | Among the curved beds of the brick-walled "Upper Garden," you'll find bulbs, annuals, and perennials for every season: hollyhocks, peonies, primroses, heliotrope, larkspur, and dozens of other specimens, all of which were grown here by the Washingtons. You'll also find fig and flowering cherry trees and century-old boxwood hedges.
The garden's most formal element is a well-documented, recreated boxwood parterre in the shape of a French fleur-de-lis. Landscape scholars at Mount Vernon speculate that Washington's use of the parterre was a way both to honor his friendship with the Marquis de Lafayette and to pay tribute to the French for helping America win the Revolutionary War.
| | Kitchen garden. Click image for larger view | Kitchen Garden
On the other side of the Mansion's west lawn from the Upper Garden, is the "Lower," or kitchen, garden, where you'll discover a delectable variety of of fruits and vegetables. Much of the produce that appeared on the Washingtons' table was raised in this brick-walled, sunny spot located directly behind the stables and their unfailing supply of manure. Today rows of asparagus, beets, beans, spinach, and peas grow in beds edged with low-growing herbs. Apple and pear trees pruned to form waist-high, stout fences line the paths between beds of artichokes, onions, and lettuce. The garden is a wonderful example of a formal English kitchen garden. It also showcases the abundance of "vegetables indispensable to the kitchen," that so pleased Martha Washington. | | Crown Imperial, one of the few bulbs, actually mentioned in Washington's records. Click for larger view. |
Botanical Garden
Tucked away between the upper garden and the north lane is a small, enclosed plot of ground, where Washington quietly experimented with growing a variety of plants, including pecan and hickory nuts and root crops for animal fodder. He fondly called it his "little garden." Be sure to find this private spot.
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