Garden and Plant Delights
Highlights of my North Carolinian hort adventures
Nothin’ like a giant Aloe to add drama to a scene. This at the Juniper Level Botanical Garden at Plant Delights Nursery
View Slideshow » Illustration:Much-used in NC, this beautiful Muhly grass pictured near a pond at the Juniper Level Botanical Garden is native from Massachusetts to Texas.
View Slideshow » Illustration:Everybody lingered on the terrace brimming with pots of rare, variegated succulents
View Slideshow » Illustration:Plant Delights nursery
I’m fresh back from Raleigh, North Carolina where I attended the annual Garden Writers Association Symposium. My last post described some of our pre-conference plant geekery. But there was one more garden pilgrimage planned before the conference started: a personal tour of the specialty plant nursery Plant Delights Nursery in Raleigh with owner Tony Avent. This renowned mail-order firm also has an on-site botanical garden with some 17,000 taxa (unique plants), beautifully arranged and labeled, and an education center with classroom space.
Tony Avent’s politics have earned some complaint letters from progressives and others who object to the (questionably) humorous political mockery displayed on the cover of his catalogs. Still, his plant collection is astonishing and his depth of knowledge of plants and gardening is profound. We were in plant heaven.
After immersing ourselves in the glorious diversity of Plant Delights, the pre-conference gawking was officially over. But I had four more days of GWA-organized plant tours (with a full schedule of sessions and meetings between) ahead of me. Well, me and about 650 other garden writers and plant industry professionals!
First stop: the Sarah P. Duke Garden in Chapel Hill. This 55-acre public garden flanking Duke University consists of four areas: the formal “historic” gardens and terraces designed by landscape architect Ellen Shipman (1869-1950); the H.L. Blomquist Garden of Native Plants; the W.L. Culberson Asiatic Arboretum; and the Doris Duke Center Gardens. There was some really fine container plantings and unusual plant bedding material but the most photogenic by far was the lily pad pond.
After another few hours of buying plants at Plant Delights (we’d only ogled them with the proprietor the first time ’round), we visited the J.C. Raulston Arboretum in Raleigh. This truly extraordinary garden was named in honor of its late director and founder, a much-admired plantsman and professor of horticultural science at NC State. The garden contains over 5,000 taxa (different kinds of plants). In addition to acres of woody and herbaceous plants laid out in large island beds for evaluation, there was a xeric garden with a wide range of drought-tolerant plants and scree gardens, which display plants native to hot, dry regions of South Africa, Mexico, the Mediterranean and the southwestern US. Unfortunately, it was raining and dusk was falling while we toured the garden so my photos were disappointing.
Raleigh is situated in USDA Zone 7b (winter lows of 5F to 10 F) so there are close parallels to our region’s Zone 8a/7b climate. It was exciting to see so many new plants – if they can grow in Raleigh, there’s a very good chance they’ll grow in Portland, OR. The upshot? In the name of science, I shipped home a bunch of hardy gloxinias, tradescantias, aloes and bulbs so I could try them out myself.
The North Carolina Botanical Garden in Chapel Hill displayed many native North Carolina ecosystems beautifully including the coastal plains, the Piedmont (central North Carolina), and western NC’s mountains, as well as native gardens devoted to shade, fern, carnivorous, and rare plants.
Devoted to plant and resource conservation, the gardens and building are built and maintained with green principles in mind, from the ecologically sound plantings to the permeable driveway and new green building that will likely be the first LEED Platinum building in NC when finished.
The last garden on the tour was Montrose in Hillsborough. Now a Garden Conservancy property, this amazing garden is the home of Nancy and Craufurd Goodwin. The grounds include several romantic 19th century buildings, rock and scree gardens, woodlands, unusual trees, luscious container plantings, and exquisite meadowy perennial and shrub beds. I first heard of Nancy Goodwin while reading Allan Lacy’s “The Garden in Autumn,” published in 1990 and still my favorite book on the season. Goodwin’s garden had attained quasi-religious status for me so it was an essential visit, even if it meant missing my plane, which I very nearly did. While I didn’t have enough time to savor the exquisitely sensitive interplay between formality and wildness there, I did snap some photos, which I can savor. I hope you can, too.
Tags: Places to Go



If your readers would like more information on usda plant hardiness zones, there is an interactive usda zone hardiness map available at http://www.plantmaps.com/usda_hardiness_zone_map.php
Pete, what a useful map! Thank you for the link – it will be a wonderful to play around with it during some rainy evenings this winter…
Nice to find you again Kate! Your Plantwise blog was so out of date I wondered where you had gone. I am SO JEALOUS that you got to tour Plant Delights (and the others too) what an adventure that must have been. Hopefully you will show us all what you bought!
Loree, so nice to hear from you. I finally realized I’d better leave a note myself on the old blog site!
OMG Plant Delights was so interesting. I know how you feel, I have always wanted to go and it was a true pilgrimage for me. The plants I picked out are winging their way to Portland as we speak. You know, I actually thought of you when I saw that amazing terrace full o’ agaves at the nursery – more “spiky plants” than you could shake a stick at! You are surely familiar with this plant but I ordered an Agave ‘Quadricolor’ which is simply dazzling. I will post a picture. It’s yummylicious!
As a GWA member who couldn’t make the meetings this year, you made my day with this post! Thanks much for a little nibble of the fun!
Nellie, I’m happy you enjoyed reading. Nice to meet you on the blog and hope to meet you in person next year. Stay in touch!