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Selecting Flowers for the Garden

Bob continues his tour of the exterior with landscape designer Ruth Foster. In the Elizabethan-inspired garden in the front of the house she explains the various flowers she has chosen for the outer border and how they are appropriate for Colonial theme. Over near the side of the house we learn more about the more naturalistic garden, a style that dates back to the American Revolution.
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Selecting Flowers for the Garden

  computer-generated transcript - may not be 100% accurate

" Let's talk a little bit about the plant material that's been filled and added in for for color."

" This is sent a typical kind of -- planting that there would have been in the colonial house around the time of the revolution. Many different kinds of plants it reached its peak in the late summer early autumn. And these plants are old English is this an all -- this is fox this is Diane this charming little planks pinks. We have pansies now that looks like hide viscous it right here in it is a kind it is a kind of a hibiscus it's a perennial and actually they had it in their garden they did write leveling and and then of course future peace and those two little old fashioned roses yes very guess throws his wonderful it. It's an old fashioned looking bush rose but it's called carefree wonder and -- and I picked it. Not and it stays a bush rose and you can cut it way back but it's quite carefree and it blooms all season -- last. The old fashioned roses only bloom once in June -- I thought it was better to have one that looked old. But performed new very pretty and asked as terrorist masters were very common very very favored OK and then."

" You've designed a different approach to landscaping that you were."

" Pegging to Capability Brown Capability Brown landscape. Lancelot brown was an English garden designer about 1850 and he became popular. About the time of the American revolution and people were beginning to do these naturalistic landscapes. And he would come into a piece of land and say. This has capabilities and he would terror in all up well we didn't quite do that here how we do have."

" A very naturalistic approach with these birch that have been -- just kind of scattered around informally right they're planted in clumps informal clumps and -- And then once they're all put together and in place."

" Which you see beyond is the natural woods on the other side of the driveway it's this wonderful naturalistic landscape yes Ruth Foster thanks so much for your help thank you Bob it's always a pleasure who can't."

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