Home GardeningGarden Diary A woodland art collector’s garden on Vashon Island

A woodland art collector’s garden on Vashon Island

by NORTH CAROLINA DIGITAL NEWS


August 02, 2024

While touring the Carhart Garden at the Puget Sound Fling last month, I met one of the owners, Mary Carhart, who upon learning I was from Texas enthusiastically told me that she is from Texas too. Decades ago, she and husband Whit moved to Washington for work and fell in love with Vashon Island, and I can see why. It’s a short ferry ride and a world away from busy Seattle — likewise from mellow Tacoma, our home base for the Fling.

The couple created their 3-acre garden themselves starting in 2000, first planting up the space around the house, which overlooks Quartermaster Harbor, and then taming the steep slope as it climbs toward the road.

The entry garden, with a lovely wooden bench near the door and an enormous lavender-pink hydrangea in bloom, sets a welcoming tone.

As you explore you discover that the Carharts have filled their garden with art that evokes the Pacific Northwest, like these ravens perched on boulders.

A double gate off the driveway invites you in.

A potted banana glows in bright sunlight, its red foliage echoing chairs and a table along the lawn.

Another patio shaded by an umbrella is enclosed by bushy, upright grasses and a mix of golden plants.

In a clearing, a pink and yellow meadow in full flower surrounds an interesting sculpture with a cut-out piece.

Poppies were going to seed in a sunny patch overlooking the harbor.

Bees were seeking out the flowers.

Fern tables are popular in the cool, moist Pacific Northwest, and I saw them in many gardens, including this one. I don’t know exactly how this one was made, but it appears to be soil piled up on a flat, elevated surface, with branches, stone, and moss sort of holding it all together, and planted.

A colorful playhouse dwarfed by two of the massive trees on the property

Astrantia, a plant I so wish I could grow here in Texas. They tell me it’s practically a weed in the PNW.

Crocosmia in fiery flower

It blooms in a shadier spot too. Beyond, happy flowers are painted on a pink wall.

Several mosaic sculptures by local artist Clare Dohna appear throughout the garden, including this giant bug.

I first admired Clare’s work in the Portland garden Floramagoria, where she created a mosaic “rug” on the patio, as well as other pieces. I adore this tapestry-backed insect as well.

Abutilon making a color-echo with red chairs

Fabulous Corten planters in a gravel garden along the back of the house

And a fabulous view to match!

Zimbabwean artist Dominic Benhura created Relay Racers, a group of children running with batons in a grassy garden.

Figurative sculpture can be hit or miss for me in a garden, but I really enjoyed the playfulness and blocky texture of this work.

Purple coneflower, a friendly face from home

Astilbe

A mosaic sphere by Clare Dohna, elevated atop a red pot

Speaking of elevate, let’s climb. A winding stair leads up through a ferny, mossy garden toward a steel moon gate above.

Fern shadow

More fern and moss

At the top of the slope, a conifer has been trained along the steel structure of the moon gate.

You walk through, pausing to admire a bouquet of cones…

…and then a remarkable swimming pool disguised as a natural pond opens before you. It’s huge! With a tree-planted island!

I was agape over this pool-pond ringed with boulders and set in a forest of gigantic trees.

It’s so densely planted all around that you can’t even see the pool in this photo, although it’s just to the right. Can you imagine the experience of swimming here?

Up-slope, an Asian-style pergola shelters a small sitting area, which overlooks a boulder-strewn waterfall.

The path skirts to the side of the waterfall, giving you time to take it all in. A little ceramic bluebird perches on a mossy boulder along the way.

And a Clare Dohna bird sculpture too

The pergola offers shade on a summer day or an escape from misty rain in other seasons.

An inviting spot, it’s about halfway between the house and the upper garden.

From the pergola you look out over the waterfall to the swimming pool and, beyond that, the blue harbor.

Let’s continue uphill, where the garden becomes thickly forested.

Glancing back down toward the pergola

And pausing to admire the shaggy red bark of a tree

The upper garden mixes understory trees and conical evergreens with ferns and other perennials under tall straight trunks soaring skyward.

It felt very much of its place.

Complete with a giant mosaic slug!

Indian pink

At the street entrance, a tall gate — part of the deer fencing that surrounds the garden — is another work of art, with a metal tree studded with little birds…

…like this one…

…and a mosaic ring by Clare Dohna making a colorful tribute to the life of a garden.

Up next: Lunch at welcoming Froggsong Gardens. For a look back at the cheerful Halstead-Robinson Garden on Vashon Island, click here.

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