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Bewitching bonsai, art, and autumn gardens at North Carolina Arboretum

December 3, 2022
in Home & Garden
Reading Time: 11 mins read
15 Graveyard Fields bonsai - TodayHeadline


November 30, 2022

01 Red berry tree Yellow sedge - TodayHeadline

Located in Asheville on the doorstep of the Blue Ridge Parkway, with views of the Southern Appalachian Mountains, the North Carolina Arboretum draws hikers, mountain bikers, and trail walkers thanks to 10 miles of wooded, hilly, dog-friendly trails. But garden lovers like myself find plenty to enjoy too in the Arboretum’s 65 acres of cultivated gardens — even if that visit occurs in early November after several hard freezes.

02 Red berry tree Yellow sedge - TodayHeadline

We visited on our last day in Asheville and found bright berries, textural grasses, copper hedges, golden trees, and camellias in bloom, plus one of the best bonsai exhibits I’ve seen.

04 Frederick Law Olmsted statue - TodayHeadline

Located within Pisgah National Forest, on land that was once part of Biltmore Estate, the Arboretum honors landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed Biltmore’s gardens, with a bronze statue.

03 Pleached hedge Bench - TodayHeadline

A pleached hedge in coppery fall color frames the small plaza where he stands.

05 Pitcher plants - TodayHeadline

At the edge of a pond, pitcher plants stood tall in throaty, speckled beauty. I really love these. Has anyone grown pitcher plants in a container in Central Texas? What’s required to keep them happy, I wonder? I mean, besides wet feet.

07 Stillness Meets Trajectory bird sculpture - TodayHeadline

Stillness Meets Trajectory, a heron sculpture by Annie Mariano, perches on a stacked-stone gabion plinth.

- TodayHeadline

A Hedge Against Extinction by Martin Webster will always remind me of Asheville Fling back in 2012.

09 Camellia Fall foliage Disco balls - TodayHeadline

Camellias in fluffy, white flower against a backdrop of orangey red foliage

10 Fall hydrangeas Disco balls - TodayHeadline

And disco balls hanging from tree branches!

11 Oh Great Spirit statue Native American - TodayHeadline

Bronze statue Oh Great Spirit by Nell Banister Scruggs stands amid tawny grasses on a walled terrace overlooking the mountains.

12 Purple flowering perennial - TodayHeadline

Late-flowering perennials were still in bloom, even in early November.

13 Fall color Ramp to bonsai garden - TodayHeadline

Others had gone to seed but still looked pretty backlit by the sun.

Bonsai

14 European beech bonsai - TodayHeadline
European beech

My favorite part of the Arboretum is the Bonsai Exhibition Garden. I’ve been intrigued by bonsai for years, though I’ve never acquired one or tried to make my own. The Arboretum’s striking display was stunning enough that I had a mad few moments of wondering what I’d been doing with my life, not to be working with bonsai. And then I considered where I live, and our extremely hot and droughty summers, and realized I’d be chained to a watering can. Nope. I’ll content myself with marveling over the bonsai creations of others.

15 Graveyard Fields bonsai - TodayHeadline
“Graveyard Fields”

A fascinating article about an American apprentice to a Japanese bonsai master, “The Beautiful, Brutal World of Bonsai,” by Robert Moor, recently appeared in the New Yorker. “When you look at a traditional bonsai tree,” it says, “you can climb into it with your eyes and feel the peace of a late-summer afternoon, or the bright chill of a morning sea breeze.”

Climbing into it with your eyes — yes, that’s right. You experience these miniaturized trees as if you are miniaturized yourself, as if you could sit under one and reach up to caress its gnarled branches. That these trees naturally grow tall in a garden setting or in the wild makes the experience of viewing one all the more magical. How do they do it?

16 The Wounded Rider red maple bonsai - TodayHeadline
“The Wounded Rider” red maple

The secret to making a dwarfed tree that looks like a full-sized tree sculpted by wind and weather lies in starting with a seedling tree or woody plant, confining its roots in a shallow container, and carefully pruning its roots and foliage over the years as it grows. Oh and also wrapping its branches with copper wire to shape the tree to your vision.

17 Dwarf white pine bonsai - TodayHeadline
Dwarf white pine

Bonsai is grown outdoors and often displayed so as to be viewed from one side, with a wall or screen behind it.

18 Golden Heart tamarack bonsai - TodayHeadline
“Golden Heart” tamarack

A pocked gray concrete wall at the Arboretum shows off the bonsai nicely, especially this golden tamarack.

20 Bald cypress bonsai - TodayHeadline
Bald cypress

A bald cypress bonsai magically evokes the towering majesty of an old bald cypress in nature, complete with buttressed root flares.

21 Amur maple bonsai - TodayHeadline
Amur maple

I enjoyed seeing the bonsai collection in autumn, when leaves of deciduous trees were turning red or yellow and dropping onto carpets of moss.

22 Japanese white pine bonsai 1 - TodayHeadline
Japanese white pine

Evergreen pines, gracefully twisted, are equally lovely though.

23 Heart Full of Hollow red maple bonsai - TodayHeadline
“Heart Full of Hollow” red maple

Some of the bonsai have titles, like works of art.

24 Blue Atlas cedar bonsai - TodayHeadline
Blue Atlas cedar

Others don’t. But they are works of art too.

25 Japanese maple bonsai - TodayHeadline
Japanese maple

A Japanese maple bonsai at peak autumn color

26 Mount Mitchell bonsai - TodayHeadline
“Mount Mitchell”

The real Mount Mitchell, located in North Carolina, is the highest peak in the Appalachians. This bonsai “Mount Mitchell” consists of dwarf white spruce, rhododendron, red creeping thyme, wooly yarrow, and loosestrife — all miniaturized. It evokes the spirit of a place.

30 American hornbeam bonsai - TodayHeadline
American hornbeam

American hornbeam bonsai

29 40 Acre Rock bonsai - TodayHeadline
“40-Acre Rock”

“40-Acre Rock” displays a ‘Shimpaku’ juniper and boxwood in a depression atop a rounded, oblong boulder. This one isn’t easily moved!

32 Sedge accent plant - TodayHeadline
Sedge accent plant

I wasn’t familiar with bonsai accent plants, but several appear in the Arboretum’s display, like this clay saucer cupping a single sedge with moss.

31 Sea oats accent plant - TodayHeadline
Sea oats accent plant

Another consists of a narrow clump of inland sea oats underplanted with moss.

33 Bonsai Accent plant Yellow trees - TodayHeadline

Seeing bonsai so beautifully displayed at the Arboretum was a highlight for me. A backdrop of golden leaves and mountain views made it even more special.

Up next: Hiking at vertiginous Chimney Rock. For a look back at fall foliage and black bears along the Blue Ridge Parkway and in Great Smoky Mountains, click here.

I welcome your comments. Please scroll to the end of this post to leave one. If you’re reading in an email, click here to visit Digging and find the comment box at the end of each post. And hey, did someone forward this email to you, and you want to subscribe? Click here to get Digging delivered directly to your inbox!

__________________________

Digging Deeper

Come learn about garden design from the experts at Garden Spark! I organize in-person talks by inspiring designers, landscape architects, and authors a few times a year in Austin. These are limited-attendance events that sell out quickly, so join the Garden Spark email list to be notified in advance. Simply click this link and ask to be added. You can find this year’s speaker lineup here.

All material © 2022 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

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