The Eagles

I have no embarrassment of my Lord Of The Rings love, or the fact that I am an elf. I believe everything about the world that Tolkien created. It's so real to me - and I do believe that one day I will meet Gandalf, Aragorn, Frodo, dear Sam, Lady Galadriel, and all the others who hold a place in my heart. 

So every once in a while (as I already have done) I will share a track, an image, a thought, or a quote from my second world.

This track will forever remind me of Rome as my sister played it as we sat in the rubble of the Colosseum. 

Happy in Holland

It was like a dream. And I was in it. 

I've been wanting to go to Amsterdam for several years now. Just to have the experience of riding a bicycle around the canal-lined streets. So with the Easter holidays arriving, travel credit saved up, and a friends house available for a visit, I jumped at the chance. Double-major-bonus-over-time that I could couple it with tulip season! Amazing, amazing. 

My time in Holland was practically perfect. My trip basically consisted of four things: Riding a bicycle in Amsterdam, riding a bicycle though the coastal dunes to the beach, visiting the world-famous Keukenhof, and riding a bicycle past the fields and fields of tulips. (I know I missed a lot of paintings/museums, but that will be for a return visit when the cash is flowing). The weather was obliging and the bike trails endless. I can't believe how bike-friendly the entire country is! It was so refreshing to get around that way and I wish more of the world was as accommodating. Though I must say, there is the advantage to the land being as flat as a Dutch pancake. 

I started out my journey by taking the ferry from Harwich to the Hook of Holland - the water was calm and the sun was bright. It was really wonderful actually. The pictures below will tell the rest of the story....

If you want to catch my travel pictures in real-time, follow me on Instagram. Handle: lorienhall. 

Tulipa, Tulipa, Tulipa

Can you have too many tulips?

No.

Keukenhof: "also known as the Garden of Europe, is the world's largest flower garden. (And boy, is it ever!) It is situated in Lisse, the Netherlands. According to the official website for the Keukenhof Park, approximately 7 million flower bulbs are planted annually in the park, which covers an area of 32 hectares." (Wikipedia)

I could have spent many more hours here. It's mind-blowing the amount of tulips they have and the varieties...the gardens go on and on and on. Keukenhof leans toward a touristy-theme-park environment, and although I prefer a more naturalized design-style - I enjoyed it more than I initially thought I would. It kept me smiling.


The world is indeed full of peril, and in it there are many dark places; but still there is much that is fair, and though in all lands love is now mingled with grief, it grows perhaps the greater.
— J.R.R. Tolkien, The Two Towers

A Short Story: "My wife, she will love this"

I was walking towards the Baker Street tube station when from across the road I saw that same tree I had seen the week prior, the one with the blue flowers. 

I had to get some photos.

Making a detour, I headed right instead of left. It was a difficult bloom to photograph so I was lost in thought while snapping shots when someone interrupted me. 

"Wow. These are beautiful!"

I spun around to see a well-dressed business man in his 50's. 

"Yes, I love them. I don't know what the tree is, but I love it."

"I'm also going to take some pictures, for my wife...she will love this."

So the two of us were standing there on the sidewalk of a very busy street photographing this beautiful tree. Me and the successful business man.

Snap, snap snap.

"Thank you so much for noticing this tree and stopping to photograph it. I never would have noticed how beautiful it is unless you had done so. I would have walked right past. So thank you."

I was taken back by the sincerity, really. "Uh, you're welcome."

More snaps.

He gets a call on the phone he's taking the pictures with. He accepts the call and leaves, walking and talking hurriedly...somewhere important to be. 

Which is hopefully home, with his happy wife. 

From Where I Sit...An Update

I thought I should give an overview of what's going on from where I currently sit. And for the sake of simplicity of mind, I will do it in bullet-proof format.

Here we go:

  • D4 was turned in a week ago from last Friday. It was anti-climactic, and I am ready enough to chalk that project up to experience. A good experience, but I wasn't able to complete it 100%. For D1 and D3 we had a whole week off from school before they were due, and I used that entire week to get the projects ready for hand-in, and did so successfully (though I was certainly beat afterwards). For D2 I didn't have that week and didn't get the project 100% completed, and for D4 I also didn't have that week. I am seeing a pattern! Having those consecutive, uninterrupted days really helps me tie everything together. It was a very stressful time leading up to the hand-in date for D4, there was a lot going on and I wasn't feeling well for a couple of weeks. So...it is was it is - or was what it was....que sera, sera.
  • Since the D4 hand-in I have been in recovery mode. I think I can say I am recovered, but it did take about a week. 
  • I visited my D7 site (final project we have to source ourselves) last Thursday. It's located in Shropshire and I loved every minute of it! What a wonderful part of the world and what a wonderful family to design for! It's the most challenging site I have encountered to date. 7 acres at the base of a very, very steep hill. Walking around, there's hardly a time your foot is flat! More info on this to come....
  • Friday I was up at 4:30 am (as I was Thursday to catch the early train to Shropshire) to catch a bus, then a train, then a ferry, then a bus, then a train, then a bus. I am here in Holland! Staying in den Haag. I will share my Holland trip with you later in the week.
  • I will probably be back in London for Easter, before taking off again. Going to meet two of my sisters in an undisclosed location...you'll find out when I get there!
  • So over all - I am feeling pretty much recovered, but if my brain wanders back to anything school related, it shuts right down. Not ready to deal with that yet. My mind needs some R&R in the form of a few long bike rides. Good thing I am in Holland.
  • Cheers!

Here's some picture I took of Shropshire...climbed to the top of the hill to eat my lunch.

Designing with Fallen Spring Blossoms

During my wander through Regent's Park I saw this:

It was in 2010 that I became aware of the possibilities of designing with fallen spring blossoms - something I picked up in Japan. Fallen petals collect - and if you plan for it - you can purposefully create 'catch-basins' so that the concentration is emphasized. I love how these diverging paths do just that. 

It was a joyous moment when I happened upon it...or rather - when it happened upon me.

Being Found

As a landscape and garden designer a portion of my existence and growth is spent being found by experiences and moments that take me. And I think I should continue that sentence by saying 'take me...to a place of timelessness' (following up on a previous post).

These experiences capture me, make me stop in my tracks or thoughts and are ones I long to incorporate into gardens and landscapes that I will one day develop. They can be found anywhere. 

That's why I travel and wander through new territories, lands and cultures, there's always an unexpected experience waiting to teach me. 

And I don't think it's about replicating the physical nature of the experience, the space or the moment, as it is understanding how I feel, and why I feel that way - then being capable of translating that feeling into a (domesticated) landscape. 

I had one of these moments as I was wandering through an area in Regent's Park of which I had never passed. There was a rough hedge with an ambiguous path that went behind and I had to follow....it led to an opening of long floppy grass and in the far end of the clearing was one of the most magnificent beech trees. The new growth was magical in color and the late afternoon sun was hitting it just right. 

Following an intriguing and hidden path, turning a corner, coming into an expanse - then happening upon a delight to wonder at...there's one experience to record for the diary.


Fresh: Cut Lawn & Mulch

Springtime is full of all sorts of wonderful scents - and when it comes to the man-made landscape two rise above all others. Within the past 24 hours I experienced both and now my London Spring has officially begun. 

It was about 11:00pm when walking through Potter's Field's Park that I stopped abruptly in my tracks, "What is that?!" A good friend from home had randomly flown in so we were wandering through this part of town when a scent captured me. "It's smells like pine trees...Christmas trees....where is it coming from?" I repeated that about three times before touching some plants that had recently flowered trying to find the source. As I was looking towards the ground in the darkness I saw it. Fresh mulch! "Of course!!" Hahaha. I scooped up a handful and raised it to my nose and took a deep breath. "Aaahhhh....I need a candle with this scent." It seriously is one of the best. I could roll in mulch and be very happy. I am going to get a baggie of it to keep on the small table next to my bed. 

Walking home from school today towards what will be hours and hours of work on D4 before presenting tomorrow - my mind and soul is already tired and I have miles to go. A sleepless night is ahead of me. As I walk with weighted thoughts I come to the far end of St. James Park and continue along Horse Guards Road - and that's when it hits me. Fresh cut lawn! And I realize it's the first time this year.

The scent of fresh cut lawn fills me with memories and ideals. It's takes me back, wakes me up and gives me hope for the future. Such a simple thing can do so much. 

D4 - now I am ready to rock and roll.

After a quick power nap.

Time Stands Still Here...And So Do I

Have you ever experienced a timeless moment? 

And I'm not talking about timeless as it regards to fashion or design, but rather the physical essence, or absence, of time.

Most of my timeless moments revolve around raw nature or people that have been dearest to my heart. It's a powerful experience to live in timelessness. It's effortless; it flows and it's content. 

I have an architect-friend who can make time stand still. I have experienced two of his homes/designs in person and was blessed to be able to create the landscape for one of them. I haven't quite nailed down how he does it exactly, but his use of materials, light and how he organizes shapes and space is fascinating to say the least. It's very affecting and I feel more aware and alive in his spaces.

Last Friday while visiting the Barbican Centre for school we talked about time and how you can speed it up, or slow it down, depending on how you develop your design and the transitions between spaces. It's fascinating to consider the possibilities, really.

But if I am to develop one ability for myself as a landscape and garden designer, it will be that within my gardens and landscapes, time stands still.

And even disappears.

D5 Begins...

We spent today on a new site - D5. It's somewhere (in Godalming) between 25-30 acres (double digits, folks). 

The house was built in 1954 so it's not that old. And the style of architecture is Queen Anne, I do believe (rectangle with four flat sides, all symmetrical). There's an existing small back terrace, a tennis court, paddocks (horses pastures), open fields, stable and storage sheds, and a couple types of woods...and a stream on the far southern boundary. Most everything will be worked, reworked, or re-done with the exception of much of the wooded areas...some land just shouldn't be intervened with too much, if at all.

It's a calm site - nothing too dramatic happening though there is good grade change across the landscape as it slopes away and down with great views to the south from the back of the home to hills beyond. 

I really enjoyed the visit and am pleased to be working out a design for this land that seems to be ambling along. I want to amble with it. The wood's are pleasant to visit and explore and are not eerie at all. I like to wander in raw places, so naturally - when we were left to experience the site solo...I headed straight for the lesser visited areas and discovered some gems. I have a few photographs of my finds...which will probably end up inspiring me in the design. Who knows.

I DO LOVE exploring. It is my play. Coming to a new site allows me to do just that, especially one this big. I am not looking for anything in particular when I explore, I wait to see what finds me. There were a few places I came across today that enchanted me and I just wanted to stay for awhile. Really you need a good few hours to explore a place like this one. Probably at least 3. 4 Ideal and even then! (Where's the tent).

I never know how I will design a site when I leave the first visit. During that first encounter I meet the site, and it meets me - but I make no definite decisions. I do notice views (good and ill) - things I may want to enhance or remove or replace. And it's usually during the first visit that I understand the feeling or emotion which I want to capture in the design..though I see no lines on the ground...

You can't replace the first visit, or recreate it. You can't have firsts twice. They only happen once. So my advice is to take time, plenty of time the first time you arrive to a site to really understand your first impression. And to leave a good first impression on the land as well.

My treasures from today:

Black and White Stripes

I love including black and white stripes into drawing details - I don't know why, but it's been that way for a very long time...if I had all of my doodles I did as a youngster during church on Sundays I am sure stripes would be a continuous thread.

So of course I was thrilled when I came across this image in a google search - I have no idea where it's at - but it's awesome - as long as that's tree-safe paint!

Chicken in Sombrero Driving Armored Car

Chicken in Sombrero Driving Armored Car

This is my first painting (acrylic on canvas paper 2011) - which was also the beginning of The Lorflor Project. (Shout out to all TLP participants!!!) Classic black and white stripes in the corner.

I wonder what this painting would look like if it were turned into a garden.

Thinking and Dreaming, Dreaming and Thinking

Last week I was reading in Gaston Bachlard's The Poetics of Space. And I came across this:

...well-determined centers of revery are means of communication between men who dream as surely as well-defined concepts are means of communication between men who think.

This led me to wonder if there is a difference between thinking up a garden and (day)dreaming up a garden. Thinking vs. dreaming...what could the differences be in relation to developing a garden design and if there are - is the outcome of the garden itself different as well? 

It's been rolling around in my mind subtly ever since. And I do think there is a difference.

This image gives me the impression of thinking and dreaming. It's almost as if one's self is hanging in the balance, suspended...waiting for resolution and clarification - which is what thinking and dreaming may do for us as garden designers. Resolution and clarification.

Anyway, if you want to read the sentence in context you can find it on the very bottom of page 39 - in the chapter, House and Universe.

Design Motivation

I wanted to walk straight on through the red grass and over the edge of the world, which could not be very far away.
— Willa Cather

Why does one design a garden the way one does? What drives the design? What's at the core? What is the heartbeat or the hinge? What gives it life? 

Maybe I could simply ask - what is the motivation for a garden design? (Phew, so many questions).

I have been turning these questions inside-out in my mind for some time - trying to come to a resolution, or maybe just some clarification on the matter. Because to me it does matter.

I remember back to my high school art class - to a project where we were supposed to create a piece of art that was based on a concept - where everything was supposed to mean something. It drove me crazy. I just wanted to produce art. It was that simple. (But what is art and does it have to mean something? I won't even bother with that now...)

I hadn't really learned about, or how to effectively develop, a concept-driven design until I arrived at the Inchbald. There definitely has been some mental adjusting while I have been wrapping my head around it and working with concepts in my projects. I go from wanting everything to mean something or being derived from something, to not wanting anything to mean anything at all!

A few days ago as I was doing some writing, and feeling a bit incompetent for not having developed a strong concept-based design for D4 - I came to this: for me, there are three motives my designs may grow from: 1) a concept, 2) an experience(s), & 3) a story.

CONCEPT: I think my D3 is a good example of a successful concept-led design. Everything grew out of the idea of a kaleidoscope and what that means to me, but in a non-super-obvious way. Which I don't think concepts (necessarily) should be obvious. I like designs that are based on concepts through various layers - if done well they have integrity and are grounded. I feel there is a risk though with concept-based garden designs - if not done properly they can become themes...or worse...theme-park-like..."tried too hard" is a phrase that comes to mind. 

EXPERIENCE: After writing, I realized this is where my D4 is currently growing from, which after having let go of must-have-a-concept-or-else-my-design-isn't-valid, I am really enjoying the design process (you'll see some pictures this coming week of my progress!). There are certain experiences I want people to have who enter the D4 space I am developing. It's as simple as that...views I want to capture, feelings I want others to observe and memories to create. In my gardens want people to experience a time and a place that is all it's own. Maybe Sui generis* is a proper term to describe my motivation for an experience-led design.

 STORY: I am just now thinking that this may be better categorized as NARRATIVE. Sometimes I see my gardens/landscapes as a book, or a story, and various areas around the property are different chapters...each area has it's own personality, it's own identity, but it is related to the whole through various design threads. I think of my Rivendell project back in Utah - that was story-driven I would say...especially when it comes to the planting schemes as one moves through the landscape. I suppose one could say that there is also a concept with Rivendell, being Rivendell - but I would still say that creating the story of the landscape itself speaks more strongly than the concept, though having the concept/foundation of Rivendell did help tell the story. 

Which leads me to say that these three motives can overlap...or one motive can contain one or both of the other motives within it. But to be clear within your head - you can ask yourself as a designer, what is the strongest motive you are working with? Concept, Experience, or Story/Narrative?


While I was working for a landscape architecture firm (shout out to J & B! - Cottage cheese and Ritz Crackers at 3pm forever!) we had a public park we were designing. It was for a community in some lower hills in mountainous Utah County. The level changes at the west end of the park were dramatic as there was a very steep slope down to the road - we were trying to figure out how to work with this grade change. "The edge of the world, let's make this park the edge of the world" - that was my contribution. While visiting the site the first time I could see it - looking towards the west..."leave the view wide open towards the west, no trees. Have the grass extend as wide and far as it can before dropping at an acceptable grade to the road below - it will feel and look like the edge of the world from here!"

Months later - probably even over a year later - I was in the neighborhood of this park...I was curious and pulled over. I walked out to the large grassy area and faced west...and there it was...the edge of the world. It was an awesome and memorable experience. 

So was my "Edge of the World" park concept-led? Experience-led? Or story/narrative-led? 

Over time I'll see how these three motives grow, develop or change. I am still writing it out and turning it over. Maybe another design motive with surface...I'll let you know if one does. 


*Sui generis: is a Latin phrase, meaning "of its own kind/genus" and hence "unique in its characteristics."


Postgrad Discussions

Starting in January each of the Postgrad students led a group discussion - topic was of the individual's choice. There are 6 of us and we just recently finished with the series. I absolutely loved these discussions and always looked forward to the hour we had to explore ideas, thoughts and opinions. 

These were the topics:

  • Gardens Are For People vs. People Are For Gardens (I did a blog post on this)
  • It Takes A Place To Create A Community And A Community To Create A Place
  • The Importance Of Having Garden Space And How It Changes As You Grow Older
  • Is It Possible And Helpful to Establish Personal General Guidelines To Use When Designing Gardens
  • Approaching The Garden As A Plantsman vs. A Designer
  • What Are The Ethics Of A Garden Designer: Innovation and Sustainability

The discussions were lively - and sometimes quite lively. I found myself doing a lot of introspective searching during and more so, after the discussions. I have spent days re-thinking what I had contributed, what others had said, and what I really think about each topic we covered. 

Discussions are helpful tools for me - as one who used to be so nervous to share my opinion, it's good to have opportunities to express my thoughts, without necessarily being held to them. Sometimes you don't know what you think until maybe you say what you don't think out loud or what you do think and you just confirm that you agree with yourself. Simply having someone else there to bend the angle of the light a little so that you can understand an idea differently, or more clearly, is very helpful. 

I will miss these discussions for the rest of the year - and hope there is room for more. MORE MORE MORE!! I could talk about gardens and design ideas and philosophies 'til the cows go mad. 

Moo. 

D4.v.2

1,2,3...4. 4, but version 2.

We are on our fourth design for the school year as you know. I am redesigning the Victoria Embankment Gardens - of which I have shared some history, the brief, and my mood board. 

We are several weeks in, and I had developed a concept plan which I was moving forward with in a mostly-motivated fashion. But all of that has been brought to a halt. I don't know how to put it into words, but I am starting over - the only way I can describe it is lemons, lemonade and going to pick oranges instead and I know that this does not make any sense to you, but in a round-about way, it abstractly makes sense to me. Sort of. I am still sorting it out really.

By having to start D4 again I feel as if I have had the wind knocked out of me. Or maybe deflated is a better explanation. I have been reaching to find my footing for the past 5.5 days and it's slowly, slowly surfacing. Is it though.

I am not upset with starting again (voluntarily), but I do feel puzzled. Maybe confused. A little bit of, "what am I supposed to do?" I am trying to find whatever it is I am supposed to find, on the site and in myself. And when you are not sure what you are looking for, it can be an interesting task to find it. But I am hoping that when I do, I will know it. 

So I spent today on site searching, searching. I walked away with a few hints...but no definite clarity. 

Looking for the sun to rise in my head. It's always darkest before the dawn.

This is me doodling my thoughts at the gardens today while trying to find something more from me and the site.

This is me doodling my thoughts at the gardens today while trying to find something more from me and the site.

No failure here, only flight. 

D4 Mood Board

We are wading thick through D4 now...never a break. 

I have shared the history and brief in a previous post - so now for the mood board, which has been on my wall at school for awhile...

IMG_1776.jpg

I am re-designing the Victoria Embankment Gardens - a space which I feel is already successfully used, but lacks strong cohesion in the overall design. I have 9 existing monuments/statues to incorporate and would like to have a definite presence of annuals and bulbs which will add bold, bright punches of color throughout the year. Also, you'll notice the image of the sack lunch - people love to take a lunch break here - on a sunny day you'll be lucky to find a spare seat! I want to maintain that aspect of the garden and possibly create more seating while including a rich plant palette....lots of flora...a very verdant space; think less public-plaza, more plants and O2.

The image in the center represents subtlety, because at the end of the day, I want a strong, yet subtle experience. The mood of the green-yellow glow is the ambiance/atmosphere I hope to achieve and the way I want people to feel while they are enjoying the gardens.

Doesn't that glow remind you of a wonderful and idyllic summer afternoon?

Doesn't it make you laugh? (Or at least smile?)

Sick Day

So I finally succumbed to a day in bed. 

I have been working around what's been going around for a week now - but finally it took me over - over and down. Bleh.

We are working through D4 currently and missing an entire day dedicated to studio time...not the worst day to miss, but definitely not the best! 

So instead I did what I could manage:

  • Watched a video on dividing Iris
  • Watched a video on dividing Daylily
  • Drank LemSip
  • Did some exploratory writing
  • Checked out the designs for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2014
  • Listened to Gardens Illustrated podcasts
  • Napped
  • Ate
  • Watched an E2 series season III episode: The Village Architect 
  • Napped
  • Organized
  • Listened to RadioWest's program - (Re)Working

Aaannnddddd......that's about it. 

I think I am over the worst - and am looking forward to feeling my best. 

Think it's time for another nap...and another cup of LemSip.