We’re visiting with Beth Britt today.
I have been gardening on a tiny lot (about an eighth of an acre) in a western suburb of Boston for the last 25 years. I had helped my parents and grandparents in their vegetable gardens when I was a kid in North Carolina, but I didn’t know anything about ornamental gardening when my husband and I bought this house. Very few of the plants I started with remain, with the exception of several trees.
My biggest challenge has been dealing with the scores (no exaggeration!) of groundhogs who live in the stone wall behind our house and throughout the neighborhood. After years of trial and error, I’ve now mostly learned which plants they do not eat, although sometimes the newest additions to the groundhog clan will try things that the older generations shunned.
This series of photographs shows a partial view of my front garden peaking in spring and summer. All the plants in these photographs have proven unpalatable to the groundhogs in my neighborhood.
I plant about 500 tulips in the front garden each year, treating them as annuals. This photo from the middle of May shows Mazus reptans (Zones 5–8) blooming in the lawn. The two low evergreens on either side of the steps are Thuja ‘Mr. Bowling Ball’ (Zones 3–7).
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