More is more: designer Roger Raiche’s personal garden

Last weekend, I attended the Pacific Horticulture Society’s Summit 2016 held at the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts in Santa Rosa, CA. Under the motto “Changing Times, Changing Charges: Shaping a New Environment,” the two-day event featured a series of diverse presentations exploring “how gardens are evolving in the face of climate change, with inspiration coming from our natural surroundings as well as from innovations in water conservation and land management.” The speakers ranged from landscape architects with experience in private and public projects (Thomas Rainer, Michelle Sullivan) to garden designers (Bob Hyland, Marilee Kuhlmann) to nursery owner and plantsman extraordinaire Phil Van Soelen, owner of Cal Flora Nursery in Sonoma County.

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Roger Raiche’s house: subtle clues notwithstanding, it’s often difficult to know what treasures might be hiding behind fences and gates

Sunday’s program included a self-guided driving tour of Sonoma County with more than 30 stops—everything from private gardens, public gardens and spaces, nurseries, wineries, and even “on the road” attractions such as bakeries, cheese and ice cream shops. Knowing that the public places are open and accessible year round, my partner-in-crime Kathy Stoner of GardenBook and I decided to focus on the private gardens. Sonoma County is large (1,576 square miles, 4,080 km²) and driving between the gardens took time. In the end, Kathy and I managed to visit three of the five private gardens. As is so often the case, we underestimated how engaging gardens can be and how easy it is to lose track of time when you get lost in plant-related reveries.

Our first stop was the private garden of Roger Raiche, a well-known Northern California landscape designer and 2011 California Native Plant Society Fellow. This is how it was described in the 2016 Summit program:

This relatively new garden—planted September 2013—is located in a sunny part of Armstrong Valley near the Russian River. It was designed by Roger and David McCrory, partners in Planet Horticulture Garden Design, and includes many large plants moved from previous gardens around the San Francisco Bay Area.You’ll see how they provide a thread of continuity, but reimagined. The compositional framework is bold with ebullient foliage plants and large urns, reflecting some of the best work of this design team. A plus: This garden backs into the Armstrong Redwood State Natural Reserve, giving you an opportunity to see well-preserved acreage of coastal redwoods.

And this is how I experienced it.

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A long and narrow side yard leads to the back garden. Spaces like this are challenging to landscape. Robert and David have done a masterful job creating vertical interest by espaliering or severely trimming shrubs and even trees like yews.

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Great use of tall vertical containers to create different planting levels

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The backyard was surprisingly small—quite a bit smaller than my own, which isn’t big by any standards. What it lacked in size, it more than made up for in plant volume. Clearly, Roger and David are proponents of the “more is more” school of design.

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Strappy and spiky, what’s not to love?

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Agave xylonacantha

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LEFT: the most purple Yucca ‘Blue Boy’ I’ve ever seen

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This groundcover attracted a lot of attention. Most people (myself included) had no idea what it was. It turns out it’s variegated St Augustine grass (Stenotaphrum secundatum ‘Variegatum’).

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More Stenotaphrum secundatum ‘Variegatum’

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This purple mimosa (Albizia julibrissin 'Summer Chocolate') caught quite a few people by surprise. Planted right next to the fence, Roger clearly intends to keep it small. It’s normally a 20-foot tree with a wide canopy.

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Deuterocohnia-like terrestrial bromeliad (no idea which genus or species) and variegated soft-leafed yucca

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Heuchera and Brunnera macrophylla 'Jack Frost', two plants that have a hard time surviving in Davis (too hot and dry) but seem to be doing OK in the gentle climate of Guerneville, just a few miles from the Pacific

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This is the first of several enormous urns in this garden. I have no idea how you move something this large (and no doubt heavy).

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According to this article on Planet Horticulture, Roger Raiche’s and David McCrory’s landscape design company, this is an olive oil urn from Portugal called a tijana.

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Fatsia japonica 'Spider’s Web’. Doesn’t it look like it accidentally got paint splattered all over it?

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Mahonia ‘Soft Caress’ and a cool lantern

We’re in the corner of the property now where the (narrow) backyard we just walked through meets up with a much larger space. I believe the house is a duplex and the space we just entered is technically the backyard of the 2nd unit. I must admit I was a bit perplexed by the layout—but who cares when there’s more room for plants!

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Roger Raiche talking to visitors. I had a whole slew of plant ID questions but never got a chance to talk to him.

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Variegated Yucca aloifolia

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There’s that ‘Spider’s Web’ again!

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One of my favorite vignettes. I’d take this planter in a heartbeat and put in my own garden. I think the spiky beauty here is Yucca linearifolia.

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Begonia boliviensis ‘Santa Cruz’—time to try it again

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Seen outside the back deck

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More is more is more!

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Another masterful combination of texture, color and height

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And another olive oil urn. I wonder if the blue rocks are glass?

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Urn # 3. To the left is a small vegetable bed with veggie starts from Annie’s Annuals (I recognized the tags immediately, LOL).

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Same urn, different perspective. This corner of the (larger) backyard seems to be the nursery. There were lots of potted plants in all sizes. I saw several things I really wanted, but they weren’t for sale.

I always find it interesting to see what professional landscape designers do in their private garden spaces. Based on the photos I see on Planet Horticulture, this garden seems very true to Roger and David’s design aesthetic. The main takeaway for me is this: It’s OK to pack them in tight. Dense plantings suppress weeds and reduce the amount of water needed. That’s all the incentive I need to buy more plants!

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Comments

  1. More is more...buy more plants. Good takeaways from this cool garden. I've had good luck ordering glass rocks like that from http://www.recycled-rocks.com/Glass-Boulders-p/boulders3.htm Thanks for sharing this plant packed place!

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    1. Peter, as I was walking through Roger Raiche's garden, I thought of your garden more than once :-).

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  2. Lot's of beauty here! That's the tallest Yucca ‘Blue Boy’ I’ve ever seen, and wow, I love how the variegation on the Yucca aloifolia shows all the way down the trunk, via the bases of the old leaves.

    Buy more plants!

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  3. There are a lot of images to unpack there! Off in left field perhaps but I kept wondering what the circular silver objects used as edging material in the back garden are? I wasn't certain even after enlarging your photos. They looked like abalone shells to me.

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    1. The circular objects are indeed abalone shells! They were a recurring motif throughout the garden. Maybe inspired by Lotusland?

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  4. Thanks for posting these pictures. I attended Summit 2016, but didn't make it to Raiche’s garden - too many choices, too far apart. Rainier's talk was a real eye-opener with lots to think about. Did you see Josh Williams' garden? It was a strong statement of what can be done with California natives. Again, thanks for the pictures.

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    1. The driving tour definitely covered a big chunk of Sonoma County!

      I did see Josh Williams' garden and LOVED IT. I had never seen an all-native garden that looked so lush and beautiful. Look for a post later in the week.

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  5. great overview Gerhard..I didn't take nearly enough photos here-though I did manage to document everything I wanted to copy !

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  6. I need one of those urns -- HUGE! Loved this tour, thanks for sharing!

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    1. Our of sheer curiosity, I'd love to know how much one of those gigantic urns costs.

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  7. That garden urns my praise.

    Sometimes more really is more, but no doubt considerable experience and skill is involved keeping more from becoming less.

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  8. I wasn't sure which Raiche garden would be on the tour. Didn't he once have a garden with a feature dubbed Helicotrichon Hill? Obviously, this one is a recent project and already full of their inimitable style. Loved this tour, thanks Gerhard. Gets the award for best use of blue ceramic pigs ;)

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    1. I think Roger Raiche had several gardens in the Bay Area over the years. Many of the plants in the Guerneville garden came from those earlier gardens.

      As for the blue ceramic pigs, very people people can pull that off!

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