Gardens

Meadow Mist

A tidal pond sets the tone for a serene blue and pink garden in York.

From our September/October 2019 issue
TEXT BY VIRGINIA M. WRIGHT
PHOTOGRAPHED BY NICOLE WOLF
Pondfield, York Maine

ABOVE Drifts of cool pastel blooms frame David and Barbara Chase’s view of York’s Barrell Mill Pond, seen here blanketed in morning fog, and Steedman Woods nature preserve on the opposite shore.

Meadow Mist

A tidal pond sets the tone for a serene blue and pink garden in York.

From our September/October 2019 issue
TEXT BY VIRGINIA M. WOLF
PHOTOGRAPHED BY NICOLE WOLF

David Chase’s garden is shaped by his rules: It must be cloistered from the road and neighboring properties. It must frame the view of York’s tidal Barrell Mill Pond in summer. It must vanish in winter so David and his wife, Barbara, can look out their living room window and watch the seabirds that forage close to their shore. Most important, it must bloom in blues, pinks, and purples — no other hues allowed.

Though designed with these constraints, Pondfield, as Chase calls his half-acre plot, has a breezy sense of order. In late summer, when morning fog settles on the pond, clouds of lavender, periwinkle, rose, and burgundy float over the land. This is Chase’s vision, but he relied on Eliot landscaper Jacquelyn Nooney to recommend perennials and annuals and their placements. “The truth is, I don’t really consider myself a gardener, because I don’t know much about plants,” the retired architectural historian admits. “I have a design sense and a particular idea of what I’d like to accomplish in terms of color and bloom period. Jackie’s terrific at figuring out how to do things.”

Barrell Mill Pond is an artifact of York’s mill-town era, created when the York River was dammed in 1726. From their one-story house on its east bank, the Chases can see the famous Wiggly Bridge, which connects York Harbor to Steedman Woods nature preserve. When they bought the place in 2000, their lot was mostly lawn with a few flowerbeds at the edges. They made some modest renovations to both house and yard over the next few years, then around 2011, Chase says, “I got the idea that it was calling for flowers. Plus, I didn’t like cutting the grass.”

He and Nooney embarked on a landscape overhaul, installing a color-themed garden that whittled the lawn to a 3-foot-wide path. One enters through a circular sitting area surfaced in pea gravel. From it, long, gently curving rows of flowers ripple toward the pond. Swaths of color are created by dense horizontal masses of perennials like catmint, purple coneflower, Culver’s root, ironweed, Joe Pye weed, meadow rue, salvia, and Russian sage. The air buzzes as bees from a next-door- neighbor’s hive drift from blossom to blossom. Come late fall, everything except the arborvitae hedges that border each side of the property will be cut to the ground, opening up the view to the mudflats that attract migrating shorebirds.

Designed to be viewed from the house, Pondfield takes it color cues from water and sky. However, the house is the backdrop out front, where it forms a small, enclosed courtyard with a tall cedar fence. To complement the bright-red board-and-batten siding, Chase and Nooney chose hot colors to line the courtyard’s edges: scarlet canna lilies and dahlias, yellow coneflowers and leopard plants, and orange false sunflowers and ligularia. Birch trees provide dappled shade. And trumpet vines, with their big orange-red blossoms tumbling over the top of the fence, offer passersby their only hint of the fireworks inside.

ABOVE Chase walks among verbena, a self-seeding annual favored by monarch butterflies. BELOW Salvaged from old buildings, these wooden urns are painted to look like marble. 

Pondfield, York Maine
Pondfield, York Maine

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP Plants are arranged by height in curving horizontal rows, so the entire garden can be seen from the Chases’ living room window. Pruning shears in hand, Chase approaches his front gate; spilling over the top of the fence are trumpet vines. Honeybees love Bishop of Llandaff dahlia’s scarlet flowers. Tropicanna canna’s striated red, pink, gold, and green leaves are as showy as its tangerine blooms. 

Pondfield, York Maine

ABOVE Drifts of cool pastel blooms frame David and Barbara Chase’s view of York’s Barrell Mill Pond, seen here blanketed in morning fog, and Steedman Woods nature preserve on the opposite shore.

David Chase’s garden is shaped by his rules: It must be cloistered from the road and neighboring properties. It must frame the view of York’s tidal Barrell Mill Pond in summer. It must vanish in winter so David and his wife, Barbara, can look out their living room window and watch the seabirds that forage close to their shore. Most important, it must bloom in blues, pinks, and purples — no other hues allowed.

Though designed with these constraints, Pondfield, as Chase calls his half-acre plot, has a breezy sense of order. In late summer, when morning fog settles on the pond, clouds of lavender, periwinkle, rose, and burgundy float over the land. This is Chase’s vision, but he relied on Eliot landscaper Jacquelyn Nooney to recommend perennials and annuals and their placements. “The truth is, I don’t really consider myself a gardener, because I don’t know much about plants,” the retired architectural historian admits. “I have a design sense and a particular idea of what I’d like to accomplish in terms of color and bloom period. Jackie’s terrific at figuring out how to do things.”

ABOVE Chase walks among verbena, a self-seeding annual favored by monarch butterflies. BELOW Salvaged from old buildings, these wooden urns are painted to look like marble. 

Pondfield, York Maine

Barrell Mill Pond is an artifact of York’s mill-town era, created when the York River was dammed in 1726. From their one-story house on its east bank, the Chases can see the famous Wiggly Bridge, which connects York Harbor to Steedman Woods nature preserve. When they bought the place in 2000, their lot was mostly lawn with a few flowerbeds at the edges. They made some modest renovations to both house and yard over the next few years, then around 2011, Chase says, “I got the idea that it was calling for flowers. Plus, I didn’t like cutting the grass.”

He and Nooney embarked on a landscape overhaul, installing a color-themed garden that whittled the lawn to a 3-foot-wide path. One enters through a circular sitting area surfaced in pea gravel. From it, long, gently curving rows of flowers ripple toward the pond. Swaths of color are created by dense horizontal masses of perennials like catmint, purple coneflower, Culver’s root, ironweed, Joe Pye weed, meadow rue, salvia, and Russian sage. The air buzzes as bees from a next-door- neighbor’s hive drift from blossom to blossom. Come late fall, everything except the arborvitae hedges that border each side of the property will be cut to the ground, opening up the view to the mudflats that attract migrating shorebirds.

Designed to be viewed from the house, Pondfield takes it color cues from water and sky. However, the house is the backdrop out front, where it forms a small, enclosed courtyard with a tall cedar fence. To complement the bright-red board-and-batten siding, Chase and Nooney chose hot colors to line the courtyard’s edges: scarlet canna lilies and dahlias, yellow coneflowers and leopard plants, and orange false sunflowers and ligularia. Birch trees provide dappled shade. And trumpet vines, with their big orange-red blossoms tumbling over the top of the fence, offer passersby their only hint of the fireworks inside.

ABOVE Plants are arranged by height in curving horizontal rows, so the entire garden can be seen from the Chases’ living room window. BELOW Pruning shears in hand, Chase approaches his front gate; spilling over the top of the fence are trumpet vines. Honeybees love Bishop of Llandaff dahlia’s scarlet flowers. Tropicanna canna’s striated red, pink, gold, and green leaves are as showy as its tangerine blooms.