Dianne Larrivee’s home in Raymond is surrounded by greenery, colorful perennials, shrubs and a water garden continuously recharged by two waterfalls. Her oasis is one stop on this year’s Raymond Garden Tour.
“My
all-time favorites are peonies and lady slippers,” she said. Larrivee
cultivates several varieties of peony, including white, pink, yellow and red;
and another, her most revered, a 100-year-old French variety from her
grandmother’s garden. “It’s mostly sentimental,” she explained, “My grandmother
grew these. It has a high degree of smell. When I put together a bouquet, I
slip one of these in to give it a perfumed scent.”
Nearby
are eight varieties of rhododendron, bridal wreath spirea, and a yak plant
which transforms from pink to white over two weeks in spring. Run a finger
along the underside of its pointed leaf and it feels like a soft felt blanket.
Asked
about the planning and design of her numerous gardens, Larrivee maintains it is
somewhat of an art form, a talent learned from her mother, trial and error and
magazines. A garden scheme is the product of arrangement and organization. For
example, she advises prospective gardeners not
to ignore the height and layering of plants. First, consider that green leaves
are prominent all season long, while the flowers bloom for only short periods;
so vary the types, sizes and textures of the leafs. Secondly, the taller plants
need to be placed in the back, even if their heights vary when first planted.
Larrivee
also combined day lilies and daffodils that have back-to-back blooming times in
order to extend the spring color.
Larrivee
believes her main attraction will be the water garden that she designed,
planted and even dug herself. The pond, or “water feature” in garden lingo, contains
pond lilies, lotus and reeds. Lining the water are Cyprus, a multi-colored
Japanese maple, clematis, yellow and pink lady slippers, jack-in-the-pulpit and
purple trillium. Spanning the pond between the heavy flow waterfalls is a
humped wooden bridge.
The
Raymond tour will be held on Saturday, June 27 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Patrons
will start at Raymond Village Library and receive a “ticket brochure” which
will provide directions and describe the nine gardens. Each garden will have
volunteer guides. The tour is self-guided and the gardens can be visited in any
order. One stop, at King’s Grant, will offer refreshments and a visual tour of
Raymond’s history. The tour winds up at the Hawthorne House at 3:30 p.m. with a
strawberry festival and program featuring two speakers from the McLaughlin
Garden.
Tour
committee member Elissa Gifford said, “Each garden is a visual representation
of the owner’s personal interpretation, not only of what gardening means to
them, but of their own work in developing its meaning.”
Tickets
are $15 in advance, $20 on tour day, and can be purchased at the library. All
proceeds will benefit Raymond Village Library, a 501©3 (non-profit).
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