Turquoise lakes, waterfalls in North Cascades National Park

Turquoise lakes, waterfalls in North Cascades National Park

January 18, 2025 After two days last July at Olympic National Park, we drove back through Tacoma, headed north through Seattle, and kept cruising northeast. Just 20 miles from the Canadian border we entered North Cascades National Park, the only one of Washington’s three national parks we had never visited ...
Chasing waterfalls and sunsets (and vampires) in Olympic National Park and Forks

Chasing waterfalls and sunsets (and vampires) in Olympic National Park and Forks

January 17, 2025 Last July, I flew from Austin to Seattle the week before the Puget Sound Fling. With well-planned timing, my husband was descending from the summit of Mount Rainier the same day my plane soared over its snow-capped peak. That evening we met up to begin a national ...
Gold in them thar hills: Aspen season in the Rockies

Gold in them thar hills: Aspen season in the Rockies

October 23, 2024 In all my visits to Colorado and Rocky Mountain National Park over the years, I’d never seen aspens turning gold or elk bugling. Now I have, thanks to a late September trip. Twice we drove from Denver into the mountains to hike trails under shivering golden leaves ...
Tiki-style pond and lush courtyard at the Galicic Garden

Tiki-style pond and lush courtyard at the Galicic Garden

September 12, 2024 If you feel you’ve seen a lot of coverage of Washington gardens lately, it’s true. This is my 26th post about the Puget Sound Fling tour in July. While I have a few more posts about places I saw on my own, including Gillian Mathews’ garden, Seattle ...
Exploring Dan Hinkley's Windcliff, part 2

Exploring Dan Hinkley’s Windcliff, part 2

August 27, 2024 Agapanthus and grasses When you’ve read about a garden and then visit in person for the first time, it can feel both strangely familiar and a little disorienting. As you walk around, you recognize certain features — plants, art, viewpoints — but you also don’t really know ...
Next-door gardening neighbors at Puget Sound Fling

Next-door gardening neighbors at Puget Sound Fling

August 10, 2024 As we rolled into co-planner Camille Paulsen‘s Puyallup, Washington, neighborhood at the Puget Sound Fling last month, my bus was invited to tour a couple of her neighbors’ gardens while the other busload of Flingers worked their way into Camille’s garden first. I was charmed that Camille’s ...
Toad-henge sculpture is king of the hill in garden made for entertaining

Toad-henge sculpture is king of the hill in garden made for entertaining

August 05, 2024 Steep lots, rocks, lush plantings, and mountain views were a running theme at the Puget Sound Fling last month. The garden of Meagan Foley and Mac Gray fit right in thematically, but it also had us exclaiming wow as we walked around the house and spotted this ...
Hopping around Froggsong Gardens

Hopping around Froggsong Gardens

August 03, 2024 Lunch on the first day of the Puget Sound Fling was held on beautiful Vashon Island at Froggsong Gardens, a private home with a 5-acre estate garden that can be rented out as a wedding/event venue. Needless to say, they were well set up to host 100 ...
A woodland art collector's garden on Vashon Island

A woodland art collector’s garden on Vashon Island

August 02, 2024 While touring the Carhart Garden at the Puget Sound Fling last month, I met one of the owners, Mary Carhart, who upon learning I was from Texas enthusiastically told me that she is from Texas too. Decades ago, she and husband Whit moved to Washington for work ...
Fantastical rockwork and koi pond at Japanese Tea Garden in San Antonio

Fantastical rockwork and koi pond at Japanese Tea Garden in San Antonio

May 07, 2024 While hunting for faux bois works throughout San Antonio last month, I couldn’t miss the chance to visit the Japanese Tea Garden in Brackenridge Park. I was last there 11 years ago, and I was eager to see its distinctive rock architecture again. A torii gate of ...
A tradition of faux bois, or trabajo rustico, in San Antonio

A tradition of faux bois, or trabajo rustico, in San Antonio

April 22, 2024 Faux bois palapa at Landa Library Last week I roadtripped to San Antonio to explore the city’s faux bois tradition, or trabajo rústico as it’s known locally. These functional works of art — mostly garden furniture but also planters, shade structures, bridges, and even bus stops — ...
Jenny Rose Carey's charming Northview Garden, part 1

Jenny Rose Carey’s charming Northview Garden, part 1

November 05, 2023 It was a soggy late-September midday at the Philadelphia Area Fling when we visited author and horticulturist Jenny Rose Carey‘s garden, Northview Garden, in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. My bus of 50 (garden bloggers, Instagrammers, and YouTubers) was invited first to have a sit-down lunch in the carriage ...
Pumpkin season at the Dallas Arboretum

Pumpkin season at the Dallas Arboretum

October 28, 2023 While in Dallas last week I visited the Dallas Arboretum to see their annual pumpkin extravaganza. The last time I’d seen it was pre-Covid. Autumn at the Arboretum I was surprised to find that Autumn at the Arboretum has been relocated from a shady grove near the ...
Moose, goose, grizzlies, and more Yellowstone wildlife, part 3

Moose, goose, grizzlies, and more Yellowstone wildlife, part 3

August 17, 2023 Yellowstone National Park was my favorite of all the parks we visited during our spring RV trip through the West. Why? Because the wildlife-watching there is epic! That’s my favorite thing to do, far more than hiking, which I’m always a little nervous about in grizzly country ...
Waterfalls, wildlife, and wonder at Zion National Park

Waterfalls, wildlife, and wonder at Zion National Park

June 21, 2023 Utah and its wealth of national parks drew us west on our 5-week RV trip this spring. Zion National Park in southwestern Utah sparkles as one of its crown jewels. For anyone wishing to beat the heat in canyon country, April is prime visiting season. We arrived ...
Chimney Rock thrills with a-Lure-ing views

Chimney Rock thrills with a-Lure-ing views

December 04, 2022 I’ve always loved the thrillingly high and scenic views from the cracked tower of stone known as Chimney Rock, 25 miles southeast of Asheville, North Carolina. I came here many times as a kid and young adult when I lived in the Carolinas. Privately owned and managed ...