Creative paths and cutting garden glory at Chanticleer

March 03, 2022

Chanticleer Garden enchants through marvelous plant combos and artful garden spaces that evoke a sense of mystery, romance, and discovery. I visited Chanticleer, located in Wayne, Pennsylvania, on my East Coast road trip last fall. This is Part 6 — and the finale — of my blog series about it.

Creek Garden

Both the Creek Garden and Bell’s Woodland appeal to the explorer willing to leave main paths and crisscross Bell’s Run Creek via stepping stones and charming bridges. Tucked amid ferns and other shade-loving plants, starbursts and spirals appear along rugged paths, inviting you to stop and look or perhaps sit on a secluded bench.

This large stone starburst is made, I believe, from slate pieces laid on edge. It’s a touch of woodland magic.

Another slate design leads to a half-hidden pair of benches along the creek.

A smaller starburst segues into a slate path that evokes stitching or links of chain.

This is my favorite, I think — an intimate spiral patio, with stone-slab benches on each side, enclosed by lush, green growth. This could easily be translated into a home garden’s shady corner or along a narrow side yard.

Following the creek into a sunny glade, you come to a toad fountain spitting water into a round pool.

Contained within stone walls, Bell’s Run Creek makes an undulating path through a green lawn, which in spring turns blue with masses of camassias.

A bridge with arching handrails crosses the creek…

…to a stone patio with a round fountain spitting water high in the air. Another spot to sit and take in the view.

Bell’s Woodland

Keep going and you enter Bell’s Woodland, a garden that “celebrates the flora of eastern North American forests.”

Here you find a fantasyland feature — a gigantic “fallen tree” that’s actually a manmade bridge across the creek. It looks as if it’s being swallowed up by the forest, just as fallen logs are.

A plant poking out of a hole in the big “log”

What a creative and playful bridge!

Feeling like a rabbit slipping through a hollow log

And out the other end, where the flared “roots” of the fallen tree make an artful support for vines.

Here you find another of Chanticleer’s unique plant list boxes. This one looks like a hornet’s nest suspended from a tree with bark of metal scales.

The hornet’s nest box even includes faux hornets — making it a little disconcerting to reach out to open the box.

Ta-da! Plant lists for the woodland garden.

And now we’re leaving the woodland and headed for the sunny, floriferous vegetable and cutting gardens. One of Chanticleer’s unique chairs marks the transition, along a path leading to a greenhouse.

Cutting and Vegetable Gardens

The cutting and vegetable gardens occupy the same sunny plot, in view of a picturesque and enormous potting shed that could be mistaken for a horse stable.

Another charming plant list box, this one smothered by orange nasturtiums

More orange! Pie pumpkins dangle from vines rambling through the vegetable garden’s fence.

A group of people were hanging out in the vegetable garden, so I didn’t get pics this time. Instead let’s turn our attention to the blowsy autumn cutting garden.

Pink cosmos feeding the bees

More

And more!

The long view through the cutting garden

Every day, staff use the cutting garden to make bouquets for the restrooms and to float flowers and leaves in water bowls throughout the garden.

The garden is used by others as well.

A cabbage white butterfly on Verbena bonariensis

Big, floofy dahlias

Being face-to-face with flowers is a pretty good way to wrap up a visit to wondrous Chanticleer.

Just how big are these colocasias? Thanks to a trick of perspective, they appear to dwarf two women on a bench, rendering them garden gnome-sized.

It’s all part of the magic of Chanticleer.

This concludes my 6-part series about Chanticleer. For a look back at Part 5, “Every passage is a destination,” click here. And for more about this remarkable garden, visit my Must-See Gardens page and scroll down to Pennsylvania to find my previous Chanticleer posts.

Up next: My visit to brand-new Delaware Botanic Gardens, which features a Piet Oudolf–designed meadow garden.

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Digging Deeper

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8 responses to “Creative paths and cutting garden glory at Chanticleer”

  1. Well that was just wonderful. Thank you for taking us through the garden’s many areas in a slow deliberate manner. When I finally do make it there myself would you recommend planning more than one day to take it all in? Or is one enough?

    • Pam/Digging says:

      I would go on a Friday when they stay open late so you have extra time. Then a full day should be enough to see it all without rushing. Look on their schedule for those extra-hours Fridays — and you can bring in a picnic dinner as well, which you’ll want to do because there’s no food on-site. The only catch is finding parking again if you leave and come back, so come back early — like 4 pm — if you leave to grab some food. Their parking lot is somewhat small and fills up fast.

  2. commonweeder says:

    Pam – thank you for this travel through Chanticleer! I visited a number of years ago and I can see that more has been added to this beautiful garden – all that amazing stone work that you begin with. Clearly I will have to make another trip.

  3. Kris P says:

    Now that’s a cutting garden! I loved the artistic slate paths too.

  4. ks says:

    My big regret is that I didn’t have a full day for Chanticleer. Your overview was great Pam-you showed lot’s of areas I missed.