Exploring Chanticleer’s Elevated Walkway, Serpentine, and Bulb Meadow

January 03, 2024

Chanticleer Garden’s rooster theme continues with Marcia Donahue‘s cockscomb-bamboo sculptures, which mark the entrance to the Elevated Walkway garden. This is Part 4 of my visit to Chanticleer during the Philadelphia Area Fling last September.

The winding pathway spirals around a big Japanese maple, which was blushing red for fall.

Green leaves going orangey red

Moss and ferns carpet the ground under the tree, and a curious little house appears beneath the branches — an apple house, built half-underground for chilly apple storage.

Inside, an immersive mural spanning every wall and even the ceiling makes the old structure into a chipmunk burrow of a playhouse. Amid painted fallen leaves, a paper with Chanticleer’s address appears to lie crumpled on the ground.

And a hungry cat peers in at the chipmunks — and you!

One more look at the mossy-roofed apple house and guardian Japanese maple

Late September flowers

Angelica’s maroon umbels

Rattlesnake master

Even a few daylilies

The walkway looks out on a great lawn running downhill from the house to a pond…

…and it delivers you to the lawn near the bottom of the hill.

Serpentine

Here, the Serpentine wriggles into view. Two sinuous beds are planted with agricultural crops like barley or sorghum.

With a creative sleight of hand, silvery willows are pruned to look like gnarled olives, and bushy junipers are meant to evoke the verticality of Italian cypress. It’s a hint of old Tuscany in the Pennsylvania countryside.

At the end of the Serpentine, pleached ginkgos encircle a low stone wall.

What a beautiful living enclosure

‘Fireworks’ goldenrod was sizzling yellow behind the ginkgos.

Bulb Meadow

Further along, a lawn spangled with colchicums came into view. These fall-flowering bulbs look like lavender bouquets set down in the turf.

A romantic scene, with Easter-like color for fall

Up next: The Asian Woods garden at Chanticleer. For a look back at Chanticleer’s dreamy House Garden, click here.

To read about my past visits to Chanticleer’s Elevated Walkway, Serpentine, and Bulb Meadow, follow these links:

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Digging Deeper

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All material © 2024 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

4 responses to “Exploring Chanticleer’s Elevated Walkway, Serpentine, and Bulb Meadow”

  1. Elaine says:

    Love the photo of the cat peering down into the apple house. It’s a cool little structure but at the same time I think I would find being in it a bit spooky. Kind of like going underground into a troll’s house. What a treat to see all the colchicum blooming in the lawn. Adds a lot of interest to otherwise plain old grass.

  2. Lisa at Greenbow says:

    What a wonderful post to read on a cold windy winter day. Thanks so much for a needed boost.

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