Showing posts with label Filoli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filoli. Show all posts

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Spring Fling! ... Filoli


In the knot garden, Celtic patterns are woven with emerald germander, violet-hued Japanese barberry, soft lavender, and silvery santolina with its perky yellow flowers.

Filoli ... glorious in Spring!

Historic site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation

Photos: Filoli


Spring Fling takes place on Saturday, March 20, 2010, an event especially for families!

You'll have a rare chance to see historic greenhouses sheltering plants that have been in Filoli’s collection from 1920 to the present: Carnivorous species, unusual bromeliads, orchids, and edible tropical plants, among them. 

There'll be activities for children, garden docents on-hand to answer questions, music, puppet shows and more! 
Link to Filoli on:  Garden Travel Buzz  
- column on the right -

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Filoli Fall Festival - Brilliant Color and Heirloom Fruit


Filoli 'Gentleman's Orchard,' photo by Jerry Barrack
6.8-acre landscape with over 670 trees: An eclectic connoisseur's collection of European and American varieties of fruits.
Filoli Autumn Festival - October 3, 2009

Kieffer Pear
Garden lovers from near and far are acquainted with the Filoli estate's celebrated landscape, the elaborate formal gardens embracing a wisteria-draped mansion designed by Willis Polk.

I would guess, however, that Filoli's orchard is less well-known. It is, in fact, the largest, and I must add, lovingly tended, heirloom orchard in private hands in the United States.

Families and friends in-the-know 'calendar' Filoli's Autumn Festival well in advance, in order not to miss this fundraiser with live music, orchard tours, floral design demonstrations,
and a host of activities to take part in for kids and adults.


Climbing Hydrangea

Sunday, March 8, 2009

San Francisco Travel, Filoli Estate and Gardens

Photos Courtesy : Filoli

Built in 1917 for William Bourn III and his wife, Filoli was subsequently bequeathed to the National Trust for Historic Preservation by the Roth family.

The Georgian revival mansion, designed by Willis Polk, stands as a centerpiece in the estate's sixteen-acre formal garden, created by landscape designer Bruce Porter together with Isabella Worn.




Photos Nilda Gardon-Lindorfer: Filoli

The house's U-shaped floor plan features two axes and a long hallway that parallels the valley beyond. The garden's overall design with its north-south axis repeats the line of the mansion's transverse hall.

Especially lovely to behold in Spring, the garden plan unfolds in a series of walled rooms, with terraces and lawns, parterres and pools complementing the natural vegetation and vistas surrounding the estate.

The renowned Yew Allee demonstrates William Bourn's affection for Ireland's Muckross House, home to Bourn's daughter and son-in-law.  More than 200 Irish yews grown at Filoli were started from cuttings taken from Muckross. The yews, along with espaliered apple and pear trees lead to the High Place, an open-air theatre facing south, where ancient columns form an inspiring backdrop. 



Filoli opens its gates in early spring, when exuberant displays give rise to the mansion's clematis and wisteria-draped portico and terrace balustrades. The grounds teem with tulips and daffodils, azaleas, camellias, wildflowers and a trove of blooming shrubs. By late spring, glimmering dogwood and 'Sunburst' honey locust play a prominent role, while flowering cherries and laburnums are memorable focal points.

The Sunken Garden presents a balancing act between meticulously groomed hedges, soaring trees, profusely blooming container displays, and ornamentation - petite, cast-lead water maidens. Gazing at the vast hilly terrain visible in the distance seems to reenergize the spirit, as it completes the tableau. 

In the knot gardens, Celtic patterns are woven with emerald germander, violet-hued Japanese barberry, soft lavender, and silvery santolina, with its perky yellow flowers.

Italian Renaissance in style, the Walled Garden holds a central place among Filoli's gardens. This partitioned realm encompasses three garden rooms, each one characterized by its own indelibly romantic ambience.

The property surrounding the estate is a haven of undeveloped woods and fields that can be explored on hikes with Filoli's nature docents. Located in Woodside, 25 miles or so south of San Francisco, the microclimate is a nearly ideal environment for a garden of Filoli's caliber. William Bourn's vision for this land has continues to enthrall visitors to the estate. On another note, Isabella Worn remained involved with the plantings until the age of eighty-one. Together with owner and benefactor, Mrs. William P. Roth, the two lovingly nurtured Filoli's gardens for decades, carrying on Bourn's spirit.