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Backyard Havens![]() Photo by John Abernathy
Minnesota’s growing season may not be long, but that hardly limits a hardy gardener.
Ted Bair and Harvey Filister
Although the backyard evolves each year, its water features—a pair of ponds and a pair of streams—are set. “When I was digging out the hole for the last pond, people thought I was totally nuts,” Bair says. “It looked like I was putting in a swimming pool, which I essentially was.” Much of the excavated dirt went to good use elevating parts of the landscape. The arbor seating area, for instance, now sits on a knoll near the spring.
Pathways made of Chilton stone (quarried in Chilton, Wis.) connect the arbor space to the rest of the backyard. “All along you have garden spots, or places to pause, so you’re not necessarily spending a lot of time in any one area,” Bair says, noting that the design does not include a large garden “room.” “It’s really all about little vignettes where you can sit and take things in and then move on. They pull you through, and your curiosity makes you want to keep going.”
Bair rarely finds time to sit; for him, planning and planting are his raison d’être. Last year he enlarged the upper pond and added “floating rocks” to traverse it, and he’s pondering what to do next. Although his travels inevitably include visits to exquisite gardens in other big cities, “my garden is the one place I’d rather be than anywhere else in the world,” he says. “I love it on a rainy day and I love it in all the seasons. Oftentimes I walk through the garden, even in the middle of the winter, to study the structure of the trees. It’s a constant for me.”
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