MÉLANIE'S GARDENS
A bee lands on a flower, a butterfly takes off from a leaf. A garden is when a falling leaf touches the water below. At Mélanie’s Gardens, we take pleasure in making the moments that make your garden.
ABOUT
Hi! My name is Mélanie. I’m a gardener, and owner of Mélanie’s Gardens.
Mélanie’s Gardens is a small gardening company specializing in long-term care of gardens. We design gardens, plant them, and shape their growth according to your preferences. See our services page for more information.
You can contact me by email:
melaniesgardens@gmail.com
SERVICES
Design
Are you looking for a way to translate your ideas into flowers and tree canopies? We are available for garden consultation and design. Contact us to start the conversation.
Installation
Have a design in mind? We can assist you with plant purchasing, delivery and installation. Contact us for details.
Gardening Services
Seasons change, and with them, your garden does too. We can help you with your spring and fall cleanup, pruning, hedge trimming, weeding, and any of your own individual garden needs. Contact us to set up your custom garden maintenance plan.
Blog
About preventing gardening injuries, sod removal and a late March ice storm
Dear Reader,
Last week’s weather was, as to be expected for late March, a mix of things. Light flurries, followed by a hot bright sun, then a cold wet wind brought rain which stayed through the week’s end. North of Grimsby, it was ice. Visually spectacular, but no time to relax for gardeners. Ice reveals the weakest branches.
In a way, for gardeners, spring is like an ice storm. For gardening, I rely heavily on injury prevention, spending time in winter on cardio, strength, and flexibility. But the sudden stress of repetitive actions over long durations is like ice on a tree – immediately revealing.
For example, one morning last week I woke up with a new stiffness in my forearms: only while rotating; the usual motions of my current asana sequence and rowing were unaffected. The ache disappeared within a couple of hours, after yoga and a row. A hot bath and a cold shower ended the day without any further aches. The cause of the issue may have been lifting large bins of yard waste or pruning an old mock orange hedge in need of rejuvenation, both of which I had done the previous day. Either way, I’m adjusting my morning warmup to include that rotating motion with light dumbbells. With repetition, weakness becomes injury, which would sadly interfere with the joy of gardening.
Which brings me to the exercise paradox. Working out is hard work. When I do, I aim to break a sweat, enough so my body is thankful for recovery time. However, last week, the days I rowed before gardening facilitated gardening motions. At the end of those days, I even felt I had more energy left. It seems hard work makes work easier.
I’m no expert on fitness and physical issues. I’ve only seen what trial and error has done for me and my full-time gardening business. This desire to gain strength and endurance has been here from the start; my gardening practice depends on it. It is a constant (yet exciting) process of why’s and how’s. Somehow, putting a body through stress, carefully and deliberately, makes the body adapt and increase its available output. Gardening motions need gardening strength and flexibility. I want to be ready for the ice storm. I’m working hard to make hard work easy, and so far, it seems to be working.
This past week, in a Grimsby garden below the escarpment, I’ve been addressing a large Norway Maple issue: its deep shade makes the lawn underneath sparse, but removing it is finicky with all the roots. Near the tree trunk, I’ve been doing it by hand, loosening grass with a fork then separating it from the lovely Grimsby loam with a hand hoe. Thankfully, forward folds, lunges (new this winter), rowing, and sitting meditation have made kneeling sustainable.
That said, the adage holds – work smarter, not harder. I’m considering other tools and techniques for the tree periphery. A gas-powered sod remover would be excellent (it walks itself), if it weren’t for the surface tree roots. It’s also 300 pounds. A manual sod cutter requires some elbow grease, but I can carry it in one hand. We’ll see how it goes. That’s this week’s project, when the rain stops.
Have a great week!
Thanks,
Mélanie
About designing a garden for an interior designer and an architect.
A few years ago, I was invited to design a small front garden for the home of an interior designer and an architect. They brought to the table an aesthetic opinion on the garden space and language to communicate it (their drawings were immensely helpful). I brought plants and some knowledge of their change over time.
Designing gardens, like music, movies, magic and endless others, is a time art. Time arts are designed in a time frame; Things can be arranged in order of happening, which allows for endless effects.
Some of the effects were planned. As garden design turned into garden care for the new front garden as well as the established back garden, I got to see them happen. The front garden’s short bergenia and sweet woodruff, tucked in the inner, home side of the garden, bloomed in spring, followed in mid-summer by the tall roadside periphery of Echinacea, Black Eyed Susans and Daylilies. The four Daylily varieties were timed to bloom on the outskirts first, then symmetrically converge on the center. It was fun to plan and fun to see.
But other effects were unpredicted. They’re what keeps me coming back to gardens season after season, year after year. Last week I did a spring cleanup at this garden. It had been hot for a few days, high teens, even twenties. NOTL is always a few degrees ahead of Grimsby, so the yellow crocuses were already deep in bloom. We had planted them last fall to extend the back garden’s bloom time.
This back garden lines the private back road, and continues as a narrow strip on the other side of their driveway. Miscanthus and Karl Foerster are the background, Black Eyed Susans and Japanese Bloodgrass are the foreground, and the crocuses are sprinkled along the front edge.
The garden wears its dry grasses over the winter, for mass, texture, structure and that lovely tan colour. This early spring, for the first time, the grasses cast their long slim shadows on little yellow crocus petals. When the occasional strong gust of wind blew through, they moved like brushstrokes on a canvas, like tiny elusive eclipses. The awakening garden, wispy and bright. A first touch of spring on the thawing ground.
Every year, cutting down the dead grass stems left behind a carpet of large round tan polkadots on aged brown mulch. Not that it wasn’t a nice early spring garden. I’m a fan of tan with brown, and its rough texture is grounding. But bringing in crocuses has changed it. Rough to soft, dull to bright, dead to alive, winter to spring. This year, that little pop of yellow is something different.
So what’s the takeaway here… A little bit goes a long way? Plan ahead and notice what happens? Take away what you like. Mine is that I enjoy designing with designers. We may specialize in different fields, but we share, if not a common language, common dialects. We, on some level, understand each other. And that allows us to make yellow crocuses bloom on a winter carpet.
Happy Spring, gardeners!
Thanks for reading.
Mélanie
How I became a gardener
Summer Sundays are introspective. I spent the last one sitting in our garden, eyes half closed, half open, watching the halo of pollinators crowning the towering, flowering Joe Pye weed.
I’m attempting to master the difficult art of sitting still. I’ve already vacated my lawn chair to get a little table, then iced tea, a large book on charcoal barbecuing, and a second, smaller one on the tiny lives of mosses. Eventually persuaded by lethargy, I observe the want of anything else pass by like the sparse clouds dawdling across the blue sky.
Beyond Joe Pye’s blooms is a deciduous tree canopy. Both are cloud shaped; one light purple, the other dark green, synchronously swaying in the breeze. I’ve been looking for a way to introduce this gardening blog, a space meant for answers to the many gardening questions I field as a professional gardener. And here, in the synchronicity of clouds, the large green one, the small fuzzy purple one, and the cloudy thoughts floating across my mind, I’m finding a hint of a beginning.
I didn’t intend on becoming a gardener. If you asked my younger self what she wanted to do when grown up, she might have said to write film music. Or perhaps to bake. The future was far and filled with endless options. Time passed. I wrote music, I baked for a coffeehouse, but the wind blew, the clouds flew across the everblue sky, and after seven years of study and work in Waterloo, I moved to Niagara.
There is something about Niagara; the air, the glacially deposited soil, the inescapable microclimates of the Escarpment… it makes magic happen in gardens. Just take a stroll down quaint Niagara-on-the-Lake on a summer evening, a walk along the plentiful orchards on fall apple days, or even in the middle of winter, clinging to dislodged escarpment boulders along the Bruce Trail, see evergreen ferns enjoying a sunny winter noon. Niagara’s gardens are impossible to ignore. I fell in love.
I found my way to a college at the base of the Escarpment, an introduction to caring for plants. Planting, growing, hedging, splitting, transplanting, designing gardens. I grew my own business, Mélanie’s Gardens; a name and frame for the gardens I care for.
The sun hides behind a cloud, the clouds of pollinators crowning Joe Pye dissolve into shade. The bees are still there, I just can’t see them. I know where I was, where I am, but how did I get here? What was the southerly wind which carried me here, why did I stay? And, in the spirit of lethargic introspection, what is love, anyway?
Like the purple Joe Pye clouds juxtaposed with the giant green cloudy canopy, gardening made sense to me. I transplanted the time-based art of writing music into time-based planting designs, adapted the craft of kneading dough to working soil. But it was all transferable, what did I unearth in gardens I hadn’t found before?
Gardening breathes to the rhythm of seasonality. There is only so much time for spring cleanups. Seedlings waiting for last frost. Deadheading to be done before seeds ripen. Once winter comes, so comes rest, a balance known by nature since the dawn of plants. My thoughts follow suit, ideas followed by reflection, clouds by sky.
Perhaps that’s what made me a gardener, the space between doing, when between garden work I watch the world unfold around me. Seeing it all buzzing, floating like clouds across the still blue sky. I still don’t know what it is, but I’m in it… in love.
So, you ask, how did I become a gardener? In the passage of clouds, I seem to have found some clarity. Wanting to create, I grew a garden. Needing rest, I set down a lawn chair on a sunny summer Sunday and stayed still until the sun set and the evening mosquitos ushered me back inside.