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Little oasis

The garden in front of Mary Frost's bungalow.

The Press Democrat / Jeff Kan Lee
Published: Friday, May 13, 2011 at 3:00 a.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, May 12, 2011 at 2:43 p.m.

Mary Frost's garden is not large. It's a wedge of greenery and contrasting textures and colors, unfurling on that narrow cusp between the porch of her 1920s cottage and the street.

Facts

SPRING HOME AND GARDEN TOURS

Sonoma County Medical Association Alliance Self Guided Tour: Six gardens, from the fabled McDonald Mansion to a Mediterranean landscape in Fountaingrove to a small Roseland oasis. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, May 13 and Saturday, May 14. Light refreshments offered in one of the gardens for $15. Tickets $45. www.scmaa.org, email alliance@scmaa.org or call 707-321-9190. Tickets can be purchased at The McDonald Mansion on McDonald Avenue the day of the tour.

Healdsburg Historic Homes Tour: Seven homes in the historic core of Healdsburg, all within walking distance of the plaza and representing a range of architectural styles. 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. May 15. Sponsored by the American Association of University Women. $35 in advance and $40 the day of the tour. Check in at the Healdsburg Museum, 221 Matheson St., between 11:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. to pick up a wristband or buy tickets. For information visit healdsburgaauw.com.

Food for Thought's Annual Western Sonoma County Home and Garden Tour: Eight diverse stops representing a wide range of lifestyles, from an English cottage to a French farmhouse to a working farm. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 15. $45 includes a map to featured homes. There will be a shaded area at Food for Thought's lush organic food garden for picnic lunches and tours given of the AIDS/HIV Food Bank. $45. Order online at fftfoodbank.org, by phone at 887-1647 or at the Food for Thought Office, 6550 Railroad Ave., Forestville. Info@FFTFoodBank.org.

Gardens with Sculpture Tour: Seven Sebastopol area gardens, each serving as a showcase for a variety of outdoor sculpture. Some pieces are on permanent display in the gardens, others brought in and integrated just for the event. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 22. Cost is $5 per garden or $25 for all. Lunch served at one garden between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. $10 advance purchase recommended. Tickets available at Sebastopol Center for the Arts or at brownpapertickets.com. For information visit sebarts.org or 829-4797.

Anderson Valley Home and Garden Tour: This tour features just one fabulous stop: The Madrones, an estate owned by Jan Taylor Roberts, that has been featured in numerous magazines and includes both Spanish-style architecture, English gardens, a koi pond, landscaping evocative of the Thomas Church designed gardens of Roberts' childhood home. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. June 4. Tickets are $40 and limited to 250 guests. Includes wine pairings, small plates and a display of garden ornamentation by local artisans for sale. Send checks payable to AVAS to Ginger Valen, AVAS, PO Box 222, Boonville. Include a return address. 895-9424.

Mendocino Coast Garden Tour: A fund-raising benefit for the Mendocino Art Center features behind-the-scenes self-guided glimpese of some of the coast's best gardens. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 25. $40. For information visit mendocinoartcenter.org or call 937-5818.

MORE INFORMATION:
www.thegardeningtutor.net
www.scmaa.org

Facts

SMALL-GARDEN TIPS

Plants that grow “up” or tall or vining are good for making a space feel larger. “Up” plants are good for small gardens, too. However, gardeners often choose vines that grow too large for the space or they don't provide a good trellis with enough air circulation behind the vine. Also, people tend to “set and forget” plants; vines usually require guidance so they don't look like a blob. Know what you're planting before you plant it. You don't want things to grow too fast and take over.

Don't put all of your garden ornaments and adornments out at one time, unless it makes you super happy. With too much clutter, the eye doesn't know where to land. With fewer items, thoughtfully placed, you'll enjoy them more. You don't have to get rid of anything special. Just store and change the accessories. Doing so will also freshen up your views.

As you learn more about your plants, you'll see how much water each plant really wants. Some plants, if watered more, will just take over a small space. A little spritz may be all that's needed to keep them fresh without getting too vigorous.

Tuck containers of interesting combinations within your small garden spaces. Containers can also keep some plants better suited to larger spaces from spreading too much. Frost, for instance, has an aggressive red-twig dogwood in a tall pot.

You will want taller plants and big-leafed plants for height, and contrast. But the advantage of a small garden is that you can play with unusual, petite plants that would be overwhelmed in a large landscape. Visitors walking through your garden, attuned to the smaller scale, will notice them more.

It's a mix of her careful selections, including a few mistakes, some heirlooms left from previous generations of gardeners and a little bit of what nature brought and allows to stay.

It's lovely, it's authentic and it sends an inspiring message to anyone who ever went on a home and garden tour just to ogle and dream.

Frost's little front yard garden and colorful bungalow, a bright article of faith and possibility amid Santa Rosa's proud but economically challenged Roseland area, is one of the featured stops on today's 20th Annual Garden Tour, put on by the Sonoma County Medical Association Alliance Foundation.

It is an endearing counterpoint to the headliner on the tour — the showstopping grounds of the newly restored McDonald Mansion, for generations Santa Rosa's most envied address. Tour-goers can enter a lavishly refurbished fantasy of old-world gentry at the mansion. When they reach Frost's cottage on the other side of the tracks, they won't be let down.

She has made the absolute most out of the space she has — yard space she also must share with her husband, Jack Frost, a concrete contractor who collects classic cars. Tour-goers will not only be able to visit Mary's gardens, but see his vintage trucks, decked out in zingy colors.

You'd think it would be a terrible clash, but the pair have made it work.

“The (tour) committee liked the fact that when we moved here we separated the property right away. From the garage back is his and from the garage forward is mine. The committee thought that was so funny they wanted me to put a sign on the fence — ‘his and hers' — with arrows,” she says with a laugh.

Frost is a “gardening tutor,” who works hands-on helping timid, time-constrained or overwhelmed homeowners come up with a maintenance plan or design that works for them and makes them happy. It's a job she invented after work-related injuries to her arms made it impossible for her to continue her occupation as a deep-tissue massage therapist.

She helps her clients choose their own plants, so “they feel a connection to the plant and want to take care of it.”

But she began her own garden, which she uses as a demonstration area for clients, some 15 years before, when she and Jack bought the 900-square-foot fixer for $115,000, fulfilling what seemed like the unattainable dream of owning a home.

Their first task was to clean out the old — shrubs, hedges and Bermuda grass choking their 1/3-acre lot. Although she would later get her associate's degree in landscape management from Santa Rosa Junior College, at the time she was a neophyte, determined only to create a secret tranquility garden for massage clients in front of her little studio.

“I was just having fun throwing plants in and seeing what thrives,” she remembers.

She has some regrets. Jack was zealous with his chainsaw on an ancient fig that was in the way of the fence. It eventually died and was replaced with a persimmon. And she wishes she had not removed an amazing but thorny Pyracantha on the other side of the house by her greenhouse.

“I didn't appreciate what we had at the time. If you have inherited a garden and you're not a gardener, have a professional come in and tell you what you've got,” she advises. “Go slow and wait a year. There are things that are dormant and things that are going to pop up that you might love.”

She offers up her largely hand-watered garden, with all its modest beauty, as both a lesson in how to do things and how not to do things. Some of her own mistakes she lives with because there are still things about them she loves. Like the magnolia that is too close to the house but is gorgeous and the two Deodara cedars, one weeping, one prostrate, that she likes but finds too similar for the same garden view.

She and Jack changed the face of the little house, adding terra cotta tinted concrete paths through the plantings so as to be accessible to any visitors in a wheelchair. And Jack built a large porch inset with deep blue tiles where she can sit and enjoy her handiwork. Hugging the front is a bed of uplifting seasonal annuals. Beyond are more complex plantings.

She loves the intermingling that comes with a garden's maturity, she says, pointing to a spiky Phormium sharing tight space with a softer Euphorbia and declaring it “sweet.”

“I just love playing with color and color combinations and textural combinations, something hard next to something feathery, something shiny next to something dull” says Frost, who came by her attraction to color from her father, a Sebastopol sign painter.

She creates bones and definition with everything from a soft and low Teucrium groundcover hedge, popular in English knot gardens, to a vigorous gnarly hazelnut shrub called Harry Lauder's Walking Stick, which is probably too big for its space but which provides leafy screen from some neighboring apartments in summer and sculptural beauty in winter when bare.

Amid the landscape are artistic notes, often a good way to distract from a problem zone. Her most meaningful is “Tea for Two,” a memorial for a departed sister with whom she shared a love of tea in fancy cups.

Still grieving, she found a pair of cups at the San Francisco garden show, which the sisters loved attending each year. She spray-painted a little bistro set and set out tea in perpetuity.

You can reach Staff Writer Meg McConahey at meg.mcconahey@

pressdemocrat.com or 521-5204.

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