One of the most rewarding parts of my "apprenticeship" at Elandan has been the annual Northwest Flower and Garden Show (NWFGS) - America's second-largest gardening convention. Every year, some 60,000+ enthusiastic visitors fill the Washington State Convention Center. They come to see a variety of professionally landscaped display gardens, hear informative gardening seminars, and visit a wide variety of local vendors. Dan and his team from Elandan Gardens have participated in the show building display gardens every year since its creation in 1989. This year's Northwest Flower and Garden Show falls on February 20th-24th. As I prepare to help Dan and his son Will (also a landscaper and stone sculptor) set up this year's garden, I wanted to share my excitement with you all by highlighting the past years where I was able to participate.
Elandan Garden's 2017 entry into the NW Flower and Garden Show - entitled "The Fruits of Our Labor." |
Every year at the start of the weekend before the convention, a giant room in the convention center is set aside for the display gardens. To one side of the bare room: massive piles of saw-dust, multi-ton decorative rocks from Marenokos, massive piles of sewage-based mulch (I've been told it's cheap), and young plants the exhibitors will use for their creations. Among these raw materials, loud trucks, cranes, and front end loaders bustle about delivering pieces of the gardens. Dan especially prides himself on consistently being the only display garden without structures. He instead relies entirely on natural elements as he prefers to do in his landscaping style anyways. Dan even refuses to use the young trees the Flower and Garden Show supplies exhibitors to chose from - old and gnarly were always his thing instead. Instead of young trees and man-made structures, Bonsai Man Dan can always be counted on to bring spectacular trees (large and small!) that have been artistically pruned for decades and other eye-catching natural treasures from Elandan Gardens. Every year he must exhume his treasures from his garden in Bremerton, haul this load over a ferry and through downtown Seattle (imagine the early-morning sight of a huge tree taking up a lane and a half as it is moved by his truck!). Oddities aside, the experience of creating this garden from the barren room also serves as a fun reunion of all of Dan's other apprentices and landscaping friends.
Unfortunately, the year that I took these photos of the set-up, my phone lost many photos from the first day of set-up. Luckily, I still have some photos from that year worth highlighting.
The type of young tree's Dan would never be caught dead using in his display garden - other gardens emphasize other elements though. |
Young contorted filberts for comparison - they grow extremely slowly. |
Bonsai Man Dan always has a sitting area within his garden. Every day of the show he sits working on a bonsai tree and talking with attendees. |
Dan also likes to bring other oddities from his garden. This old Douglas Fir stump he found has rocks embedded in its roots! |
Oddities again: Another beach-borne stump (Cedar probably) from the Olympic Peninsula, and a naturally-dwarfed mountain hemlock from a boggy area of coastal Canada. |
A bonsai pear Dan brought for the show. |
Before shot - the tree Dan styled over the course of the show was a Mountian Hemlock, collected near Mt. Hood in the Cascades. It was also the first tree I everpracticed carving on with Dan's help. |
After foliage was trimmed, wired, and placed. |
Same bonsai, different angle. |
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