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I love both. Draughn and I wanted a classic English garden with cascades of flower groupings making an impressionistic painting. ツ But I also love the Japanese concept of shibumi--simple, subtle, and unobtrusive beauty--which can be applied to landscape and involves a certain amount of order. And I love Zen gardens, of course.
Same question right back at you.
(Going to look up shabumi. Learn something new every day)
I am taken with asymmetry, and the scattered, sprung -up thing.
I can't think of a question right now. You go.
You once created a meadow of seed grasses and flowers which draw pollinators.
Sadly, no, but I have many blossoms which attract bees
You once had a Venus Flytrap, but it did not do well
I did have one, yes, and it did very well (witness Audrey in The Little Shop Of Horrors--lol).
You had a Venus Flytrap, and you felt sorry for the flies.
No. My plant expired.
You have a windw box or a raised bed on the porch for small patches f springtime growing
True.
You love impatiens because they bring bright color to shady areas.
Yes!
Geraniums are easy, hardy, and attract bees
Yes!
Hardy and interesting perennials like dicentra make you happy!
True
You usually eat your kiwis, halved , with a spoon
Gosh, no. I do it sloppy: slit and peel the skin, and then slice down the stone, missing some.
You don' leave your baked potato skin on the plate, after eating the flesh out of it
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