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Getting My Head Around Homer
Made sense. As I would understand more clearly over the next several days, if you live in Alaska, you don’t leave during the summer. If you ever leave at all. Before I get too wrapped up in my story and ensuing Homer, Alaska, photo garden tour, here are this month’s suggested readings from the archives: “Always plant a tree at the same depth it was in the pot” Back to my report following my trip two weeks ago to Alaska…with a one-hour layover before boarding my connecting flight to Homer, I wandered into the fine little bookstore within the sleek Anchorage airport, and quickly came to realize what all tourists visiting Alaska come to realize: At some point during my visit, I will be killed and eaten by a bear. One’s only prayer is that these two events occur in that order. Certain Death By Bear was driven home to me while perusing the books lining the shelves in the “Local/Alaska” section of the bookstore, where one may choose from the following titles: Danger Stalks the Land—Alaska Tales of Death and Survival (snarling grizzly bear on cover)
Perhaps I should stay away from the books—it’s only a half-hour flight to Homer—and buy a local magazine instead. A nearby rack features the July/August issue of Alaska magazine, slick and thick, on the cover the smiling face of an attractive, middle-aged woman. Then I realize she must be the subject of the glaring cover story: “SURVIVOR! Petra Davis Reclaims Her Life After a Bear Nearly Killed Her.” To hell with sodas, neck pillows and reading material, is there a shop that sells big guns and ammo?
I’m in Alaska because last winter some nice people representing the Homer Garden Club had e-mailed to see if I would be the guest speaker kicking off their third annual Gardener’s Weekend, August 1 & 2. Not much to ponder about that proposal. They’d flown me from Minneapolis as far as Anchorage, with the connecting flight to Homer, so I decided there was no backing out now. The flight from Anchorage to Homer is a little twelve-seat turboprop, and even though we take off at 9:30 at night, once we gain altitude to 3,000 feet out the window I can see clearly across probably 500 miles, the vast Cook Inlet, cargo ships, mountains, mountains, mountains. It’s not quite dusk.
Picking up my rental car at the…quaint Homer airport, I fill out the rental form, declining additional liability insurance, accepting the damage insurance, then initial at the bottom of a separate, stern form telling me that I will be charged two hundred and fifty dollars if I bring the car back smelling of fish. Alaska state motto on license plate: The Final Frontier The Renegade Gardener feels right at home. Adams Residence The tour of six gardens was scheduled for Sunday afternoon, but gardeners being among the most gregarious folks on earth, I was invited to stop by several gardens on Saturday that were not on the tour. The first garden I visited was created by Brenda Adams, a marvelous blend of color, form, texture and artful accessories.
Garay Residence How hip is that? That’s Homer, happy home to hippies, artists, musicians, cowboys, fishermen and women, young professionals, old amateurs, and a quiet, mysterious colony of Old Believers Russians (Google it).
Moose, as I soon learned, are the number one critter problem for gardeners in Homer (and across much of Alaska). What moose can do to a garden makes deer damage seem trivial. Deer eat rose blossoms; moose eat the entire rose bush to the ground. Gardeners in the lower 48 become tearful when they discover that during the night, a deer nipped off some of the tulips. In Alaska, Moose will eat your trees, shrubs, perennials, lawn grass, bird food, bird feeder, and just about anything in a garden not made of ceramic or stone. Which is why most of the gardens I visited were bordered by heavy-duty, seven-foot tall moose fence. Larson Residence
Even though I was safely ensconced in my familiar Zone 4, I kept seeing the unexpected—giant heuchera that more resembled specimens I might see in Seattle’s Zone 7 than the meager specimens I coax to life each summer in my Minneapolis Zone 4. Delphiniums skyrocketing six or more feet tall, pulmonaria, ligularia, and perennial geranium on steroids. 70 degrees is about as hot as it gets in Homer in summer, with a growing season totaling 75 days, in a good year. Not only that, but Alaska has the weakest sunlight of any of the 50 states. One thing you won’t find at the local Walgreens is sunscreen. What in blazes was going on? Clyne Residence
“You should have been here in mid-June,” a fellow tour mate remarked at some point. “A lot of us don’t even sleep. You can garden all night, if you want to.” Ah, of course. In Homer, June 21—the summer solstice—features a whopping 20 hours of sunlight, ample time to get the chores done. It all started making sense. Even last night, the final day of July, I had been shooting decent garden photos at 9:30, without use of a flash. In the lower 48, we’re used to the sun setting, as in going bye-bye, off and away to the other side of the planet, where it brings morning to China or Australia or whatever countries lie opposite. In Homer, in summer, the sun doesn’t really set, it ducks behind the mountains for a quick cigarette, its orb out of sight but its rays still dancing overhead. This was why I was seeing so many plants I was not familiar with, and plants I knew but couldn’t possibly grow, plants that hate extreme heat but need sun, such as Himalayan poppies (they’re everywhere). And this was why I was seeing so many varieties of hosta out loud and proud, growing in full sun without a smidgen of sunburn. Dungan/Carroll Residence
As I get to know more people on the tour, I begin to see what a club they form. Not a private club; whether born in Alaska, or a relative newcomer, if you’ve made the plunge, you’re an Alaskan, and I sense that acceptance of those who arrive from “outside” to take up residence comes readily. There are only two scenarios whereby one moves to Alaska: after a great deal of thought, or on a whim. Either way, you need to be a certain type of person, adventurous, confident, self-supporting. You need to be assured, and you need to be strong. Telling family and friends that you are moving to Alaska, after all, is a rather stern goodbye. You probably won’t be popping back to Des Moines for your niece’s high school graduation. So what you get is a great gaggle of independents, paradoxically drawn to each other by the singular trait of non-conformance. I ask a woman in her mid-30s where she had moved here from. Colorado, she replied. Interesting, I said, noting that Colorado is not without its charms. Too many people, she said. Reinhart Residence
Fell Residence
Hahn/Stearns Residence
This amazing day concluded with a reception at Bear Creek Winery and Bed and Breakfast, where we all met up for appetizers and bountiful amounts of wine. This is also where I stayed while in Homer, and it’s fabulous—charming host, delightful accommodations and beautiful gardens. And far too short a trip. I was in Alaska a grand total of 48.5 hours (the curse of operating a landscaping company in summer). Really stupid, I know. But I’ll be back. We all want to go to Alaska. If you go, fly first to Anchorage, rent a car, and hit Homer and the rest of the towns on your way down the peninsula. Denali and Mt. McKinley can wait. Half the time, you can’t see a thing for the cloud cover, anyway. And once you get inland, the bears really have the advantage. Word is, they don’t attack, they wait for you to freeze to death, then suck on you frozen. LINKS: www.homeralaska.org To link to this page, use this URL: http://www.renegadegardener.com/content/167-head_around_homer.htm |
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