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knew we could, and the best way to start was with those extraordinary (mostly) small gardens of Buffalo.

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      Buffalo gardens have colorful front yards.

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      You’re about to meet some highly individual gardens and the gardeners who created them. Different approaches, different sensibilities, no two remotely alike. You might ask, if these gardens are all so unique, how can there be a Buffalo style?

      Well, that’s just the point: These homeowners weren’t designing “by the book.” They weren’t professionals – some had never gardened before. But the common design thread connecting the hundreds of gardens of Garden Walk Buffalo is the individual artistic sense of the gardeners, their way of personalizing an outdoor space, their love of the objects and plants they bring to it. For this book we’ll show you how they achieved their memorable gardens – not always intentional, often hit-and-miss-and-try-again. These gardeners seem to intuitively understand certain design and artistic rules. They played with their space, with colors and shapes; they found creative ways to overcome challenges, like a neighbor’s ugly garage wall or a large tree in the “wrong place.” Most of all, they loved making something just their own that gave them joy. And they demonstrated for the thousands of visitors to their gardens how heart, persistence and go-for-it experimentation can make a garden fabulous even when it’s not exactly “by the book.”

      Garden peeping is fun

      Tens of millions of people visit gardens every year. International garden tourism expert Richard Benfield reported that “More people visit gardens each year than visit Disney World and Disneyland – combined!” In Buffalo, what began as a simple neighborhood tour of a handful of gardens grew and grew until it comprised 400 gardens that are visited by some 70,000 people each year over a two-day summer weekend. For many of those years we have been there too, as participants or tour guides, and also as interested observers of this remarkable event. We hear the comments of visitors as they stroll through the gardens: “I would never have thought to do that, but it works!”… “Could I try that at home? I want a garden like she has.” Sometimes we’ll also hear a voice lamenting: “I feel so inadequate.” It doesn’t have to be.

      Garden touring doesn’t necessarily teach gardening or garden design. Sally should know; she has led tours and organized garden travel far and wide for many years. In response to what she saw as a real need, she developed a talk called Lessons from Private Gardens (what they can teach you) to help her audiences analyze what they saw during garden walks. The idea was to help people to learn to see – not just look – and to show them it’s okay to be copycats, and how to do it. In his blog, ArtofGardening.org, Jim also tries to take some pressure and guilt off regular gardeners by showing creative, personalized garden projects and explaining how almost anyone can succeed with them.

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      People enjoy getting out and visiting gardens – by the tens of thousands!

      Other people’s gardens are teachers

      Many remarkable gardens are not necessarily for everyday gardeners, but we can all learn from them and get inspiration, joy and fun from seeing them. Neither the gardeners we’ll introduce, nor your authors, want to dampen anyone’s enthusiasm or set the bar so high that a garden like she has becomes impossible. Every gardener, from the slightly scared beginner to the set-in-his-ways old pro, can get great ideas and techniques from special gardens and apply some of them in the garden back home. In this case, stealing is encouraged! Buffalo gardeners are a generous lot, delighted to share. Part of this book is about figuring out who you are as a gardener, what you like, and what you can and want to do yourself.

      The biggest lesson from visiting special home gardens may be this:

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      Great gardens don’t just happen because of good plants and good gardening methods.

      Both factors are important of course (you’ll find the necessary gardening how-to’s in Sally’s “Hort Tips” throughout this book), but the greatest private gardens became unforgettable (and more so over the years) because the gardeners were self-aware. The gardeners had made conscious decisions about their statements, their individuality, their identities. They were also realistic about what their yard and garden had to offer – its permanent features and site characteristics – and they worked with them. They had figured out their own uniqueness and their gardens’ highest potential, and used these to create the “wow.”

      A book of unforgettable gardens

      This book needed to be written. You’ll see why in the pages that follow. You can’t be in the middle of a massive garden tourism happening without wanting to tell the story. You can’t see busload after busload of visitors gasp as they walk into artfully designed, unforgettable little yards, without yearning to show everyone. We even brought a national convention of garden media professionals (GWA: The Association for Garden Communicators) to Buffalo to experience and broadcast the strength of the Buffalo-style phenomenon. These gardens, these gardeners, and their solid gardening how-to needed to be broadcast.

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      Creative use of hellstrips (area between sidewalk and street)

      For this very special book, Sally brings her extensive background in writing, gardening and landscape educating – and much tree hugging. And Jim brings his professional marketing, design and photography skills as well as being a gardener and garden tourism promoter – and a popular host-gardener on Garden Walk Buffalo).

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       How Buffalo-Style Gardens came to be: meet the authors

       Sally

      After an early and intense career in government and commerce in New York, I left that world, returned to my Western New York roots and was happily reborn in the horticulture profession – where I’ve thrived for nearly thirty years. My young family acquired thirty acres outside of Buffalo and named it “Wonderland Farm” (our daughter’s name being Alice). My first garden was 4,000 square feet of vegetables and flowers that buzzed with beneficial insects. But the day came when Alice was grown and my people weren’t eating so many vegetables. I turned my attention to perennials, shrubs and trees. I focused on ecological and ornamental landscaping, and began to help people design and care for their yards. But more than that, I was always teaching, whether on Sunday morning TV for twenty-three years, or in The Buffalo News and Buffalo Spree magazines, which commit significant space to gardening and ecological content. Among professional honors, I was thrilled to receive Buffalo’s Ambassador of the Year award, and to be named Person/Professional of the Year by the New York State Nursery & Landscape Association, by the Professional Landscape and Nursery Trades of WNY, and by the Western New York Land Conservancy.

      In a logical progression, I was asked if I would lead some tours to those famous Buffalo gardens I talked so much about. Surely, I would… and tour buses started coming in from Canada, Pennsylvania and parts beyond. With AAA of Western and Central New York I developed Great Garden Travel, to design trips and take people to see and learn about gardens even farther afield in the U.S. and Canada, and to Europe. Garden tourists tend to be lifelong learners, so we looked and learned, and some of us figured out what lessons we could bring home with us.

      How did all of this lead to the book you hold in your hands? Well, along with my friend Jim, who happens to be an amazing photographer already immersed (mostly buried) in tens of thousands of photographs of special gardens…it was simply time to share

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