By JoAnne Skelly — Last week I went on the first Douglas County Master Gardener Garden Tour with my friend Peggy. The Master Gardeners organized a viewing of five local gardens with great efficiency of signage, directions and volunteers staffing at each site. There was even an artist painting at each site.

JoAnne Skelly

The first garden was the Blomma Flower Farm. The owner, Tiffany Jones, is breeding new “zinnias for beautiful forms and colors useful for gardeners, farmers and florists.”

She has bred many soft muted pastels that are uncommon in home gardens. She collects, processes and sells the seed. Not only were her test gardens beautiful with hundreds of blooms, but her home landscape was also lovely and peaceful with fruit trees, roses, dahlias and vegetables amid lawns, trees and quiet seating areas. I loved her white garden building, with its arch of baskets around the door and vines climbing the sides.

Blomma garden shed.

The second garden was smaller and more manageable, similar in size to most home gardens. It had been transformed into a pollinator-friendly yard with vegetables and flowers growing in both the front and back areas. The homeowners had chickens and an ingeniously sail-covered patio.

Blomma beautiful zinnias.

At the next garden we walked past a lush bed of daphne. I could imagine the fragrance when it was in full bloom. As we walked around the side of the house past a glass potting shed, we were astonished with a spectacular west-facing mountain view. A chicken habitat lined one side of the yard, with trees and flowers for pollinators on another side. A thriving vegetable garden was along the west wall. 

Walking down the drive of the fourth garden, we discovered Sierra Shadow, a lavender and honey farm. Filled with flowers for the owners’ bees, they created an astounding lavender maze. They hold workshops on using lavender in the kitchen, for wreath making and on jewelry making and other topics. They have La Petite Boutique de Lavande, that is open Fridays and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. This lovely little store is filled with lavender and honey products, French linens that make you feel like you are in Provence, and other unique gifts. Their website is www.sierrashadowslavender.com/

The final garden had a large shady patio and lawn area and big trees with flower beds throughout. I fell in love with their greenhouse made from recycled wood, doors, windows and even an old red sink. There was a sign on the wall that said, “And into the garden I go to my mind and find my soul.”

That says it all.

— JoAnne Skelly is an Associate Professor and Extension Educator, Emerita, University of Nevada Cooperative Extension. She can be reached at skellyj@unr.edu.

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