A Forest Garden on Somes Pond Mt. Desert Island, Maine
by Stanley Ira Hallet with accompanying text by Judith S. Goldstein
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About the Book
The typical Maine woods is often an impenetrable tangle of underbrush, the result of criss-crossing dead branches from the fir and spruce trees. It appears that only the top of these deciduous evergreens are alive as they block out the sun in its attempt to penetrate the forest floor. If that is not enough, the acidic needles that fall, form a thick forest floor where little new growth stands a chance of surviving. The resulting thicket hides everything including sizable boulders called glacial erratics that haphazardly fell to the earth when the thick glaciers made their retreat. Over the last decade, Judith Goldstein and Jonathan Stein have been hacking their way through the dense underbrush and in the process transforming their part of the a forest into a very special garden. Through a patient but strenuous act of editing, of careful removal, the once impenetrable forest has become an ever-expanding refuge for plants as well as people.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Home & Garden
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Project Option: Standard Landscape, 10×8 in, 25×20 cm
# of Pages: 80 - Publish Date: Jun 25, 2009
- Keywords Mt. Desert Island, Somes Pond, Landscape, forest, garden, photography, sculpture, Maine
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About the Creator
Stanley Hallet
Washington, DC
Former Dean and Professor Emeritus of Architecture, School of Architecture and Planning, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, Studio Head Paris, France, Former Fulbright to the University of Kabul, Former Peace Corps Volunteer, Tunisia, Fellow of the American Institute of Architects