Leach Botanical Garden
Dale and Bek's Excellent Adventure Series pt.4
Dale and I really enjoyed exploring this garden; there are many fine plant specimens, including some very established plants that we had never seen so happy and healthy.
Leach does many things well from a design perspective, seamlessly weaving together the more Japanese aesthetic that thrives here along with elements native to the Pacific Northwest. This is a balance that we often try to capture here in our Winterbloom design department as the two marry beautifully - and it was inspiring to see another entity take it on and make it thrive.
I was drawn to the way that the garden incorporated movement and dimension into the visitor’s experience. The path that leads up to the gardens has several beautifully crafted wooden benches that create a sense of movement. It’s as if an element of the landscape itself rose up to say, “Here, sit a moment, but don’t stay too long, keep wandering.” Leach has a lifted circular walkway that takes you through a grove of established trees and it is the perfect use of height in the garden. It gives you the feeling of walking in a canopy or being in a tree fort while giving you a whole new perspective on the garden around you.
At the entrance to Leach, you will find the three-season pollinator garden with plants that bloom spring, summer and fall to benefit pollinators. Included in this area is the only lawn in the garden and it is a good example of how lawn can be used to enhance design with negative space surrounded by other elements and to create an open and inviting area.
Here in the Pacific Northwest, we are blessed with a black basalt rock which looks stunning in a variety of landscapes. I really appreciated how it was incorporated into the garden at Leach, particularly in the woodland area. I loved the way this tall pillar of rock mimicked the trees around it but provided a difference in height and texture and almost a sense of mysticism, making me feel like I should encounter a wandering druid along the path.
The woodland area was one of my favorite spots; it was so well designed to give a sense of being in nature by incorporating large groupings and swaths of plants. You could tell it was thoughtfully created by the height of the plants and the way that sweeps of them set off tree trunks, nursery logs, snags, and the gnarled branches of tree like rhododendrons. There was a lush carpet of Oxalis oregonum that I wanted to lay down and take a nap in.
This urbanite wall also grabbed my attention, urbanite is created by using broken up slabs of recycled concrete to build a wall. As a bit of a design snob, I had always felt wary about using it; but in this shadowy canyon, it seemed like the perfect choice with the concrete ruble intermingling with the vibrant green moss.
Overall, I would say that Leach gave me a sense of romance; the sweeping stone staircases, the crunching gravel paths, the walkway in the trees. Gazing across Johnson Creek at the picturesque stone cabin, I could just imagine John and Lilla holed up on a rainy spring day, dreaming about their property and all that was to come.








