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Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Garden of Sculptures

Fellow bloggers, did you ever have a post you started working on, put aside and then forgot about it for one reason or another? This one was like that. It's not that we didn't find it a fun day trip, but that we saw so much!

In late spring, we took a 45-minute trip from Nashua to Lee, NH to visit a public garden, which wasn't always a garden. That's because, what's now home to an amazing garden of plants and unique sculptures was once a 37-acre dairy farm that had been abandoned for about 40 years. 
These fields, where cows freely grazed, is now home to a public garden where whimsical metal sculptures like these above capture the imagination and they were everywhere we looked.

Jill Nooney & Bob Munger
Bedrock Gardens is a 20-acre garden situated on a former dairy farm that dates to the 1700s. In 1980, the land was  purchased by husband and wife, Jill Nooney and Bob Munger who started planning and planting their garden vision in 1985. Nooney is a clinical social worker, sculptor designer and metal fabricator with an extensive knowledge of gardens. Munger is a retired doctor and a self-described tinkerer who designed many of the gardens walkways and water features. They designed, created and maintained the garden for over 25 years and designed the landscapes to showcase Nooney’s very unusual sculptures. The gardens showcase over 1,000 varying plant species, many in perennial beds that are arranged by texture, color, and size. 

Former farm house (Internet source)
The former dairy farm included a farm house, circa 1740, historic barn, 3-hole outhouse and 37-acre of scrub forest. Over the next two decades, 20-acres were developed into a large ornamental garden. The first years were spent clearing out acres of poison ivy. The scrub growth and grown-in fields were cleared, access roads were established, and woods were thinned, trimmed, and managed under forester and arborist advice. Wooded areas were lumbered to create a trail system. In 1991, a wildlife pond was built, and work started on perennial and shrub beds. Walls, paths, water features, structures, and topographical improvements, have been added over the years. Currently, two-thirds of the property is garden.
In 2013, the Friends of Bedrock Gardens was formed as a non-profit foundation. Its goal is to promote and support the gardens and operate it as a public garden. All board members are volunteers. The gardens are financed by admissions, donations, grants and memberships.
This year was the first season that Bedrock Gardens operated as a nonprofit public garden. Our admission passes were obtained through the Nashua Public Library website where the Friends of the NPL provide funding for library patrons to visit museums, science centers and other attractions within NH and Boston at reduced costs.
Bedrock Gardens includes botanical specimens and unique sculptures into a landscape journey. Scattered throughout the 20-developed acres are small and large pieces of sculpture created by co-founder Nooney. Many of the sculptures consist of old agricultural tools.
Exploring the gardens is designed as a journey along a three-quarter mile path through distinct garden areas accented by pools, fountains, seating areas, pergolas, long vistas, and quiet spaces. Unusual plants 
collected and nurtured by the co-founders are found throughout the gardens, along with benches, chairs, and tables available to rest or enjoy a picnic lunch.
The gardens contain many different features, all linked with pathways. There’s a spiral garden, perennial beds, a small garden with a pond and fountain, and the barn garden, lined with a towering hedge, and a wall of 26 small sculptured metal creations made from old farm tools.
The Wiggle Waggle (below) is a 200-foot water channel planted with lotus and lilies. Throughout the gardens are examples of Nooney’s sculptures and artwork.
Not to be outdone by his partner, Munger has his own special sculpture ↓ hanging in the gardens. In case you were wondering what it was in life, it's a complete horse skeleton.
The day we visited, the gardens were relatively uncrowded with no limit on time spent exploring. While a printed guide was available, we mostly enjoyed just wandering around. One of the paths led to this Buddha statue ↓ placed under a giant metal halo suspended from tree branches.
One area within the gardens houses a large collection of metal parts of varying sizes and shapes (below). Most likely some of these will eventually be used to create more one-of-a-kind sculptures. This is recycling in a major way.
Bedrock Gardens was a place we will most likely revisit one day. There was so much beauty in the garden itself, and it was even more fun seeing the metal sculptures dispersed throughout.

19 comments:

Bijoux said...

Well, you know I love visiting gardens and to find sculptures throughout is an added treat. I love to see recycled art like that.

Jon said...

It's amazing and inspiring to see how much artistic creativity can be extracted from scrap metal and previously unusable items. The photos are great. I especially love those tall majestic trees and the two chairs with the lion statues.

Vee said...

Intriguing place. You did well to describe it all and I can see why that would be a challenge.

William Kendall said...

Well worth the visit.

Emma Springfield said...

A fascinating place. It combines beauty and whimsy.

Billy Blue Eyes said...

Reminds me of the sculpture garden I visited here in the UK

Linda G. said...

What a neat place!

My name is Erika. said...

These photos look so familiar. I joined as a member this year. I love visiting. You should go back another time to visit as everything changes over time, Thanks for sharing these photos.

Veronica Lee said...

What a fascinating place to visit!

Love the cool sculptures.

Margaret D said...

Interesting sculptures and looks a good place to visit.

David M. Gascoigne, said...

I chuckled when I read that the flower beds are arranged by texture, colour and size. Miriam always says that if she gets really mad at me one day she will rearrange all my books by colour and size! So far, I am happy to say, she has not inflicted that on me.

nick said...

What a wonderful place. I love all the sculptures, especially as some are made from recycled agricultural tools. The horse skeleton is remarkable too. The gardens are a real labour of love for sure.

Edna B said...

It looks like a very interesting place to visit, but I wonder where all the cows went? I think I'd like the cows better than the metal sculptures. The flowers are beautiful though. You have a super day, hugs, Edna B.

Rob K said...


What a fabulous location. I love all those metal sculptures! Thanks, as always, for the great information.

Lowcarb team member said...

It certainly looks a fascinating place to visit, I enjoyed your photographs, thank you.

All the best Jan

Lee said...

How beautiful! Fascinating and so very interesting! Thanks for sharing.

Take good care. :)

diane b said...

What an interesting garden with an interesting history. The sculptures are many and varied.

DUTA said...

We, seniors, have free access to parks and gardens, but things are relatively modest here, where I live.
The place you describe in your post is big and versatile. Definitely worth a visit!
Usually, picnic spots capture my eye, and I like the one with a table and three chairs in your post. The Wigle Waggle water channel looks quite impressive! The various sculptures spark a lot of interest in the visitor. A day well spent!

Sallie (FullTime-Life) said...

What a fabulous place -- beautiful and whimsical -- two of the things I love best about gardens. I would love to visit this place. (And yes, I have definitely had the experience you mention of forgetting posts once started.)