Garden Virtually Meander Along the Pathways of Martha's Perennial Garden, a Landscape of Delights When fate (in the form of a mole-cricket invasion) forced Martha to relocate her vegetable plot eight years ago, she filled the space with a different kind of sustenance: wave after wave of breathtaking perennial flowers. Today, the landscape bursts with a rainbow of romantic blooms from spring through fall. Wander in for a top-of-the-season tour. By Melissa Ozawa Melissa Ozawa Melissa Ozawa is the features editor at Martha Stewart Living. Editorial Guidelines Published on March 17, 2021 Close Photo: Ngoc Minh Ngo In Martha's perennial garden, you'll find no shortage of colors and textures. Blousy roses climb tuteurs and arbors, spires of purple-and-pink lupines rise up regally, vibrant poppies punctuate the landscape, and chartreuse sprays of lady's mantle spill onto paths. "This is a garden of variety," says Martha of her perennial flower plot in Bedford. Animated with color and abuzz with pollinators, the 150-by-90-foot spread teems with more than 200 different types of blooms. "I'm a collector," she says. "I love to learn by having as much diversity as I can." The expanse is an ode to Turkey Hill, Martha's former home and garden in Connecticut, which itself was inspired by trips she made to Claude Monet's at Giverny, in France. It originally grew vegetables, but she had to relocate them after an onslaught of mole crickets, and set out to create her "dream garden" in their place. She started in 2013, transplanting a dozen or so old-fashioned roses from Lily Pond, her former home in East Hampton, N.Y. Then she began to fill the quadrants with flowering perennials. To create a painterly scape, she varied colors, heights, textures, and bloom times, and plotted plants at random, rather than in a formal grid. Today, she takes care to keep any single species from overtaking the scene, cutting back the roses and asters to keep them from getting too large. "Gardens have to be tall and short, bushy and thin, clustered and individual," she says. They should also be ever-changing. "I like to experiment," says Martha, who hunts for seed packets on travels and scours catalogs for unusual varieties. New discoveries join favorites saved from the previous year. Aside from tubers, bulbs, corms, and an occasional nursery find, she and her gardeners grow most varieties from seed, a practice that is more cost-effective than buying plants in pots, and lends more variety. "I love to see how the garden changes," she says. "It's always full of surprises." A seedling pops up, giving rise to an unexpected combination, or a cultivar stretches its footprint. But the uplifting effect is constant. "It's the last garden you see when you leave the property," says Martha. "And the first one to welcome you back home." Martha Takes Us Inside Her Greenhouses at Bedford and Teaches Us How to Groom Two Popular Houseplants Sturdy Fences Above, the sun rises over Martha's perennial garden, which is enclosed to protect it from hungry herbivores. "Good fences make good gardens," says Martha of the sturdy, 8-foot-tall steel structure. "I'm not one for quaint fences," she says. "I prefer them to be utilitarian and well-made, and I do think this one is pretty." Contrasting Colors Ngoc Minh Ngo Martha contrasts purple 'Universe' alliums with white-bearded irises and red Oriental poppies (Papaver orientale), whose seeds she originally saved from Turkey Hill. Rust-Colored Plants Ngoc Minh Ngo In one spot, rust-colored Baptisia 'Cherries Jubilee' echoes the bronzy hue of Rodgersia foliage and firework-like Allium schubertii. Plenty of Purple Ngoc Minh Ngo In another, she incorporates lavender B. 'Bubbly' with 'Universe' alliums and the feathery white Aruncus (in the background). "I love Baptisia and must have 10 different varieties," she says. All About Martha's Border Garden, a Continual Show of Gorgeous Blooms Roses Galore Ngoc Minh Ngo Babcia Helen, Martha's paternal grandmother, raised and propagated dozens of roses at home. Martha followed suit, winning blue ribbons from the Nutley Women's Club (in New Jersey) for ones she grew herself, and has been a "rose addict" ever since, growing hundreds around the farm. Here, 'Constance Spry', the fragrant David Austen variety, winds up a tuteur she brought from Turkey Hill. It blooms profusely every June. How to Grow and Care for All the Roses in Your Garden Elegant Pathways Ngoc Minh Ngo Martha recently updated the plot's two main paths, edging the sides with black granite bricks that elevate and define them, but also help prevent soil and gravel runoff after heavy storms. Next she laid down stone dust and pea gravel. Inspired by the way nasturtiums blur the paths' borders at Giverny, she planted lady's mantle (Alchemilla mollis and A. erythropoda) to do the same. Reddish-pink 'Benjamin Britten' roses climb an arbor. Seasonal Interest Ngoc Minh Ngo A bird's-eye view reveals the garden's intricate swath of lupines in varying shades of pink and purple, poppies, and globes of alliums. Over the course of the season, these blooms will fade and make way for summer flowers like lilies, hollyhocks, asters, and daisies. For easy access to weed, cut blooms, and deadhead, Martha recently added stepping stones. "Otherwise you trample your plants and feel bad," she says. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit