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Feliciana Explorer • Tuesday, March 17, 2015 • Vol. 5, No. 11 • Published Weekly • Circulation 17,000 • felicianaexplorer.com • © 2015
Audubon Pilgrimage Begins Friday By Anne Butler
The forty-fourth annual Audubon Pilgrimage March 20, 21 and 22, 2015, celebrates a southern spring in St. Francisville, the glorious garden spot of Louisiana’s English Plantation Country. For over four decades the sponsoring West Feliciana Historical Society has thrown open the doors of significant historic structures to commemorate artist-naturalist John James Audubon’s stay as he painted a number of his famous bird studies and tutored the daughter of Oakley Plantation’s Pirrie family, beautiful young Eliza. This year’s featured homes include three country plantations and one historic townhouse, plus two significant state historic sites. Open this year for the first time is Retreat Plantation, built around 1823 on property of Sarah Bingman and named Soldier’s Retreat by her second husband, Clarence Mulford, a U.S. Army captain at nearby Fort Adams. A 1½-story Anglo-Creole home with handsome architectural details set on a bluff overlooking Little Bayou Sara, it has been restored by
Afton Villa Gardens
present owners C.B. and Mary C. de Laureal Owen, continuing seven generations of Percy family occupancy since 1859. At the opposite end of the parish is Dogwood, in the Thompson Creek delta on lands initially granted by Spain to Jean Cloccinet as part of a failed resettlement of Acadian exiles. The house was begun in 1803 by George Freeland, an early settler from the Carolinas. His initial hewn-log shed-roof house, two rooms flanking a hallway and topped by a sleeping loft, has been enlarged over the years and is home to the family of Rob and Missy Couhig. An exuberant Carpenter Gothic Victorian home approached from US Highway 61 via an impressive oak avenue, The Oaks was built in 1888 by Judge Thomas Butler, Confederate veteran, planter and police juror. From his family’s isolated plantation he moved to be nearer St. Francisville’s amenities, embellishing his new house with stained glass, fanciful gingerbread trim, dormers and turrets. When the last of his nine chilSee PILGRIMAGE on page 4
The Artist as Gardner: Walter Imahara By Patricia Stallman
For Walter Imahara the act of art is ongoing. At play is the quietness of the garden in winter and what he calls the “miracle,” the return of leaves and flowers in spring. The actual view in February of the evergreen and deciduous trees coexists in the eye with the anticipation of rebirth, an exquisite equilibrium. Each season, Imahara says, has its own beauty. Of the 54 acres he owns, Walter Imahara has carved and molded 10 acres to present his collections of Azalea (over 3,000 plants), Camellia, Crape Myrtle (over 25 varieties), Holly, Magnolia and Oak
James Imahara with three of his sons at Afton Villa Plantation.
varieties in their native alluvial soil. The garden includes as well 11 species of palm trees. Past the Camellias, visitors may view Cypress Point for “spectacular views of the vast natural swamp.” (Imahara Botanical Gardens) The elevation of the garden site is 122 feet, Imahara says. The Mississippi River, which is three miles away, has a water level of forty-plus feet, “so this land is really high.” The land to the west of the river, he says, was under water; winds from the west blew the dust that built his property after the Ice Age.
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