Mt Cuba DayTrip Article

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DAYtrip

Mt. Cuba Center, the Perfect Walk in the Woods

by Cheval Force Opp

From Corn Fields to Wildflowers

Come for a walk in the woods. It is that perfect day. Woodland paths slope gently and the quiet calms our voices to softer tones. Surrounding us, wild flowers are strewn under dappled shade. So many blooms cluster near the path, we slow our stride to stop and admire them. In the distance, a gurgling stream tempts us to walk further in anticipation of marsh flowers. Welcome to a Mt. Cuba Center in Delaware. Mt. Cuba Center is an acclaimed horticultural institution specializing in Piedmont native wildflowers, shrubs, and trees. The Appalachian Piedmont region includes the gently rolling hills that lie between the Atlantic Coastal Plain and the Appalachian Mountains of the eastern United States. Mt. Cuba began in 1935 as the private estate and garden of Mr. and Mrs. Lamont du Pont Copeland, gar-

den lovers and native plant collectors. Together, they lovingly invested over 50 years of expertise and resources to create a series of gardens rooms combining formal spaces with woodland walks eventually adorning over 600 acres. The couple transformed the corn fields and pasture land surrounding their Colonial Revival-style residence with the guidance of premier landscape architects, including Thomas Sears, Marian Coffin, and Seth Kelsey.

Woodland Tours by Appointment

In 2003, the stately brick Copeland family home was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. Entry to the property is through an iron gate of oversized stylized wildflowers that portends the elegant plants to come. After a 15-minute video giving the Mt. Cuba Center history and mission, you join a small group for a docent-led walk. A typical mile walk

takes two hours, with significant plants identified and questions answered by the knowledgeable docents. The elegant home, now the administrative and educational building, is complemented on the south side by several garden rooms seamlessly integrated with wide brick paths. Exiting the back door onto a generous terrace, the gently sweeping hills are tree-laced. It is tempting to stop there, sitting on one of the garden seats, relaxing into a silence broken only by birds trilling, but there is much to see. Turning right gives a glimpse of the tall gum tree allee, a short walk down brick steps. Pausing before turning the corner of the house allows a good view of Andre Harvey’s sculpture, “Samara Turning with the Wind,” a 10-foot-tall bronze maple seedpod anchored on a three-foot base of local stone. It is a striking focal point, while, on both sides, sheltered under the native trees are pinkshell azaleas, fothergilla, shadSUMMER 10

WASHINGTON GARDENER

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Mt Cuba DayTrip Article by Kathy J - Issuu