My Tennessee Allée garden is a broad passageway separating a northern hillside native oak garden from the larger southern meadow Madrone rose garden. It is lined with trees, shrubs and wild roses I collected in Tennessee. I spent summers on the farm of an aunt and uncle where I was free to roam the woods and fields and explored everything. So wild roses from Tennessee are planted beneath Hickory and Sassafras trees with other Tennessee shrubs like Sumac along the sides of the allée. These are Rosa setigera and its variety tomentosa, Rosa carolina, and Rosa palustris with many other Rosa species intermixed.
Photos are the property of and copyrighted by their contributor, all rights reserved. Downloading or use is prohibited without the contributor's explicit consent. Photos also copyrighted by HelpMeFind: Please report illegal use.
Garden: Tennessee Allée
My Tennessee Allée garden is a broad passageway separating a northern hillside native oak garden from the larger southern meadow Madrone rose garden. It is lined with trees, shrubs and wild roses I collected in Tennessee. I spent summers on the farm of an aunt and uncle where I was free to roam the woods and fields and explored everything. So wild roses from Tennessee are planted beneath Hickory and Sassafras trees with other Tennessee shrubs like Sumac along the sides of the allée. These are Rosa setigera and its variety tomentosa, Rosa carolina, and Rosa palustris with many other Rosa species intermixed.