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We got our start working with houseplants and still love cultivating our indoor garden. It’s full of tropical and arid plants that are especially therapeutic to tend to. I also enjoy growing my lemon tree outdoors in the summer and bringing it in for the winter when it flowers. And in late winter, on the cusp of spring, I bring in a few cut branches of magnolia in bud and bloom to invite spring to come a little sooner.

Every garden needs a…

At least one fragrant plant that can transport you to another place. A manageable hose that won’t drive you crazy and a good place to store it.

Favorite hardscaping material:

In place of a patchy lawn, Dirt Queen designed a native garden for a Ditmas Park client, with areas for dining and gathering around the fire. Photograph by Brent Wood.
Above: In place of a patchy lawn, Dirt Queen designed a native garden for a Ditmas Park client, with areas for dining and gathering around the fire. Photograph by Brent Wood.

Bluestone and pea gravel. We love the combination and both are regionally appropriate materials.

Tool you can’t live without:

Adam: San Angelo bar—you never know when you’re going to come across a chunk of concrete buried in a backyard.

Jarema: My grandpa’s giant watering can.

Go-to gardening outfit:

Jarema: Coveralls and clogs.

Adam: I think we both aspire to dress like Monty Don but haven’t quite been able to pull it off yet.

Favorite nursery, plant shop, or seed company:

Pleasant Run Nursery. They have an amazing native plant selection and we get to hang out with the nursery dogs that jump into our golf cart.

On your wishlist:

Carex woodii, Mt. Cuba Center’s top performing carex, but we still haven’t seen it in person. [See Trend Alert: A Carex for Every Garden.]

Not-to-be-missed public garden/park/botanical garden:

Jarema’s sister lives in Santa Cruz so we’ve been fortunate to spend a lot of time there over the years, and the UC Santa Cruz Arboretum & Botanic Garden has an amazing collection of plants. One moment you’re immersed in an Australian landscape, the next moment you’re in South Africa. It’s a great opportunity to see a totally different type of flora without traversing an ocean.

The REAL reason you garden:

An East Village terrace with a daybed for late afternoon siestas. Photograph by Max Burkhalter.
Above: An East Village terrace with a daybed for late afternoon siestas. Photograph by Max Burkhalter.

Jarema: As an artist, it was a pivotal moment when I realized that plants were the medium I had been searching for. Gardens are restorative–places for growth, life and healing. Working with plants has been an incredibly healing process for me.

Adam: Connecting with the land—its past, present, and future. Every moment I spend in the garden, I understand how all of this works just a little better.

Thanks so much, Jarema and Adam! (Follow them on Instagram @dirtqueennyc.)

For our full archive of Quick Takes, head here.

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