Telluride: Renewal and Reinvention
It makes perfect sense to us. If you live in a harsh climate eight months of the year and the other four are a continuous spring, it's a good idea to make the outdoors another room of your home to renew your spirits. Most of the long-timers here surround their homes with pocket-sized gardens under the cover of towering spruce, willows, and aspen trees. There are few lawns; the landscaping tends to be the consummate 'rock garden' with exotic lupine (Russell Hybrid above left), columbine, bleeding hearts (right), poppies, and bachelor's buttons (below article) alongside native plants with fanciful names like bunny brush, junegrass, beardtongue, and tufted hair. Several wildflowers, like the cornflower blue bachelor's button are endangered but carefully being nurtured back into the landscape. The resulting effect on tourists like us is wonderment. That the people survive the harshness of alpine winters is astonishing enough, but the plants render us silent with reverence that such hardy folk possess the hope to presume spring can happen again and again. Telluride, a model of nature and man, renewing and reinventing. This article is co-authored by Steve Chambers, AIA, a Dallas residential architect. Photos of his designs can be found at: http://chambersarchitects.com






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