
September 2009.
Giant Bonsais, Giant Gnomes and a Myriad Flowers.
What do you think when you hear me talk about giant bonsais and giant gnomes? You look doubtful and shake your head, "Hey, dear teacher, are you pulling my leg?" I know it sounds like a contradiction in terms. Is there a smaller tree than a bonsai, is there a smaller dwarflike creature than a gnome? Certainly not. But I have seen them - I have a living proof: look at the picture above. I went to visit giant bonsais and giant gnomes among a myriad flowers. The place that houses them for exactly 177 days is the Brandenburg State Garden Show. I have been there so I can tell you all about it.
Before I begin with my botanical lesson let me explain some parts of German geography and local history. You all know that I live in the German capital which is Berlin. In 1989 my little West-Berlin hometown reunited with its eastern counterpart and together they swelled to become Berlin again, 892 square kilometers with 3.4 million inhabitants and a federal state in its own right. It lies almost in the heart of another German state, Brandenburg, which is much less populated (only 2.5 million inhabitants) but comprises a larger area (29,476 square kilometers). To be honest – all these numbers don't mean anything to me, I just figured some of you might like the facts. (You who like figures and facts please raise your finger so I know whether this makes any sense. Thank you!)
North of Berlin, easily to be reached by train in about 30 minutes from city center, lies Oranienburg which until the end of the 12th century A.D. was nothing but a very small village amidst swamps and woods. It was called Bötzow then, home to fishermen and peasants who had a hard time to make a living since the soil was barren and the strong cold winds from the east dominated the climate the whole year round. And it was not a safe place. It was finally discovered by dukes and other noblemen from mid-Germany who built a fortress here in order to defend themselves against the "savage people" from the east called Slavs. Many centuries later a Dutch princess came here because of a mighty duke who ruled over his little empire now called Brandenburg. It was Louise Henriette, born in 1627 in The Hague, married against her will to Friedrich Wilhelm in 1646. But she was intelligent and accepted her fate. She made Friedrich Wilhelm progenitor of Prussian kings. She had an excellent taste, a good education, a strong will and no desire to get bored in the Brandenburg wasteland.

Louise Henriette discovered Bötzow in her husband's Brandenburg and made it her new home. Since her family name was "Oranien" she renamed Bötzow "Oranienburg" which actually means "the Oranien's Castel". She wasted no time and had a pretty castle built surrounded by a splendid park, a real pleasure-garden complete with lakes, fountains, flower-beds and little woods. The next 300 years the castle and the park survived in a more or less good condition. But the potential of the area was always clearly visible, and this year, 2009, Louise Henriette's park was selected to host the Brandenburg State Garden Show.
A garden show, you must know, is all about flowers and trees and vegetables and herbs and fruit, it is all about green stuff and blooming and blossoms. For us people from the north it is about sun and being outdoors without freezing to death. This is why we celebrate a garden show only from late spring (April) to early fall (October) which explains the 177 days of duration of the Brandenburg State Garden Show in Oranienburg. When you are a garden aficionado like me you will come here to feel close to Mother Nature and the many wonders that our little planet earth unveils before our very eyes when we only want to see.
One of the garden wonders is the Giant Bonsai. It took 30 years to grow and it is more than 7 meters high. So actually it is only a bonsai by shape. But this is the beauty about it – you can solely detect it by its sheer height. It then invites you to climb upon the hill where it is planted to overlook the flower beds. And it is then that you notice the gnomes. They stand right next to the tree and they look grumpy as only dwarves can do.
A garden gnome is the most genuine German invention besides the cuckoo clock and the German shepherd (when you are willing to call a dog breed an "invention" that is). The first of this type of little fellows was made in the mid-18oos by a potter who wanted people to beautify their gardens. In no time garden gnomes conquered the German, the French and even the English front lawns. Traditionally they wear bright red pointed hats and grow long grey beards, thus resembling Snow White's seven dwarves.
When I was coming of age in the 1960s we used to loathe the garden gnomes. For us there was nothing more "bourgeois" and despicable than the crocheted dust-protected toilet rolls in the back of the Volkswagen cars and the happy smiling brightly painted family of garden gnomes in suburb garden plots. I used to roll my eyes and shake my head in disgust, "How can you stand such useless stuff?" But the years went by and taste changes. I made my peace with garden gnomes and bougeois thinking. Actually I was delighted to see the little fellows in the Brandenburg State Garden Show. These were not the ordinary type, I noticed immediately. An artist I once met in his studio near my office (Kurt Mühlenhaupt) had created them and in the process, he let them grow from their usual size of no more than 20 centimeters to almost a meter. So they can rightfully be called Giant Garden Gnomes.

Have you ever thought why people enjoy parks and gardens? I pondered the question a lot because I missed a stroll in the park very much when I lived in Phnom Penh. For me, the "Hun Sen Park" is not a real park, it is only a strip of grass between two lines of a very busy street. A park, on the contrary, needs space, a lot of space, and plants.
Garden culture is quite old. The first garden mentioned in the history of gardening is depicted on an Egyptian tomb painting and almost 4,000 years of age. The old Egyptians enjoyed their garden around a lotus pond surrounded by rows of acacia and palm trees. It must have been so precious to them that they wanted to take at least the image with them to the other world, after their time on earth had ended. Gardens were known to almost all cultures on earth when nature only allowed it. So very different styles developed, depending on climate, taste, financial resources, availability of accessories and specific needs. The Persian gardens were famous for their water basins and fountains for they were built in the hostile climate of the desert. Roman gardens prefered ornamental horticulture. Chinese and Japanese like to copy their favorite landscape of mountains and rivers. Medieval European gardens were first developed in monasteries and served as kitchen-gardens the more practical purposes. With the French baroque gardens more planning and more ornamental planting became fashionable while the English with their landscape gardening did just the opposite and let nature grow as freely as possible.

Whenever I read about the famous Cambodian golf courses I wonder: why do you not have a public space in Cambodia where all the wonderful tropical plants can join together and compete with each other's beauty? Why is there no botanical garden in Phnom Penh? In Oranienburg the doors on the garden show will close when the fall season makes all flowers die and the trees loose their leaves. In tropical Phnom Penh, on the other hand, there is always a flower, there is always a tree in full bloom. But there is no place for the people to quietly enjoy the full range of botanical splendor and to teach their children the names of the plants. But maybe you know all the plants already and rather prefer to play golf? Since you live in a garden you may not need a garden show as much as I do. Or do you?
Your teacher Helga.
September 2, 2009.
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