Walking in Memphis, in The Cooper-Young District

in a Memphis Garden

I know, I was ‘Walking In Memphis’ Gardens. It’s a corny headline. but I just could not resist, you can’t help but sing the words of that great song when you visit Memphis, Tennessee. Here’s the song in case you need a refresher.

I recently took a trip to the USA specifically to attend The 2025 Garden Bloggers Fling. I bet that you have been following along through my socials and I hope that you’re enjoying the posts so far.

Memphis

Most people would think about Memphis and the first thing to come to mind is probably Elvis, BB King, Graceland and Sun Studios and well basically the home of The Blues music genre, but this southern city in the USA offers so much more, especially if you love garden visiting and gardening.

Lavender and cream verandah – a cool place to sit and watch the world go by
Kim Halyak’s all abilities backyard design

I am going to start with the last day of ‘The Fling’ first. We visited more than 50 Memphis gardens in 5 days, so hang onto your straw hat, there will be lots of posts.

Of course you need a stunning red clawfoot bath tub on your back verandah complete with painted rug on the deck!

On the final day of “The Fling” we were lucky enough to enioy a private peak at the Cooper-Young Garden Walk, which is an initiative developed by The Cooper-Young Garden Club and is part of a wider garden visiting experience called Experience Memphis Gardens.

https://experiencememphisgardens.org/

Kim Halyak and Sharron Johnson are the powerhouse co-chairs of this event and are well-supported by many other members of this community driven event and yes, both ladies opened their gardens for the event and for our private visit.

A must have part of any home in the south where it gets very humid
Back deck in The Copper-Young district
Interior design principles for the outdoors demonstrated to perfection on the front porch of this home in The Cooper-Young district
Exceptional Thriller Spiller Filler Cooper-Young style

2025 marks the 10 year anniversary of the Annual Signature Cooper-Young Garden Walk, and it ran from May 17-18.  It featured over 100 gardens, speakers, musicians and garden vendors, throughout the historic neighbourhood. A festival for all things garden!

Delightfully painted cottages are up and down every street
Duck egg blue coloured cottage
Alice in Wonderland themed garden
Quirky signage makes for a fun experience
Great use of seating and mirrors

The Cooper-Young district is about 10-15 minutes from downtown Memphis and is a diverse community filled with smaller homes, painted in the cutest array of colours enhanced with delightful gardens and pretty porches that demonstrate a unique southern- style of garden design.

I did and loved them all

This community is home to artists and extremely creative gardeners, which becomes self evident when wandering through the gardens. The main street offers heaps of restaurant choices and some fun shopping. Gentrification of this fun district is well under way.

Every garden needs a sheep, doesn’t it?
The artist who creates these horses rode his horse from California to Tennessee

On the day of our visit it was very hot and humid, so an early lunch and lots of unsweetened iced tea (yep, it’s my go to drink when visiting the USA) was a great idea, in between peaking in and out of the gardens which were all easily signposted and within walking distance of the main street. We ate at Soul Fish Cafe which was excellent. I had the most delicious grilled catfish on a vibrant salad (and no fries), proving that not all American food is bad for you. https://soulfishcafe.com/midtown-memphis/

Here’s proof that you can eat delicious, healthy food in America-I left the croutons!

My Best Garden Friend @AZPlantlady and I retired “hot” not hurt, in the afternoon, for a cheeky frozen Margarita with fellow “Flingers” at a fun bar called Cooper’s, just down from the Johnny Cash statue. We were all buzzing with excitement sharing our perspectives on an inspiring day walking in Memphis Gardens.

We retired “hot” not hurt and enjoyed this
Me with Johnny Cash

The biggest take-away was enjoying all of the creative possibilities for folks with small cottages and smaller garden spaces, which was super helpful knowledge for people like me, working with gardeners in urban areas with small cottage blocks .

The opposite of the incredibly generous hospitality that we enjoyed

I would highly recommend this fun May weekend of experiencing Memphis gardens in the most unexpected way, if ever you get the chance, take the time to visit The Cooper-Young Garden Walk.

If you want some ideas for your garden based on some of these photos, get in contact here.

Even the slimmest of patches is filled with plants in this neighbourhood

Wild and Free: Some Pennsylvanian Garden Container Inspiration to plan this key garden trend for Spring.

2024 Container planting

Bloom Wildly: 2024 Container Planting at Suburban Square, PA

I know that we are only just heading into Autumn here in Perth, but there is no harm in dreaming and planning for Spring 2025 with some garden container inspiration now. It will be here before you know it.

Single Grey Container at entrance to store in Ardmore PA

Last August, I had the great pleasure of visiting Suburban Square in Ardmore, Pennsylvania. Over the past 3 years this incredible shopping precinct has been brought to life with spectacular bursts of colour through their annual container displays. However, for me, the 2024 Bloom Wildly container planting took explosions of container filled colour to the next level.

Suburban Square obviously take a great deal of pride in blending retail with nature and the 2024 planting initiative demonstrated that philosophy in the most delightful way.

Andrea (L) with her friend, Horticulturist and Educator, Louise Clarke (R) from Media PA

2024 marked the third year of the The Bloom Wildly festival of flowers and aimed to bring inspired botanical beauty to urban and retail environments. The focus for Bloom Wildly 2024 was on bold colours, pollinator-friendly species, and sustainable container gardening practices. Any gardener seeking garden container inspiration could experience it at every turn. A collaboration between some local horticulturalists, landscape designers and community volunteers, the installation included dozens of super healthy plants filled to overflowing containers which were placed throughout the shopping centre’s walkways, plazas and patios.

The design themes I experienced drew inspiration from meadow-style planting trends, which was forward-projecting for the ‘Wild and Free’ trend for Spring/Summer 2025 in Australia.

Containers featured loose, whimsical arrangements mixing textures, heights and bloom times. The Thriller plants included Echinacea, black-eyed Susans, ornamental grasses (lots of fabulous tall grasses) and Salvias — all of which bloomed their heads off in containers and welcomed bees, butterflies and other pollinators like hummingbirds, all in an outdoor suburban shopping mall.

So many great examples of ‘Thriller Spiller Filler’ container planting style was everywhere. Bright splashes of Geraniums, trailing Petunias, and annual Calibrachoa were obviously chosen for their stunningly bright colours and continuous blooms throughout the Pennsylvanian Spring and Summer months.

Pennsylvanian native plant species were carefully included, demonstrating that native plants do just as well in containers as introduced annuals and perennials.

The native inclusions offered encouragement and container inspiration for visiting gardeners to plant these specimens in their own gardens to support local ecosystems, as a water wise and environmentally friendly option. All of the containers used in 2024 were chosen with sustainability in mind. Many were made from recycled or repurposed materials and filled with more sustainably produced compost and soil blends. The plants were all super healthy and obviously appreciated the good soil in the containers.

The transformation of this retail space was a little bit mind blowing for this Aussie visitor. I had never seen any thing quite like it before. The joy that live plants and nature interacting wild and freely with people in an urban setting such as this, is remarkable on so many levels. The fact that the owners of this space are willing to commit to such installations year after year is commendable.

And so if you’re inspired to create some stunning containers…this is a pretty good place to start…what wild and free inclusions will be in your garden??? Let me know here.

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