Seems there's always a party going on in Mike and Judy Cunningham's yard, and that's just how they like it. Whether it's a few guys tipping back cold ones in Mike's garage-turned-Irish pub, or a white-tablecloth wedding for 300 guests, their 1-acre wonderland is the center of their lives.
"It's our treasure to share," said Mike of the gardens and 1938 farmhouse in Shoreview that he and Judy have been working on since 1980.
"It was primitive when we started," he said. The property, once part of a 15-acre farm, included a flat-roofed home and a then-unremarkable yard that had lots of potential. With four active children, the family used the front lawn as a soccer field and turned the back into a hockey rink.
After a tornado took out 13 mature oak trees in 1998, the void spurred the Cunninghams to begin creating a bolder vision for their property.
The result is an outdoor haven that now includes three ponds, multiple shade gardens, a roomy fire pit area and meandering flagstone paths.
In the front yard, Judy's collection of more than 50 birdhouses mingles with doors, ladders and other flea-market finds. Family heirlooms, including Mike's grandfather's sharpening wheel, are nestled among the mature trees and freely growing shrubs, native grasses and more than 50 varieties of hosta.
The showpiece is a 5,000-gallon backyard pond, brimming with koi fish, aquatic plants and the gentle purr of a four-tiered waterfall. As if in a fairy tale, a two-story white clapboard playhouse sits alongside the pond, and now welcomes a second generation of tiny footsteps as the Cunninghams' six grandchildren romp around what they consider their "personal park."
Mike, 60, retired three years ago from Sysco MN, a food distribution company, where he was a senior vice president of operations. The oldest of nine children whose family has lived in Shoreview since the early 1900s, he credits his Uncle Ray, a self-taught biologist and naturalist, with fostering his love of landscaping, hunting and wildlife management.