Wind your way through the housing subdivisions of Woodbury, up a gentle hill, and you come to a pastoral sight: a picturesque yellow farmhouse, with a 19th-century granary painted barn red. Just beyond is a dining patio overlooking a serene koi pond with waterfall. And surrounding it all are acres of colorful gardens.
This is the refuge that Lisa Moran and Peter Rekow have spent more than 20 years creating on a former dairy farm, a vestige of the suburb's agrarian past.
In her garden, Moran is at peace. "It's my Zen. I love being outside in nature," she said. "When I'm in the garden, I'm blissful. I'm in the moment."
A graphic designer, she enjoys the creative aspect of composing a garden. She designs "by feel," using garden hoses to lay out the perimeter of each new bed, then planting with an eye to height, color, foliage texture and bloom times to create her composition. "I like an English look — not very formal," she said, "and I want something blooming at all times, from spring to fall."
Moran enjoys even the mundane garden chores such as weeding. "I'd rather be cleaning my garden than cleaning my house," she said.
Rekow is her partner in life — and in hardscape. A mechanical engineer, he came up with the skimmer and filtration system for their koi pond, hand-built their woodfire pizza oven and collaborated with Moran in building the pergola and the long cedar table and benches that have turned their backyard into an enchanting spot for entertaining.
"He doesn't like gardening," said Moran. "He's my project guy. When I tell him I want to add or expand a garden, he cringes."
It was Moran's hunger to garden on a grand scale that led them to their home in the first place. Their previous house in Lauderdale had a very small yard.