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More Information

Contact: Nell Nash
Ministry: Equipping Ministries
Phone: 414-964-2424, ext. 110
Email: nnash@umcwfb.org
Office Hours:
  Mon - Thur 9:00am-5:00pm

 


 
     
    VOLUNTEER - Building and Grounds and the Buxton Memorial Woodland Garden  
  Life Began In A Garden...

 

Consider helping the garden angels breathe new life into our church home gardens this Spring and Summer.  Beginning in April, when the snow melts and the winds arm, pruning will begin to help re-shape the gangly bushes around the building.  Watch for spring bulbs, planted last fall, to begin popping up all over.  Help out on one of the work days, to bring all the gardens into full beauty.  Volunteer to care for a specific garden this summer.

 

Want to know more?  Contact Mary Paull at mpaull@wi.rr.com or 414-354-7692 to volunteer weather-permitting.    Come play in the dirt with us!

 

 
   

Buxton Memorial Woodland Garden
This lovely garden was created in 1977 in memory of our former pastor, Rev. James Buxton, who served as pastor here for 26 years.
The garden is ever changing, a place of peace, where you are invited to sit, rest, observe, and pray, or enjoy conversation.

 

Contact Diane Wais at dwais03@sbcglobal.net to use your green thumb in the Buxton Memorial Woodland Garden.

 
 
   
A woodland garden is different from a formal garden.  The Buxton garden contains plants which grow naturally in Wisconsin and which you might see in a Wisconsin woods.  There are

plantings for all seasons in the garden.  It is common for flowering in a woodland garden to be in spring, before the leaves come out on trees.  In the summer, we commonly see plants of texture such as ferns, or meadow rue.  During the winter, leaves need to remain on the plants, to provide them with a winter protection and mulch for the next growing season.

 

The loss of plants can be a great problem, since it generally takes three years for a plant to 'take' when it is planted. Consequently we encourage folks to stay on the path. We generally add new wood chips to the path yearly. We are in the process of replacing the railroad ties that have marked the path. 

 

Seasonal plantings include:
 
Early Spring

Early Meadowrue

Virginia Bluebells (Mertensia virginica)

Tricyrtis Empress)

Late Spring

Jack-in-the-Pulpit

Great Solomon's Seal

Columbine

Late spring and Early Summer:

Buttercup

Mayapple

Anemone

Wild Strawberry

Wild Geranium

Wild Ginger (Asarum canadaense)

Starry Solomon's Plume

Foam Flower (Tiarella)

Mid-summer

Turtlehead (Chelone glaabra)

Phlox

Bug bane (Cimicifuga Racemosa)

Late Summer

Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea)

Woodland Sunflower

Zig Zag Goldenrod

Bee Balm

Short's Aster (Aster shortii)

Sweet Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia subtomentosa)

All Season Plantings

Ostrich Ferns

Maidenhair Fern

Wood Fern