Toxaway Mt. greenhouse named after famed horticulturist 'Bunny' Mellon

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A new state-of-the-art greenhouse on Toxaway Mountain in Transylvania County will carry a namefabled in the world of horticulture.

Thanks to a $500,000 grant from the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation, the greenhouse will be named in honor of the late Rachel “Bunny” Mellon.

Mollie Gordon, Madeline Magin, Jessica Whitmire, Virginia Watkins, Dee Dee Perkins, and Larry Chapman, all with the Transylvania County Tourism Development Authority, join Southern Highlands Reserve Executive Director Kelly Holdbrooks in support of red spruce restoration.
Mollie Gordon, Madeline Magin, Jessica Whitmire, Virginia Watkins, Dee Dee Perkins, and Larry Chapman, all with the Transylvania County Tourism Development Authority, join Southern Highlands Reserve Executive Director Kelly Holdbrooks in support of red spruce restoration.

According to a news release, Southern Highlands Reserve, a nonprofit native plant garden and leader in red spruce restoration, broke ground on the new facility last week and announced the new partner supporting conservation efforts for the high elevation spruce-fir forests of the Southern Appalachian Mountains.

Known for her artistry in the world of horticulture, Mellon’s design techniques celebrate quiet spaces and honor the mystery of nature by finding perfection in its wild ways, the release said. With an eye for simplicity and elegance, Mellon created gardens — including the White House Rose Garden, at the request of Jacqueline Kennedy — to keep the beauty and natural growth of plants center stage, without hint of the helping human hand.

She established the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation in 1976 to honor her father, whose business acumen contributed to the success of the Gillette Safety Razor Company as well as Listerine mouthwash, which Lambert’s father invented in 1879.

Little Coche Tiger with his father, Coche Tiger, look at a tray of red spruce saplings.
Little Coche Tiger with his father, Coche Tiger, look at a tray of red spruce saplings.
Southern Highlands Reserve Executive Director Kelly Holdbrooks speaks on Nov. 17 at Brevard College at the event to announce the partnership of Southern Highlands Reserve and the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation.
Southern Highlands Reserve Executive Director Kelly Holdbrooks speaks on Nov. 17 at Brevard College at the event to announce the partnership of Southern Highlands Reserve and the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation.

“This partnership exemplifies the wonderful relationship my grandmother had with the outdoors,conservation, and supporting others to create beauty,” said Thomas Lloyd, president of the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation, in the release. “We are so thrilled to work directly with Southern Highlands Reserve on this very meaningful endeavor.”

The spruce-fir forests lining the highest ridges of the Southern Appalachian Mountains are the second most endangered ecosystem in the United States. They are survivors from a time long before humans roamed the land, and through more than a century of logging, fire, pollutants and parasites, red spruce have endured existential decline.

Spruce-fir forests are home to two federally-endangered species, the Carolina northern flying squirrel and the spruce-fir moss spider, which is the world’s smallest tarantula. Also living there are the northern saw-whet owl, red crossbill, brown creeper, black-capped chickadee, hoary bat, silver-haired bat, Weller’s salamander, pygmy salamanders and a type of lichen called hot dots.

The U.S. Forest Service has identified 16 rare plant species found only in spruce-fir forests. As warming temperatures push more species northward and to higher elevations, red spruce matrons will provide refuge beneath their canopy.

Baby red spruce spend two years at SHR’s nursery growing strong enough to survive in the wild.
Baby red spruce spend two years at SHR’s nursery growing strong enough to survive in the wild.
Jill Chapman and Transylvania County Commissioner Larry Chapman pose at the Nov. 17 event at Brevard College where Southern Highlands Reserve announced a grant from the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation.
Jill Chapman and Transylvania County Commissioner Larry Chapman pose at the Nov. 17 event at Brevard College where Southern Highlands Reserve announced a grant from the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation.

Southern Highlands Reserve, the U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, The NatureConservancy, and other partners have formed the Southern Appalachian Spruce Restoration Initiative to streamline efforts, expertise, and funding for red spruce. Southern Highlands Reserve grows red spruce trees from seed to be planted on public lands through SASRI’s network of partners. At an elevation of 4,500 feet, Southern Highlands Reserve’s nursery perfectly mimics the natural climate and conditions of spruce-fir forests.

More than 6,000 of the nonprofit’s red spruce trees are growing on public lands and have a 90 percent survival rate. Because efforts have been so successful, the U.S. Forest Service has requested 50,000 more trees, necessitating a new larger and more efficient greenhouse facility. It will include technology to reduce energy expenditure and will more than double current capacity in the same footprint.

Coche Tiger shares the Cherokee legend of Judaculla, with microphone assistance from his brother, Shaligugi Tiger, on Nov. 17 at Brevard College at the event to announce the partnership of Southern Highlands Reserve and the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation.
Coche Tiger shares the Cherokee legend of Judaculla, with microphone assistance from his brother, Shaligugi Tiger, on Nov. 17 at Brevard College at the event to announce the partnership of Southern Highlands Reserve and the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation.

It will also offer enhanced opportunities for visitor education and a home to the dozens of other native plant species Southern Highlands Reserve propagates for restoration projects as well as home gardens.

Leading the charge locally, the Transylvania County Tourism Development Authority hascontributed a $100,000 grant to the project through its Destination Infrastructure program. Southern Highlands Reserve has also received a $300,000 grant from the National Forest Foundation, a $100,000 challenge grant from the BAND Foundation, a $50,000 grant from the AEC Trust and many gifts from family foundations and private donors.

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The lead consultant for the greenhouse project is Ron Determann, former vice president of the Dorothy Chapman Fuqua Conservatory at Atlanta Botanical Garden. Sitework Studios, which has developed plans for several Asheville-area parks, mixed-use areas, business and education institutions, gardens, and residences, has created the site design. Asheville-based Van Wingerden Greenhouse Company will manufacture the greenhouse. Established in 1972, Van Wingerden has built greenhouses for New York Botanical Garden, Atlanta Botanical Garden, Mt. Cuba Center, The University of Tennessee, Duke University, MetrolinaGreen houses and others.

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“We are deeply grateful for the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation’s generous support,” said SouthernHighlands Reserve Executive Director Kelly Holdbrooks in the release. “Traditionally, gardens have been a place of respite, providing education and beauty — conservation contained within set boundaries. Now it’s necessary for us to venture outside our own property lines and apply our knowledge of horticulture conservation to a broader landscape, focusing on regional efforts in a long-range perspective. We look forward to honoring Bunny Mellon’s legacy with our work.”

To learn more, volunteer, or donate to red spruce restoration, visit ww.southernhighlandsreserve.org and www.southernspruce.org.

This article originally appeared on Hendersonville Times-News: Lake Toxaway greenhouse named after famed horticulturist 'Bunny' Mellon