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Munroe-Meyer Guild’s annual garden walk, faire June 12









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The garden of Bob and Bonnie Bammes are among those spotlighted in the June 12 walk.

The 38th Annual Garden Walk will be Sunday, June 12, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (rain or shine). Sponsored by the Munroe-Meyer Guild at UNMC, proceeds will support MMI’s therapeutic, training and research activities benefiting children, youth and adults with developmental disabilities and chronic handicapping conditions.

For the first time, the event will feature a Garden Faire, where participants can enjoy workshops, demonstrations and the latest gardening advice from Omaha garden experts. There also will be a host of vendors selling an array of gift items and foods.









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The garden of Roland and Jacqueline Bremers.

Garden Walk & Faire guests will tour seven locations. The homeowners are:

  • Bob and Bonnie Bammes, 3016 Trailridge Blvd., Elkhorn. The Bammes’ yard bursts with color all season. Spring brings forth blooming crabtrees, hundreds of tulips, daffodils, scillas and anemones. The formal rose garden consists of hybrid teas, grandiflora and floribunda. A large arbor smothered in pink New Dawn climbing roses stands at the entrance of this garden.
  • Roland and Jacqueline Bremers, 13417 Corby Circle. Bluegrass pathways provide access to a number of curving flower beds throughout the yard. The garden is registered as an official American Hemerocallis Display Garden (AHS) and was a featured garden during the 2002 Midwest regional meeting in Omaha. There are 350 different daylily cultivars growing in the garden.








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    Jim and Pat Manion’s yard is the site of the new Garden Faire.

  • Jim and Pat Manion, 11202 Old Maple Road. The site of the new Garden Faire, “Camp Manion” sits on nearly four acres with 200 trees surrounding the property. There are two ponds, one with a long waterfall, along with various flowerbeds which include a mix of full sun and shade gardens, with an emphasis on perennial plantings. The Manion’s backyard deck was featured in the March 6, 2005, Omaha World Herald for its year-round family use and entertainment capabilities.
  • Stephen and Barbara Wallace, 7810 Keystone Drive. The Wallaces like to think of their garden as an experiment in progress. They also call it “natural,” “rustic” and “informal.” Most of the garden is done in terms of “rooms” rather than views, with a large variety of shrubs dividing areas and with informal paths connecting them. The shrubs and small trees provide an almost continuous bloom somewhere in the yard.
  • David and Carol Van Metre, 6611 Davenport St. There are multiple pathways that lead guests into a terraced backyard, which includes 120 tons of stone outcroppings. More than 100 flats of annuals are planted to complement the many ornamentals and shade trees. These include redbud, dogwood, serviceberry, burr, shingle and chinkapin oak. The unique landscape is a variety of shrubs, perennials, bulbs and annuals that provide something in a bloom from early spring to frost.








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    The garden of Joseph and Candace Daly.

  • Omaha Hearing School, 1110 North 66 St. Gardeners routinely say that their gardens talk to them, but at the Omaha Hearing School, the garden teaches the deaf and hard of hearing children how to talk. The Talk and Teach Trail provides a multitude of opportunities to build vocabulary and oral skills. The garden’s Hotwheel track provides places for students to dig, grow flowers and eat veggies, as well as feel the native grasses.
  • Joseph and Candace Daly, 505 North 62 St. PJM rhododendrons highlight the front of the house on both sides of the entrance. A collection of hydrangeas dominate the shrub assortment bloom white to blue to pink and put on a stunning plum-to-reddish hue for fall leaf color. A thriving Japanese Maple accents the patio and pond, a relaxing focal point for summer entertaining.

Tickets may be purchased at Hy-Vee Stores (all locations); Earl May Nursery and Garden Center, 9229 W. Center Rd. in Omaha; 410 Galvin Rd. in Bellevue, and 1718 Madison Ave. in Council Bluffs; Haver’s Mar-H Florist Nursery, 8032 Maple St.; Indian Creek Nursery, 303 N. Saddle Creek Rd.; Lanoha Nursery, 192nd and W. Center Rd.; Moore’s Landscaping and Nursery, 11999 Cryer Ave.; Mulhall’s Home and Garden Showplace, 120th and W. Maple Rd.; Sherbondy’s Home and Garden Showcase, 319 16th Ave., Council Bluffs; Finke Garden and Nursery, 500 N. 66th St., Lincoln; and Cornerstone Gifts, second floor, UNMC’s Durham Outpatient Center.

Advance tickets are $10. Tickets will be $13 on the day of the event at all gardens. Children under 12 are free. No strollers are allowed in the gardens. Advance tickets also are available by calling 559-6460 or via mail at: Garden Walk Tickets, Munroe-Meyer Institute, 985450 Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, 68198-5450.

For more information about the 2005 Munroe-Meyer Guild Garden Walk, contact Shannon Slowiaczek at 402-397-1080, Nancy Meltzer at 402-397-7829 or visit Web site at www.mmigardenwalk.com.