Jim Lewis had lived in condominiums all of his adult life until in 1992, he drove by a brick house for sale and decided to buy it. Located in an old Atlanta neighborhood, the house and its nearly one acre property had been neglected for years. Jim, a software salesman, had never gardened. The large, wooded backyard contained a number of overgrown shrubs. As Jim and some volunteer co-workers dug and chopped, they discovered a number of features, including a stone table, barbeque area and a shuffleboard court, all installed decades ago.
While uncovering rockwork and former paths, Jim also realized what a great stress reliever gardening was. He soon started adding plants and other features of his own Japanese maples, ferns, shade-loving shrubs like pieris and groundcovers like hosta.
After installing a lawn, Jim soon realized that the area was too shady for grass. He began planting dwarf mondo grass, a dark green grasslike plant that grew only three inches tall. Once the new "lawn" grew together, he started seeing other places that might work for the groundcover and began using it in artistic ways filling in spaces in his driveway, making patterns on the ground throughout the garden and edging the extensive paths that wind uphill from the back of the house to the barbeque area.
Soon, Jim became known in gardening circles as "Mondo Man." He spent every spare moment going to the nursery and bringing trays of the dwarf grass home to plant. He confesses that he ended up spending a fortune on at least 50,000 plugs of mondo grass, but he loved the effect it gave him when he looked out at his backyard.
Jim also added features like a chain that connects the trees around his garden to provide a medium-sized planting underneath the tall, mature trees. Crossvine (Bignonia capreolata 'Tangerine Beauty') grows along the chain and festoons the garden in late April to mid-May with beautiful trumpet-shaped, reddish-orange flowers. Red accents from an umbrella and cushions on deck chairs also enliven the mostly green plant palette.
Other features in the garden include a pavilion with a hammock and a "curtain" of water that falls from the roof, waterfall, koi pond and an extensive stone patio overlooking a natural-looking rock pool.
Some plants in Jim's garden: