May 15, 2010
Into the Garden: Visit Charleston's Gateway Greenspace Sunday
Page 2 of 2
Kenny Kemp
Perennials and trees at the new Gateway Greenspace, across the street from the Clay Center, have been planted to mimic plantings found in different areas of West Virginia.
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There are educational opportunities galore -- the space represents a slice of West Virginia natural history. According to information from Salisbury, the stacked terraces that create the backdrop to the park resemble the rugged sandstone cliffs of the southern Appalachian Mountains. A rocky stream fed by recycled rooftop storm water tumbles down the cliffs into a small pool at the foot of the terraces.

"These boulders were brought in from the Marmet Locks and Dam worksite," Salisbury said, pointing to the huge, gray stones. "And those others came from a mountaintop mining site." She pointed a "bubbler" fountain basin carved into one of the stones, cut by hand by Orders Construction workers.

"They were so scared they would mess up this huge boulder," Salisbury said. "They were out here chiseling away for days. They did a wonderful job -- it's just perfect."

The plants are a who's-who list of West Virginia species. Trees include: Acer rubrum (red maple), Betula lenta (yellow birch), Carya ovata (shagbark hickory), Fagus grandifolia (American beech), Oxydendron arboretum (sourwood), Pinus virginiana (Virginia pine), Quercus coccinea (scarlet oak), Amelanchier laevis (serviceberry), Carpinus caroliniana (ironwood), Cornus florida (flowering dogwood), and Halesia carolina (Carolina silverbell).

Shrubs include: Hammamelis virginiana (witchhazel), Kalmia latifolia (mountain laurel) and Rhododendron calendulaceum (flame azalea).

They've used Pachysandra procumbens (Alleghany spurge) as groundcover. Perennials and grasses include Aster divaricatus (white wood aster), Athyrium fillix-femina (lady fern), Aster novae-angliae (New England aster), Aquilegia canadensis (red columbine), Echinacea purpurea (purple coneflower), Heuchera americana (alum root), Iris versicolor (blueflag iris), Penstemon digitalis (talus slope penstemon), Panocum virgatum (switch grass), Rudebeckia fulgida (black-eyed Susan), Schizacrim scoparius (little bluestem), Tiarella cordofolla (foamflower) and Thelypteris noveboracesis (New York fern).

The Kanawha County Master Gardeners will be at the opening today doing a gardening craft with children.

Reach Sara Busse at sara.bu...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1249.

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