Modjeska Canyon garden strikes a water-friendly balance
If gardens are autobiography, Sarah Sarkissian has spent 13 years writing hers on Modjeska Canyon land in Orange County. High school teacher, water harvester and amateur botanist, she lives with husband Geoff on a Santiago Creek-hugging acre that includes a front garden that is 75% irrigation-free. The backyard is also carefully designed not to waste a drop of water, with plenty of California natives and other dry-habitat plants that bring beauty and tranquillity with minimal use of hose and not one sprinkler.
Sarah Sarkissian is a passionate lover of dry landscape, with the eye of an artist and the mind of an engineer. She knows exactly what it takes to have a water-wise yet bountiful garden in Southern California. Her front garden, here, was designed along a plan by landscape architect Lisa Iwata of Land Interactive.
We wanted a coherent design, says Sarkissian, not just a collection of plants. The front yard also has a custom water harvesting system.
Sarah Sarkissian rakes leaves under a front yard canopy of live oaks that she and her husband planted. She considers the glen, visible from the street, one of the most interesting things weve done.
Sarah Sarkissian dusts off a best garden award that the front garden recently received from the California Friendly Garden Contest, sponsored by Rogers Gardens in Corona del Mar.
Sarah Sarkissian casts a shadow in the late afternoon light as she works in her garden. She and her husband have lived since 1989 in the modest house they built and over the years they have learned about native plants and water harvesting, observed the wildlife and repeatedly walked the land.
To me its the most amazing place in Orange County, she says of Modjeska Canyon.
The richly planted, spacious backyard slopes to Santiago Creek. The yard is an assemblage of small gardens, sitting areas, an orchard and an artfully sited utility yard and the water harvesting system in the front also feeds the back. Irrigation is divided into zones with roses and vegetables near the house watered regularly; the small orchard receives infrequent deep watering along with some ornamentals; California native plants and trees arent irrigated at all.