Points of Interest
Notable American Destinations and Happenings
- By Matt Kettmann, Paul Grondahl, Monica Watrous and Nan Chase
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Breslow, a woodworker, opened the store in 1997 and "developed a passion" for marbles after buying thousands of factory-made ones for wooden game boards he crafted. He then learned glassmaking techniques. He acknowledges that marbles are not a thriving business but also notes they're still used in aquariums and floral arrangements and as agitators in paint cans. "I'm not concerned for the future of marbles," he says. "I'm concerned for the future of play."
Shear Brilliance
Bishopville, South Carolina—No road signs direct visitors to Pearl Fryar's topiary garden, but local residents can point the way. Near the end of a quiet cul-de-sac, not far from the pine woods and cotton fields of this dusty town in the middle of the state, Fryar's brick ranch house stands out. More than 400 carefully groomed evergreen plants billow into Alice-in-Wonderland shapes that cover most of his three-acre property.
For nearly 20 years, Fryar has pruned and twisted and coaxed not only boxwood and yew, the staples of topiary, but also holly, fir and even loblolly pine. Mostly geometric or abstract, Fryar's topiaries start modestly at the curb, then swirl in dizzying patterns around the house he shares with his wife and adult son. Transformed shrubs, resembling a gaggle of chessmen, seem to march up the driveway; trees reach for the sky in arrowhead shapes 30 feet high. Water burbles in Fryar's homemade fountains.
Now retired from his engineering job at a can factory, Fryar, tall and slender at 68, devotes most of his time to his topiaries. Using gasoline-powered shears that leave a velvety finish, he trims each plant every four to six weeks. Special projects, such as turning a lollipop-shaped live oak into a square tree with a topknot, can take years.
As word has spread about Fryar's free, open-to-the-public garden, people from all over have found their way here, sometimes by the busload. The Garden Conservancy, an organization devoted to preserving gardens, adopted Fryar's last year, and a documentary film, A Man Named Pearl, opens this summer. Fryar's credo—"Love, Peace & Goodwill"—not only suffuses his work but is carved into the lawn.
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Comments (3)
I served aboard the USS Sutton DE-771 from May 1946 to Dec 1947 when it was decomissioned. I was present at the South Boston Nany Yard in 1956 when she was handed over to the Korean Navy I was working for the New England Telephone Co. at that time. I am interested in hearing more about the Destroyer Escort Historical Museum. I was 17 years old when we departed from Norfolk VA to Panama Canal Zone to operate with the fleet submarines out of Balboa Panama so my childhood days are memorable as a young sailor on the DE, we were with the USS Muir DE-770 during that deployment and the submarines USS Sea Owl, USS sea Poacher and the USS Sea Fox among others in the Pacific Ocean. Greates time of my young life and most memorable.
Posted by Thomas J. Bilbo on July 27,2008 | 01:14 PM
Looks like a Phacelia Californica to me. Actually, my brother is a Master Gardner in Craighead County Arkansas and he found it for me.
Posted by Jimmy Thomas on April 29,2008 | 06:39 PM
Nick, The information we have on that particular photo is that it is the detail of a Phacelia plant. There are dozens of types of Phacelia however we could not identify which one it was. We do not have the common name. Editor
Posted by Editor on April 29,2008 | 02:43 PM
Thank You for the "Points of Interest' online however I was hoping to find the name of the wildflower shown in the small inset photo under "Not So Dead" on page 30 of the magazine. Am I just some howmissing the name and description in the article or can someone tell me what it is called? Thanks Nick
Posted by Nick DeTini on April 24,2008 | 07:49 PM