By Margaretta wa Gacheru (wrote December 2020)
Sandy Price never boasted of having a green thumb. She also had never planned to have a garden of her own. Yet in all the dozen places where she’s lived since moving to Kenya from New York over 50 years ago, she’s had a lush garden.
“Everywhere
I’ve stayed, I found there were plants to be nurtured and to watch grow,” says
this midwestern American woman who spent her earliest working years in Manhattan
in the heart of the fashion world, being the personal assistant to one of the
leading fashion designers in the US.
‘Bill Blass
designed elegant clothes for high society and celebrities,” says Sandy who
admits she had once dreamed of becoming a fashion designer herself. ‘But the
next best thing was working for the best of the best,’ she says. But since
coming to Kenya in 1969, she has evolved into a leading interior designer whose
accessories are easily found at Spinners Web in Kitisuru.
Sandy stayed
with them for nearly two years, after which she joined African Wildlife
Foundation, first as a volunteer, then eventually as director for all sub-Saharan
Africa. But throughout those busy years, she always came home to her garden. “Wherever
I stayed I had to be surrounded with plants,” she says. “The more the better.”
She might
never have taken to gardening if a friend hadn’t given her a seedling to plant.
Then, practically overnight, this former urbanite was transformed into a
gardener. For she had witnessed the miracle of nature when the seedling grew to
a size and shape she could hardly recognize. She was hooked on gardening from
then on.
Asked where
she gets most of her plants, Sandy describes herself as ‘an accidental
collector.’
“I have
friends who bring me plants they pick up from various places,” she says. But
she adds that she’s not fussy and doesn’t care if they’re indigenous or not.
“I’m more concerned with whether they are beautiful,” says the woman who was
picked by ‘Glamor’ magazine as a teenager to feature in the magazine as one of ‘the
ten best dressed high school girls in America”.
“I also have
loads of succulents since I know they are resilient and hold up well in
drought,” she says, pointing to one giant pot with a glass top covered in miniature
pots filled with her favorite succulents Each tiny pot has a clay chameleon
crawling up its side.
On the far
side of her veranda, Sandy has filled the land with broad-leafed plants,
including assorted palms, ornamental banana trees, and several lovely Birds of Paradise.
Sandy can’t
identify many of the trees on the grounds by name. But she’s not bothered by
their anonymity. They simply give her tremendous joy. And since she often
entertains friends on her veranda, they all have a fabulous view of her Ficus
tree, red, white, and pink bougainvillea’s, and countless leafy green shrubs.
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