Chapel Hill Retreat Center

Chapel Hill Retreat CenterChapel Hill Retreat CenterChapel Hill Retreat Center

Chapel Hill Retreat Center

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    • Home
    • Purpose
    • Principles
      • About the Principles
      • Permaculture
      • Therapeutic Horticulture
      • Shinrin-yoku
    • Programs
      • About the Programs
      • Self-Guided Retreats
      • Facilitated Retreats
      • Speeches and Workshops
    • People
    • Place
      • About the Place
      • About the Place 2
      • Plant Tour
      • Plant List
      • Bird List
      • Rock List
      • Recommended Readings
      • Recommended Resources
  • Home
  • Purpose
  • Principles
    • About the Principles
    • Permaculture
    • Therapeutic Horticulture
    • Shinrin-yoku
  • Programs
    • About the Programs
    • Self-Guided Retreats
    • Facilitated Retreats
    • Speeches and Workshops
  • People
  • Place
    • About the Place
    • About the Place 2
    • Plant Tour
    • Plant List
    • Bird List
    • Rock List
    • Recommended Readings
    • Recommended Resources

Self-Guided Plant Tour

Registered guests of the Chapel Hill Retreat Center are invited to walk the peaceful and pleasant trails of this four acre private estate in Chapel Hill, NC (overview), which is the primary location for the Chapel Hill Retreat Center programming. This self-guided plant tour (below) is just over .5 mile and includes more than a dozen garden rooms (stations), each featuring a different shade-tolerant, deer resistant plant that is thriving on the property (horticultural zone 8a). 

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Self Guided plant Tour

1) Illicium Fire Pit

1) Illicium Fire Pit

1) Illicium Fire Pit

Photo credit: Tony Avent of Plant Delights Nursery retrieved from https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants

Enter the property from the Miscanthus Grass-lined court onto the driveway where there is a low stone wall warmed-up with ferns. Walk approximately 200 feet along the driveway flanked with Hollies, Viburnum, Magnolias, and Mahonias, and turn left to enter Garden Room One: Illicium Fire Pit (Illicium parviflorum “Florida Sunshine”). 

2) Aucuba Lounge

1) Illicium Fire Pit

1) Illicium Fire Pit

From the Illicium Fire Pit, turn left to re-enter the driveway and then turn immediately left onto the main Chapel Hill gravel trail ("Outer Loop"). Walk approximately 250 feet and the Aucuba Lounge (Aucuba japonica “Gold Dust”) will be on your left.  

3) Holly Hammock

1) Illicium Fire Pit

4) Christmas Fern Fire Pit

Photo credit: Leaves & Berries - November - Warren Co., NC. Cathy DeWitt. CC BY 4.0. Retrieved from

From the Aucuba Lounge, walk straight across the "Outer Loop," up the moss-covered stairs, and ver right to follow the path ("Oak Tree Trail") towards the house. Walk approximately 150 feet and the Holly Hammock (Ilex opaca) will be on your right.

4) Christmas Fern Fire Pit

4) Christmas Fern Fire Pit

4) Christmas Fern Fire Pit

Photo credit: Fiddleheads Photo by Suzanne Cadwell. CC BY-NC 2.0. Retrieved from https://plants.ces.

From the Holly Hammock, turn right to re-enter the "Oak Tree Trail," walk towards the house and make a U-Turn to enter the "Five Cedars Trail." Follow this side trail approximately 150 feet back to the Aucuba Lounge, turn right on the "Outer Loop" and walk approximately 150 feet to the Christmas Fern Fire Pit (Polystichum acrostichoides), which will be on your left. This fire pit is shaded by the tall Sycamore tree (Platanus occidentalis) and is situated at the point of two creek confluence. 

5) Buckeye Chair Swing

4) Christmas Fern Fire Pit

5) Buckeye Chair Swing

Photo credit: Palmately compound leaves.
James St. John, Flickr. CC BY 2.0. Retrieved from https://p

From the Christmas Fern Fire Pit, turn left to re-enter the "Outer Loop." Walk approximately 15 feet and enter the Buckeye Chair Swing (Aesculus glabra). This swing hands from a maple tree.

6) Magnolia Lounge

4) Christmas Fern Fire Pit

5) Buckeye Chair Swing

Photo credit: Flower. Arthur Chapman
CC BY-NC-SA 2.0. Retrieved from https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/pla

From the Buckeye Chair Swing, turn right to re-enter the "Outer Loop," cross the railroad tie bridge, and walk approximately 25 feet. The Magnolia Lounge (Magnolia grandiflora) will be on your left. 

7) Leucothoe Chair Swing

7) Leucothoe Chair Swing

7) Leucothoe Chair Swing

Photo credit: Whole Plant. Suzanne_Cadwell. CC BY-NC 2.0. Retrieved from https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu

From the Magnolia Lounge, turn left to re-enter the "Outer Loop" and walk approximately 25 feet. The Leucothoe Chair Swing (Leucothoe fontanesiana) will be on your right and situated under an ironwood tree.

8) Prostrate Yew Lounge

7) Leucothoe Chair Swing

7) Leucothoe Chair Swing

From the Leucothoe Chair Swing, turn right to re-enter the "Outer Loop" and walk approximately 50 feet. The Prostrate Yew Lounge (Cephalotaxus harringtonia 'Prostrata') will be directly in front of you before crossing the wooden bridge. 

9) Japanese Cedar Bench

7) Leucothoe Chair Swing

10) Japanese Maple Chair Swing

Photo credit: Needles in June - Halifax Co., NC. Cathy DeWitt. CC BY 4.0. Retrieved from https://pla

From the Prostrate Yew Lounge, cross the wooden bridge and walk up the stone steps to the Japanese Cedar Bench (Cryptomeria japonica), which is situated along a hillside of Hellebores (Helleborus) aka Hellebore Heaven! 

10) Japanese Maple Chair Swing

10) Japanese Maple Chair Swing

10) Japanese Maple Chair Swing

Photo credit: Red fall leaves and red samaras (Cabarrus County, NC). Hope Duckworth. CC BY 4.0. Retr

From the Japanese Cedar Bench, walk approximately 50 feet along the flat "Side Trail" towards the center area of the back slope. The Japanese Maple Chair Swing will be on your left. This swing hangs under an Elm tree facing a stunning Japanese Maple and next to a well-established Rhododendron.   

11) Sweet Osmanthus Deck

10) Japanese Maple Chair Swing

11) Sweet Osmanthus Deck

Photo credit: 'Fudingzhu' Flower and Leaf
Jim Robbins. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Retrieved from https://plant

From the Japanese Maple Chair Swing, turn left and walk up the moss-covered slope "Inner Loop" to the Sweet Osmanthus Deck (Osmanthus fragrans). The deck also houses a micro greenhouse and plant hospital.

12) Pieris Hammock

10) Japanese Maple Chair Swing

11) Sweet Osmanthus Deck

Photo credit: Flowers/New Growth - March 29 - Wake Co., NC. Cathy DeWitt. CC BY 4.0. Retrieved from

From the Sweet Osmanthus Deck, turn right to walk along the flat trail towards the hammock. The Pieris Hammock (Pieris japonica) hangs under the x and y trees.


13) The Seven Layer Food Forest

13) The Seven Layer Food Forest

13) The Seven Layer Food Forest

From the Pieris Hammock, walk a few steps up the slope and through the gate into the Seven Layer Food Forest. This 1,800 square foot forest garden is a burgeoning Garden of Eden with two meditative paths that wind through fruit- and nut-bearing trees and shrubs, and other edible and medicinal plants, including Pawpaw trees, Raspberries, Asparagus, King stropharia mushrooms, and Muscadine grapes.



14) Mahonia Picnic Area

13) The Seven Layer Food Forest

13) The Seven Layer Food Forest

Photo credit: Vicki Russell, Chapel Hill Garden Club, 2023.

From the Food Forest, exit to and through the Moss Garden, to the front of the house, and down the driveway approximately 50 feet. The Mahonia Picnic Area (Berberis bealei) and chicken coop will be on your left.  

Farewell!

13) The Seven Layer Food Forest

Farewell!

From the Mahonia Picnic Area, turn left to re-enter the driveway and walk approximately 150 feet to exit the property. If you glance back while walking along the driveway, you may catch a view of the heart-shaped tree blooming above/behind the house! Farewell and may peace be with you. 

"An early morning walk is a blessing for the whole day."

 Henry David Thoreau


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