I M MI I I M MMI M I I . M . M . " 1 " M MI M I " M I M I I M I M I I M I M I I M I I " M i " I l i " M i l . " M i l " . " 1 " . " i " l i " . M i l 5 ' T 4111111111i111111iiiiMio ,... Staff photos by Angie Baan utdoor Palette For nearly 40 years, the Camdens have used their West Bloomfield yard as an area of self-expression• Top: Howard and Lili Ann Camden with one of their painted trees. Below: A dragon graces the yard. Right: Hibiscus trumpet the summer. 12 JUDITH DONER BERNE Special to the Jewish News p robably everyone in their West Bloomfield neighborhood is familiar with Howard and Lili Ann Camden's garden. It's chock full of weeping trees and ornamental grasses. It features rows of sacred indian lillies, grown from bulbs which must be dug up each year and for a time emit an unpleas- ant odor, and a flock of moon lilies whose large white flowers bloom in late summer nights. And this year, hundreds of deep-purple wave petunias and yellow marigolds are flanked by gnarled Harry Lauder walking sticks. Two small, dead maple trees, one painted yellow, the other red, function as sculpture. Other trees, such as a weeping crabapple, have been pruned in such a way that you can see more wood than leaf. It's little wonder that last year the Camdens received a Beautification Award from West Bloomfield Parks and Recreation. "There is a pleasure in plant- ing things and seeing them bloom that you can't measure in HOME IMPROVEMENT • AUGUST 31 • 2006 monetary terms:' Howard says. "Just look- ing at it makes me feel good." Howard, an insurance consultant with a business degree from Wayne State University in Detroit, also holds a hor- ticulture degree from Michigan State University. He studied how to grow and sell plants, an ambition fostered by gar- dening as a youngster. "I come from immigrant parents. I paid my way through college because my mother didn't think a Jewish boy should be a farmer:' Howard says. But a year or so after graduation, he determined that "Mother Nature was too fickle a partner:' and pursued what he saw as a more stable profession. Gardening became a hobby, along with cooking and creating eclectic collections of porcelain, silver, glass, woods and Western furniture. He won a prize for his roast-style brisket of beef and two pieces of the Camden's art collection will soon to be donated to the Detroit Institute of Arts. "But I would say the gardening comes first:' he says. Lili Ann gives her husband of 43 years the credit. "I can plant and I can weed, but Howard puts it all together. He does the design." They fit it in even though both are still working, Lili Ann as special events coor- dinator for Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloomfield, where they have belonged since it was formed. (His brisket and other of their recipes can be found in the Shir Shalom cookbook.) Each puts in several hours a week in the garden once the planting is in place. "But," says Lili Ann, "the planting goes on most of the summer." Indeed, a couple of flats of annuals — odds and ends, Howard says — sit by a potential bed even in the second week of August. Like many homeowners, the Camdens began by landscaping directly around their house when they moved in 39 years ago. "But that didn't give me enough expression," Howard says. So they branched out, putting in mul- tiple circular beds throughout the back yard and wide sideyard beds of peren- nials, including rose of Sharon, hibiscus and calla lilies, on either side of their corner lot. As houses went up throughout the neighborhood, Howard bargained with building crews to sell and deposit some of the mammoth rocks they came across during basement excavations. That rock pile, plus some unusual rocks, petrified wood, huge clam shells and drift wood discovered in their travels, are another source of sculptural inter-