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In The Jardin With Tar-Jay
Posted by Kerry Trueman on April 18, 2006 - 7:40am.
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I hate myself for loving Target. While its mock-French nickname lost some cachet in the blogosphere once Katie Couric appropriated it, the big box bastion of home goods for the hipster still knows how to reel me in with all those stylish and whimsical items that I may or may not really need.

Target hooked me again last week with a flyer tucked into my newspaper. It was a stealth flyer, looking exactly like an IKEA catalog, only thinner. By the time I realized it was actually from Target, I had already fallen in love with the cast iron garden gnomes and knew I had to get one. Or two. Three, tops.

So I hopped on the subway to the Brooklyn Target and got myself a pair of gnomes, and discovered, in the process, that Target has outdone itself with its line of outdoor products this season.

There, in the middle of the gardening department, stood the Mai Tiki Gazebo, a really nice-looking and sizable (10' x 10') structure made of bamboo, for a paltry $249 (it's $299 on the Target website, but I saw it at an upstate Target yesterday where it was also $249). Thank goodness we haven't got a large enough patch of level land to fit the Mai Tiki Gazebo, or I would be sorely tempted to buy it. And that would be just the beginning.

Once you've got the gazebo, there's a whole line of complimentary furnishings, including a bamboo bar and stools that provide the perfect setting in which to serve, and sip, the exotic, umbrella-topped beverage of your choice. There's an assortment of comfy, cushioned wicker seating and a "firebowl with screen," a kind of firepit that looks like just the ticket for making s'mores.

Target's even selling a line of upscale, German-engineered greenhouses on their website this year. The sleek, simple structures have proven so popular that they're currently sold out of all but the smallest model, which, alas, at roughly 7 1/2' x 10 1/2 ‘ is still too big for our garden.

I also have trouble figuring out where we could fit one of the hot tubs Target now sells, or the sauna, for that matter, but it's fun to fantasize about.

More useful for my modest garden was the line of seeds Target's selling as part of its Sean Conway Garden Style line. It's a choice selection of seeds including everything from hard-to-find heirloom Bull's Blood beets, a brand-new-this-year cosmos for the dot.com set named "Double Click," and a nasturtium I've never seen anywhere, a mounding variety with dark blue-green leaves and deep salmon-rose flowers called "Salmon Baby."

I googled Sean Conway and discovered that he's the host of a new PBS program called Cultivating Life, a kind of cooking/gardening hybrid how-to. He looks like a nice, dorky sort of guy, with salt & pepper hair, and glasses. Don't know anything else about him, but he's definitely got good taste in seeds.

Another terrific gardening product at Target is a line of clogs called Sloggers. They're really comfortable and easy to clean, with removable, washable inserts. I already own several pairs, but they keep coming out with new colors. I resisted the urge to get an orange pair, Mario Battali's trademark clog color. Was also tempted by the lime green Sloggers, but I already have a sage-colored pair. Still, when they're only $14.99, it's awfully hard to resist. And best of all, they're made right here in the USA.

I don't know where the super-cool, super-cheap Mai Tiki Gazebo is made, but given its asian motif and materials, it's not hard to guess. As for my gnomes, they come from the Land of Make Believe. As in, Make Believe it Doesn't Matter Where the Stuff We Buy is Manufactured. I try not to go there if I can help it, but Target knows just how to push my "spend" button.

We liked the gnomes so much we ended up buying four; one pair for the city; one set for the country. Do we really need them? Well, they make me laugh, and according to my colleague Marisa, a good laugh is just what the doctor ordered.



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<em>Anonymous</em>'s picture
Gazebo quality
by Anonymous on April 18, 2006 - 6:47am
I just had a similar experience of accompanying a friend to Ikea- with a reading lamp as my only desire. I walked out of the store several large plastic bags heavier with objects I didn't have an inkling I needed. That gazebo you mentioned looks great. In your opinion, do you think it would withstand the rigours of the Hudson river wind? Does it come with that wood base shown in the picture? I bought one of those canopies on a metal frame from Home Depot once and the wind bent the steel tubes like they were made of clay.
<em>kat</em>'s picture
...the deck, and river view, alas, are not included
by kat on April 18, 2006 - 7:39am
The gazebo only comes with a "bamboo side shade and mosquito netting," no mention of a base. The frame is made of bamboo and rust-resistant powder-coated steel, which sounds sturdier than your ill-fated Home Depot canopy. Bamboo is an amazingly strong material, they actually use it for scaffolding in Hong Kong, believe it or not. I'd take extra measures to secure the canvas roof of this gazebo, though, maybe lash it to the bamboo with heavy duty wire; those Hudson River winds can be fierce...
<em>Anonymous</em>'s picture
Gazebo
by Anonymous on April 18, 2006 - 7:31am
I believe the explanation for the listed higher price for the gazebo is because it's necessary for suppliers to list their items higher in order for Fema to pay double and use them to rebuild New Orleans.
<em>kat</em>'s picture
hadn't thought of that...
by kat on April 18, 2006 - 7:44am
But it does make me wonder if a company like Target wouldn't, in fact, be better equipped to provide displaced Katrina victims with well-designed, decent quality trailers at a lower price than the ones FEMA paid through the nose for and left sinking in the mud somewhere while people are waiting to rebuild their homes and their lives...
<em>Anonymous</em>'s picture
Misconstruction
by Anonymous on April 18, 2006 - 8:21am
I believe you have misconstuued what is happening. Fema has certainly not left trailers sinking in the mud while thousands remain homeless. That would imply some lack of structure, organization and foresight. What, in fact, must be happening is, in order to provide a safe environment for "those unfortunate people," Fema is merely water testing those trailers in case it ever rains again in New Orleans.
<em>kat</em>'s picture
of course!
by kat on April 18, 2006 - 8:46am
Why didn't I think of that? I'm glad they're on top of things, 'cause the next hurricane season is only a couple months away, I hear...
<em>Amy_Rice</em>'s picture
Gnomes are irresistible.
by Amy_Rice on April 19, 2006 - 1:37pm
I have to admit that I have been known to relocate local gnomes from various gardens to secret hiding spots. They are way too cute, I saw the ones at Target but I don't think my boyfriend likes them, this may be a bad sign? He thinks they look too much like clowns.
<em>kat</em>'s picture
please ask him to take a closer look...
by kat on April 19, 2006 - 3:07pm
...I myself have a fear and loathing of clowns; if there were anything even remotely clown-like about these gnomes they would not appeal to me at all. The Target gnomes actually have a kindly, grandfatherly air about them; I would go so far as to say that they exude a kind of Buddha-like wisdom. To be fair, most new, mass-produced gnomes on the market are ugly and buffoonish (and made of horrible materials like cast resin); that's the genius of Target. Their gnomes have a vintage look about them--they probably found some old gnomes and used them to make molds for these guys.

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