
Virginia Garden Week is more about traipsing through exquisitely decorated homes than wandering around rich people's flower beds. You'll have to take my word on this as the host garden clubs prohibit photography and sketching inside the tour homes. Not that I could have produced, let alone figured out how to upload, a legible sketch of any home interior.

The Garden Club of Virginia has raised more than $14.5 million dollars over the past 76 years from Historic Garden Week tour events. The money is used to restore scores of historic properties in Virginia, including Monticello, Mount Vernon, and Montpelier. The oldest and largest program of its kind in the nation, "America's Largest Open House" was listed recently in an English travel advisory as among the very "Hip and Historic" things to do in the spring. This year 33 different communities participated.

My friend Lee never says no to an adventure, especially one that involves Virginia Beach and Norfolk. She hardly blanched when I insisted on driving my car and I restrained myself from teasing her about the GPS she positioned on her lap five seconds after she buckled her seat belt Tuesday afternoon. That GPS came in handly about two hours later when the fuel light on my dashboard started flashing.

The GPS also helped us find JoAnn's new house in Virginia Beach, a lovely manse with about 78 bedrooms and 105 bathrooms. Okay, I'm exaggerating a little but JoAnn will verify that the house is so huge her son Ben calls her on the phone every morning to let her know he's up in time for school.
The three of us did the Virginia Beach tour on Wednesday, and Geraldine joined us in time for lunch. Today Lee and I oohed and aahed our way through six homes in Norfolk's new East Beach neighborhood on the Chesapeake Bay before heading back to D.C. One of the docents at the Norfolk tour was my old neighbor Kyle. Another docent who looked hauntingly familiar turned out to be the twin brother of Kyle's husband. Virginia Garden Week made me a little bit homesick for Norfolk. I'd be even more homesick for Norfolk if I could figure out how to swap our Larchmont house for one of the East Beach gems, most of which feature water views and quaint little guest suites over their garages.