[2006.08.03-11:40am EDT: See bottom of entry for link to article describing history of the Avenue H Station House.]
This post is rather lengthy. I’m hoping to make up for my numerous small and seemingly scattered, though all intricately interwoven in my mind, posts.
On Sunday, July 30, I attended the South Midwood Garden Tour. I was invited by a fellow gardener from that neighborhood whose husband I had met at a “new neighbors” event last year, after we bought our house. We invited them to our house opening party last fall, and I got to sketch out the “garden in my mind” which was forming out of the weeds and dust which came with the house.
My journey began by taking the Q train from my local station a couple of stops south to Avenue H. The tour began at 11am at a community garden, the Campus Road Garden at Brooklyn College. This is located at the western end of the Brooklyn College campus, near the ball fields.
The light towers surrounding the playing fields have large nests of Monk Parakeets. Their calls were constant. Dragonflies were swarming over and around the gardens. Butterflies were everywhere.
The next four photos are all from the same house and gardens. It’s on a double lot, 100ft x 100ft, a rarity in Brooklyn, but South Midwood has several of them. This garden was one of the highlights of the tour for me.
Skipping ahead a few gardens, these next two photos are different views of a well-designed and inviting accessible garden. The raised beds were customed designed and built for the gardener, whose mobility had become restricted over time. The integral seating is a terrific feature, providing both a place to sit and work the beds, and inviting visitors to get up close and personal with the plantings. This was another garden at the top of my list of favorites. I have so many ideas for my own gardens from this one.
At this stop it was the house, and not the gardens, which was featured on the tour. But the gardens make their own statement, which I would not want you to do without.
A couple of flower portraits from two other gardens.
I have a special fondness for large, red Hibiscus. It takes me back to my childhood in space-age Florida. I picked flowers just like this from the monstrous, garage-sized shrubs outside our house to dissect, study, and learn all the parts of the flower. I even put together a presentation on flowers and pollination for my grade school classmates and school. Yes, I was a curious child, in all the meanings of the word.
At the penultimate stop, the gardener invites his guests to enjoy the sensual pleasures of his herb garden.
The last, but not least, stop on the tour, home of the tour guide. The food and refreshments were raved over. And the gardens were nothing to sneeze at, either.
Links:
- The Little Station in the Woods tells the whole story of the Avenue H Station House.
Love the pictures of the gardens, but I was drawn to that old subway station. It’s so funky, and I can’t believe it’s still used. Being from California the subway system you have is quite interesting. Your pictures are really helpful to my understanding of city gardens.
That pond is way cool–it looks like a grotto of sorts. Hard to believe that garden is just a year old!
My favorite part of the tour was the red fence, though. I have posts to put up for my grapes and espaliered fruit trees, and I stained them a similar color… I only hope mine look as cheerfully bright as that fence does once they settle in.
The pond is just two MONTHS old: That garden was built in June of THIS year!
It was designed professionally. The owner was quite clear that she wasn’t a gardener, but she knew what she wanted, and what plants she liked, from past years’ garden tours. She had used the same designer on a small bed in the front yard, and hired him to do the entire back.
I had to go back and look at the pictures to see where the “red fence” was! That garden was so complex and big you couldn’t see everything. I just tried to find some vantage points and snap away. So many gardens, so little time!
Thanks for the photos – these gardens have a definite elegant ‘city’ feel in their denseness & tidyness, all the brickwork and the green feeling around the vintage houses. I remember the first time I saw the title “Flatbush Gardener” it made me think of Lana Turner’s character in Ziegfeld Girl, but her Brooklyn sure didn’t look like this!
The solid white hibiscus are still blooming here, and a few red Texas stars open once in awhile – I love hibiscus.