“MADAME, your attacks on our climbing hydrangeas are VANDALISM.”

Okay, other than the occasional glance over a fellow commuters’ shoulder while riding the subway, I do not read the New York Post. I heard about this story this morning on NY1‘s In The Papers segment. The most impressive thing about this story? These guys are growing climbing hydrangea in a tree pit!

A bushwhacker has become a thorn in the side of residents who love two sidewalk gardens on East 79th Street. The mystery woman has become the street’s Public Enemy No. 1 by ripping down climbing hydrangea vines, which produce brilliant white flowers in summer.

Vandal’s Vine Mess, East Side Anti-Plant Spree, New York Post, March 15, 2007

And, my spidey senses (aka gaydar) tell me this story fits the Gays in Gardening meme.

Fed up with the vine villain, Charles Dean and Skip Wachsberger, who tend the gardens, have posted signs politely ordering her to stop.

Two guys cooperatively gardening. That could be innocent enough.

“MADAME, your attacks on our climbing hydrangeas are VANDALISM. Please stop it! The gardener,” the sign reads.

Okay, they adddress the vandal as “Madame”. That’s kinda gay.

The gardens are in front of 225 E. 79th St., a high-rise between Second and Third avenues. Each [gardener?] has a tree.

Joe Cinni, the building’s super, has seen the uptown vandal and said she claims the vines are choking the trees.

“No! No! Absolutely not!” responded Dean, 58. “Hydrangeas are grown in gardens all over the world. They are not dangerous like that,” he said. “She thinks she’s doing something to protect the trees, but she’s misguided.”

Said Wachsberger, 62, “The vines co-exist with the trees. Climbing hydrangeas are very slow-growing.”

Wachsberger is a landscape designer and he and Dean edited “Of Leaf and Flower,” an award-winning book of poems and short stories about the emotions that plants inspire.

Okay, that’s really gay.

The dispute took root a year ago when Cinni saw the hydrangea snipper, a woman in her mid-50s, pulling down the vines. He stopped her. … Six weeks ago – in what appeared to be a pre-emptive strike – the “vigilante” popped up and began ripping the vines down.

“All of a sudden, I see this woman pulling down the vines with her hands. When I tell her, ‘Stop,’ she starts yelling at me that these are going to kill the trees,” Cinni said.

“I told her to stop pulling them and call 311 if she had a problem. She walked away from me and I haven’t seen her since.” Dean said he tied the vines to the trees with string, but two weeks ago the woman cut the string. He tied the vines up again.

“She has good intentions, but she’s misinformed,” Wachsberger said.

Strong words.

BBG Lab Admin Building Designated NYC Landmark

The Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s Laboratory Administration Building
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Laboratory Administration Building
On Tuesday, March 13, by unanimous vote, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated BBG’s Lab Admin Building a landmark:

“With its simple ornament, extraordinary cupola and octagonal roofs, this picturesque building complements its breathtaking surroundings,” said Commission Chairman Robert B. Tierney. “It’s also considered one of McKim, Mead & White’s most significant later commissions, and until today, was one of the few buildings designed by the firm without landmark protection.”
Press Release (PDF)

The press release notes that “the Tuscan Revival–style building is capped by a striking cupola with slender rounded-arch windows.” See for yourself:

Cupola Detail
Cupola Detail, BBG Laboratory Administration Building

Magnolias in front of Lab Admin Building

Cupola, Lab Admin Building

William Kendall designed the Garden’s Laboratory Administration Building, which was constructed in stages between 1912 and 1917. Kendall is known for other outstanding New York City landmarks, including the Municipal Building, Casa Italiana and the United States General Post office. In 1929, he was appointed to be on a U.S. Commission to design cemeteries in France and Italy for American soldiers who lost their lives there.

Some of McKim, Mead & White’s other buildings with landmark status in New York City include the Bowery Savings Bank, the Brooklyn Museum, the University Club and Low Memorial Library.

Related posts

My Flickr photo set of BBG’s Laboratory and Administration Building

Links

Press Release (PDF), Landmarks Preservation Commission

Good Planets: Home

Street tree in front of our house
Sycamore Maple? Street Tree, Stratford Road

Trying to catch up with some of my blogospheric responsibilities, I realized I totally forgot to link back to Good Planets!

I submitted two photographs from the front of our house. The one above is the street tree in front of our house. Street trees have a tough time, and I worry about it. I’m thinking about plantings I can do in the tree pit (aka “hell strips”) between the sidewalk and the curb which will help the tree. We’re also going to need to make a cutout for the trunk, something I’m sorry we didn’t do when we had the sidewalk replaced two years ago.

Bees and Crocus tommasinianus in the front garden
Bees and Crocus tommasinianus in the front garden

This one’s a bonus shot of my first Spring flowers, in the front garden. These are part of the heirloom garden I’m building up in the front yard. The crocus were swarming with bees that day. I counted five bees when I took the photo, though I can only find three of them in the photo now.

Friday, March 16: Sustainable Flatbush Kickoff Party at Vox Pop

This Friday, 8pm-midnight, Vox Pop is hosting the Kickoff Party for Sustainable Flatbush:

Each month (or so) Sustainable Flatbush will present a workshop, lecture, or film on a sustainability-related theme that can benefit our neighborhood… and then, we party!

Future topics and events to include:
– energy efficiency for apartment buildings, houses, and small businesses
– understanding NYC’s arcane recycling laws [I don’t think they’re that arcane.]
– local food, slow food, food justice
– flatbush community garden [This is in very early planning stages already. I’ll post about it when things are more defined.]
– fair trade
– livable streets
– bike month NYC
– freemeet – electronics recycling event
– permaculture and native plants [Yay!]
– rainwater harvesting [Woo-hoo!]
– green roofs [Go team!]
– composting [Yeah, baby!]

SOUNDS AND VISIONS
– Drummerman brings the musical goodness: Brazilian funk and Samba classics, New Orleans grooves, and Latin/Caribbean beats!
– Keka provides a whirlwind visual feast of thematic imagery to feed your head!
– and… if the stars align correctly… live musical happenings!
plus, food and drink specials all night!

Vox Pop is at 1022 Courtelyou Road, on the Southwest corner of Courtelyou and Stratford Road (East 11th Street), just one block east of Coney Island Avenue.
Subway: Take the Q train to Courtelyou Road station, just 4.5 streets away.
Bus: B23 or B68.

Red (#2 of 8)

Hibiscus, from South Midwood Garden Tour, July 30, 2006
Hibiscus

The second of eight installments on the way to creating a photographic rainbow to use as a banner for the blog and other branding opportunities. Pink was the first, and there will be six more: orange, yellow, green (easy!), blue, indigo (tough!) and violet/purple.

“Red” turned out to be harder for me to define than “Pink”. It’s not a simple color. There are so many different flavors of red. Of course, there’s the brilliant, vibrant, almost crimson that screams RED, like the Hibiscus.

There are less saturated reds, like brick red:

Front Porch Detail, from The Front Garden Evolving, January 24, 2007
Front Porch, Brick Detail, April 2005

Some leaves:

Virgina Creeper, from North Carolina Arboretum, October 9, 2006
Virginia Creeper

And even algae:

Algae Pool in Rock, from North Carolina Arboretum Bonsai House, October 9, 2006
DSC_2521

I’m having a particularly hard time figuring out where red leaves off and orange begins:

Cormorant on Torii in the Japanese Garden, from Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 23, 2006
Cormorant on Torii in the Japanese Garden

Maple Tree, 91 Marlborough Road
Maple Tree, 91 Marlborough Road

There are many more flavors of red in the Flickr photo set, so be sure to visit there, too.

Waterfront Museum, Red Hook, Brooklyn

[Updated 2007.03.14: Added links to Related Posts.]

The Waterfront Museum was one of the highlights of yesterday’s walking tour of Red Hook, Brooklyn, associated with the Historic District Council‘s 13th Annual Preservation Conference. Myself, I could have spent two hours there alone. The story of the barge, not to mention the people and characters involved in saving and restoring it, is fascinating. I want to go back when the water is warmer!

It was also visual overload. I couldn’t capture everything. Here’s what I got.

Waterfront Museum Barge, Red Hook

Waterfront Museum Barge, Red Hook

Pier 41

Statue of Liberty

David Sharps Speaks to the HDC Red Hook Walking Tour

David Sharps

Rope Ball

Hinge and Hasp

Artifacts

Barge Bunny

Block and Tackle

Chest Hardware

David Sharps

Wooden Propeller Blade, Detail

Kinetic Musical Sculpture

Going ...... going ...... gone!

Musical Sculpture

Related Posts:

HDC Red Hook Walking Tour

Beard and Robinson Warehouse, Beard Street, Red Hook
DSC_6638
[Updated 2007.03.14: Changed post title to link to my Collection – a feature Flickr just added yesterday – of my Sets of photos from the tour. Added links to Related Posts.]
[Updated 2007.03.12: Added several images.]

Today I went on a Walking Tour of Red Hook, sponsored by the the Historic District Council. This and several other tours were organized to cap their 13th Annual Preservation Conference, which I attended all day yesterday.

Follow the link from the title of this post to see today’s pictures. I managed to whittle down more than half of the photos I took today. That still leaves over 200 photos. I have massive editing to do. In no particular order, here are some of my favorite images of the day.


Lamb Baited Area

Barge Bunny

Entran No 6

School Bus Emergency Door

Fish Heads, Valentino Pier

Our Lady of the Corner of Garnet and Court Streets, Botanica de la Milagrosa

Block and Tackle

Cobblestones, Van Dyke Street

Open and Shut

Gowanus Canal

Salt Dunes

Related Posts:

Field Trip: Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 23, 2006

I thought I had previously blogged these photos, but I couldn’t find the blog post. So I’m posting it where I can find it again!

[I would have preferred to back-date these photos to April 23, 2006, the date of the visit, but “new” Blogger doesn’t seem to allow that.]

This is what we can look forward to in another six weeks or so in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.

Cherry Blossoms
Cherry Blossoms

Cormorant, Torii, and Hillside in the Japanese Garden
Cormorant on Torii in the Japanese Garden
Cormorant, Torii, and Hillside in the Japanese Garden

Magnolia Plaza
Magnolia Plaza

Spring Bulbs in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Spring Bulbs in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Spring Bulbs in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Spring Bulbs in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Spring Bulbs in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Spring Bulbs in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Spring Bulbs in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace

Tulips in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Tulips in the Annual Border of the Lily Pool Terrace

Euphorbia in the Mixed Perennial Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Euphorbia in the Mixed Perennial Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Euphorbia in the Mixed Perennial Border of the Lily Pool Terrace

Lilacs in the Mixed Perennial Border of the Lily Pool Terrace
Lilacs in the Mixed Perennial Border of the Lily Pool Terrace

Redbuds and Spring Bulbs in the Fragrance Garden
Redbuds and Spring Bulbs in the Fragrance Garden
Redbuds and Spring Bulbs in the Fragrance Garden

Pink

[Updated: Added captions and links to previous blog posts.]

I’ve been thinking about creating a banner for the blog which I can use for “branding” opportunities such as calling cards. I want to create a composite image from my photographs which recreates the rainbow of curtains across the front of the house.

The original design for the gay pride flag had eight colors: pink, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and purple. (Only a gay man would insist on including “indigo” in the rainbow!) My first task is to collect photographs for each color. This is the first installment: Pink.

Beetle on Rose, from Field Trip to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, July 8, 2006.
Beetle on Rose

Cherry Blossoms, from Field Trip to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 23, 2006.
Cherry Blossoms

Tabletop Portulaca
Tabletop Portulaca

Bee on Echinacea, from South Midwood Garden Tour, July 30, 2006.
Bee on Echinacea

Gecko Under Glass
Gecko Under Glass

Phlox, from Marie’s Garden, Saratoga, NY, August 26, 2006.
Phlox

Allamanda cathartica “Cherries Jubilee”, from North Carolina Arboretum
Allamanda cathartica "Cherries Jubilee"

Sunset, from Halloween 2006.
Sunset, Beverly Square West, Brooklyn, Halloween 2006

The Pergola, Prospect Park Lights.
The Pergola, Prospect Park Lights

Park Circle, Prospect Park Light.
Park Circle, Prospect Park Lights

Images of the Children’s Aid Society

Last night I attended the Opening Night Reception of the Historic District Council‘s 13th Annual Preservation Conference. The event was held at the Children’s Aid Society at 219 Sullivan Street. This is within the boundaries proposed by the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation for a new South Village Historic District.

Two Windows, Children's Aid Society

Today I’ll be attending the all-day conference at Hunter College. I’m already running late! So here’s just a few photographic impressions of last night’s location. More later tonight.

Window, Children's Aid Society

Children's Aid Society, 219 Sullivan Street

Empty Easel, Children's Aid Society

Playground Plaque, Children's Aid Society

Playground Pig, Children's Aid Society