Plant Delights order is on its way!

I just got an email notifying me that my Plant Delights order is on its way!

Honestly, I don’t remember what I ordered. I know I ordered some exotic, marginally hardy (Zone 7ish) monsters for the long, sunny border. The tracking service tells me the package is 18.3 pounds, which is a lot of produce.

Unfortunately, Plant Delights’ online ordering system generates no copy of what you ordered, and no confirmation of what gets shipped. If you don’t print it out and file the page away, you’ll never know until it arrives. Which is where I am now.

Links

Plant Delights Nursery

A weekend at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Part 2: Magnolia Plaza

See also Part 1: The Osborne Garden, and Part 3: Rock Garden.


Judith D. Zuk Magnolia Plaza, Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Magnolia Plaza

Check out the photo above, and select the largest size your bandwidth and screen size can handle. Place yourself in that picture, take a deep breath, and imagine the fragrance that saturated the air: a mix of citrus and spice, light, not heavy or thick, that clears the sinuses and the mind.

The Magnolia Plaza doesn’t get much better than it was when I saw it this past Saturday. A textbook sky, a warm, Spring day, the majority of the species and varieties of Magnolias in the plaza just coming into peak, with barely a dropped petal to be seen anywhere.

From BBG’s Web site:

From March-blooming star magnolias (Magnolia stellata) to saucer magnolias (M. x soulangiana) in April, Magnolia Plaza is sweetly scented with 17 varieties.

Magnolia stellata, Star Magnolia
Magnolia stellata, Star Magnolia

Star Magnolia

Magnolia kobus
Magnolia kobus

Magnolia, unrecorded variety
Magnolia

Magnolia Plaza is an elegant formal garden of magnificent trees spread in front of the beaux arts Administration Building. The sweet scent and showy blossoms of magnolias are among the early signs of spring at Brooklyn Botanic Garden. In March, the star magnolias (Magnolia stellata) bloom, covering the trees with millions of lacy white flowers. In April the Plaza is splashed with the ivory, yellow, pink, and rich purple of 17 varieties of magnolias. The last of the collection, the sweet-bay magnolia (M. virginiana), reveals its fragrant, creamy white flowers in June.

Magnolia Plaza, with the landmark BBG Lab & Admin Building
Magnolia Plaza

Magnolia Plaza

More of Magnolia Plaza
Magnolia Plaza

Magnolia Plaza

Related Posts

Part 1: The Osborne Garden
Magnolia Plaza, BBG, April 2008 (Flickr photo set)

Links

Judith D. Zuk Magnolia Plaza, Brooklyn Botanic Garden

A weekend at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Part 1: The Osborne Garden

See also Part 2: Magnolia Plaza, and Part 3: Rock Garden.


The Osborne Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Osborne Garden

I spent most of yesterday and a couple of hours today at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. There were several things that drew me to the gardens this weekend:

  • Yesterday morning I attended a meeting of the newly forming Brooklyn Community Gardens Coalition.
  • After that, I met up with OldRoses of A Gardening Year and her Straw Hatters on a field trip to BBG from New Jersey.
  • Today I went for Forsythia Day to pick up my Forsythia and Signature Plants.

I took hundreds of photos from every part of the gardens except the greenhouses. I’ve gotten most of them through my workflow, but there’s still more to sort through, cull, edit, label and so on. It will take me a few days, so I thought I would take the opportunity to organize a series of posts, grouped by the area of the garden, regardless of which day I took the photos.

I’m cheating a little with this first group; I took many of them Thursday evening, on my way to my Botany class. These are all from the Osborne Garden, the formal gardens that bridge the Eastern Parkway entrance to BBG with the main body of the garden. In past years, I’ve hardly ever seen this garden. It’s out of the way; unless you enter or exit from Eastern Parkway, between Mount Prospect Park and the Brooklyn Museum, it’s a detour, a cul-de-sac off the beaten path. But since the the Eastern Parkway stop on the 2/3 train is right there, this will be my commute to evening classes at BBG. I’ll be seeing, and photographing, a lot more of the Osborne Garden over the next year or two.

Here’s how BBG describes the Osborne Garden on their Web site:

This three-acre, Italian-style formal garden is a kaleidoscope of color in May with azaleas, rhododendrons, crabapples, and wisteria draped over wood and stone pergolas.

The art of formal Italian landscaping comes to life in the Osborne Garden, where wisteria-draped pergolas frame an emerald lawn. In spring, daffodils, pansies, and tulips bloom, followed by crab apples and cherries, which gradually give way to azaleas, rhododendrons, and wisterias. The 30,000-square-foot central green is surrounded by a fountain, water basin, stone seats, and soaring columns.

My botany class runs into May. I’m hoping that gives me a chance to see the Wisteria in bloom on the pergolas.

Wisteria Pergolas, Osborne Garden
Osborne Garden

Wisteria Pergola
Wisteria Pergola

Grappling Wisteria
Grappling Wisteria, Osborne Garden

On the east and west sides of the central lawn are walkways through 10 pergolas draped with wisteria. Evergreens and flowering fruit trees such as cherries and crab apples shade the walkways. Rhododendrons and azaleas line the paths, and on the west side is a boulder wall accented with shrubs, perennials, and annuals.

Birch, Daffodils and Forsythia
Birch, Daffodils and Forsythia, Osborne Garden, BBG

Pansies overlooking the Osborne Garden
Osborne Garden

I caught up with the Straw hatters about halfway through their visit. They had just finished visiting the Children’s Garden, and were coming up the Flatbush Avenue side of the garden to the Rock garden, where I met them. We looped around from there, including a pass through the Osborne Garden.

Straw Hatters in the Osborne Garden
Straw Hatters in the Osborne Garden

They were admiring one of the Cornus mas, Cornelian Cherries, in bloom.

Cornus mas, Cornelian Cherry

There’s lots of yellow happening right now.

Yellow

Yellow

Yellow

The southwestern spur of the Osborne Garden has azaleas and rhododendrons. These will be also be something to watch over the coming weeks.

Gable Rhododendron ‘Conewago Imperial’
Gable Rhododendron 'Conewago Imperial'

Rhododendron mucronulatum var. ciliatum
Rhododendron mucronulatum var. ciliatum

Related Posts

Part 2: Magnolia Plaza
Botany for Horticulturists, April 3, 2008

Links

Osborne Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Hanami at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Prunus ‘Okame’ in bloom yesterday afternoon, along the Cherry Walk and adjacent to the Cherry Esplanade at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.
Prunus 'Okame'

Tomorrow, Saturday, April 5, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden kicks off its annual Hanami, the cherry blossom season:

Hanami is the Japanese cultural tradition of viewing and cherishing each moment of the cherry blossom season. At Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Hanami is a New York City “rite of spring.”

Visitors can stroll under a canopy of cherry trees, view artwork inspired by cherry blossoms in the Steinhardt Conservatory Gallery, savor special Japanese entrees at the Terrace Café, and browse a special Hanami Shop.

Hanami runs through May 11, culminating in a celebratory crescendo with Sakura Matsui on May 3 and 4.

Here’s a detail of Okame’s flower:

Prunus 'Okame'

Here’s how the tree looks, peaking through the other cherries, still in bud. One of the entrances to the Japanese Garden is along the path sloping down on the left.

Cherry Walk

This is Prunus sargentii ‘Fudansakura’, blooming just northeast of the Cherry Esplanade, near the northern entrance to the Cherry Walk.

Prunus sargentii 'Fudansakura'

Prunus sargentii 'Fudansakura'

There’s another beautiful specimen in full bloom within the Japanese Garden, here viewed from the other side of the fence.

Japanese Garden

BBG updates its CherryWatch Blossom Status Map weekly. Only a handful are in peak bloom right now. Most are still in bud and haven’t yet started blooming. But a few warm days, especially sunny ones, will change that quickly.

BBG CherryWatch Map as of 4/4/2008

Here’s the flower of Accolade, shown on the map above. I could have lightened this image up a bit, but it was a cold, overcast day, threatening rain. The dark tones reflect the feeling of the afternoon when I visited.

Prunus 'Accolade'

The rain will stop by Saturday afternoon. Sunday will be a good day for Hanami! It’s also BBG Members’ Forsythia Day on Sunday. I’ll be there to pick up my Forsythia and my signature plants.

Related Posts

Introducing the BBG Hanami Flickr Group, April 3, 2008

Links

Flowering Cherries at BBG
BBG’s new Hanami Flickr group

Botany for Horticulturists

Liverworts and Mosses, one of the specimens we examined earlier this evening.
Liverworts and Mosses

A brief note before I crash for the night. It’s been a long day. Tonight was the first time I’ve been in a classroom, outside of work, in about 25 years. It was my first class of Botany for Horticulturists, one of eight courses I need to complete to receive a Certificate in Horticulture from the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.

Tonight was orientation and overview. And we had time to get into the beginnings of classification.

Specimens for Botany for Horticulturists

Although the apparent stars in these pots are the carnivorous Sundews and Pitcher Plants, they were on hand to give us some close looks at Bryophytes: liverworts and mosses. Here, in a pot of Sundews, the liverworts are giving rise to fruiting bodies.

Liverwort Fruiting Bodies

Here’s some closeups of the mosses. If you look closely, we can see some baby Sundews in there, too.

Sphagnum and other Mosses

The best part, though I have no photos of it, was walking through the greenhouses at night and having them all to ourselves. It was warm and kinda spooky at the same time. We moved there to get some looks at Pteridophytes – Ferns, the earliest vascular plants – and Cycads.

This course runs seven weeks, through the middle of May. I’m looking forward to it.

Introducing the BBG Hanami Flickr Group

Cherry Blossoms from the 2006 Hanami at BBG, one of my photos I’ve already added to BBG’s new Hanami Flickr Group
Cherry Blossoms

This Saturday is the official opening of Hanami, the Cherry Blossom Viewing Season, at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Last week, inspired by the success of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitors group on Flickr, BBG launched a new Flickr group, Hanami: Cherry Blossom Viewing at Brooklyn Botanic Garden:

The blossoming of the cherry trees at Brooklyn Botanic Garden is a New York City rite of spring. Hanami is the Japanese cultural tradition of viewing and cherishing each moment of the cherry blossom season.

Join Brooklyn Botanic Garden in celebrating Hanami this year by adding your cherry blossom pictures to our group!

Any Flickr member can join and add their photos. No invitation is needed. At the moment of this writing, there are already 14 members and 20 photos in the pool. We can expect to see hundreds of photos by the end of Hanami.

Earlier this week, BBG contacted me to ask for some suggestions on how to get the group started. Based on those email conversations, and discussions in the group itself, they’ve come up with the following guidelines:

Any photos you have taken of flowering cherries at BBG are welcome for submission–from any time in the blooming cycle. Hanami is the official cherry blossom viewing season here at the Garden (this year it’s from April 5 to May 11), but if you’ve got shots of early- or late-bloomers, we’d love to see them, too!

Please tag your photos with “Hanami” and “BBG” or “Brooklyn Botanic Garden.”

Related Posts

Events and Resources: Hanami and more at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 3, 2007

Links

Flowering Cherries at BBG is the home page for all your Hanami needs

April is MillionTreesNYC Month

This is the street tree in front of our house. Update 2008.04.21: I recant. I think it’s a London Plane Tree after all, not a Sycamore.
American Sycamore, Street Tree, Stratford Road

All the Spring activities are coming fast and furious now. Hard to keep up.

On April 1, Mayor Bloomberg declared April 2008 MillionTreesNYC Month:

During MillionTreesNYC Month in April 2008, all New Yorkers are encouraged to “think globally and plant locally” by joining the City’s historic undertaking to expand New York City’s urban forest by 20 percent. Throughout the month, Parks, NYRP, and MillionTreesNYC partners will host free Citywide events for the public, including Earth Day (April 22) and Arbor Day (April 25) celebrations, tree education seminars, tree stewardship workshops, tree pruning instructional courses, and Urban Park Ranger tree identification hikes throughout the City. There will also be large-scale volunteer tree-planting events, including the planting of 20,000 trees in parks Citywide on Saturday, April 12 through New York Cares’ Hands on New York Day and Jet Blue and NYRP’s One Thing That’s Green Day.
Press Release, April 1, 2008

Related Posts

News, NYC: 1M Trees in 10 Years, April 22, 2007
Carolina Silverbell: One of a Million, October 9, 2007

Links

Press Release, April 1, 2008
Events and Activities, MillionTreesNYC
New York Restoration Project

The Daffodil Project is in bloom on Cortelyou Road

Cortelyou Daffodil
Cortelyou Daffodils

This evening I came home via the Cortelyou Road stop on the Q train. I wanted to stop by John’s Bakery to pick up some munchies. I had to cross the street: the Daffodils are just starting to bloom.

They’ve started on the north side of the street, as I expected. The south side has been shaded by the stores and apartment buildings until recently. The soil in the tree pits there has not been warmed by the sun which the north, unshaded side of the street has been getting.

Cortelyou Daffodils

Last fall, two dozen volunteers planted 1,000 Daffodil bulbs and 400 Crocus corms over two weekends. The Crocus are all but spent now; just a few raggedy blooms hanging on here and there. The Daffodils are just getting started.

Cortelyou Daffodils

As in past years, there’s no way to know what you’re going to get when you plant the bulbs in the Fall. I saw at least four different kinds in bloom today.

Cortelyou Daffodils

It seems a far remove from 9/11, the inspiration for the Daffodil Project. But it was very much in the consciousness of at least some of us who planted these bulbs. And certainly in the minds and hearts of my neighbors who took the initiative to request these bulbs to be planted in their neighborhood.

Related Posts

My Flickr photo set of this project
Cortelyou Crocuses!, March 6, 2008
Cortelyou Road Crocus Watch, February 4, 2008
Tree Pits are not Dumpsters, November 18, 2007
The Daffodil Project Plantings on Cortelyou Road, November 4, 2007
1,000 Daffodils for Cortelyou Road, October 27, 2007
The Daffodil Project: Grief & Gardening #5, November 26, 2006

Links

The Daffodil Project

City Planning Commission Unanimously Approves Green Initiatives

Update: The City Council approved the Yards Text Amendment on April 30, 2008.


54 Stratford Road, Caton Park, Flatbush, Brooklyn. This is not a parking lot.
54 Stratford Road, Caton Park, Brooklyn

I learned yesterday that last week NYC’s City Planning Commission unanimously approved two initiatives proposed last fall by the Department of City Planning.

I wrote last year about the Yards Text Amendment, which will prevent paving over front yards for parking, among other things. The other proposal mandates street trees – one for each 25 feet of lot frontage, and a minimum of one per lot – for new development and significant renovation. I’ve written several posts about street trees, though none about this specific DCP proposal.

These now go to the City Council.

246 (left) and 240 (center) Westminster Road, Beverley Square West, Flatbush, Brooklyn
246 (left) and 240 (center) Westminster Road

Related Posts

Preserving Livable Streets: DCP’s Yards Text Amendment, November 7, 2007
Basic Research: The State of the Forest in New York City, November 12, 2007
Factoids: NYC’s Street Trees and Stormwater Reduction, November 15, 2007
Barbara Corcoran Hates the Earth, November 18, 2007
The Luminous Streets, November 25, 2007
Factoid: Street Trees and Property Values, December 2, 2007

Links

Residents square off about new driveway limits, NY Daily News, April 1, 2008

GMail’s April Fools Feature: Custom Time

As of today (and likely only for today), GMail, Google’s email service, allows you to send messages into the past:

How do I use it?

Just click “Set custom time” from the Compose view. Any email you send to the past appears in the proper chronological order in your recipient’s inbox. You can opt for it to show up read or unread by selecting the appropriate option.
Introducing GMail Custom Time: Be on time, every time

However, you can only send ten messages into the past, as they explain:

How come I only get ten?

Our researchers have concluded that allowing each person more than ten pre-dated emails per year would cause people to lose faith in the accuracy of time, thus rendering the feature useless.

Their findings:

N = Total emails sent
P = Probability that user believes the time stamp
φ = The Golden Ratio
L = Average life expectancy

That should clear things up.

What ten messages would you send into the past? Keep in mind that you can only send as far back as April 1, 2004.