More Heirloom Bulbs in the Front Garden

The front garden Saturday morning
Front Garden

Lots of bulb action in the front garden lately. Just a couple days of warm weather and things really took off. This is what it looked a week ago:

The Front Garden

These photos of the Hyacinths are also from a week ago. Heirloom Hyacinth “Queen of the Blues” is the light blue one. It’s hard to render the color accurately on-screen; it’s a pale, powder blue which looks different depending on whether it’s sunny or overcast, or in the shade or sun. It’s been blooming for two weeks now. Today, it’s just starting to flop over and fade.

Heirloom Hyacinths

Heirloom Hyacinth 'Queen of the Blues'

Heirloom Hyacinth 'Queen of the Blues'

The dark purple one is heirloom Hyacinth “King of the Blues.”

Heirloom Hyacinth 'King of the Blues'

What the camera can’t capture at all is the scent. These heirloom Hyacinths are intensely fragrant, especially “Queen”; those eight inflorescences perfume the entire front yard and the sidewalk in front of our house.

Two more bulbs opened up over the past week. An unidentified Daffodil obtained from the Daffodil Project, and the unbelievably red Tulipa linifolia, which I just planted this season.

Daffodils and Tulipa linifolia

Daffodils

Tulipa linifolia

Tulipa linifolia

Tulipa clusiana was just starting to open up today, but I didn’t get any shots of that yet. Something to look forward to for later in the week.

Related Posts

Sprign has Sprung, March 2, 2008
The Front Garden Evolving, January 24, 2007

Native Flora Garden, BBG, April 2008

Sanguinaria canadensis, Bloodroot, Native Flora Garden, BBG
Sanguinaria canadensis, Bloodroot, Native Flora Garden, BBG

Set aside the Cherries for a moment. Now is the time to visit the Native Flora Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.

There’s always something to see in this garden at any time of year – it’s a great spot for birdwatching, for example – but right now, during this brief week or two, is when most of the spring ephemerals are in their peak bloom. Check it out soon, or you’ll have to wait another year for this show to repeat itself.

With more than two acres divided into eight geographical zones, this wildflower garden exhibits native plants growing in the New York Metropolitan Area, a region known for its natural diversity.

Dating back to 1911, the Native Flora Garden isn’t just another wildflower display. In 1931, this wild retreat was ecologically designed to support nine distinct plant communities found within a 100-mile radius of New York City: serpentine rock, dry meadow, kettle pond, bog, pine barrens, wet meadow and stream, deciduous woodland, and limestone ledge, as well as a border mound with several representatives of the region’s coniferous forests.

All plants in this garden are appropriate for their particular ecological niches, determined by environmental factors such as topography, geology, soil acidity or alkalinity, moisture, drainage, and light.

I took this set of photos last night on my way to Botany class. This is not even everything that’s blooming right now, just the ones I had time to shoot before I had to head off to class.

Caltha palustris, Marsh Marigold
Caltha palustris, Marsh Marigold, Native Flora Garden, BBG

Dicentra eximia, Bleeding-Heart
Dicentra eximia, Bleeding-Heart, Native Flora Garden, BBG

Erythronium americanum, Trout-Lily
Erythronium americanum, Trout-Lily, Native Flora Garden, BBG
Erythronium americanum, Trout-Lily, Native Flora Garden, BBG

Dicentra cucullaria, Dutchman’s Breeches
Dicentra cucullaria, Dutchman's Breeches, Native Flora Garden, BBG

Uvularia sessilifolia, Wild Oats
Uvularia sessilifolia, Wild Oats, Native Flora Garden, BBG

I am also quite fond of ferns.

Osmunda cinnamonea, Cinnamon Fern, with some Skunk Cabbage behind
Osmunda cinnamonea, Cinnamon Fern, Native Flora Garden, BBG

Osmunda regalis, Royal Fern
Osmunda regalis, Royal Fern, Native Flora Garden, BBG

Related Content

Growing a Native Plant Garden in a Flatbush Backyard, August 6, 2007
Resources: Native Alternatives to Invasive Plants, May 22, 2007
Native Plant profile: Dicentra eximia, Bleeding-heart, May 22, 2006
Notes from a visit to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Late July 2005
My photos of the Native Flora Garden
My other posts about native plants

Links

Native Flora Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Brooklyn Native, New York City Garden, is a great writeup of tips and sources if, like me, you’re interested in growing native plants in your own Brooklyn or NYC garden.
Native Plants Database, Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center

Amy Stewart at the Horticultural Society of New York

Amy Stewart at HSNY

This evening I had the pleasure of attending Amy Stewart’s appearance at The Horticultural Society of New York. Amy was promoting the paperback edition of her bestseller, Flower Confidential, and provided a synopsis of the themes she covers in detail in her book.

I enjoyed her talk. She illustrated her stories with photographs from her research and travels for the book. The photo above illustrates Florigene’s attempts to genetically engineer a blue rose by combining Petunia genes with a Rose’s. Telling stories through pictures is something I strive to do here, however statically. Amy’s talk was a model for me.

Amy Stewart

Amy was also an animated speaker, so few of my photos successfully captured her spirited delivery. A couple of quotes:

  • “What would a blue rose mean?” We have cultural associations for Roses of other hue: white, red, yellow. Blog Widow suggests a blue rose should signify “disease,” ala The Glass Menagerie.
  • “You don’t see a lot of flowers in bloom” in greenhouses. Except for Gerberas, most flowers are cut, prepped and shipped while still in bud.
  • “We Americans know nothing about flowers.” (On national pride in flower-growing)
  • “There are good and bad farms everywhere.” (On making assumptions about floral industry practices based on the region of the world in which they’re located.)
  • “The focus is you.” (Advice to brides seeking her consult on where to obtain the “chocolate” rose.)
  • “Florists have to have a careful understanding of human nature.” Which leads us to the florist’s axiom:
  • “Use a different florist for a different woman.”

Amy also announced her next project: “Wicked” Plants – illegal, illicit, immoral, murderous, and so on. Sounds delightful! It reminded me of the wormwood, Artemisia vulgaris, I’ve been striving to eradicate from my gardens the past three years. It has been used as an arbortifacient in early pregnancy. I have thought of simply keeping some of it in a container, but it’s not the most attractive plant, and its flowers are visually insignificant.

Signing Table

It was also a pleasure for us to finally meet face to face, having known each other only through the gardening blogosphere up to now.

Cheers!

The Horticultural Society of New York

This was my first visit to the offices of The Horticultural Society of New York (HSNY). The building was midtown non-descript at street level.

148 West 37th Street, New York

But HSNY announces itself when the elevators open on the 13th floor. (It didn’t strike me until just now how unusual it was that the building even has a 13th floor.)

This must be the place

This simple arrangement of Spring flowering bulbs stood on the other side of those green doors.

Spring Bouquet

Daffodils
Daffodils

Fritillaria (pallidiflora?)
Fritillaria (pallidiflora?)

Their beautiful space is open to the public Monday through Friday, 10am to 6pm. Their library is impressive.

Horticultural Society of New York

Links

Amy Stewart’s Web site
The Horticultural Society of New York

Sunday, April 27: Sustainable Flatbush Street Tree Walking Tour

Updated 2008.04.21: Added Google Map.


Westminster Road, Beverley Square West, looking north from Cortelyou Road
Westminster Road, Beverley Square West, looking north from Cortelyou Road

On Sunday, April 27, in celebration of Arbor Day weekend and Spring in bloom, join Sustainable Flatbush and others as we take a walking tour of one of our neighborhood’s greatest assets: our street trees.

Experience the neighborhood’s amazing wealth of street trees — including some that are more than 100 years old!

Throughout the tour, your street tree guide will:

  • Identify trees and their characteristics
  • Share interesting facts
  • Explore local tree history
  • Discuss the many ways street trees benefit the environment
  • Explain how to obtain and care for street trees

and much more!

Newly Planted Street Tree on Cortelyou Road
Newly Planted Street Tree on Cortelyou Road

Credit: Keka Marzagao
Flyer for Sustainable Flatbush Street Tree Walking Tour

WHEN:
Sunday, April 27, 2008, Arbor Day Weekend, 1:00 PM – 4:00 PM

LOCATION:
Tours start and finish at 1414 Cortelyou Rd, the office of NY State Assembly Members James Brennan and Rhoda Jacobs. The tour will loop through the neighborhoods of Beverley Square West and the landmarked Prospect Park South Historic District.

DIRECTIONS:
Take the Q train to Cortelyou Rd. and walk one block west (left), toward Marlborough Rd., after exiting the station.

SPECIAL DETAILS:
The tour is just about a mile in length and will take place rain or shine.
Please dress appropriately for the weather and the walk.


View Larger Map

Tree identification with Trees NY at Greening Flatbush
Tree ID, Greening Flatbush

ABOUT SUSTAINABLE FLATBUSH: Sustainable Flatbush provides a neighborhood-based forum to discuss, promote and implement sustainability concepts in Brooklyn and beyond.

Hydrant and Tree, 297 Westminster Road, Beverley Square West
Hydrant and Tree, 297 Westminster Road, Beverley Square West

Related Posts

Factoids: Street Trees and Property Values, December 2, 2007
Factoids: NYC’s Street Trees and Stormwater Reduction, November 15, 2007
Basic Research: The State of the Forest in New York City, November 12, 2007

Links

Street-Tree Walking Tour next Sunday!, Sustainable Flatbush
Trees NY

Sunday, April 27: Plant Trees in Ditmas Park West

North side of Dorchester Road between Rugby and Marlborough Roads, Ditmas Park West
North side of Dorchester Road between Rugby and Marlborough Roads, Ditmas Park West

On Sunday, April 27, Arbor Day weekend, join the residents of the Victorian Flatbush neighborhood of Ditmas Park West to:

  • Plant Trees
  • Liberate Tree Pits
  • Beautify the Neighborhood

This is Ditmas Park West’s 14th Annual Arbor Day weekend tree planting. It is well-organized and coordinated with City resources such as Parks. Even if you don’t live in Ditmas Park West, this event can provide you with ideas for organizing and mobilizing your neighbors to clean up your streets, become stewards of street trees, and build community in the process.

Arbor Day 2008

To participate, meet at 458 Rugby Road at 9:30am to join a crew. Heavy excavation will be done with power equipment. You can bring your own gardening tools, as well. Work continues for about two hours, then everyone gets a chance to share a light lunch.

Southeast corner of Dorchester Road and Rugby Road, Ditmas Park West
Southeast corner of Dorchester Road and Rugby Road, Ditmas Park West

Related Posts

Wanna Fight Crime? Plant Trees, February 1, 2008

A Weekend at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Part 3: The Rock Garden

See also Part 1: The Osborne Garden, and Part 2: Magnolia Plaza


The Rock Garden, viewed from just inside the southernmost entrance.
Rock Garden, BBG

A year ago I “discovered” the Rock Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden:

I did get to see the Rock Garden as I had planned. I wasn’t disappointed. I don’t usually get to see this garden. It just seems off the beaten path during my usual visits. I want to visit it more often.
A Visit to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 1, 2007

The Rock Garden lies between the main western path of the garden and Flatbush Avenue. I’ve been able to visit the Rock Garden each month so far this year. Spring seems to be a peak time of year for this garden.

This boulder-strewn slope provides some of the earliest signs of spring as well as brilliant color in the fall. Opened to the public in 1917, it was the first rock garden of considerable size in an American botanic garden.

BBG’s Rock Garden uses boulders to define beds and create pockets of microclimates where plants with a variety of special needs are able to thrive. Many of the plants showcased are compact and suited to growing in small spaces.

Many of the boulders that pepper the landscape were unearthed during construction of various parts of BBG, and were deposited on the site during the last ice age.

During a renovation in 1992, additional boulders, imported from Westchester County, were added to the original collection, pathways were widened, and steps were eliminated wherever possible. Today the Rock Garden is about two-thirds wheelchair and stroller accessible …

The heaths were buzzing with bees when I visited on Saturday.

Erica carnea ‘Springwood Pink’
Erica carnea 'Springwood Pink'

Heaths and Spring Bulbs
Heaths and Spring Bulbs

Right now, the Rock Garden is also a great place to see a wide variety of Daffodils and other Spring bulbs in bloom.

Narcissus in the Rock Garden
Narcissus in the Rock Garden

Rock Garden, BBG

Rock Garden, BBG

Narcissus ‘Prologue’
Narcissus 'Prologue'

Narcissus ‘Wee Bee’
Narcissus 'Wee Bee'

The Hellebores were also happy.

Helleborus orientalis, Lenten-Rose
Helleborus orientalis, Lenten-Rose

Bee on Hellebore

Helleborus orientalis, Lenten-Rose

And just keep looking around. There’s something new and different everywhere you look.

Corydalis
Corydalis, Rock Garden, BBG

Corylopsis pauciflora, Buttercup Winterhazel
Corylopsis pauciflora, Buttercup Winterhazel

Rhododendron P.J.M.
Rhododendron P.J.M.

I also swung by the Rock Garden when I attended Making Brooklyn Bloom on Saturday, March 8. During breaks in the rains, it was lovely.

Crocuses in the Rock Garden
Crocuses in the Rock Garden

Crocuses and Snowdrops
Crocuses and Snowdrops

Crocus tommasinianus
Crocus tommasinianus

Pair a Ducks
Pair a Ducks

Related Posts

Part 1: The Osborne Garden
Part 2: Magnolia Plaza
First Crocus, Rock Garden, BBG, February 16, 2008
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, January 21, 2008
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 14 and April 1, 2007
My Flickr photo sets of BBG’s Rock Garden

Links

Rock Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Friends of Cortelyou meets this Saturday

Via email, the first meeting of the season for Friends of Cortelyou will be this Saturday morning:

FRIENDS OF CORTELYOU will meet this Saturday, April 12, from 10am to 11:30 a.m. at Connecticut Muffin, 1106 Cortelyou Road. We’ll discuss the following issues:

  • Welcome and support new Flatbush Food Coop; celebrate the beautiful new store!
  • Farmers Market on Cortelyou Road opens in June; help publicize and market the market.
  • Welcome the Farmers Market (& Farmers!) to the 2008 Market; help publicize it!!!
  • Restart Conversation Partners!
  • Tree pits: Daffodil Project, adopt-a-tree

Hope to see you there.

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