Festival of the Trees #6

Festival of the Trees #6 is up over on Arboreality. It’s a huge edition, with links to many of my favorite gardening and nature bloggers.

If you’re visiting this blog for the first time, welcome! Here are some recent tree-related photo posts:

The Daffodil Project: Grief & Gardening #5

DSC_4132Today I planted bulbs in the front yard, including daffodils I received through the Beverly Square West Neighborhood Association, which were donated through The Daffodil Project. With this act, our front yard becomes part of a living memorial to those murdered on September 11, 2001.

The Daffodil Project was originally created to commemorate September 11. …
The Daffodil Project is made possible in part by the generosity of a Dutch bulb supplier, Hans van Waardenburg of B&K Flowerbulbs, who has pledged to donate 500,000 daffodil bulbs to the project each year as long as there are volunteers willing to plant them. More than 20,000 volunteers have responded to his challenge so far. And thanks to their efforts, nearly 3 million yellow daffodils bloomed in over 1,300 individual sites across the five boroughs in the spring of 2006.
The Daffodil Project, New Yorkers for Parks

… This act of immense generosity has been coupled with that of Joseph Temeczko, a Minnesotan handyman who willed his entire life-savings of $1.4 million to New York City, $300K of which will pay for the shipping of these precious bulbs for the following 5 years. Temeczko, who is said to have been a Nazi prison camp survivor, entered the U.S. through Ellis Island and lived for a time in New York City where he worked at the Statue of Liberty. Following September 11th, 2001, he redirected his estate “to honor those who perished in the disaster.” An avid gardener, himself, he loved to share his garden’s harvest with others, and passed away only a month later while working in his own garden.
My Community Hero: The Daffodil Project, Claudia Herrera Hudson

This Daffodil Project is distinct in that it involves no particular site. All public parks and community gardens are potential sites for the Daffodil Project. After 9/11, New Yorkers turned to their parks as a common ground where they could congregate, debate, memorialize, grieve, and find spiritual and physical renewal. The Daffodil Project is a lasting tribute to the people that died and the heroes that were born that day, it is a symbol of remembrance and rebirth in the heart of what is common ground for all of the citizens of New York: their public parks.
The Daffodil Project, The Living Memorials Project

Here are some more photos of me in the act this afternoon, graciously taken by my neighbor, Jeff Tolbert. (Since this is my photographic debut on my own blog, I decided not to upload the flattering butt-crack photos.)
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Related Posts

The Daffodil Project

Links

Plans for bequest made by Joseph Temeczko, Press Release, Parks, February 12, 2003

More Fall Color in Beverley Square West

I’m afraid I missed the peak leafage in my neighborhood this year, at least as far as a photographic record is concerned. I didn’t get out into the neighborhood last weekend; I was at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on Satruday, and waiting all day on Sunday for the cable guy. Wednesday we had heavy rains all day, which knocked down a lot of leaves.

But we had a beautiful day today, so it was a good excuse to get out and see what color I could still find. You can see there was still some good color out there.

1422 Beverly Road1422 Beverly Road. I have several photos from this house in this set. It has a lovely shady front-yard garden. I walk past this house every day, to and from the subway to work. I’ve yet to introduce myself to the gardener who lives there.

215 Stratford Road209 & 215 Stratford RoadCherry Tree1402 Beverly Road1422 Beverly Road1422 Beverly RoadHouse on Argyle RoadHouse on Argyle Road268 Argyle Road274 Argyle Road274 Argyle RoadHouse on Stratford Road
Cherry LeavesDueling Maples

Each photo in this post links to its photo page on Flickr, where you can view it at several different resolutions.

Related Content

Flickr photo set

Happy Halloween!

[2006.11.01 18:00 EST: Linked to The Farm.]
[2006.11.01 16:00 EST: Described t-shirt text.]
[2006.10.31 23:00 EST: Updated with photos from the rest of the evening. Mwa-ha-ha-ha!]

It was a great day. I walked to the subway through the cemetery at Trinity Church. There was a magnificent sunset. Over 330 trick-or-treaters. All candy gone. We went out to dinner at The Farm at on Adderley on Cortelyou Road, where most of the staff and many guests, including me, were in costume.

DSC_3174Over 33 pounds and 1,695 pieces of candy: $50 (estimated)

Wigs, makeup, ghoul teeth: $60 (approximate)


Seeing small children freeze in shock and hearing their shrieks of gleeful terror as they look up at your hideous face:

PRICELESS
DSC_3197The t-shirt has a drawing of a leering devil on it. The text reads: God’s busy. Can I help you?


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Fall Color in Beverley Square West

“You know, for a gardening blog, there’s not much about gardening …” – What I imagine you all must be thinking by now.

I’ve got lots of stuff, honestly. I’m just really back-logged with everything I want to write about. Just not enough hours in the day, especially workdays!
Street tree on Rugby RoadHolding leaves on Rugby Road

But here’s a little something: some photos of the developing fall color in my neighborhood, Beverly Square West, one of the neighborhoods of the larger area known as Victorian Flatbush. Yes, this is Brooklyn.

DSC_2911DSC_2912Looking south down Westminster RoadTrees in yard of house on Westminster RoadDogwood in front yard of house on Stratford RoadTrees in yard of House of Westminster Road
Street tree on Westminster RoadHouse on Rugby Road

Related Content

Flickr photo set

Matthews Park

Our house was built in Matthews Park. Don’t look for it on any current maps of Brooklyn. Beverly Square West, the neighborhood where we live, was originally known as Matthews Park from at least 1900, the same year our house was built, to 1902. Two articles from the Brooklyn Eagle document the boundaries of Matthews Park, which exactly coincide with those of what is today called Beverly Square West.

A March 30, 1900 article, Attempt to Rob Bolles’ Home, is a report on burglaries in the area:

Mr. Bolles is one of a committee of three of the Matthews Park Association, appointed to visit the Police Board to find out why there are so few policeman in that section. Matthews Park extends from Beverley road to Avenue C, and from Coney Island avenue to Fifteenth street.

A March 5, 1902 article, Sign Posts for Matthews Park, describes the submission of “a design for cast iron sign posts to be placed on all corners of Beverley and Cortelyou Roads, from East Eleventh to East Fifteenth Streets, inclusive.” The same article also mentions that “it is intended to adopt on these blocks the same names at present in vogue for the same streets in Prospect Park South,” which is today a landmarked Historic District just up the block from us. So the numbered streets – East 11th through 15th Streets – became named Streets: Stratford, Westminster, Argyle, Rugby and Marlborough. Tony sounding, eh? Or, if you prefer, the acronym SWARM.

Links

Event: Victorian Flatbush House and Garden Tour, Sunday, June 11, 2006

The view looking up the block from the sidewalk in front of our house.Flatbush Development Corporation‘s annual Victorian Flatbush House and Garden Tour is scheduled this year for Sunday, June 11, from 11am to 6pm.

The Victorian Flatbush section of Brooklyn ranges from Prospect Park on the north, to Brooklyn College in the south, and from Flatbush Avenue on the east, to Coney Island Avenue on the west. Most of the properties are fully “detached” houses built around the turn of the last century. There are a dozen different identified neighborhoods in this area. Real estate listings typically refer to this entire area inaccurately as “Ditmas Park”, which is just one of these neighborhoods.

The photo above was taken May 4th, 2006. It shows the view looking up the block from the sidewalk in front of our house. In 2005, my partner and I bought our first home in another of these neighborhoods: Beverly Square West. Our house was built in 1900.

Opening Day, Cortelyou Greenmarket

Some of the apple varieties available from Red Jacket Orchards at the Courtelyou Greenmarket on opening day.
Photo taken: June 3, 2006

Today was the first day of the season for the Courtelyou Greenmarket which serves our neighborhood:

Greenmarket has organized and managed open-air farmers markets in NYC since 1976. By providing regional small family farmers with opportunities to sell their fruits, vegetables and other farm products to New Yorkers, Greenmarket supports farmers and preserves farmland for the future.
Greenmarket Farmers Market

The Courtelyou Greenmarket is located in the schoolyard of P.S. 139 on Argyle Road, just up the block from Courtelyou Road. There were only three vendors there for opening day:

Based on our experience last year, the number of vendors will ramp up through the month of June. There’s about a dozen during the summer, selling all kinds of fresh fruits and vegetables, plus meat, dairy, baked goods and some handcrafts.

Related Posts

Greenmarket

Links

Greenmarket