Events and Resources: Hanami and more at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Flower Detail, Prunus “Okame”
Cherry Blossoms

Gowanus Lounge noted an article on New Yorkology about the first cherry tree to bloom this Spring at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, more than a week before Hanami, the cherry-viewing season, officially begins this weekend. I saw that tree in bloom when I visited on Forsythia Day. I didn’t get to write up that visit yet; the least I can do is pump up this tree’s 15 minutes of fame. (It’s not as impressive as the cherry tree which bloomed in December, which I didn’t get to see.)

Before you visit the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, you should visit their Web site. Their Plants in Bloom page shows you what happens where and when: not just right now, but for every month of the year. Some areas are of particular interest only at certain times of the year, and knowing whether or not they’re worth a peek in advance of your trip can help you plan your visit. For example, Daffodil Hill was not quite peaking when I was there on Sunday, while the Bluebell Wood was showing only winter-damaged foliage. Of course, much of the garden has lots of things even when they’re not in bloom, but this still is a good indicator of what you might expect to see.

But this time of year, the hype is all about the Cherry Trees. Hanami runs from this Saturday, April 7, through Sunday, May 6. The big event is the annual Sakura Matsuri, the Cherry Blossom Festival. This year it’s the end of April, Saturday and Sunday, April 28 and 29. There’s always an impossible number of events highlighting many different aspects of traditional Japanese culture, including music, dance, theater, crafts, and more.

Leading up to and during Hanami, BBG maintains a special map on their Web site, just for the cherries.

BBG’s CherryWatch (Hanami) Blossom Status Map showing the single specimen of Prunus “Okame” in bloom at the time of my visit.
Blossom Status Map, Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Each cherry tree on the map is linked to a popup summary of the plant, as shown here, which links to a detail page describing the specific variety. Here’s what BBG has to say about ‘Okame’:

This hybrid of the Formosan and Fuji cherries was introduced to Europe in 1947 from Japan by Captain Collingwood Ingram. Its deep carmine-rose buds open to lighter tinted flowers before leaves appear. This small- to medium-sized tree is excellent for small gardens and is also showy in fall, with orange-red leaves. This variety is recommended by the Garden Club of America’s book, Plants That Merit Attention.
Prunus ‘Okame’

And here it is: the single flowering cherry tree.

Lone Flowering Cherry and my Doppelganger
Lone Flowering Cherry and my Doppelganger

The other photographer in the photo seemed to be everywhere I was on Sunday, so I had to shoot around him a lot. For example, he was standing next to me (or I next to him) when I took this upward-looking shot against the overcast sky:

Cherry Blossoms

Finally, here’s a different shot of the same cluster of flowers at the top of this post. I like the background of the out-of-focus branches in this one; it works like an oversized mat in a picture frame. I think I’m going to process this one a bit and try to lighten it up without losing the mood.

Cherry Blossoms

Links

Flowering Cherries at BBG

Forsythia Day today at Brooklyn Botanic Garden

I’ll be leaving for BBG shortly. We’ve got rain coming today, so I want to get there as early as possible. They open at 10am on weekends.

There are a couple of things I want to see and do for today’s visit.

Today, all members receive a free Forsythia × intermedia ‘Goldilocks’. I generally loathe Forsythia; they have no garden value other than their one week of bloom. But I don’t even have a single one on my property, and I can afford one in the developing mixed border on the south side of the house. I can always dig it up and give it away.

The other Forsythia Day events are an awards ceremony and a reception in the afternoon. I don’t think I’ll stick around for any of that, even if it’s not raining by then. Awards are interesting for the recipients and the organizers, otherwise boring as hell to everyone else.

I’m also going to pick up my signature plants. I got my confirmation letter in the mail last week. Today I’ll pick up Cotinus coggygria “Golden Spirit” and Heptacodium miconioides. Both would be suitable for the mixed border.

Today I really want to see the Rock Garden. Spring should be the peak season for this, and BBG’s Plants in Bloom page confirms that there will be lots of bulb and Hellebore action there. I also ahve never managed to catch Daffodil Hill in peak bloom. Today should be perfect.

If time permits, I also want to check out the Native Flora Garden, just to see what’s going on there.

Of course, there will be a large photo post from my visit. So check back later!

Field Trip, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, November 6, 2005

Stone basin with cherry leaves, outside the entrance to the Japanese Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Basin outside entrance to Japanese Garden

Another “lost” set of photos which I’d uploaded to Flickr, but never blogged. These are from a year-and-a-half ago, in November of 2005. Again, irritating that the “improved” Blogger won’t let me back-date them to the date I took the photos.

My parents were visiting with us, so they show up in several photos.

My parents walking toward the entrance of the Japanese Garden
My parents walking toward the entrance of the Japanese Garden

Pond and bridge in the Japanese Garden
Pond and bridge in the Japanese Garden

Torii seen from the Viewing Pavilion in the Japanese Garden
Torii seen from the Viewing Pavilion in the Japanese GardenTorii seen from the Viewing Pavilion in the Japanese Garden

My parents in the viewing pavilion
My parents in the viewing pavilion

Pond and Torii from the Viewing Pavilion
Pond and Torii from the Viewing Pavilion

Pond and Hill
Pond and Hill

Southern approach to the entrance to the Japanese Garden
Southern approach to the entrance to the Japanese Garden, Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Sundial near Magnolia Plaza
Sundial near Magnolia Plaza

Shrubbery in the mixed border, Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Shrubbery in the mixed border, Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Lily Pool Terrace
Lily Pool Terrace
Lily Pool Terrace

My parents sitting by the Mixed Perennial Border
My parents sitting by the Mixed Perennial Border

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

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

A Visit to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden

[Updated 2007.03.04: Added links to related posts, and to BBG.]

Today I dragged my better half to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. It was a brief visit; it was sunny and warm when we left the house, but cloudy and chilly by the time I finished buying my seeds at the gift shop.

Shadow and Light, Bonsai Museum, BBG

The Bonsai Museum

Four-way stone, Bonsai Museum, BBGBasin, Bonsai Museum, BBGAcer palmatum, Bonsai Museum, BBGJumiperus chinensis var. sargentii, Bonsai in literati style, BBGBonsai, detail showing wire wrapping in placeThree trees, Bonsai Museum, BBG

Bonsai Museum, Steinhardt Conservatory, BBGJuniperus chinensis, Bonsai, Informal upright style, BBG

The Desert Pavilion

Desert Pavilion, Steinhardt Conservatory, BBGDesert Pavilion, Steinhardt Conservatory, BBGDesert Pavilion, Steinhardt Conservatory, BBGPelargonium crithmifolium, Desert Pavilion, BBG

The Tropical Pavilion

Tropical Pavilion, Steinhardt Conservatory, BBGAnthurium infructescence with fruits, Tropical Pavilion, BBGPalm, Tropical Pavilion, BBGWatercolors, Tropical Pavilion, BBG

Croton leaf, Tropical Pavilion, BBG

The Japanese Garden

Torii and pond, Japanese Garden, BBGFIltered View, Japanese Garden, BBG

Torii and Pond, Japanese Garden, BBGFiltered View, Japanese Garden, BBG

Miscellaneous

Artist and subject in the Trail of Evolution greenhouse. BBG offers classes in botanical art and illustration. I think one or more classes were in session when we visited. We saw several student-artists throughout the garden.

Artist and subject, Trail of Evolution, BBG

Magnolia in bud at, where else, Magnolia Plaza. I’m guessing bloom for the Star Magnolias is just two weeks away, depending on what weather we get.

Magnolia buds, Judith D. Zuk Magnolia Plaza, BBG

The Shakespeare Garden. I hardly ever spend any time in this garden; I usually pass through it on my way to another destination. The entrance to this garden is just across from the Japanese Garden. It also connects with the Fragrance Garden.

Shakespeare Garden, BBG

Related Posts:

Interactive Keys for Woody Plants in New York

In the Spring 2007 edition of their Members News newsletter, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden noted a new Web resource available from the BBG Research department:

BBG scientists have developed interactive identification keys to woody plants of the region …
… Users often experience difficulties naming a plant when the [field] guide refers to a structure (e.g., flowers) that the specimen does not have. If the structure doesn’t exist, the user is stuck at that identification step, with limited options for further classifying the plant.
– Woody Plant Identification Made Easy With Interactive Keys, BBG Members News Newsletter, Spring 2007 (PDF, requires membership login), p. 3

The keys are available for the New York City Metropolitan Area, and for New York State. They’re packaged as ZIP files for download for PCs and PDAs. I downloaded both PC versions to try them out; each file is about 4MB in size. (The PDA versions are huge, over 100MB, for reasons I’ll explain later.)

The PC version comes as a handful of HTML files (Web pages), Javascript files (little chunks of programs and information), and JPEGs (images). I tested using the keys with Internet Explorer 7. You need to enable or allow scripting to use the keys; if the IE Information Bar tells you it “restricted this webpage from running scripts”, you need to “Click here for options..” and select “Allow Blocked Content…”

The main page is a frameset (a Web page with different areas). The left-hand frame, or pane, provides the key. It’s much like a traditional key, a series of yes-or-no questions. However, instead of the traditional hierarchical key, the key is flattened out so that all 106 questions are presented at once. For example, here is their question #34:

34. Leaf (leaflet) apex:
mucronate-cuspidate
otherwise

Of course, you still need to know what “mucronate-cuspidate” means. That’s where the images come in. The text for each key links to a JPEG file which provides an example of the key, and sometimes additional text. For example, here’s the image which comes up when you click the “Left (leaflet) apex” label from Key #34:

Leaf apices

The right-hand pane lists plant taxa, either genus or species. Clicking a genus expands to the list of species. For example, Amelanchier expands to:

Each species name links to the details for that plant. This Amelanchier example is from the Metro version of the keys; each name links to its page on BBG’s New York Metropolitan Flora Project (NYMF) Web site. The NY State version takes you to the New York Flora Association Atlas (NYFA) Web site. I’m guessing that the PDA versions of the keys load all these pages onto the PDA instead of linking to the external Web sites, which is why those download files are so large.

The next to each name gives you the keys for that species. Here are the keys for Amelanchier canadensis:

Amelanchier canadensis

Habit: undefined
Habit: not stoloniferous
Leaf development at flowering time: most leaves not fully developed (i.e., folded or in bud)
Underside pubescence in young leaves: densely pubescent
Color of young leaves: undefined
Leaf outline: undefined
Leaf outline: undefined
Leaf outline: undefined
Leaf outline: undefined
Leaf outline: otherwise
Leaf apex: undefined
Leaf apex: undefined
Leaf apex: undefined
Leaf base: acuminate, acute, cuneate, obtuse or rounded
Leaf base: undefined
Leaf margin: finely toothed (more than 6 teeth per cm.)
Inflorescence: many flowered (usually more than 5) raceme
Inflorescence: erect or ascending
Inflorescence: axis and pedicels pubescent
Petal length: usually less than 10 mm.
Micropetaly (petals greatly reduced to nearly absent): absent
Ovary summit: glabrous or slightly pubescent and glabrate (i.e., not persistent)

Finally, the top frame/pane has two buttons which allow you to synch up or filter the contents of the left and right panes. After selecting one or more keys in the left pane, clicking the button filters the list in the right pane to matching genera and species. Similarly, after selecting a genus in the right pane, you can click the button to filter the keys to relevant questions to distinguish species within the genus. (This seems to happen automatically when you select a genus anyway, so I’m not sure why this button is needed.) If you know you’re looking at an Oak or a Maple, for example, you could use this feature to identify which species.

I haven’t had a chance to actually use the keys yet to identify anything. But there are some confusing Maples I’ve got my eyes on.

Links:

The Brooklyn Botanic Garden Celebrity Path

Hi-O highlighted the Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s Celebrity Path in their blog yesterday:

The list of celebrities from Brooklyn is long and growing. I linked the list to Wikipedia from the Brooklyn Botanical Garden’s walk of fame.

“Harvey Keitel or Woody Allen? Brooklyn’s Most Famous?”

It’s an extensive list, and linking most of the names to their Wikipedia articles is quite a service. (I’m surprised there really is nothing on Wikipedia for Woody Guthrie or Joan Rivers.)

I can say this is about my least favorite feature of the Gardens. It’s just odd.

The path itself is in a weird place. I never seem to need to go between the two places it joins. It goes behind the Japanese Garden, from one entrance to the other. I’d rather walk through the Japanese Garden.

Walking along the path, the stepping stones themselves are just distracting. If only there were some nice views or vistas along the way. If there are, I’ve missed them because I keep reading the stones!

BBG notes that “New names are added to Celebrity Path each June on the borough’s annual Welcome Back to Brooklyn Day.” So we can look forward to more distractions later this year.

Any Brooklynites you would want to add to the list?

February 10, Brooklyn Botanic Garden: Lunar New Year Celebration

Next Saturday, from 10am to 4:30pm, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden will host a Lunar New Year Celebration and Flower Market. All events will be held indoors in BBG’s greenhouses, visitors centers, classrooms and other facilities:

  • Flowering fruit trees, houseplants, lucky bamboo and cut flowers will be on sale at the Flower Market in the Palm House.
  • Tours of plants in BBG’s collections which are native to China, Korea, Vietnam or East Asia are offered in the Steinhardt Conservatory. Tours are available in both English and Mandarin.
  • Performances in the Palm House by Nori Company, Huaxia Edison Dance Troupe, and Qi Shu Fang Peking Opera.
  • Workshops and demos are offered throughout the facilities.

Visit BBG’s web site for full details.

Brooklyn Botanic Garden Signature Plants

Today I received my 2007 Catalog of Signature Plants from the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. This is one of the benefits of BBG membership I anticipate every year and serves as one of the markers on the gardening calendar. (Another such event is the annual plant sale the first week of May, a feeding frenzy of plant lust I hope to blog about this year.) It always arrives in mid-Winter; we finally had Winter this season, with mid-day temperatures in the teens the past two days. The catalog’s arrival reminds me that Spring is coming fast and I’d better start planning my garden renovations and acquisitions for the year.

Members contributing at the Signature level or above can select one or two plants from the catalog. Plants are grouped as Houseplants (tropicals hardy only to USDA Hardiness Zone 9 or higher), Perennials, and Trees and Shrubs. The listings describe 30 plants in just under four pages, with detailed information about the variety, cultural requirements, size, habit, and so on.

They also identify native plant species and cultivars. This year, they include:

  • Cornus sericea ‘Cardinal’
  • Fothergilla major ‘Blue Shadow’
  • Heuchera americana ‘Green Spice’
  • Itea virginica ‘Little Henry’
  • Kalmia latifolia ‘Ostbo Red’
  • Monarda fistulosa

Two years ago, they also offered local genotypes of species native to New York City, propagated in collaboration with the Staten Island Greenbelt. This is something I wish they would do every year. There are no commercial sources of locally-propagated plants available to the residential gardener.

Most years, I wait until late in the season to place my order, and never get my first choices. You, gentle readers, by your very presence, spurred me to email my first choices today. Here they are, with their catalog descriptions:

Rosa x odorata
China rose, butterfly rose (cultivar)
Hardiness: USDA Zones 6-9
Full Sun, Average soil; 3-6 feet tall

This antique shrub rose from China is celebrated for the chameleon-like color changes of its flowers (the “mutability” referenced in the cultivar name). Its cupped, single, slightly fragrant butterfly-shaped blossoms open a honey-yellow color, then turn coppery pink, then watermelon, then finally a rich mahogany. The floral display begins in May and repeats throughout the summer into fall. Orange hips form when the spent flowers are not deadheaded.

From the information I can find, this variety was introduced to the West from China “before 1894”, so it’s likely much older. It fits the criterion of being an antique/heirloom variety for the front garden. The size is right for this space; it will be easy to keep it low enough that it doesn’t detract from the brickwork, or block the view from the windows. Planting it at the south end of the planting area will give it nearly full sun during the summer. The early bloom is another bonus; I’m hoping to get the front garden, at least, on the Victorian Flatbush House & Garden Tour next year; it occurs June of each year.

Cotinus coggygria ‘Golden Spirit’
Smoke tree (cultivar)
Hardiness: USDA Zones 5-8
Full Sun to Partial Shade, Average soil, 8-15 feet tall

This smoke tree cultivar is grown for its unusual bright chartreuse-yellow foliage. The small, circular leaves retain their golden color until fall, when they develop magnificent tones of amber, burgundy, and scarlet. Smokelike grayish-green flower panicles appear in summer, typical of the species. An upright, loose-spreading, multistemmed deciduous shrub, ‘Golden Spirit’ works well as a single specimen or in mixed plantings. Grow it in average, well-drained soil in full sun.

I have this in mind for the south side of the house, along the driveway; you can see much of this garden in the Winter 2006 photo in The Front Garden Evolving. A large, deciduous shrub in this location will partially shade the south side of the house and provide privacy during the summer, when windows are open, and allow light in the windows during the winter.