Morning Eye Candy: Adage

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

How does that adage go? Would you rather be a big duck in a little pond, or a little duck in a big pond? Clearly, this lady mallard–who looks right at home in the Home Gardening Center‘s rather small pond–has made up her mind.

Big Duck, Small Pond (photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen)

This entry was posted
on Sunday, May 13th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Photography.
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Morning Eye Candy: Slightly Psychedelic

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

The concept of a rock garden sounds amazingly dull, like it would be a garden full of well … rocks. But that couldn’t be further from the truth. Plants are imminently adaptable, and those that adapt to the arid, hardscrabble life of grappling for nutrients in a barren biome tend to be, well, really cool. Need proof? Just check out the fractal fabulousness of these Hens and Chicks in the Garden’s WPA-era Rock Garden.

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen


The New York Botanical Garden is competing as one of 40 New York City historic places in the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Partners in Preservation program. Vote for us, and we have the chance to win a grant to restore a piece of Nature’s Showplace in New York City, the Rock Garden. VOTE FOR THE GARDEN!

This entry was posted
on Friday, May 11th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Photography.
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The Perfumer’s Essence: Crafting Fragrance at the NYBG

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Ed. Note: Our delectable cooking adventures, botanical art primers, and flower arranging courses make the NYBG‘s Adult Education program one of the most robust horticultural experiences in the nation. True to form, we will soon offer courses for the amateur perfumer, introductions to what can only be called “plant alchemy.”

Read on for an interview with Julianne Zaleta, who brings her perfumer’s knowledge to the table in Natural Perfume Blending and Aromatherapy 101. Each is an upcoming part of this summer’s Botanical Spa course series, bringing the sensuous and luxuriant side of gardening home.


How did you start and how long have you been making your own scents?

I’ve been making my own scents for about ten years, but my love affair with plants started a very long time ago, in my mother’s garden when I was a child. When I look back I can see that my whole life has been about taking the next logical step to understanding and appreciating the plants around me. I’ve been a gardener, floral designer, herbalist and aromatherapist and I feel it’s all led me to this.

Describe the classes that you’re teaching.

I’m teaching two classes at NYBG. The first is a natural perfume blending workshop. It’s a three-hour class and I’ll start by talking a little bit about the history of perfume, the sense of smell, the advent of synthetic ingredients and the return to naturals. I’ll talk about the different perfume ingredients and how they’re distilled, while passing around testers of a wide range of oils. The basics of formulation will be explained and each participant will leave with two bottles of their own bespoke perfume.

The second class is Aromatherapy 101. Participants will gain a basic understanding of aromatherapy, essential oils, and their applications, including recommendations for an aromatherapy “first aid kit.” The oils I’ve chosen for this class are easily available selections that everyone should have access to. Each student will get the opportunity to create their own therapeutic bath salts and massage oil.

What does “natural” perfume blending mean?

At the turn of the last century the first synthetic fragrance material was developed in a laboratory. Originally the perfume community was skeptical of the synthetic materials, but soon they were lured by their cheap prices, availability, and colorlessness. Soon all perfume was made with these synthetics, with only a smattering of natural oils. Like a lot of things these days, we are enjoying a return to basics (think handmade paper and the Slow Food movement). There are a bevy of perfumers working now that work exclusively with essential oils and precious absolutes.

What impact do scent and aromatherapy have on people?

Essential oils are volatile, meaning that they’re explosive–literally. When you open a bottle of essential oil, the odor molecules burst out of the bottle and become airborne, entering the bloodstream purely by inhalation. Essential oils have many properties and uses. They are anti-microbial (meaning that they fight infection), anti-depressant, calming, stimulating, aphrodisiac, etc. Scent can also trigger emotional memories rather instantaneously, owing to the fact that the part of your brain that registers smell is so closely linked to the part that stores emotional memory.

What are ways that people can experience the benefits of aromatherapy at home? What will they learn in your class that will enhance this?

In Aromatherapy 101, students will learn the properties of a variety of essential oils and how to use them to benefit their health. Each student will have an opportunity to make their own bottle of massage oil and a packet of bath salts to take home. Hopefully they’ll be armed with helpful information to make further remedies on their own.

What do you like most about teaching?

In every workshop I’ve taught there’s always one student who announces, “This is so much fun!” That’s my reward! I get to share information about the things I love most to folks who want to know about it and I find that incredibly satisfying. It’s great fun for me to see and hear everyone’s reactions to all of the different scents being passed around. I also live a very green lifestyle and it’s a chance for me to hopefully influence people to think about what they’re consuming.


Natural Perfume Blending takes place on Saturday, May 19 at the NYBG’s Midtown Center. Visit our Botanical Spa listing to see each of the courses being held throughout May and June.

This entry was posted
on Friday, May 11th, 2012 at 11:00 am and is filed under Adult Education.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/05/adult-education/the-perfumers-essence-crafting-fragrance-at-the-nybg/

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Delphinium: Vivid Blues

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Claude Monet may have defined his career as a painter with the iconic irises and water lilies that sprung from his palette, but his garden at Giverny offered a menagerie of color and shape that reached far beyond his most common canvas subjects. And it does to this day: over a century later, a crack staff of gardeners still tends the dazzling variety of plants that makes up the Impressionist’s living legacy. This includes a collection of vibrant indigo flowers well-known to home gardeners, cattle ranchers, and one of the 20th century’s greatest creatives.

As May makes its case for cheerful spring weather, a prime example of the Impressionist’s varied tastes blooms at the NYBG‘s Nolen Glasshouses, awaiting the opening of Monet’s Garden. And if ever an eponymous color did its namesake proud, it would be that of “delphinium blue.” There are other hues in the plant’s repertoire, of course–lavender, white, red–but each understated alternate might seem almost banal in comparison.

Delphinium is also known as larkspur, a genus of the Ranunculaceae family with around 300 species under its umbrella. It was described as “lark’s heel” by Shakespeare, and knight’s spur by others (its monikers are many). And true to the classic notion of the beautiful and deadly, delphinium can be a killer if eaten in great quantities. It contains the alkaloid delphanine, which kicks off a number of unsettling maladies before a pitstop in the morgue. The threat of delphinium poisoning is especially real for cattle ranchers in the western United States, who will often keep their hungry herds away from high-elevation grazing ranges until later in summer, when the local delphinium is less toxic.

But for art’s purposes, it’s more about the aesthetic of the plant than its influence on lifespan. Few knew this as intimately as Monet’s unlikely New York contemporary: Edward Steichen.

Delphinium ‘Triton Dark Blue’

As resumes go, Steichen’s is incomparable. You could say he sits among the pantheon of some of the greatest Renaissance men in recent history. He carried under his belt a successful career as the early 20th century’s highest-paid photographer, along with esteemed recognition as a painter, gallery curator, art aficionado and New York fashion maven. His service in World War I and II earned him distinction as commander of some of the most capable and prolific military photography outfits on the battlefield, and later work directing wartime documentaries garnered him an Academy Award. It’s safe to say he had the chops to justify his fame. But another passion of Steichen’s–horticulture–flew under the public radar.

It wasn’t until he retired as Chief of Photography for Vanity Fair and Vogue magazines that Steichen’s thirty-year obsession with delphiniums came to light. By that time he had taken the opportunity to develop his passion at his garden in Connecticut, and in 1936 he unveiled his newest works. Edward Steichen’s Delphiniums appeared in the Museum of Modern Art (did I mention Steichen later became their Director of Photography?) as its first and only exhibition dedicated to living plants. Familiar sprays of blue and purple flowers stood alongside towering racemes of white petals, unusual cultivars of Steichen’s own creation. Of course, the mind behind the production was already world-famous as a photographer; despite MoMA‘s best efforts to clarify the subject of the exhibition, arriving crowds were baffled by the fact that they were looking at potted plants rather than framed images.

Edward Steichen (courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

Perhaps thanks to the confusing spectacle, gardeners still grow some of Steichen’s homemade delphiniums today, such as the popular ‘Connecticut Yankee’ cultivar. But his daughter Mary may best have summarized her father’s affection for his flowers, while further bringing home the thread of artistic pertinence that these striking plants carry through the decades, across continents and disciplines.

“The lovely garden created by my father came to mean as much to him as did the garden at Giverny to Monet–a bottomless well for creativity, peace, challenge, joy, inspiration, surcease, renewal–and sheer sensual pleasure.”

Beginning May 19, The New York Botanical Garden throws open the doors to a Giverny transported. Monet’s Garden is New York’s homage to one of the greatest living collections in France, and all that it did for horticulture as an artform. And it’s here that you’ll find that supernatural blue growing in abundance–the rich indigo that inspired Claude Monet, that touched Edward Steichen, and that may well set you on a path to growing delphinium in your own garden.


The New York Botanical Garden is competing as one of 40 New York City historic places in the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Partners in Preservation program. Vote for us, and we have the chance to win a grant to restore a piece of Nature’s Showplace in New York City, the Rock Garden. VOTE FOR THE GARDEN!

This entry was posted
on Wednesday, May 9th, 2012 at 1:00 pm and is filed under Around the Garden, Exhibitions.
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Morning Eye Candy: Marigold Monday

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

It’s Monday. We commiserate. But no threat of the work week’s impending doom and gloom will make the marigolds any less bright.

Calendula officinalis ‘Radio’ — Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Monday, May 7th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Monet’s Garden: Preparing the Masterpiece

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Creating a masterpiece takes more than simple inspiration. It requires preparation–arranging each color and readying the canvas. And as with a painting, Monet’s Garden at the NYBG is a work of art with as much going on behind the scenes as happens in the open.

Marc Hachadourian, Director of the Nolen Greenhouses for Living Collections, takes us through the expansive collection of delphiniums, poppies, nasturtiums and other flowers that will soon embody our homage to Claude Monet’s garden at Giverny. Months of careful tending in specialized growing environments have allowed us to tease the flowers into bloom all at once, re-creating the artist’s living muse at its kaleidoscopic peak. But you won’t have to wait that long to see them.

If you haven’t reserved your tickets yet, get to our ticket page! The doors to the French master’s private paradise open to New York on May 19.

This entry was posted
on Monday, May 7th, 2012 at 11:58 am and is filed under Exhibitions, Monet’s Garden, Video.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/05/video/monets-garden-preparing-the-masterpiece/

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Morning Eye Candy: Around the Bend

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Saturday, May 5th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Morning Eye Candy: Suspicious Mallard

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

The disapproving waterfowl of the NYBG, ever ready and willing to shame you into putting down that camera.

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Sunday, May 6th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography, Wildlife.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/05/wildlife/morning-eye-candy-suspicious-mallard/

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Morning Eye Candy: Saturated Palette

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

The sun doesn’t have a monopoly on picturesque afternoons. Really, it’s all about how you choose to appreciate your surroundings. This week’s rain had many of us muttering under the cover of our umbrellas, but the way in which an overcast sky saturates spring colors tends to make up for the inconvenience.

Not that we’re ungrateful for this weekend’s forecast–the chance of a drizzle keeps dropping, and dropping..

The Home Gardening Center after a shower.


This entry was posted
on Friday, May 4th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Summer Camp for Grown-ups: Have Some Fun

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Suppose you really can’t draw, but always wished you could…especially when it comes to drawing those gorgeous blooms in your backyard. Well now’s your chance to make your wish come true: Botanical Drawing I is just one of the new summer intensive classes offered by NYBG starting in July. Think of it as a summer camp experience designed for grown-ups.

With the botanical drawing class, in just one week you’ll learn specific techniques for drawing accurately, including professional standards of form, measuring, foreshortening, and perspective. The classes are offered in July (9 through 13) or August (6 through 10), at NYBG and the Midtown Manhattan Center, respectively.

The instructors are experienced teachers. Rose Marie James teaches the August session in Manhattan. She is a graphic designer and botanical illustrator, and has taught art for over 15 years, enjoying what she calls the “slow art” of traditional drawing methods. She writes: “Producing a piece of botanical art requires the artist to study the subject carefully, to learn how it grows, how it reproduces, and how it nourishes itself. Discovering these details, the grace and genius inherent in a plant’s anatomy, and transforming it into art brings us back to the real world growing around us.”

Marilyn Reilly teaches the July class at NYBG where she earned her Certificate in Botanical Art and Illustration. Her background as a science teacher helps to focus the classes on observation and accurate drawing of plant components, like branches, stems, leaves and flower parts. She is a member of the ASBA (American Society of Botanical Artists) and the GNSI (Guild of Natural Science Illustrators).

These hands-on classes will help you expand your horizons and you can even get started on a Certificate this summer. Register now.

This entry was posted
on Friday, May 4th, 2012 at 11:06 am and is filed under Adult Education, Around the Garden, Learning Experiences, Programs and Events.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/05/garden-programming/summer-camp-for-grown-ups-have-some-fun/

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