Morning Eye Candy: Soft at the Edges

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

The daytime temperatures are finally lining up with the sunlight filtering through the new leaves on the trees. It was a figurative weight off my shoulders to leave my jacket on the coat hook this morning.

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Wednesday, April 18th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/photography/morning-eye-candy-soft-at-the-edges/

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Earth Day the Right Way

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

We think everyone should treat each and every square on the calendar like it’s Earth Day; we’re loud proponents of keeping the environment healthy and ship-shape. But on the celebratory front, we like to pile our events into one spectacular week of sunny spring days. So if you’re searching for a way to show the planet that you appreciate all it’s done for you, and you want to give back, we have just the thing. Read on for all that’s going down with The New York Botanical Garden and its partners, here and around New York City!

Kicking off the Earth Day festivities in proper style, the NYBG is honored to serve as one of the many esteemed locations hosting The Nature Conservancy‘s most spectacular worldwide soirée. This year the Garden joins communities around the globe in celebrating the planet we live on through good food, good company, and teachable moments in preserving the environment. Join us at Picnic for the Planet on April 22 for live music from Sunny Weather and Kinky Spigot and the Welders, along with special prizes, giveaways, and treasure hunts. We’ll also be offering outdoor workshops led by REI SoHo, and open talks with NYBG scientists on the work of The Nature Conservancy in New York. It’s a day to do some good and learn how you can be environmentally proactive. And did I mention it’s the last day of our 10th annual Orchid Show? Come for New York’s most stunning tropical exhibition, stay for the sun, and maybe engage in a little sustainable face-stuffing.

Our Garden Café is always a delicious option for the latter, but for those looking to bring food of their own, we’re also partnering with Whole Foods Market! Hold onto the flyer they give you when you stop by to put together an afternoon feast–not only is it full of great suggestions on what to put in your picnic basket, but there’s a two-for-one NYBG ticket offer as well. For a location near you, be sure to check out the Whole Foods website.

Joining the world’s greatest picnic on the delectable front is our partnership with the adorably delicious Sprinkles Cupcakes, who make helping the environment…well…a cakewalk (I offer no apologies for appropriate puns). To celebrate Earth Day, Sprinkles is donating 100% of the proceeds from their vanilla cupcakes to The New York Botanical Garden.

Sprinkles has raised over $50,000 for environmental care since 2008, so look for the green tree to know you’re eating for a cause worth indulging in. The promotion runs now through April 20–get to Sprinkles and do your sweet tooth the favor!

Appreciating the Earth will always be more than an annual event, but it’s seldom that workaday life gives you the chance to make your support known with so many good people. Join the NYBG and our generous partners this week to give the planet the thanks it so deserves–even as a chance to enjoy the Garden as a spot to relax and take in the scenery, it means so much more.

This entry was posted
on Wednesday, April 18th, 2012 at 12:23 pm and is filed under Around the Garden, Programs and Events.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/garden-programming/earth-day-the-right-way/

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Morning Eye Candy: Snowfall

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Sorry–that title might have set a few of you on sudden edge. Too late for April Fools’?

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Saturday, April 14th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/photography/morning-eye-candy-snowfall/

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Morning Eye Candy: Speak for the Trees

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Sunday, April 15th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Adult Education, Photography.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/photography/morning-eye-candy-speak-for-the-trees/

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Morning Eye Candy: Black Parrot

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

The tulips are out and about! And contrary to what Holland’s classic advertising suggests, not all bulbs sprout cup-like, candy-colored petals. In some cases they fall more in line with the imagery of Poe.

Don’t worry, Holland. We love you.

Tulipa ‘Black Parrot’ — Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Sunday, April 15th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/photography/morning-eye-candy-black-parrot/

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Morning Eye Candy: Filling In

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

I’m continually amazed by the subtle but rapid changes the Garden undergoes, sometimes seemingly overnight. No two days walking the grounds are spent in repetition–there is something new to see between each moment.

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Friday, April 13th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/photography/morning-eye-candy-filling-in/

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A Crabby Disposition

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

I remember my dad telling me, rather gleefully, of fall afternoons spent pelting his friends with rock-hard crabapples flung from his homemade slingshot. It’s a Dennis the Menace trope in its purest form. But it also seems a fitting use for a fruit some say is named for its disagreeable nature. And if you were to take the dive and snack on a crabapple off the branch, with few exceptions you would probably find yourself cringing as if you’d just sampled a wedge of unripe lemon.

With the cherry trees doffing their hats until next year’s flower effusion, the questionably edible crabapples are only too willing to steal away the spotlight with looks (and being in the rose family, the crabapples have them in spades). The crabby name belies the abundance of blossoms which spot the grounds with cloudy displays of ivory, fuchsia, and burgundy. And the history of crabapples at The New York Botanical Garden is equally as rich, beginning early in the Garden’s life with a planting of trees near Twin Lakes. Later, in 1930, the collection moved to its current home in the southwest section of the grounds. Placed in neat rows along Daffodil Hill, the many cultivars–rare and common alike–burst into effervescent color just after the daffodils have faded. This year’s bizarrely early spring has, of course, given us the benefit of both beauties sashaying through flirty florescence in tandem.

Not only an intense display for visitors in the spring and fall (when the fruit matures), the multitude of cultivars, heirloom varieties, and wild crabapple specimens that have been collected by the Garden over the past century further offer horticulturists an ideal opportunity to compare hardiness, disease resistance, and growing habits among the many species.

But, again, it’s no secret that crabapples are far from the first choice for a hand fruit. Unlike their larger relative, the conventional table apple (Malus domestica), most of the tiny facsimiles in the Malus genus are dense, woody, and prove violently sour. Making them palatable often means stewing the fruits and straining the pulp, then boiling the resulting juice with a heap of sugar to make a deep, ruby-red jelly or jam. This makes them a prime candidate for toast, if not something to eat right from the orchard. But as an accompaniment to more conventional crops, crabapples have some fascinating tricks on hand.

The average draw of the crabapple’s fruit may be one reserved for those willing to prepare it properly, but for farmers–especially those with apple orchards in the north–these trees can be a boon to each year’s harvest. Their natural virility (they produce copious amounts of pollen) combined with the ability to freely hybridize with conventional apples makes them perfect pollenizers (not to be confused with pollinators, such as honeybees and hummingbirds). Growers commonly place one crabapple tree for every six or seven apple trees, often to compensate for crop cultivars which don’t produce enough pollen on their own to reliably ensure a successful harvest. Bees and other pollinators will then ferry the crabapple pollen between other trees in the orchard. As a further benefit, the hardier crabapples–the Siberian crab, for one–make for useful rootstocks when grafted with conventional apple trees. They then pass on their beneficial traits to the scion plant, allowing farms to harvest healthy crops of apples even at the northern fringes of their recommended growing regions.

Of course, we’re not doing any picking at the NYBG. We prefer to enjoy our crabapples not for their namesake, but for the plush explosions of flowers that clothe their branches. The bright autumn fruit is just a bonus.

Be sure to get here while they’re flaunting their spring regalia!

This entry was posted
on Friday, April 13th, 2012 at 11:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Gardens and Collections.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/gardens-and-collections/a-crabby-disposition/

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The Original Twitter

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

From here to Pelham Bay Park, and straight on down to Central Park, the kinship of bird watchers is peaking. April and May are something of a pilgrimage holiday for the truly dedicated ornithological set, though few in New York hoof it far from home; they set out with their binoculars, their pens, and their dog-eared notebooks, taking time off from work to travel a scant few miles to the nearest stand of trees.

These dyed-in-the-wool avian aficionados don’t come to the NYBG in spring specifically for the Red-tailed Hawks, or for the Great Horned Owls. Their prize is far smaller. And as prizes go, these birds seem more of an indulgence than the rare and elusive species recorded with fingers scribbling furiously between the lines of a “life list.” Many New York birders–seasoned or green–instead come to see the little puffs of color and song known as warblers.

With the revival of warm weather comes a wave of returning songbirds, threading their way up from their off-season haunts in South America for a homecoming along the Canadian border. New York City becomes something of a rest stop for many of these travelers along the way. And when the first warbler scouts begin to alight in The New York Botanical Garden, raised binoculars are often nearby, hoping to catch sight of a Yellow or Prothonotary warbler.

As quaint as these miniature songsmiths are, the sheer variety of hue and melody makes for quite a show. But I’m not the expert to ask–you would do better to catch up on the specifics of the craze with Debbie Becker’s spring primer from last year’s migration. Her weekly Saturday Bird Walks (11 a.m. at the Visitor’s Center Reflecting Pool!) are a chance for veterans and new faces to the birdwatching game to get together for a guided trek around the Garden, with Debbie’s proven compendium of birding knowledge to keep you on track. But the warblers don’t keep their schedule down to the individual Saturday, so feel free to stop by anytime during the week! Spring is soon to have a soundtrack of a feathered sort.


Photo courtesy of Sue O’Rourke.

This entry was posted
on Wednesday, April 11th, 2012 at 11:00 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Wildlife.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/wildlife/the-original-twitter/

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Morning Eye Candy: Doors are Open

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

Sorry we’re late with this one–it’s been a hectic weekend for some of us. But with the kids escaping from school for their spring break, it means today is a rare open Monday at the NYBG! Get here while the sun is high.

Rodgersia pinnata ‘Elegans’ — Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

This entry was posted
on Monday, April 9th, 2012 at 9:06 am and is filed under Around the Garden, Photography.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/photography/morning-eye-candy-doors-are-open/

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Morning Eye Candy: Support

Author: admin  //  Category: landscaping ideas

The flowers get all the glory, but the stems that hold them up can be picturesque, too.

Daffodil Stems (photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen)

 

This entry was posted
on Thursday, April 5th, 2012 at 6:00 am and is filed under Photography.
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Article source: http://www.nybg.org/plant-talk/2012/04/photography/morning-eye-candy-support/

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