Inside The New York Botanical Garden

Plant Talk

Endangered Plants Focus of Botanical Art Show

Posted in Exhibitions on April 27 2010, by Plant Talk

Traveling Exhibition Opens Next Week at the Garden

Carol Woodin is Exhibitions Coordinator for the American Society of Botanical Artists and a freelance botanical artist.

An organization of artists and illustrators who depict plants, the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA) began a project in 2006 to tell two stories: the continuing relevance of botanical art and the often neglected story of plant endangerment, as the decline of the world’s plant life is one of the most significant issues of our time. The result is the traveling exhibition Losing Paradise? Endangered Plants Here and Around the World, which opens at The New York Botanical Garden Thursday, May 6.

Artists from around the country and the world worked to capture the threatened and endangered plant life in their neighborhood or farther afield over the course of about three years (such as the image above
© Jean Emmons, Ixia viridiflora, Green Ixia, watercolor on vellum). This project has encouraged ASBA members to learn about today’s endangered plants, to depict more of them, to grow relationships with people involved in studying and conserving them, and to develop ethical field study techniques. Endangered plants are by definition difficult to find, and in some cases, excellent orienteering skills are needed. Once found, they sometimes require multiple years of study for a completely accurate depiction. Collaboration with scientists, conservationists, and botanical gardens bridges the disciplines of art and science and enriches both.

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The Man in the Green Jacket

Posted in People on April 23 2010, by Plant Talk

Garden Mourns Passing of Gardening Educator Ralph Snodsmith

Jeff Downing is Vice President for Education.

The staff of the New York Botanical Garden was very sorry to hear that renowned gardening educator and radio personality Ralph Snodsmith passed away last Saturday.

As an instructor in the Garden’s Adult Education program for 40 years, Ralph trained generations of New Yorkers in the essentials of home gardening. His thorough approach covered everything from basic botany to soil testing and improvement, proper pruning, and integrated pest management. But Ralph’s classes were always greater than the sum of their parts. What really came through was the genuine warmth of his personality, his enduring passion and curiosity about plants, and the contagious enthusiasm he brought to his classes—along with his trademark green sports jacket.

Outside the garden, Ralph was best known for The Garden Hotline, his weekly radio program on WOR, which he hosted for 35 years. There he welcomed horticulture personalities, dispensed gardening wisdom, and answered a never-ending stream of questions from everyday gardeners with an affable, engaging charm. He also appeared on Good Morning America for eight years, providing gardening advice to millions of viewers.

Ralph distilled the essence of his course material into Ralph Snodsmith’s Fundamentals of Gardening, an all around garden primer published in 1993. He also authored Tips From the Garden Hotline, The Tri-State Gardener’s Guide, and the New York Gardener’s Guide, as well as innumerable fact sheets and newsletter articles.

The Garden honored Ralph in 1985 with both The New York Botanical Garden Distinguished Service Award and The New York Botanical Garden Distinguished Educator in Plant Studies Award. But there really is no award that could adequately convey Ralph Snodsmith’s contribution to The New York Botanical Garden and the world of horticulture. His true contribution lives on in the millions of lives he touched, and in the flourishing gardens everywhere improved and inspired by his wisdom.

When renowned gardening author Michael Pollan was at the Garden lecturing in 2002, he mentioned to me that he had learned the fundamentals of gardening years earlier at The New York Botanical Garden in a class with Ralph Snodsmith. “I’ll never forget that green jacket,” he remarked.

Neither will we.

Share with us and others your favorite stories and remembrances of Ralph Snodsmith by leaving a comment.

For Earth Day: A New Effort in Composting

Posted in Uncategorized on April 22 2010, by Plant Talk

You Are Part of the Solution in the Garden’s Cafe Waste Program

Daniel Avery is Sustainability and Climate Change Program Manager at The New York Botanical Garden.

Every day New York City’s households and not-for-profits that receive waste handling services from the City of New York such as The New York Botanical Garden generate about 12,000 tons of garbage and recyclables that must be hauled away by trucks to distant landfills and incinerators. The city’s businesses contribute an additional 10 million tons per year of garbage, recyclables, construction waste, and fill material.

Of the 11,500 tons per day of so-called municipal waste, about 36 percent is recyclable material as designated under the city’s current recycling program. That means that, even if every accepted item was recycled, there would still be almost 7,360 tons of waste a day to get rid of.

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Reserve a Date with Nature

Posted in Programs and Events on April 20 2010, by Plant Talk

Groups Pampered with Private Tour, Luxurious Lunch

Suzanne Flanagan is Group Tours Coordinator.

Spring ColorWhen groups of 20 or more visit the Garden, they generally like to make a day of it. Who wouldn’t want to spend time relaxing in this beautiful National Historic Landmark? Reserve a Date with Nature allows you to combine a private tour of your choice with a delicious catered lunch.

This premier, all-inclusive package is a favorite among groups, many of which come back year after year and keep things fresh by trying different tours and menus. We handle everything for you, which makes the planning process a cinch.

Private catered lunches are held in an exclusive area in one of our on-site dining locations, the modern Visitor Center Cafe or the historic Stone Mill (which will reopen in September), eliminating all worry of seating and schedules. Menu options are specifically designed for group dining and range from assorted sandwiches to grilled buffet entrées with gourmet salads and hearty grain sides. This is no plain-Jane spread. Group members will leave smiling and satisfied, especially once they notice the dessert tray!

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Family Garden Reopens: Kids—and Rabbits—Are “Hoppy”!

Posted in Gardens and Collections, Learning Experiences on April 16 2010, by Plant Talk

Children Learn About Plants Through Hands-on Gardening

Toby Adams is Manager of the Ruth Rea Howell Family Garden.

Clickety clank. Bumpity bumpity bump. Two pairs of ears stand up scanning the Family Garden for the noise. Clickety clank. Bumpity bumpity bump. Two curious, twitching noses aim this way and then that.

“What’s that clanking and bumping?” wondered sleepy Darwin, the Family Garden’s newest resident rabbit (at left in photo).

Newton hopped around his hutch, the Family Garden’s original resident rabbit had heard these noises before. “I think I know what the clinkety clanks and bumpity bumps are,” Newton assured Darwin. “The Family Garden must be open again!”

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Celebrate Earth Day Activities at the Garden

Posted in Programs and Events on April 15 2010, by Plant Talk

spring daffodilsWith April sunshine ushering in spring in full force, it is easy to have green on the brain here at the Garden. Not only is it National Garden Month, it is also Earth Month, during which the Garden will present programs, tours, and demon-
strations featuring ways to get in touch with nature and become more eco-friendly.

Many special events will take place on Earth Day, April 22, including:

  • Composting made easy with our Gardener for Public Education, Bronx Green-Up, and the NYC Compost Project in the Bronx: Learn how to make compost tea, get answers to your questions on compost, and pick up tip sheets, all in the Home Gardening Center.
  • Vegetable Gardening for a Green Planet: Find out the easy steps for stocking your kitchen with homegrown foods all season long.
  • Kids activities in the Everett Children’s Adventure Garden and the Ruth Rea Howell Family Garden: Plant saplings, make crafts from recycled magazines, learn about earthworms, and more!

Also, take advantage of the gorgeous springtime blooms throughout the Garden’s 250-acre landscape, including the 50-acre Native Forest.

Garden to Offer Adult Classes at New Midtown Location

Posted in Learning Experiences on April 7 2010, by Plant Talk

Come Celebrate Grand Opening, Saturday, April 10

Gregory Long is President and CEO of The New York Botanical Garden.

On Saturday, April 10, the Botanical Garden celebrates the opening of its new Midtown Education Center with a free Open House and programs involving New York City’s finest gardening authors and professionals. I invite you to drop in at the Center at 20 West 44th Street (between 5th and 6th Avenues) for the event, which will run from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Speak with the Garden’s experienced instructors in Botanical Art & Illustration, Floral Design, Gardening, and Landscape Design. Take mini-classes, watch demonstrations, hear about the skills you can learn, and review portfolios of current students while considering the courses from among the daytime, evening, and weekend classes.

Since 1917, The New York Botanical Garden’s Adult Education Program has helped students receive unmatched horticultural training. Many of our students have discovered new careers through the Garden; others have cultivated their passion for new, rewarding green hobbies. The top-notch instructors, hands-on classes and seminars, and engaging lecture series you’ve come to expect from the Botanical Garden are now conveniently located just two blocks from Grand Central Terminal.

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