Morning Eye Candy: Juxtaposition
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on December 5 2011, by Matt Newman
Order and chaos, fall and summer. Maybe the contrasts sound a bit overwrought, but they sure can be pretty.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Inside The New York Botanical Garden
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on December 5 2011, by Matt Newman
Order and chaos, fall and summer. Maybe the contrasts sound a bit overwrought, but they sure can be pretty.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Posted in Holiday Train Show on December 4 2011, by Matt Newman
“We arrived just after closing, but the Garden staff still let us in and kept the lights on.”
From now until December 17, our visitors will be sharing their fondest memories from 20 years of the Holiday Train Show–some of them touching, some comical, and every one of them cherished. Come back to Plant Talk each day for a new story, which you can see after the jump along with a feature on one of the many replica New York City landmarks on display in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory–the Guggenheim Museum, Yankee Stadium, the Empire State Building and more.
As a bonus, read on to find out how you can win a Family Four-Pack of Holiday Train Show tickets for yourself!
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on December 4 2011, by Matt Newman
We didn’t have a chance to show you the turnout for these Nicotiana x sanderae during Sonia Uyterhoeven’s “Season in Review,” but they’re too rich and gorgeous to ignore.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Posted in Around the Garden on December 3 2011, by Matt Newman
The peak of fall foliage is an explosion of color, but the window of opportunity to catch this sort of beauty is sometimes slim. For some trees it only takes a week or two before the brilliant reds, oranges, and yellows that come with cooler weather have passed; you venture out one day to find every last leaf crunching underfoot, and a latticework of barren branches netting the sky above.
As I walked through the Garden recently, noting the trees which were heavy with leaves just a week or two ago, I found myself hunting out the stragglers. I suppose it’s more accurate to call them survivors–the last of the foliated plants, big and small, still stubbornly holding onto their leaves when many growing around them have already closed up shop for the coming winter. Somehow, the few holding out until the last minute seem that much brighter for their small numbers.
Posted in Holiday Train Show on December 3 2011, by Matt Newman
“We were amazed and awed by the intricate design and detail of the scenery and the other accompaniments gracing the exhibit while we visited.”
From now until December 17, our visitors will be sharing their fondest memories from 20 years of the Holiday Train Show–some of them touching, some comical, and every one of them cherished. Come back to Plant Talk each day for a new story, which you can see after the jump along with a feature on one of the many replica New York City landmarks on display in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory–the Guggenheim Museum, Yankee Stadium, the Empire State Building and more.
As a bonus, read on to find out how you can win a Family Four-Pack of Holiday Train Show tickets for yourself!
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on December 3 2011, by Matt Newman
The colors of late fall are almost defiant at the Garden.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Posted in Holiday Train Show on December 2 2011, by Matt Newman
The week is almost over, meaning the Garden is humming with anticipation for another beautiful Holiday Train Show weekend! What’s more is that the weather is finally acting like it should this time of year. After seeing frost clinging to the grass along Tulip Tree Allée as I walked in this morning, I think this may just be December’s way of making up for that downright awkward November “heat wave.” How can you really make the most of a northern Thanksgiving with temperatures above 60 degrees, anyway?
But that’s old news. We’re moving into this brisk and sunny weekend with smiles for the events to come, and looking forward as the season picks up momentum. Whether you’re hoping to catch sight of a rare bird with Debbie Becker, see the Holiday Train Show for the first or dozenth time, or just enjoy the sights we offer year round, there’s more than enough going on this weekend to warrant some time spent at the NYBG.
Posted in Gardens and Collections on December 2 2011, by Joyce Newman
Joyce H. Newman is the editor of Consumer Reports’ GreenerChoices.org, and has been a Garden Tour Guide with The New York Botanical Garden for the past six years.
Across from the Garden’s main Café is a grove of Nikko firs (Abies homolepsis) that was planted in 1928, and has since become part of the Arthur and Janet Ross Conifer Arboretum at the NYBG. Much like a few of the unique conifers we have previously discussed, these trees are native to Japan, and commonly grow in mountainous areas where they need cool, moist, and often snowy environments to thrive. But despite the tree’s native habitat, the word nikko in Japanese actually means “sunlight” or “sunshine.”
You could travel to Mt. Fuji in Japan to see these fir trees growing in abundance. However, the grove right here in the Bronx is an amazing example in itself, due to the fact that firs are difficult to grow in urban environments. In fact, it would be even harder to establish a healthy grove of these trees today given ongoing climate change.
Posted in Holiday Train Show on December 2 2011, by Matt Newman
“We were in for a real treat when we saw his reaction as the first train started chugging through.”
From now until December 17, our visitors will be sharing their fondest memories from 20 years of the Holiday Train Show–some of them touching, some comical, and every one of them cherished. Come back to Plant Talk each day for a new story, which you can see after the jump along with a feature on one of the many replica New York City landmarks on display in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory–the Guggenheim Museum, Yankee Stadium, the Empire State Building and more.
As a bonus, read on to find out how you can win a Family Four-Pack of Holiday Train Show tickets for yourself!
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on December 2 2011, by Matt Newman
Neither this Camellia ‘Winter’s Cupid’ nor its busy tender seems bothered by the chill.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen