Inside The New York Botanical Garden

shade gardening

Urban Container Gardening Classes

Posted in Adult Education on April 24 2013, by Lansing Moore

photo (5)[2]In New York City, where space comes at a premium, it helps to live by the mantra “Great things come in small packages,” even when it comes to gardening. Container gardens, tree well plantings, and terrace gardens are the easiest way to add a small-scale garden to the average city apartment, and they can be beautiful, too.

Over the course of two sessions in March, Daryl Beyers showed his class how to get the most out of placing a few plants in a simple pot. The results were these charming, self-contained gardens, perfect for even the most space-starved New Yorker.

If you would like to try your hand at container gardening, the Garden’s Adult Education program is offering two special Saturday sessions in May! “All About Containers” is a daylong boot camp on May 4 in the Bronx and will cover all the basics of container gardening.

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Navigating Hostas

Posted in Gardening Tips on June 9 2011, by Ann Rafalko

Sonia Uyterhoeven is Gardener for Public Education.

Hostas in the Perennial GardenThere is nothing inherently complex about hostas. They are easy-to-grow, readily available, adaptable foliage plants for the shade garden. The problem with hostas is that they have a predisposition toward mutation, and there is a glut of similar looking cultivars on the market.

So how do you navigate the vast selection of these ubiquitous shade lovers to find a few outstanding specimens for your garden? The Azalea Garden provides an ideal opportunity for window shopping, offering ideas for choice cultivars and tips on how to integrate them into your woodland landscape design. In this new garden, azaleas are paired with ferns, sedges, grasses, and woodland perennials.

Hostas come from Japan, China, and Korea. The common name was once plantain-lily and the former Latin name, Funkia, was often used as a common name as well. There are around 45 species of hosta with over 7,000 cultivars. Two well-known species are the fragrant Chinese Hosta plantaginea and the waxy glaucous (blue) Japanese Hosta sieboldiana. They are parents to a myriad of successful cultivars on the market. Members of the plantaginea group tend to be heat lovers, while members of the sieboldiana group cannot take too much sun and warmth, their waxy blue coating starts to melt and turns green.

Hostas are notorious for having split personalities, meaning they sometimes change color during the course of the season. There are terms for this type of color instability: A hosta that changes from yellow or white to green is called viridescence; a change from green to yellow is called lutescence; and from yellow to white albescence.

Hostas are often classified by size: dwarf, miniature, small, medium, large, or giant. Each category has a different height range (given in inches) and average leaf size (given in square inches). For example, a giant hosta is over 28 inches tall and has a leaf surface area of greater than 144 square inches.

Learn more about hosta care and see a list of recommended plants below.

This Saturday: Learn How to Garden in the Shade

Posted in Learning Experiences on February 10 2010, by Plant Talk

Carol Capobianco is Editorial Content Manager at The New York Botanical Garden.

Liz Costa, Associate Vice President for Corporate and Foundation Relations, and her husband, Rob Yagley, moved in to their own home in September. Their small yard is framed by several trees, which can be challenging to landscape. As their first spring planting season approaches, they decided to seek help from the Botanical Garden’s Continuing Education program.

So both signed up for this Saturday’s Shade Gardening event—a day of classes for gardeners who want to understand the different levels of shade, design shade gardens, choose appropriate plants, and more. Liz and her husband have even split up the chores—she’ll attend three of the six sessions offered and he the other three so that they cover all the topics.

“As apartment dwellers most of our lives, we knew we needed help with our new yard, especially with gardening in the shade,” said Liz. “When we spotted the six different sessions offered on one Saturday, we knew we found the best way to start thinking about our shady spot!”

To find out more about Shade Gardening Saturday or to register, click here and search “shade garden” or call 718.817.8747.