Inside The New York Botanical Garden

The New York Botanical Garden

Morning Eye Candy: Ruffled and Smooth

Posted in Photography on August 25 2011, by Ann Rafalko

It seems logical for raindrops to be caught in the frilly edges of a crape-myrtle blossom, but the variegated textures of ornamental grasses can capture them, too.

Lagerstroemia 'Choctaw'

Lagerstroemia ‘Choctaw’

Drops on Grass

Photos by Ivo M. Vermeulen

In the Family Garden

Posted in What's Beautiful Now on August 23 2011, by Ann Rafalko

The summer session of the Children’s Gardening program–where kids aged 5-12 work in pairs to cultivate and tend their own garden plot–is in full swing, and the Ruth Rea Howell Family Garden is a hive of activity, bursting at the seams with produce and happy kids.

If the kids in your family want to get in on the gardening action, you can join in during Dig! Plant! Grow! which takes place daily (except on Mondays when the Garden is usually closed), beginning at 1:30 p.m. Digging, weeding, and harvesting aren’t the only activities going on in the Family Garden (read one visitor’s appreciation); there’s also cooking, Mario Batali’s Edible Garden, and tons of exploring to be done as well! And there are bees and bunnies. Oh, and it’s also really pretty!

Be sure to stop by on your next trip to the Garden, and while you’re here, snap a few photos to enter into the August NYBG-IGPOTY photo contest, “Kids in the Garden” featuring special Mario Batali prizes!

Teamwork in the Family Garden

See more scenes from the Family Garden after the jump

Coral Bells for Sunny Sites

Posted in Gardening Tips on August 23 2011, by Sonia Uyterhoeven

Sonia Uyterhoeven is Gardener for Public Education.
Heuchera villosa 'Tiramisu'
Heuchera villosa 'Tiramisu'

Last week we looked at coral bells and covered some of the dark leaved options that are grown in this garden and easy to find on the market. This week we are going to look at some spectacular options for sunny sites.

Coral bells were traditionally thought of as shade lovers. Heuchera villosa, however, is a species that is native to southeastern U.S. It is an adaptable species that thrives in full sun to part shade, grows happily in soils ranging from slightly wet to slightly dry and is unfazed by high humidity. Understandably, it is a popular plant for southern gardens.

Hybridizers have latched on to this species and it is now part of the parentage of many successful hybrids. The French hybridizer, Thierry Delabroye has taken the world of coral bells by storm by flooding the market with a number of mouthwatering cultivars that are designed to make you either hungry or thirsty. Delabroye’s offerings include cultivars such as ‘Carmel’, ‘Brownies’, ‘Mocha’, ‘Pistache’, ‘Tiramisu’, ‘Pinot Gris’, and ‘Beaujolais’. We have used a number of these cultivars in container displays. This year we are growing ‘Brownies’ in the Trial Bed Garden in the Home Gardening Center.

The reputation of Heuchera ‘Brownies’ as an attractive and adaptable coral bell is attested to by the fact that it is flourishing in the challenging environment of New York’s High Line park. Its foliage emerges brown and then transforms into a greenish brown with a rich purple-red underside. Like the majority of Heuchera villosa hybrids it features large foliage and has a fuzzy texture. It grows over a foot tall and forms a generous two foot clump.

Learn more about these sun-loving coral bells below.

Science Open House Weekend

Posted in Programs and Events, Science on August 22 2011, by Ann Rafalko

Pfizer LabSaturday and Sunday, August 27-28, 2011

This weekend-long event will offer the public a rare insider’s view of The New York Botanical Garden’s Science campus.

Garden scientists will lead tours of the Pfizer Plant Research Laboratory and William and Lynda Steere Herbarium.

Briefings from the Field, a short lecture series featuring updates from the fieldwork of various Garden scientists, is open to the public Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Arthur and Janet Ross Lecture Hall

Garden scientists are working all over the world on plant-related studies ranging from working to preserve the endangered flora of Puerto Rico, to searching for lichens and mosses at the ends of the earth, to hunting for hidden pathogens in North America’s cranberry bogs, and to empowering junior high school girls through flowers. Come visit these beautiful and fascinating facilities (get a preview of the Pfizer Lab here) and hear the stories of discovery from the Garden’s scientists themselves.

Head below the jump to see the schedule for this exciting weekend of science events!

Morning Eye Candy: Make Believe

Posted in Photography on August 20 2011, by Ann Rafalko

This Adnia rubella flower (commonly known as Chinese buttonbush) looks like it would make a very fine stand-in as a magic wand for your favorite fairy princess.

Adina rubella

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

MB + NYBG + IGPOTY = Kids In the Garden Photography Contest

Posted in Mario Batali's Edible Garden, Photography on August 19 2011, by Ann Rafalko

Mario Batali and Kids in the Mario Batali Edible Garden at NYBG
Mario Batali and Kids in the Mario Batali Edible Garden at NYBG

Please join Mario Batali, The New York Botanical Garden, and the International Garden Photographer of the Year contest in celebrating the joy of youth gardening! The prize for this special monthly photography contest includes a selection of products from Mario Batali!

The rules are simple:

– Enter up to five photographs of kids gardening, or photographs taken by kids in the garden

– The photos do not have to have been taken at The New York Botanical Garden. They can be from any garden anywhere in the world.

– The photos do have to be placed into the NYBG Flickr Group Pool

– Please tag your photographs with nybgigpoty3

Judging will take place at the beginning of September and one winner will be chosen by a panel of judges, and winners will be announced in September.

Please let us know if you have any questions in the comments below!