Tuesday, June 26, 2018

NPG Sunday, June 24, 2018

At the Garden five days ago, but I had heard from the docents that Joel was giving a tour on this date.  If Mohamed won't go to the mountain...   Joel is a good friend, having met many years ago at a docent class that I guess I taught and he was sitting on the aisle and indicated his interest as I walked past at the end of the class. If I had anything to do with his outstanding knowledge of the Native Plant Garden, it is one of those situations that I recall when I was a summer camp counselor.  I taught kids to dive better than I could, and to serve in tennis better than I did, so you get my meaning.  Though we help each other, Joel clarified the identities of several plants today as we went through before his tour was to begin. It was nice to see docent DePrator today, too, and many more visitors on a weekend.

Though I could see how the young German visitor last time felt it was "all green," in just the five days there was a lot of growth, and yes, many flowering and berried plants to identify. I took photos galore, so different from the days when we had 12 pictures on a roll of tape and one was very careful to choose what to shoot.  Of course I photo individual flowers but the meadow was sooo beautiful with myriad colors so I also took overall views.


Milkweed, Poppies, False Sunflowers.


Pear Cactus, Butterfly Weed


















Phlox and Wild Bleeding Heart and Yellow Coneflower in the approach to the NPG.

Lots of species of Beardtongue


Little Brown Jug
Beebalm Monarda, Wild Quinine, Harebell, Little Brown Jug which I confused with Wild Ginger, in the same family. See the flowers under the leaves.

Meadow Rue, Creeping Mint (small purple flowers), Celandine Poppy, Cohosh Cimicifuga racemosa, Skullcap, attractive berries on Starry False Solomon's Seal, high on the Franklin Tree are some white flower buds, a little left of Golden Alexanders, a lot of Pickerelweed in both sides of the upper water feature, Calapogon pogonia of the orchid family in the Pitcher Plant area, Rose, and newly blooming Turk's Head? Lily under the River Birch Trees.
Helianthus helianthoides

           Allium cernuum ‘Hidcote’  Nodding onion. It’s a darker pink than the species.
The meadow is just gorgeous with Spidewort, Coreopsis palmata which was pictured in the last blog, Sirene virginica, Mountain Mint.  

Ruellia humilis Wild Petunia among the Cactus
Culver's Root's spikes in approach section. Barbara's Buttons by Pitcher Plants.
Barbara's Buttons

 Many berries today: Blueberries, Chokeberry.

Culver's Root
Helianthus helianthoides
Lily under River Birches
Do we all recognize Pam?





































Friday, June 22, 2018

June 19, 2018

I am tearing myself away from my compulsive watching of every World Cup soccer game, but don't feel upset, it's all DVR'd so I will get to see them.  I had such a nice flow of things to say about "Meet the Presidents" day at NYBG, but it's already four days later and I owe a report on what's flowering.  Of course all the other events of that day to cover.

Yeah, traffic was crumby but I did get to go through the Native Plant Garden before pushing my legs to the Conservatory where outgoing Gregory Long and incoming Carrie Barratt were greeting members and patrons.

 I listed 43 flowering plants and bet I missed a few.  At the entrance I chatted with a young man leaving the NPG and asked what he thought about the NPG.  His overview was that it was "very plain, a lot of green."  Given a choice, he also preferred to go with a tour guide than walk through alone.  He was from Germany. I don't think he would have felt the same way about the color if someone had pointed out the 43 blooming plants....  He introduced the subject of Chi Gong, and it was coincidental that it was my Chi Gong class that I was missing in order to make the Presidents meeting.

Phlox
Beardtongue
Yellow Coneflower
Wild Bleeding Heart
Monarda
Milkweed
Black-eyed Susan
(Blueing Blueberries)
In front of the Shad bushes the delicate flowers on another shrub were not familiar to me.  A nice gal who works as a gardener thought it was deciduous verticillata But she noticed Michael Hagen on the golf cart (in the Garden is it still a golf cart?) and he came riding over.  Heck, it is Winterberry, but Yellow Winterberry and honestly, how well I know the berries but apparently have missed the sweet white flowers.  Exciting news as a result of a conversation with Michael Hagen, so read about it later.

Winterberry Ilex verticillata

Baptisia alba and B. australis Wild Indigo's pods are not ready to shake yet, something fun to do with kids.
Joe Pye Weed
Wild Geranium Geranium maculatum in the box at the entrance.
Spigelia marilandica  among the Bluestar leaves and lots of it beyond the water feature.
Hydrangea quercifolia
 Heading to the right over the gravel lok, Magnolia virginianum,
Columbine,
Plume Solomon's Seal,
Harebell,
bearing left Inkberry Ilex glabra
Little Brown Jug before steps, both leaves and flower similar but not Wild Ginger,
Fleabane,  beautiful Maidenhair Ferns,
Celandine Poppy,
by the Franklin Tree, 'Mary Rydel' deciduous Azalea,
Iris
Photo by Sarracenia Pitcher Plants 
Calopogon tuberosa - Tuberous Grass Pink

Pitcher Plants 
Pickerel Weed (in water)
Sign to tell us Tussock Cottongrass Eriophorum vatinatum is proof that plants can't read.  Those pink flowers are probably Barbara's Buttons.  Thanks for catching me, Joanne.
Rose (worth smelling)
Whorled Loosestrife
Butterfly Weed
Wild Quinine
Spiderwort Tradescantia
Lance-leaved Coreopsis
Vetch
by Split Rock  Poppy Mallow
not sure until Michael Hagen confirmed Coreopsis palmata

Opuntia Pear Cactus

Silene virginica 

Notice the "Chinese lanterns" on the Silverbell trees halesia.

Another name I couldn't come up with,
Apocynum androsaemifolium - Spreading Dogbane which is the airy plant by the Acer pensylvanicum toward the Education building.

Cohosh








Glade Mallow across from the water feature along the boardwalk.























I owe you from not knowing this last time 
Phacelia bipinnatifida  Fernleaf Phacelia



The reason the captions are not under the photos is because when I hit "add caption," the whole darn thing disappears....   I wish I were better at this.  It's past bedtime but I have more to say.

At the get-together for the Meet the Presidents, it was delightful to meet docents Karen W., Emily K. whose email I finally got right, Joanne S. and Sue L. We help each other and I hope some of the unknowns I have listed correctly here.

Now the news I promised after talking to Michael Hagen.  You may know the N.Y. Fern Society has been meeting at the NYBG for 42 years and was thought to be ended because the great John Mickel is having health issues, and the great Robbin Moran is overburdened.  One of the reasons that I went to Meet the Presidents was to give a letter to Gregory and Carrie (first names improper?) about the issue, after Michael P. charged me to try to solve this problem.  A staff member is needed to have the use of a room for the organization.  Michael Hagen is a member but too busy to attend weekend monthly meetings.  (All of you might consider joining the group of wonderful, knowledgeable people who also like to share yummy food at the meetings.)  Anyway, Michael Hagen, bless his heart as they say, thinks he can solve the problem.  I did, however, get to give both outgoing and incoming Presidents my letter and they were warm and interested. Sometimes I, as perhaps you, feel intimidated by "big shots" but both Presidents and in addition Maureen Chilton, the beautiful chairman of the board (title?), were extremely likable and approachable. I look forward to sharing what I can about the Native Plant Garden with our new President Carrie Rebora Barratt and Maureen Chilton, who was pretty knowledgeable about the flowers herself, any time they are available.

Maureen Chilton and Gregory Long

                                                                                                                                                       Carrie Rebora Barratt

Yeah, I do talk a lot.

Sunday, June 10, 2018

NPG June 8, 2018



Feel free to ignore the first two paragraphs that have nothing to do with the Native Plant Garden. Just grumbling.

Uh oh, Priscilla emailed for someone to lead a tour of the NPG at 11:00 A.M. (MY always time) on Friday (different day than my usual but maybe see if that brings more people) so I said, "If no one responds, I could do it."  And Priscilla jumped right back with "You got it." I've been there a lot lately, as you know if you have kept up with these blogs, so wheras a docent might worry about preparation, I felt pretty confident.  Little did I know that the Tappan Zee, oops Mario Cuomo Bridge was CLOSED, and seven million (you think I might be exaggerating?) cars headed a block away from my house on Route 4 to use the GWBridge instead.  I woulda turned around and stayed home, BUT, I have never not shown up for a scheduled tour, so I spent the next hour and a quarter getting to the Garden.  I was even brave enough to disagree with Claudette, my name for the voice in my GPS, didn't take the backed up Cross Bronx Expressway, got off on the Hudson Drive or whatever that is called, and didn't listen to Claudette again when she told me to get off at Dyckman Street and I didn't.  I stuck on the Hudson Drive until Exit 24 which worked out to be the right thing to do.

What is wrong with Marcia?  Why is she going on about her traffic travails?  Why can't she just see the good side of life and say she got to the tour on time and had a great tour?  Why would she decide that once again the stress of getting to the tour on time is not worth it and she will never volunteer to Priscilla again?

Warm day for dampening the NYBG shirt.  Five people showed up for the tour and that is an excellent number; they pay attention, don't gab at the back of the group:  Katt who should count for 1 1/2 because she will shortly become a mother; her mother from the U.K., a gentleman, and an honor to me that two docents joined, too: Alinda and a docent-in-training, Katherine's mentee, Joanne Newman.  If I remember at the end of this blog to copy what Joanne wrote to me, I will be bragging, but it was a pretty good tour.

It looks quite green as you enter the Native Plant Garden, but a good list of blooming plants follows.  The underlined ones are newly blooming. Wild Bleeding Heart Dicentra eximia, Phlox, Beardtongue Penstemon several species, Wild Blue and White Indigo Baptisia australis and alba, Beebalm MonardaOakleaf Hydrangea almost in full bloom, *Goatsbeard Aruncus dioicus [see discussion at the bottom of the page],
Goatsbeard





Columbine Aquilegia candensis, Yellow and White Clover, Fleabane, Shooting Star Primula meadia, Harebell Campanula rotundifolia (purple, bell-shaped, borne singly or in clusters), Foxglove Digitalis lutea, Mountain Laurel Kalmia latifolia, Wild Ginger Asarum canadense, Skullcap Scutellaria incana, Ipecac/Bowman's Root Porteranthus trifoliatus,  Bluestar Amsonia tabernaemontana, Rose,


                                                                           Rose Rosa rugosa
Azalea, Iris, Pinkroot Spigelia marilandica, Pitcher Plants Sarracenia, Wild Quinine Parthenium integrifolium, Spiderwort Tradescantia, St. Johnswort Hypericum perforatum, Lance-leaved Coreopsis Coreopsis lanceolata, Cow Vetch Vicia cracca, Sundrops Oenothera, Dwarf Beardtongue, Toadflax Linaria canadensis, Coneflower Ratibida pinnata, Blue-eyed Grass Sisyrinchium augustifolium, Celandine Poppy Stylophorum dyphyllum. I just listed 36 blooming plants.

Also notice TOO MUCH Poison Ivy, berries on False Solomon's Seal, the lovely aroma of the Rose, the fronds on the ferns. A turtle, I would say Painted Turtle, my only childhood pet, was in the water by Gertrude's plaque.
Turtle


A funny happening was early in the tour when we were looking at Foxglove, yet I knew it wasn't like the small, native foxglove flowers in my yard.  Michael Hagen rushed in and ripped them out.  You can't just relax and accept what you see, dear fellow docents, because these sneaky guys are out to fool us.  Across from the Franklin Tree by other Bluestar, an Amsonia Blue Star is also in need of being pulled out.
unwanted Amsonia

Remember many of us bemoaning the fact that many children come in school groups with no one to tell them anything? Well today was one of those days, maybe because it is near the end of the term and they are doing trips because they already know everything....  Literally hundreds of children came through the NPG without a word being said to them.  There's some explanation given to us, but it doesn't seem to register with me because I haven't bought it.





Here's to Michael Hagen for his great help.

*Goatsbeard Aruncus dioicus is another plant where the Latin name is important because the same common name of Goats-beard (also Salsify/Oyster plant) is of a very different looking plant, Tragopogon, yellow flowered, fuzzy seedhead which is why it is also called Goatsbeard.
Aruncus dioicus up to 7 feet tall, flowers on spikes, male and female on separate plants. 

I am remembering to appreciate being appreciated:  Hi Marcia- What a great tour!! I'll walk the garden with you any time! You're so incredibly smart, funny and engaging! Katherine was so right in recommending that I catch your tour as one of the absolute best. . I hope I can do half as well when I'm ready!
Joanne

I also realize that you can all easily research any plant by typing in the name on the computer on your search engine.  I am surprised to still find various plants that never got written up in my "book" (which is online) but those I did may have in addition to botanical facts some useful lore, legends, meaning of names, edible or medical uses, history and "stories" that we docents can use and which seem to get the most attention from visitors.

If you have suggestions for how this blog can be more useful to you, please let me know.






















Monday, June 4, 2018

P.S. on May 31 and NYBG June 2, 2018

This is a continuation plant info for May 31, '18, but from another visit on June 2, 2018.

I can't believe it. How much I left out two days ago.  My apologies, ten blooms I did not mention, so either I just plain missed them, or, they all bloomed in two days.  You should know the white flowers in the approach to the NPG entrance, obviously Phlox.  All my blab about Culver's Root?  No flower showing there, and, yes, it is a tall plant that has been put there, to bloom "early to midsummer, lasting about a month," quoting from my NPG book.

Loving the color blue, I fell for Blue-eyed Grass Sisyrinchium augustifolium (has to be high on the list for the tongue-twistiest name) when it was first put into the 2013 NPG and think of it with sparse flowers, but this season they are exuberant if that is an appropriate word.  Guess what!  I see that I can choose the size of the photo, first time noticed by this observant person whose brain shrinks when facing technology.  That certainly makes it a little easier to see the small blue-eyed grass flowers.
larger
Blue-eyed Grass


The Toadflax wouldn't show in a photo, it is such a skinny little thing, but if any visitor asks what that tiny flower is by the top of the water feature, tell 'em it invited itself from the old NPG.  There was also some Jacob's Ladder blooming under the River Birch, and the post-bloom seems to intrigue people more than the story of the ladder-to-heaven.  The Joe Pye is ready to bloom, as is the orange flowered Butterfly Weed Asclepias tuberosa.  Do notice the tiny white flowers on the American Holly, telling us it is the female of the species.  I didn't get up close, but the flowers reminded me of the beloved waxy ones on Inkberry. Still some Yellow Trillium and Celandine Poppy near the Education Building. And the tenth one I am adding, that I missed two days ago, is Golden Club, a favorite from the old NPG.




Now, back to May 31st.  This is NOT about the Native Plant Garden, but NYBG.  Because I   brought two visitors, we did go to see the Georgie O'Keefe exhibit.  I will guess that you will get to see the paintings, and the plants that were brought from Hawaii that are in the Conservatory.  Here is just one photo of an intriguing plant that G.O. painted.
 

It was a little confusing to find our way in the Library where the paintings and other parts of the exhibit are on several floors.  Who directed us?  One of our very own fellow docents, DePrator, who was knowledgeable and nice and charming and helpful.  And whose email I got straightened out so she can go back on the blog list!


June 2, 2018
As you can determine from the additions to the NPG report, I was back at the Garden two days apart.  I have young (in their fifties) very good friends from my Catskill cabin life who drove two hours to see the ROSES.  June is the season for roses, and Bruce is mad for roses.  Beejay is also a walking Wikepedia and they have an amazing garden in Maplecrest.  Also joining them was their friend Richard who knew all the plant names, and is also with Bruce serious guitarists. Yes, we spent hours there, smelled more roses than I thought still preserved their lovely aroma, and you get the benefit of a few of the many photos.
















Instead of heading to Arthur Avenue for dinner, we had a lovely, if expensive, dinner at NYBG's Hudson Grill which was a relief for my tired legs after eight hours mostly on my feet at the Garden.

Friday, June 1, 2018

Native Plant Garden of NYBG May 31, 2018

I suppose it was all the rain that made the garden look green, green, green (and at least at first distant glance, little color).  Curator Michael Hagen led a somewhat diminished group, because of the misting rain, and discoursed interestingly on the curator's responsibilities and management of the NPG: goals, selection of plants, removal of plants, decisions about sizing.  Besides listening, I, of course, was intent on listing all the blooming plants and photographing for this blog.  It was drizzly on and off most of the day but happily not warmer than the high sixties.

As in my own (mostly) native plant garden, the Wild Blue Indigo Baptisia australis and here the white variety Baptisia alba catch your eye.  Even the mallard duck was taking a close look, proof in the photo taken by actively contributing docent Joanne who was also on the tour.

It is Iris season, and do you know that the Blue Flag is native, but not the myriad other colors?

Never to be left off the list of blooming plants from April to November, Wild Bleeding Heart Dicentra eximia is lush and some Golden Alexanders Zizia aurea is hanging on.

Beebalm Monarda fistulosa
The pale pink color you see as you approached the NPG is from, uh, I know it, Beebalm//Wild Bergamot Monarda fistulosa. It is used for making tea and equally important to me, whose entire cultivated white lilies which were deliciously budding were eaten by the daily deer, is not liked by deer.  You know how many visitors ask about what will grow in the shade, these days the question is what will the deer leave alone.  They do love the New England Asters, but at least one chewing is equal to one cutting back so they don't grow too tall and fall over, but not again!


As I have often cleverly said to visitors who think a sign gives the correct name of a plant, that they need a docent more than the signs because the plants can't read and don't stay by their labels. So before you reach the blueberry shrubs on your way to the entrance, the Culver's Root sign near a tiny white flower didn't ring true to me. Will the real Culver's Root please stand up (that comes back to me from an early TV program before most of you would know it) and that I remember seeing from the top of the metal ramp.  It has large leaves, is tall and has spike-like white flowers.

Some of the Shooting Star Primula meadia, the native white and cultivated pink ones, are still with us.  This is one of the changed name plants, used to be Dodecatheon, which I liked to roll off my tongue, the name, not the flower.  Behind the Shooting Star are some Fleabane where the Virginia Bluebells are gone.  Turning left, seeing the Mountain Laurel Kalmia latifolia ahead, Columbine
Aqualegia canadensis, and I even interrupted Michael Hagen's talk to point out my beloved Wild Ginger Asarum canadense WHICH IS STILL BLOOMING.  YAY!  You have to bend over and part the leaves to see those special flowers, so do it while they are still visible.
WILD GINGER
There is a lot of Skullcap Scutellaria incana which is well-marked and which I always thought was more interesting when it had turned brown and looked like a skull cap.
Skullcap
Bluestar Amsonia tabernaemontana, the dwarf kind, is no longer gracing the territory before the entrance, but is still on the rising land to the right of the boardwalk. Higher than it is a lot of the delicate looking flowers of Ipecac, also called Bowman's Root so like Pussytoes/Lady's Tobacco, it benefits from knowing the Latin name, Porteranthus trifoliatus.  Yes, it is also known as Indian Physic, even more making the point of using or knowing the Latin name.
Pitcher Plants Sarracenia are looking robust and colorful in red and yellow, and always seem to interest visitors, young and old.  Notice the Grasses are flowering, White Clover  Trifolium repens will be easily recognized, and the Blue Mistflower is as you leave the water feature heading alongside the meadow.  But before you do, Michael Hagen pointed out Toadflax Linaria canadensis that has come up
uninvited from the old NPG (my friend) which will be left in place.

In the meadow, bursting with buds, Tradescantia Spiderwort (why do I always come up with that Latin name and the common name secondarily?) and the yellow flowers--I know them very well, have them for a long time in my own garden, try to keep nicking off the dead flowers so that it keeps putting out more flowers, used a large closeup photo of it in an exhibition at my library...  It took until I was past the split rock and the cactus before it came to me--Lance-leaved coreopsis, Coreopsis lanceolata.
Lance-leaved Coreopsis

Penstemon digitalis Beardtongue is spreading in my yard, and doing well in NPG too, with several varieties, including on the rocks past the cactus a purplish dwarf variety and there was Vetch in the meadow.

I must like to do this because it takes a long time.

As always, comments, suggestions are welcome.  And if you think I know why the print got smaller and is centering, guess again.