April 27, 2013

Time to go globe trotting again! I am a sucker for pictures of plants taken through glasshouse windows. The plants look so pensive, like they want to get outside into the wider world. I love the silhouettes they make, the unexpected shapes that form as they press against the glass. And when the glass is just a bit dirty, like it is here on these windows from the Cluj-Napoca Botanical Garden in Romania? Well, all the better I say! Beautiful, a bit eerie, and they totally make me want to hop on a plane. ~AR

(Source: phosgraphissensus)

April 18, 2013

yentinghuang asked: Does cherry bloom already? what's their stage currently? Do you have cherry-watch page the same as Brooklyn Botanical Garden??

The cherries are in bloom and then some! We don’t have a watch page, as our cherries are simply too spread out across our 250 acres (and too many in variety) to track on such a minute level, but I did some reconnaissance and found that the trees are playing round robin depending on where you go.

The Okame cherries near the Library Building were some of the first to open up, and have since passed their peak. Meanwhile, the Higan and Yoshino cherries are at or near peak around Mosholu Gate, the Ross Conifer Arboretum, the Visitor Center, and elsewhere throughout the Garden. These bright, mostly cloud-white blossoms are practically shouting for attention—hard to miss, in other words.

Over in Cherry Valley, near the Rose Garden, the Sato-Zakura group cherries are still looking sleepy, and the weeping cherries are varying at between 30% and 50% bloom as of this morning. But there’s such a kaleidoscope of other flowering tree species to see in between that it makes visiting each of these spots well worth it. The magnolias in particular are—and I can say this as a witness—literally stopping people in their tracks.

Hope this helps!

April 9, 2013

“As a classical botanical garden, we have our roots in the botanical gardens of the Italian Renaissance, which were established to be medical schools, really to teach the physicians of the time about the plants they’d prescribe and maybe as importantly to help them distinguish between plants that have healing effects and plants that are either impotent or, even worse, poisonous.”

That would be Todd Forrest, our VP for Horticulture and Living Collections, laying out some of the history behind, well, all botanical gardens, really. And when our next major exhibition starts up in May, diving back into that very same past, we’re making sure we have the best talent on hand to recreate it.
As a renowned landscape designer, this isn’t Jorge Sanchez’ first NYBG show—he did put his talents and training behind 2010’s fantastic, Caribbean-inspired Orchid Show, as seen above. But he faces all new challenges going into Wild Medicine, an exhibition that not only tackles the history of botanical remedies, but seeks to honor the oldest botanical garden in the world—that of Padua, Italy.
Is he up for the challenge? We’re not at all worried.
“My interest is in architecture and plants and history. And this combines all of them,” said Sanchez. Click through for more. —MN

“As a classical botanical garden, we have our roots in the botanical gardens of the Italian Renaissance, which were established to be medical schools, really to teach the physicians of the time about the plants they’d prescribe and maybe as importantly to help them distinguish between plants that have healing effects and plants that are either impotent or, even worse, poisonous.”

That would be Todd Forrest, our VP for Horticulture and Living Collections, laying out some of the history behind, well, all botanical gardens, really. And when our next major exhibition starts up in May, diving back into that very same past, we’re making sure we have the best talent on hand to recreate it.

As a renowned landscape designer, this isn’t Jorge Sanchez’ first NYBG show—he did put his talents and training behind 2010’s fantastic, Caribbean-inspired Orchid Showas seen above. But he faces all new challenges going into Wild Medicinean exhibition that not only tackles the history of botanical remedies, but seeks to honor the oldest botanical garden in the world—that of Padua, Italy.

Is he up for the challenge? We’re not at all worried.

My interest is in architecture and plants and history. And this combines all of them,” said Sanchez. Click through for more. —MN

March 29, 2013

So dashing, so handsome, so…well, not exactly beaming with mirthful enthusiasm, was he? His partner, meanwhile, was simply too busy for this camera nonsense.

Nathaniel Lord Britton may not have been the smiliest gentleman to sit for a photo op (I’m pretty sure the thousand-yard stare was a requisite back then), but his stern looks belied a boundless joy for botany—an enthusiasm matched only by that of his bryologist wife, Elizabeth Britton (studious to the nth degree), which would ultimately lay the groundwork for The New York Botanical Garden.

The erudite duo met as members of the famed Torrey Botanical Club (now Society) in the 1880s, but it wasn’t until after visiting Britain’s Kew Gardens on their honeymoon that Elizabeth made her pitch to the Club here in the U.S.: New York deserved its own botanical garden, and the Brittons were more than willing to take the reins. By 1895, only seven years after Elizabeth’s proposal, Nathaniel had left his position with Columbia University to take on the newly-established NYBG in the Bronx as its full-time Director—a title he would hold until 1929.

Over the course of almost 50 years, the pair’s lasting relationship produced some of the finest botanical work this country has ever seen, covering the publication of numerous landmark texts, the promotion of new botanical nomenclatures, and—of course—the establishment of North America’s foremost botanical garden.

It’s said that Elizabeth’s death in 1934, being such a blow to Nathaniel, contributed to his own death only four months later. I suppose “the couple that gardens together, stays together” is almost an apt aphorism in this case.

Special thanks goes out to the tack-sharp Mia D’Avanza, our Reference Librarian, for coming up with these images via the Mertz Archives. The top left image is, in fact, Nathaniel as a toddler, wearing a unisex dress of the period. —MN

March 4, 2013

Dominique Browning of Slow Love Life not only gave us a glowing review for the Orchid Show the other day, butreminds us that not all which grows in the Conservatory is Orchidaceae. In fact, some of the permanent members of our collection give the orchids a run for their money. —MN

February 6, 2013

Ever wondered how beavers got the reputation for being busy, well, beavers? After checking out the nearly 200 images captured by one of our Forest critter cams of this busy, busy beaver, I think I finally understand. The Garden and the Bronx River are the proud residence of the first two beavers —José and Justin—to call New York City home in more than 200 years. Beavers were once common in our fair boroughs, but their luxurious pelts were their doom, and they were hunted and trapped to extinction in our area while simultaneously making Gotham a world capital of commerce and trade (they’re even featured on the official seal of the city).

Whether this beaver is José or Justin is almost impossible to tell, but it’s not the first time we have caught our resident critters on film. Over the summer, during an impressive heat wave, our critter cam also caught a curious fox, racoon, and one very exasperated looking great-horned owl. We’re sure there are more critter cam surprises to come, so stay tuned and keep an eye peeled when you’re visiting the Garden, you just never know who you’ll meet along the way! ~AR

ps - The awesome gifs were created by Matt Newman, aka MN.

January 24, 2013
This engages me on every level: botanically, architecturally, vague-sense-of-urban-decay-ly. Have you ever been to the Kichijo-ji botanical garden? Let us know what it’s like! —MN
kitisa:


Such a fascinating tropical botanic garden in Kichijo-ji, Tokyo.

This engages me on every level: botanically, architecturally, vague-sense-of-urban-decay-ly. Have you ever been to the Kichijo-ji botanical garden? Let us know what it’s like! —MN

kitisa:

Such a fascinating tropical botanic garden in Kichijo-ji, Tokyo.

January 10, 2013

Well hey! That dome looks a little familiar, and for good reason. Both our Enid A. Haupt Conservatory and this beauty at Allan Gardens were designed by Lord & Burnham. So, if you can’t visit us in New York, it looks like you can get a similar experience up in Toronto. ~AR

coolitagain:

10.24.2012 | Allan Gardens

January 3, 2013

This is what the artist meant when he said he intended his works for all seasons. It’s a delicate balance of placement and color that gives each piece such shifting contrasts throughout the year. Aaaand I love it. —MN

trishmayo:

Why I LOVE WINTER! All it took was a dusting of snow to transform the 7 Manolo Valdes’ Monumental Sculptures at the NYBG (New York Botanical Gardens) into Snow Princesses. 

December 24, 2012
Beautiful! Our friends at the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden deserve a visit if you find yourself in Richmond, Virginia this holiday season. They’re holding their own seasonal event with the Dominion GardenFest of Lights through early January, and it’s got the Mid-Atlantic positively glowing. —MN
lewisginter:


Today’s warm weather & gorgeous sky remind me that tonight would be a perfect night for Dominion GardenFest of Lights. Arrive right at 5 p.m. if you want to see a sky like this & enjoy the twilight time at the Garden — my favorite! Many thanks to Valerie Kopp for letting us share her gorgeous photo.

Beautiful! Our friends at the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden deserve a visit if you find yourself in Richmond, Virginia this holiday season. They’re holding their own seasonal event with the Dominion GardenFest of Lights through early January, and it’s got the Mid-Atlantic positively glowing. —MN

lewisginter:

Today’s warm weather & gorgeous sky remind me that tonight would be a perfect night for Dominion GardenFest of Lights. Arrive right at 5 p.m. if you want to see a sky like this & enjoy the twilight time at the Garden — my favorite! Many thanks to Valerie Kopp for letting us share her gorgeous photo.

October 16, 2012

We’re right there with you. Ivo is the only one allowed to don the waders to go in and get close-ups of these shockers, so you’ll often see staff contorted around the edge of the pool with our cameras, Instagram or otherwise.

Despite the official closing of Monet’s Garden on October 21 (that’s this Sunday!), we’re hoping to see the Nymphaea blooming into November, so get here soon, folks! —MN

nyblues:

Water Lilies.

There were a few people outside with me, and they kept giving me funny looks because I was lying on the ground trying to get the perfect shot of the lilies sitting on the water. 

But if you see a shot, you’ve got to commit. Even if it means looking like a complete fool doing it. :)

October 13, 2012

Trish’s timing is uncanny. Just yesterday, we happened to post a Plant Talk blurb from Dr. Roy Halling, our resident mycological maestro. His sighting of a hitherto unseen species on NYBG grounds tells us the fungal scene around here is doing just fine. —MN

trishmayo:

A Walk in the Forest: Fungus Among Us


According to the NYBG’s website “The Thain Family Forest is the largest remnant of original forest that once covered most of New York City” and it’s not hard to imagine yourself far from the city in both terms of distance and time. The quiet of the forest makes it easy to slow your pace and take the time to observe your surroundings. What I found on this early autumn walk were some amazing clusters of fungus - some look like seashells, others like a group of ladies hiding behind their fans, and one group was growing in a way that created facial features. I’m not a scientist but some quick research and I found fungus names equally fanciful and descriptive: Bracket, Orange Peel, Turkey Tail and Northern Tooth Fungus. It’s easy to love the fungus among us!

October 3, 2012
Looks like the NYBG’s Everett Children’s Adventure Garden is cramming in as much Halloween fun as October can possibly allow. For you parents, keep an eye on Plant Talk this Friday for the weekend schedule of Haunted Pumpkin Garden events, and scope out the plan for our kids Scarecrow events here. —MN

Looks like the NYBG’s Everett Children’s Adventure Garden is cramming in as much Halloween fun as October can possibly allow. For you parents, keep an eye on Plant Talk this Friday for the weekend schedule of Haunted Pumpkin Garden events, and scope out the plan for our kids Scarecrow events here. —MN

September 12, 2012

joanawithonen:

New York Botanical Garden, 2012

Admission: there are about 12 Polaroid cameras in my apartment, but film these days doesn’t come easy (or cheap). Instead, I like to fall back on Instagram; don’t forget to tag your Garden shots with #NYBG when you visit us! —MN

(Source: joanawithonen)

September 10, 2012
mothernaturenetwork:

13 must-see botanical gardensPack your bags, plant lovers. We’re taking a worldwide tour of the best gardens around, as determined by our hand-picked panel of experts.

We’re honored to be placed alongside such esteemed company! Botanical gardens are a pretty significant part of this country’s cultural history, so make the time to stop and visit, whether you’re roadtripping across the U.S. or just looking for something to do on a lazy hometown Saturday. —MN

mothernaturenetwork:

13 must-see botanical gardens
Pack your bags, plant lovers. We’re taking a worldwide tour of the best gardens around, as determined by our hand-picked panel of experts.

We’re honored to be placed alongside such esteemed company! Botanical gardens are a pretty significant part of this country’s cultural history, so make the time to stop and visit, whether you’re roadtripping across the U.S. or just looking for something to do on a lazy hometown Saturday. —MN

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