Sunday, June 15, 2014

Spring in Chicago II

Chicago Botanic Gardens II


The Chicago Botanic Gardens were so filled with flowers and color that I took several
hundred photos.  I will share only a few more with you.

These are beautiful Persian Buttercups / Ranunculus.



The Lakeside Pavilion, which is used for weddings and other receptions, is always
decorated with white flowers.  These are white Persian Buttercups / Ranunculus.



Double Cream Daffodils in the Sensory Garden.



Yellow Fritillaria / Crown Imperial in the Crescent Garden



Pink, white, and purple tulips in the Crescent Garden.



White Flowering Crabapple Trees on Japanese Gardens Island.



Foam Plant, with wonderful frothy appearance.



 A bed of Calendulas / Pot Marigolds, in the English Garden.



A pot of blue cineraria in the Walled Garden.



Bleeding Hearts, in the Walled Garden.



Easter Egg Tulips in the Circle Garden.



Queen of the Night dark purple tulips mixed with Golden Sunlight double yellow tulips.



Babylon Verbena in the Heritage Garden



Senecio Asters at the entrance to the English Garden.



Star of Bethlehem in the Walled Garden.



Baby Blue Eyes were in many of the gardens; they are so cheerful.



Iceland Poppies and Blue Sorbet Violas in the Heritage Garden.



Pink Gerbera / African Daisies in the Heritage Gardens



White Polar Narcissus were in great banks around the Regenstein Center.  These are
unusual in that they have several flowers on a stem; usually there is one flower per stem.



Orange Triumph Tulips along the Woodland Trail



Red, white, and purple tulips near the Rose Garden




There is a large island for the Vegetable Gardens.  Here they mix flowers and vegetables in
the French tradition of the potager, a little garden behind the house where vegetables are
raised for food and flowers for visual delights.  These are cabbages mixed with
Sweet Alyssum flowers.



Pastel Tulips along the Woodland Trail.



Huge Double Yellow Majesty Tulips



Snow White Persian Buttercup / Ranunculus in Lakeside Pavilion



Red Triumph Tulips, Yellow Toadflax, and Orange Violas on Woodland Trail.




Atlantic Poppy




Bachelors Buttons in the Heritage Garden




White Bacopa, in the center of the Heritage Garden




Blue Chamomile, in the Heritage garden




Greek Anemones, in the Walled Garden




Nemophila  /  Baby Blue Eyes




Yellow Pagoda Trout Lilies




Pink Pagoda Trout Lilies




Pale Yellow Primrose




Zebra Stripe Primrose, in the center by fountain of Heritage Garden




Spanish Bluebells




Chopin Waterlily Tulips




Pot of Violas




Blue and White Grape Hyacinths




Salmon  Twinspur





Double Orange Tulips




Awash in a sea of tulips in the Circle Garden




Hope you have a colorful day, too!



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Sunday, June 1, 2014

Spring in Chicago

Chicago  Botanic  Gardens


Spring was late in Chicago this year, but last Sunday was the perfect spring day, 70 degrees
and sunny, so we went out to the Chicago Botanic Gardens, where the flowers were at
their absolute peak of perfection.  Cool, rainy weather allowed them to develop fully before
 opening and then kept the flowers full and intact.


There were hundreds of thousands of tulips and daffodils and hyacinths and ranunculus, etc.
all over the hundreds of acres of gardens.  These were along the Woodland Trail.


For the first time this year, I hit the Flowering Crabapple Festival just right.  There were
300 flowering crabapple trees in white and pink all around the lake.  It was breathtaking
and as beautiful as the flowering cherry trees in Washington.


A model along the Flowering Crabapple Allee.


Close-up of the white blossoms; not a single petal had fallen, but all were in full bloom.



White Glory-of-the-Snows / Chionodoxa  bloomed beneath them.


There was also Blue Chionodoxa.



Double Cream Daffodils and Purple Violas were all over.



A pot of brilliantly colored ranunculus.  These marvelous Persian Buttercups were  found
all over the gardens this year.  They look like a combination of rose and peony.



Single Red and Double White Tulips made a beautiful bed along the Woodland Trail.


Allium formed a backdrop for many of the beds.  These large colorful balls are part of
the onion family.



A large Allium ball flower; these are about 10" in width.



Towers of Jewels  /  Echium  were at the entrance.



But the tulips were the jewels of the displays.  The Gardens did not mass large numbers
of a single color, but created marvelous variations with three or four colors in many parts
of the garden.  These were at the entrance to the Dwarf Conifer Garden.



Bright yellow Scottish Broom was planted in many areas.



Stock Flowers and Primrose of various colors were in the Heritage Garden.



Harlequin Snapdragons and Yellow Toadflax were in the Enabling Garden.



Orange Tulips, Yexas Bluebonnets, Yellow Pansies, and Daffodils were also in the
Enabling Garden, which shows how to grow flowers even if you are handicapped and
cannot bend over or lift.



But the piece de resistance for tulips had to have been the Crescent Garden with its fountains
and dozens of beds of tulips of various colors.  These white, pink, and purple tulips were
immediately around the fountain.


But then, on the other side of the path, were huge beds of Easter Egg Tulips.  As you can see,
they were all in perfect condition and just opening fully for us.  The visual sensation was almost
overwhelming.



Beautiful Rhododendron bushes were found around the Regenstein Building and
in the Azalea Garden.



Rhododendron Bush along the Esplanade by the Farmers' Market.



Daffodil bed on the Woodland Trail.



A clump of daffodils.  These days they have hybridized daffodils/narcissus in many varieties of
white, yellow, and orange petals and contrasting throats / trumpets.  This is a beautiful variety/



Fothergilla was new to me, but there were several varieties growing.


Close-up of Fothergilla blossoms.



Lupine is a hardy and colorful flower and was used in a number of gardens.  These pink
lupine were in the Heritage Garden.



Beautiful little Grape Hyacinths were used in many beds below taller flowers and for contrast.



This is a Weeping White Crabapple Tree, which I had never seen in bloom before.
It is right across from the Rose Gardens.



Iceland Poppies are now one of my favorites.  They were planted individually in many beds
as well as in mass plantings all over a hillside.


Beautiful Multicolored Spurge appeared frequently.  Each week the Gardens publish a
"What's in Bloom?" list on the web, so you can get an idea of what you can see and
then print it out and use it as a check list as you walk through the gardens.


Tulips beds at the beginning of the Woodland Trail.  We noticed that tulip beds will look
completely different when seen from different locations.  The sun shining ON these tulips
made them look flat, but the sun shining THROUGH them in this photo is a
totally different experience.



Tulip bed on the Woodland Trail, with sun shining THROUGH the flowers and
blue violas below.



Pale Yellow Lupine, Iceland Poppies, Sorbet Violas, and Calendula (Pot Marigolds).




There were also pink Flowering Crabapple Trees all over the Gardens.




Close-up of Pink Flowering Crabapple Tree.




Orange Fritillaria / Crown Imperial with their flowering hanging down were an
interesting contrast to the upright tulips.




Queen of the Night Tulips and Pretty Princess Tulips made a beautiful bed.





Sorbet Violas in lavenders, blues, and purples could be found everywhere.




Two toned tulips filled a large bed near the fountain in the Crescent Garden.




A pot of orange and pink ranunculus / Persian Buttercups.




Peach and red ranunculus / Persian Buttercup.






I hope you have enjoyed this spring virtual walk through the Chicago Botanic Gardens.

JB



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