Sunday, April 25, 2021

Spring is Tulip Time

 




Tulip Time at Longwood Gardens, in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, is a spectacular affair.
Hundreds of thousands of tulip bulbs are planted by volunteers in the Fall.  Many of them
are brand new varieties provided by various nurseries.  One of my favorite parts of the gardens
is the "Idea Garden," which contains 350 plots 6x6 ft. with 300 flowers of one variety and one
color, so that visitors can get an idea of what they might like in their own garden next year.
Benches allow you to sit and soak in the color and atmosphere.




I like big, showy flowers.  These were large and highly dramatic.  "Akebono" is a double
late tulip in intense yellow with red streaks.  It is only about 12 inches high.




Close-up of "Akebono" flowers.




Whites come in many varieties from pure snow white to cream.  These are rather small
flowers, perhaps 10 inches high, named "Tres Chic."  They are among the lily-tulips,
so called because of their outward spreading petals.




A bed of white "Tres Chic" tulips. 



The flower beds spread out in all directions.  Here you can see the carillon tower on a hill
in the distance.  It plays beautiful music every quarter hour.  On the left are some
flowering crabapple and flowering cherry trees.




Yellow tulips come in many forms.  These were one of my favorites this year, "Hocus Pocus."
They are tall, 26 inches high or so.  They are of a bright but light yellow shot through with
streaks of red and orange.  The blossoms themselves are quite large, 6 inches high.




Beautiful colors of "Hocus Pocus."  Each flower is different.




A bed of "Hocus Pocus."




A very different yellow tulip is "Fair and True," a peony-tulip, so called because
 it consists of so many petals that it looks more like a peony than a tulip and it is very large.





A cluster of large "Fair and True" peony-tulips.




A great panorama of rich tulip colors.




"Orange Princess" is another double late peony-flowering tulip.  It is so full, with
so many flower petals, that it looks more like a peony than a tulip.




 "Orange Princess" peony-flowering tulip.




The gardener said this was a new variety for this year, "Blue Heron," a fringed
lavender tulip.  Frilled tulips came in every color, but usually on the small side.




"Blue Heron" fringed tulips.
I don't remember the names of all flowers the first time I see them, but Longwood, like all
good botanic gardens, maintains a webpage listing every flower in bloom on their premises,
so I can always go back and check the references.




These are three of the loveliest of the tulips: "Blushing Beauty" (pale yellow), "Carola"
(rich warm pink), and "Garant" (egg-yolk yellow).  The trellis along the right side will hold
a hundred varieties of climbing Clematis later in the year.




Big, bold, brash!  This is one of the "parrot tulips," characterized by large ruffled flowers.
This spectacular beauty is "Bright Parrot."


A bed of "Bright Parrot" parrot tulips.


Same colors, but very different feeling is "Mona Lisa," which is also on the small side
and is one of the lily-tulips - notice the spreading petals of the flowers.




A bed of "Mona Lisa" lily-tulips.



Up on the hill in back you can see the front of the Conservatory.  Here the light pink flowers
are "Marilyn" and behind them is another of my favorites this year, "Lighting Sun."




"Lighting Sun" single late tulips.  They are medium in height, about 16 inches high.
They have cousins called "Lighting Fire" and "Lighting Glow."  All appear to be glowing
with redhot embers inside.  Looked at against the sun, which is what I am doing here,
they glow.  And as I watched them over four days, they changed colors, gradually fading, 
like a fire burning out.  The first day they have very dark red and very bright yellow,
and then each succeeding day they became a little more subdued.




But here is a bed of "Lighting Sun" at their hottest.  I like them.




Wow!  This tulip is nearly 12 inches across; I had never seen such a thing.  This is
"Weber's Parrot," another of the very large, splashy parrot tulips.




 A bed full of "Weber's Parrots."




This is the entrance to the "Idea Garden.," through a grove of trees down the hill from the
Conservatory.  In the background is the "Trial Gardens," where they grow new fruits and
vegetables and have many different flowering fruit trees.  There is also a children's are
and some fountains for playing in as well as watching.




"Pink Impressions" is a beautiful, big pink tulip with dark green foliage.




A bed of "Pink Impressions" tulips.




"Clearwater" white tulips.  They were tall and nearly transparent.




A bed of "Clearwater" white tulips.




View across tulip beds of "Idea Garden" to Carillon and wooded hillside.



"Garant" yellow tulips.  Notice their variegated leaves, which are unusual.



A cluster of "Garant" yellow tulips with variegated leaves.




"Carola" pink tulips.  They have a lovely form with petals which seem to unwind
around the stem.  The pink color is strong but pure.




A bed of "Carola" pink tulips.




I'm sitting on my favorite bench as I take this picture.  The red in front is a bed of "ABBA"
and the orange to the left is "Orange Princess."




"Holland Chic" was a favorite with every photographer.  The sunlight coming through the
blossoms was incredibly subtle and beautiful.  These are also lily-tulips and not very
tall; but their color is so special, everyone stopped for a picture.




"Holland Chic" lily-tulips.




"Perestroyka" ia a beautiful soft orange tulip, with slight streaks of pink and yellow.




Bed of "Perestroyka" tulips.



Enjoying the tulips at Longwood Gardens.

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Thursday, April 8, 2021

On My Walk in Washington

 


Washington in springtime has much more than cherry blossoms.  When I land
at National Airport, there are hundreds of magnolia trees all over and many
thousands of pansies in every color.  This is a magnolia tree in bloom.
I walk all around the city enjoying the flowers.



Magnolias come in various colors and varieties, but these had huge
waxy blossoms.



Magnolia blossoms across the street from the White House.




Magnolia blossoms fill the sky.


 

Next to the Tidal Basin with the cherry blossoms are test gardens from the Park Service
experimenting with new varieties of tulips.  This is a double yellow, "Dolly Madison."



Pale peach "Dainty Touch."



"Star Crossed Lover" Tulip



Two blocks away is the Freer Gallery with its beautiful courtyard filled with spring flowers. 
These are grape hyacinths.



A nice bus ride up Connecticut Avenue brings you to the National Cathedral.  On the south side,
and spreading down the hill, is the "Bishop's Garden," always filled with flowers.



"Archbishop Cranmer" was a regal looking tulip.



The cathedral with a flowering cherry tree on the hill.




Then I walk along Connecticut, which is lined with flowering cherry and flowering crabapple.
The statue is Tomas Masaryk.



On Sunday mornings, Dupont Circle has a Farmers' Market, and I never miss it.  All produce 
and flowers must be raised within 100 miles of the city.  There are flowers, fresh fruit 
and vegetables, artisanal cheeses, herbs, plants, meat raised organically, and much more. 
 It is wonderful and delightful.


White and pink hyacinths at the Dupont Farmers Market.




Pink hyacinths at the Dupont Farmers Market.  They also have branches of pear, peach,
quince, and apple trees, ready to burst into bloom.  Most of the people shopping are locals,
of course, and I envy them every time I go.




Blue and Pink Hyacinths at the Dupont Farmers Market.





Bouquets and plants for sale at Dupont Farmers Market





Daffodils begin to bloom much earlier than tulips, but varieties have been developed
which last for a long time.  These double yellow daffodils are "Delilah."
The streets around Dupont Circle are lined with private houses, and most take
great pride in the small but colorful gardens they maintain in front.  These were
in front of a house in the area.


Another short bus ride takes me to Dumbarton Oaks, in Georgetown, where I can walk 
around the houses and then visit the museums and the extensive gardens of the
 former estate Mr. and Mrs. Bliss.  Those are huge flowering cherry trees in back.



Giant White Flowering Cherry Tree at Dumbarton Oaks




As you walkdown the hillside, you walk through a mass of golden forsythia.
A park and the zoo are on the other side of the deep ravine.


A path at Dumbarton Oaks lined with Flowering Crabapple Trees.




Huge white flowering cherry trees.  There is also a Museum of Byzantine Art and
a Museum of Pre-Columbian Latin American Art on the grounds.
The Latin American Museum is a gem designed by Philip Johnson.


Young flowering crabapples.



Pink Phlox on a hillside at Dumbarton Oaks.





There are beds of pansies in every color all around the city.  Dumbarton Oaks,
the area around Dupont Circle, and the airport have thousands of them.


White daffodil with yellow trumpet throat at Dumbarton Oaks.


Yellow daffodils with orange trumpet throat.



Yellow daffodils with yellow trumpet throats.



Purple and white "Count of Toulouse" pansies.


Delft Blue Hyacinths and pink and white pansies at the Smithsonian.



Pale Blue Hyacinths with lovely fragrance.


Delft Blue Hyacinths



Outside the Freer Gallery of Asian Art is a Chinese Garden with a Moon Gate
and weeping cherry trees.



Between the Freer and the Main Smithsonian Building is a huge courtyard filled with
flowers and flowering bushes.


"Sunlight Yellow" Tulips


Pink "Mabel" Tulips




Forsythia bushes bloom all over town.

If you have never visited Washington the first weekend in April,
I recommend it highly.  It is memorable and colorful.

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