Monday, October 3, 2011

Late-Summer Gardens .. Chicago River Cruise



It seems I'm always looking forward to visiting my home town.
 Chicago is vibrant in its approach to arts and culture, a dream destination for anyone who appreciates historic and contemporary architecture. The brilliant river cruise I took last week was a high point! 


Visit  ... www.architecture.org to get the full details on the city's most informative architecture cruise:
 Chicago Architecture Foundation River Cruise aboard Chicago’s First Lady Cruises 
  Leaving from the Riverside Gardens Dock – look for the blue awnings – on the lower level of the Michigan Avenue bridge at Wacker Drive.


Garden lovers must be sure to take a stroll down north Michigan Avenue toward Water Tower to see what's been planted. Lush, eye-catching displays are enlarged upon each year by temporary installations.
As the sign indicates, a new, upcoming event - Chicago Ideas Week will be held from October 10-16, to feature a host of speakers and innovative workshops taking place all around town. The event exemplifies the kind of energetic approach Chicago is known for.


Thursday, September 29, 2011

A Most Beautiful Blue: Interlude at the Lurie Garden




Arrived home tired but enthused after from my annual pilgrimage to the Lurie Garden in Chicago's Millennium Park.
 My visits often coincide with the bloom of Bottle Gentian / Gentiana andrewsii 
[Photo © Alice Joyce]
Would anyone care to provide an I.D. for the tiny white sparkly blooms in the background? 

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Gardening in the Blogosphere

Summer Bouquet: Zinnia 'Berry Basket' - a cultivar from Renee's Seeds that deserves high praise!

The zinnia plants have been blooming non-stop at T's community garden, where there has been no problem at all with mildew. T brings home big bunches that I take delight in. I'm lucky that he gardens in a plot in full sun, as Alice's Garden receives decreasing sunlight with each passing year; certainly not enough to grow vigorous annuals such as this.

I've spent some time this morning connecting with new bloggers via the Blotanical web site. It's a great place to discover gardening blogs of every kind, foodies to exotic gardens filled with tropicals. I find it to be a great place to find blogs from countries as diverse as the gardening realm itself.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Amber Lanterns & Fiery Sprays: Clematis and Cuphea


Rare Clematis tibetana, with its delicate amber lantern-like flowers, scrambles up the rather brittle stalks of Cuphea ignea in Alice's Garden. The silky seedheads are shown below!




Hummingbirds adore the fiery blooms of C. ignea, a tender perennial sub-shrub that thrives in my Northern California garden. I've grown various Cuphea species and cultivars, but C. ignea has proven to be the most vigorous of all, blooming for months on end except in the coldest weather. If you garden in a colder climate, I recommend growing C. ignea as an annual: it's a great selection for a wildlife habitat.

As my garden has matured, plants such as this Cuphea deserve pride of place in the garden's beds the borders, having proved themselves worthy of repetition in the garden design.

Clematis tibetana, a late-bloomer is only now putting on a show. It boasts lovely blue-green ferny foliage that's an asset throughout the season. And I love the fluffy seedheads that follow.
Of course the plant's tendrils have made it famous!
In a good year, a new plant will pop up in an unexpected spot, even as the 'mother' plant vanishes.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Andy Goldsworthy: Wood Line - San Francisco Presidio


Wood Line
[Photo by Monique Deschaines]

Aficionados of Andy Goldsworthy's artworks are legion. All the more reason to make your way to the Presidio of San Francisco, where the artist's newest installation has been created in a grove of eucalyptus. You'll find Wood Line just inside the park's Presidio Gate along Presidio Boulevard. The work represents a project commissioned by the FOR-SITE Foundation, partnering with the Presidio Trust.

Read about Goldsworthy's earlier Presidio installation: the Spire

Note: The Presidio Habitats exhibition featured on Bay Area Tendrils in April will close Oct. 2nd.

A permanent site-specific work by Goldsworthy is located in the entry courtyard
"takes its inspiration from the unique character of California’s tectonic topography. Goldsworthy has created a continuous crack running north from the edge of the Music Concourse roadway in front of the museum, up the main walkway, into the exterior courtyard, and to the main entrance door. Along its path, this crack bisects -- and cleaves in two -- large rough-hewn stone slabs that serve as seating for museum visitors."