Shrinking pallet and shrinking time. Will have to save the interesting dead stuff for the next four months.
Category: Art
Garden art, PhotoShopped images, etc.
Weekend pix – Grassy border, sumac, labyrinth
Quick picture purge, mostly of the grassy border yesterday …
Volunteer sumac. Never had much luck with the cutleaf variety. But I’ll settle for the species. They’re a lot cheaper ;-7

A second flower bulb labyrinth went in at Bluegrass Lane last week. Here is a high-angle shot of construction, courtesy of Bob Chiang, Landmark Images.

More of Bob’s high angle shots of labyrinth construction.
Rainy day fun: fiddling with Blingee
Weekend roundup
Richard Louv webcast. Louv, best-selling author, chairman of the Children & Nature Network, columnist, & recipient of the 2008 Audubon Medal will speak on Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder as part of the Cornell Plantations lecture series, 7:30 p.m. Eastern, Sept. 24. The event is sold out, but you can watch the live webcast. I’m pretty sure that the lecture will be archived and will post a link when it’s available.
Check out this temporary park in Collegetown created by landscape architecture students. The one-day event was sponsored by The Trust for Public Land and celebrated parks by creating temporary parks in public places.
Durand Van Doren, local metal artist extraorinaire, gave a great talk at the ACNARGS meeting Saturday. Too bad the weather was so nice and attendance was sparse. He told me that he’s due to install the remaining two gates on the north and south sides of Minns Garden this fall. I’ll have pictures when he does.
Ladybug, ladybug, where have you gone? Another Ithaca Journal article about a citizen science project involving gardeners, students and others to find “the once-ubiquitous beetles entomologists call Coccinella novemnotata — or C-9, for short.” It’s our state insect here in New York, but was last collected here in 1970, having been displaced by alien ladybug species that have a penchant for coming inside over winter.
High-angle pix – When I was shooting the new sod sculpture at Bluegrass Lane last week, I thought I was doing good to get a high-angle shot from a lift on the turf crew’s utility vehicle.
But while I was out there, I met Bob Chiang, the father of one of the students who did me one better when it comes to high-angle shots. Bob rigs gas-powered model airplanes with digital cameras to get really high-angle shots. But at this shoot, he was experimenting for the first time with a camera mounted on a telescoping 25-foot survey pole. Shooting blind, I think the results were quite good. If I were a professional garden photographer, I’d rush right out and get one of these so that I could get a ‘second-story shot’ from anywhere. Check out Bob’s Landmark Images photo galleries for some great shots of the area from his model airplane.
New sod sculpture at Bluegrass Lane
This afternoon, Marcia Eames-Sheavly’s Art of Horticulture class (with a big assist from turf specialist Frank Rossi) created a second sod sculpture at Cornell’s Bluegrass Lane Landscape Research Facility, adjacent to the Cornell campus and the Robert Trent Jones Golf Course.
Now golfers heading down the 8th fairway are greeted by this surrealistic work just off the course grounds. (In fact, one rode over in his golf cart during the construction to find out what the heck was going on.)
This piece joins last year’s spiral mound in the growing sculpture garden.













