Anemones continue to be my favorite fall flower. These are from the ‘secret garden’ tucked into a courtyard near the Liberty Hyde Bailey Conservatory on the south side of the Plant Science building at Cornell. Click images larger views.
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Scanner art by Craig Cramer, gardening & more
Anemones continue to be my favorite fall flower. These are from the ‘secret garden’ tucked into a courtyard near the Liberty Hyde Bailey Conservatory on the south side of the Plant Science building at Cornell. Click images larger views.
See also:
From Cool Hand Luke, in memory of Paul Newman:
We used to wail on this back in my church camp days. (We weren’t big on hypocrisy back then, either.) A folk-inspired song written in the ’50s, it’s been covered by a wide variety of artists, including Jack Johnson, the Levellers, the King Earl Boogie Band, the Flaming Lips, the Dead Kennedy and Billy Idol.
If you missed last week’s talk by Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods, it was a really good one. It’s now available online.
Louv, chairman of the Children & Nature Network, columnist, & recipient of the 2008 Audubon Medal will spoke on Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder as part of the Cornell Plantations lecture series.
Regular readers of the New York Times Home and Garden section probably zeroed in on Anne Raver’s feature on White Flower Farm and the accompanying slideshow.
I sure did. But another story and slideshow (that had nothing to do with plants or gardening) extolling the virtues of blue and white also caught my eye.
Why am I drawn to blue pots, cobalt blue bottles and other blue accessories in the garden? The bottles I can trace back to digging antique bottles out of old dumps I found in the woods. Otherwise, all I can say it it might be the dearth of blue flowers I can actually grow.
Blue bottle decorations

Blue and white container water garden.

Blue cold frame against our blue house.
