2007-06-09

Members Reception in BBG's Cranford Rose Garden

Calm before the storm in the Cranford Rose Garden
Cranford Rose Garden

Wednesday evening, blog widow John and I went to the members' wine and cheese reception in the Cranford Rose Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. During the summer, BBG stays open until 8pm on Wednesday evenings for members only, one of their benefits to members.

John overheard another visitor say "Well, the roses are beautiful, even if the people aren't." Free cheese and crackers seemed to stir visitors into a feeding frenzy. Maybe it was the free wine, of which John and I don't partake. Away from the food, things were more pleasant, though still crowded in the rose garden. Away from the rose garden, the gardens were lovely.


Entrance to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Entrance to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Duck Family
Duck Family

Lily Pool Terace
Lily Pool Terrace

Lily Pool Terrace
Lily Pool Terrace

Water Lilies
Water Lilies

Busy Bees on Milk Thistle, Silybum marianum "“Adriana”"
Busy Bees on Milk Thistle, Silybum marianum "“Adriana”"

Water Lily
Water Lily

Mixed Perennial Border
Mixed Perennial Border

Lily Pool Terrace Fountain
Lily Pool Terrace Fountain

ID REQUEST: What is this plant?
Detail of unknown xeriscape plant

Cranford Rose Garden
Cranford Rose Garden

Cranford Rose Garden
Cranford Rose Garden

Also Pink
Also Pink

Rose Garden from the Overlook
Rose Garden from the Overlook

Rose Garden from the Overlook
Rose Garden from the Overlook

View Through
View Through

Palm House Reflected
Palm House Reflected

2007-06-08

News: A Meadow for Columbia

The city’s Green Thumb parks program has paired with a team of local landscape designers to create a lush, wildflower-dotted meadow on a long-vacant corner of President and Van Brunt streets, next to Mother Cabrini Park in the Columbia Street Waterfront District.

The storefront-sized meadow — now an unmanicured thicket of knee-high grasses and rangy wildflowers — should be open for neighborly grazing by the end of the summer.
- A little green pocket, by Ariella Cohen, The Brooklyn Paper
The new greenery is expected to clean the air of approximately 33 pounds of pollutants annually, according to a study of the soot-sucking capabilities of the .18-acre site. Scientists from Columbia University also found that the store-front-size meadow will absorb the run-off equivalent of 60,000 toilet flushes, or 240,000 gallons of rainwater.


Where are all the people?

Bonsai paparazzo
DSC_3321

Julie, who authors the daily journal, Human Flower Project, recently commented:
It interests (and surprises) me that there are so FEW photos of people in the garden. Any idea why?
She went on to write her own post on this topic:

One might say that since gardens—and photographs, too—are men’s, women’s and children’s creations, they embody a kind of humanism. It just takes a penetrating eye to see the human mind at work in a glorious perennial border or a well-framed foxglove. That’s surely so. But gardens are both by and FOR people, so why are do so few of the Brooklyn Garden’s visitors show us what people are doing there, how they interact with this glorious environment? The same holds true in most gardening magazines and websites. Among the many that feature fine photos of home, public and commercial gardens, one rarely sees a hand pruning or a vagrant snoozing. Why is this?

I hadn't responded yet to Julie's comment when I read her post today. So this is my response.



I know I've contributed just a handful of photos to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitors pool with people in them. I've included a few of them in this post. Most of my photos don't have people in them. I have some ideas why that might be.

Often the people I end up photographing are other photographers. Why? Because they're in the way of my shot! Making lemons from lemonade (or something), they become the subject, or at least part of the composition.

Reflections
Reflections

More often, people are are incidental to the shot, or unavoidable, so I include them anyway.

Entrance to the Native Flora Garden, April 2007
Entrance to the Native Flora Garden

Most rarely for my photographs, people are the subject.

Alessandro Chiari, BBG's Chief Propagator, And Titan Arum "Baby", August 2006
DSC_1088

Mark Fisher and Titan Arum "Baby"
Mark Fisher and Titan Arum "Baby"

Forsythia handouts, April 2007
Forsythia Handouts

I'm not generally a sociable person. I'm bad with names, faces, and people. I've never been comfortable photographing people. There are so many great faces and characters in New York City, I wouldn't know where to begin photographing them. Not to mention I avoid confrontation. A telephoto lens helps.

Lily Pool Terrace, November 2005
Lily Pool Terrace



Anyone is welcome to join the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitors group and contribute photos of the gardens. I also actively search for photos of the garden and invite their contribution, especially from folks who are not already members of the group and don't know about it yet. There's no formula for what I look for. But one of the criteria is "unusualness": an unusual perspective of a well-photographed site, or an ephemeral moment.

I think part of the reason why there are so few photos with people in them is that they are not usually the subject of the photo. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden is located in a dense urban area and gets a lot of visitors. We don't normally go to a garden to see other people. For example, the Cherry Blossom Festival at BBG is packed with thousands of people. So a photo of cherry trees in full bloom, without a soul in sight, is unusual!

Meta: Finding Flatbush Gardener

In the past few days, people have found my blog when searching Google for:

dwarf colony in staten island

A colony of dwarves? A very small colony? Does such a thing exist? Ask Google ...

This turns up my March archive, which happens to have the words "dwarf", "colony" and the phrase "Staten Island" in it, though all on separate posts. It's low on the list; I'm surprised they clicked through.

a boy's soul taken to heaven by angels

When I checked, my blog was the FIRST site returned for this phrase. They get one of my "Blog Against Theocracy" posts. Probably not what they were looking for! Though remarkably on-topic.

happy-corpse

I don't want to know what they were looking for. Of course, this turns up one of my Corpse Flower posts. My Dad wrote: They're looking for Arum Death Plant which was a happy article.

where rabies is popular

Addams Family seeks perfect vacation spot.

2007-06-07

Saturday, June 9 is Brooklyn Pride

Working it, Brooklyn Pride 2006
DSC_0652

I still have my Marshal's T-Shirt from the very first Brooklyn Pride March on 5th Avenue in Park Slope. I don't know if I'll be able to enjoy any of the festivities this year. I'll be busy cleaning up the garden following the completion of the roof job, just in time for Sunday's Victorian Flatbush House Tour. If I do make it, there will be lots of photos!

All events take place in or kick off from Prospect Park near the Bartel-Pritchard entrance at the corner of Prospect Park West and 15th Street/Prospect Park SouthWest.

5K Run (9:30 AM Registration)

Multicultural Festival (11:00 AM - 6:00 PM)

Kids Space (12:00 PM - 4:00 PM)

Night Pride Parade (8:30 PM Kick Off)

Parade Route
15th Street to 7th Avenue
Right on 7th Avenue down to Lincoln Place

Prospect Park West will also be closed for assembly of the marchers prior to kickoff.

Contingent from the Hetrick-Martin Institute in the 2006 Brooklyn Pride March
DSC_0668

2007-06-06

Event, Sunday July 1 and 8: Grand Opening for the Cortelyou Greenmarket

Updated 2007.06.15 with hours of operation and dates of the Grand Opening.

Apples from Red Jacket Orchards at the Cortelyou Greenmarket, June 2006
Apples, Red Jacket Orchards, Cortelyou Greenmarket

On Sunday, July 1, the Greenmarket resumes operation for 2007 on Cortelyou Road. This year, the Greenmarket will be located on the north side of Cortelyou Road between Argyle and Rugby Roads (in front of the library) [Google Map]. July 1 and 8, will be Grand Opening celebrations, with lots of activities including cooking demonstrations, musical performances, children's events, and more.

The Cortelyou Greenmarket and those in Sunset Park and Borough Park are the three Greenmarkets furthest out in Brooklyn.

The Greenmarket will operate every Sunday, 8am to 4pm, from July through November; in recent years it operated on Saturdays. It's hoped that this year's location on Cortelyou will be more visible - resulting in more business for the vendors - than recent years' location in the P.S. 139 schoolyard on Argyle Road.

Note: As of today, June 6, the official Greenmarket map (PDF) still lists last year's location.

As of June 5, the following vendors are confirmed:
  • Meredith’s Bakery
  • Amantai Farm, vegetables
  • Bread Alone (Note: Lousy Web design, forces Shockwave/Flashpage on you.)
  • Red Jacket Orchards
  • El Mirador Farm, vegetables
  • Muddy River Farm, vegetables
  • Butternut Valley Organics, organic vegetables, fruits, baked goods, dairy, eggs, and meat
Pies from Meredith's Bakery at the Cortelyou Greenmarket, June 2006
Pies, Meredith's Bakery, Cortelyou Greenmarket

Business owners on Cortelyou Road have expressed concern about the impact this will have on their businesses. In particular, the Flatbush Food Coop has reported that their sales dropped when the Greenmarket was open. In addition, the location on Cortelyou Road will take up some potential parking spaces for folks who drive into the neighborhood to do their food shopping.

I'm not a business owner, but I don't buy into this scarcity model: that more business for some means less for others. I'm looking forward to the opportunity to buy fresh, locally and organically grown produce, and not have to choose between local or organic. The past two years, when the Greenmarket was in operation, we ate out less and cooked at home more. We went to the Greenmarket to see what's fresh, and planned our meals around that. That meant more local shopping for us, not less.

The new Cortelyou streetscape is coming along beautifully; people are already using the new benches.
By the end of the summer, in addition to the existing restaurants, coffee shops, food stores and supermarkets, there will be another coffee shop and a gourmet food shop. All of this will make Cortelyou a mecca for Brooklyn foodies; the Greenmarket will be one more reason to "Shop Cortelyou," as the banners implore. It's my hope that there will be more business than ever and Cortelyou will thrive as a commercial strip.

PS: I hate the CENYC Web design. There's no need for frames. All the Greenmarket information is only available as a PDF. They make it impossible to link to specific topics within their site. That's why there are no useful links to them from this post.

2007-06-05

Reminder: First Brooklyn Blogade Roadshow on Sunday, June 24

To continue the networking which began at the Brooklyn Blogfest in May, Brooklyn bloggers are taking on the road to a different neighborhood each month. The first event is in June, the neighborhood is Flatbush, the location is Vox Pop on Cortelyou Road.

Please read the announcement post for full details, including how to RSVP for this event. That post will be kept up-to-date with any changes and additions as we learn about them.

2007-06-03

The 10th Annual Brownstone Brooklyn Garden Walk

Update, 2007.06.07: All the Prospect Heights photos are up as of this morning. Clinton Hill photos are up as of Tuesday night.



I made it to all 16 stops on the Brownstone Garden Walk today. I think I should get some kind of prize.

I took about 350 photos today. I'll be uploading them as I can. Here are the placeholders for the photos from each neighborhood, in the order I visited them.
  1. Fort Greene
  2. Clinton Hill
  3. Prospect Heights
I had no time to visit any of the community gardens. It was all I could do to visit each garden on the walk. I was going to bail out after Clinton Hill, but I started getting requests from some of the organizers for photos, since they had no one "official" taking photos and had no time themselves to do so.

Some general observations.

There was a lot of imagination demonstrated in the approaches taken and solutions to the challenges of each site. Making the best use of limited space is a common challenge, but so is shade, competition from tree roots, where to store your garden necessities, and so on. Yet even with these common challenges, the solutions were different. Lots of ideas for techniques to apply in similar situations.

I also gained an insight into why a garden-only tour would be preferable to a mixed house and garden tour. On a house tour, though I might get some ideas about what to do with my house, what if I don't own a house? The gap between what I'm seeing and what i could imagine doing myself is more likely to be insurmountable with a house tour than a garden tour.

Even if it's a single plant in a pot, everyone can garden, even those who don't own any land. And the gardeners I met today were talkative. Everyone had some insight to share, some experience, some history. It just had a warmer feeling than I get when I'm on a house tour. Maybe it's just how gardeners are. Maybe it's just that I like gardens, and gardeners, more than "house people."

Overall the event was well-organized. They had ample volunteers covering each stop. Most of them also seemed to be avid gardeners, and I had several enjoyable conversations with them, as well as owners and gardeners at several gardens. I gave out all my remaining Flickr cards. I need to order another set for the upcoming Brooklyn Blogade meetup in three weeks on June 24.

Some things I hope they improve upon next year:
  • The promised "free shuttle van service" didn't materialize. It took me over four hours to cover all three neighborhoods. But the neighborhoods are well served by bus service, at least better served than my neighborhood. The map provided showed the bus routes, which was a big help, since I hadn't brought my own Brooklyn bus map.
  • It wasn't clear ahead of time that there were multiple locations to purchase tickets the day of the walk. I don't know why, but somehow I thought that the BAM Triangle Garden was the starting point for the tour, and that you had to purchase tickets there the day of if you hadn't purchased them in advance. Only when I got my map did I learn that there were ticket locations in all three neighborhoods. I would have planned my trip differently had I known that in advance.
  • For someone who is not familiar with the neighborhoods, some things were confusing. It took me a half-hour just to find the BAM Triangle Garden. Once I did, I found this sign:
    Placard, Garden Walk.
    Well, I have no idea where St. Felix Street is. A simple arrow drawn on the sign might have sent me in the right direction. Just some additional wayfinding for out-of-towners such as myself.
But those are my only complaints. The event was otherwise well-organized, the gardens varied and all worthwhile. I got lots of ideas for my own gardens, and how we might be able to organize a garden-only tour for our area.

Brownstone Garden Walk, 1/3: Fort Greene

Hydrangea and Sweet Potato Vine, 116 Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene, Brooklyn
Detail, Hydrangea and Sweet Potato Vine, 116 Lafayette Avenue

Numbered as they were in the tour guide. Listed in the order I visited them.

Stop #6: 42 South Portland Avenue
42 South Portland Avenue42 South Portland AvenueBorrowed View, 42 South Portland Avanue42 South Portland AvenueBig Blue Hosta, 42 South Portland Avenue42 South Portland AvenueFerns and Roses, 42 South Portlane AvenueFlagstones, 42 South Portland AvenueChive Flowers, 42 South Portland AvenuePlanter Bench, 42 South Portland Avenue42 South Portland AvenueRose, 42 South Portland Avenue

Stop #7: 151 DeKalb Avenue
151 Dekalb Avenue151 DeKalb Avenue151 DeKalb AvenueZonal Geranium, 151 DeKalb Avenue151 DeKalb AvenueClerodendrum, 151 DeKalb Avenue

Stop #8: 152 DeKalb Avenue
152 DeKalb Avenue152 DeKalb Avenue152 DeKalb AvenueKitty!Fern in log, 152 DeKalb AvenueCabbage Butterfly

Stop #9: 116 Lafayette Avenue
116 Lafayette AvenueStorage Bench, 116 Lafayette AvenueSpa116 Lafayette Avenue116 Lafayette AvenueClimbing Hydrangea and Evergreen Shrubs, 116 Lafayette Avenue116 Lafayette AvenueHostas and Boston Ivy, 116 Lafayette Avenue116 Lafayette AvenueMosses on Steps, 116 Lafayette AvenueColeus in Containers, 116 Lafayette AvenueLounging Areas, 116 Lafayette AvenueContainers, 116 Lafayette AvenueDetail, Heuchera (“Lime Rickey”?) in Blue Pot, 116 Lafayette AvenueColeus, 116 Lafayette AvenueLounging Areas, 116 Lafayette Avenue116 Lafayette AvenuePlanter Box, 116 Lafayette AvenueOverview from above, 116 Lafayette AvenueShady Corner, 116 Lafayette AvenueFoliage Detail, 116 Lafayette Avenue

Stop #10: 310 Carlton Avenue
310 Carlton AvenueContainers and Plants, 310 Carlton AvenueContainers and Plants, 310 Carlton Avenue310 Carlton AvenueFish and Lily Pads, 310 Carlton AvenueBench, 310 Carlton AvenueBench, 310 Carlton AvenuePond and Bench, 310 Carlton AvenueZonal Geranium Leaves, 310 Carlton Avenue310 Carlton AvenueBench, 310 Carlton AvenueLotus, 310 Carlton AvenueWater Lily, 310 Carlton AvenueContainer Plantings, 310 Carlton AvenueContainer Plantings, 310 Carlton AvenueSolanum pyracanthum, Porcupine tomato, 310 Carlton Avenue




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