Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts

Monday, November 30, 2020

I Do Love A Theme

The Camden Garden Club is having their Winter meeting and I'm trying to figure out what to wear ...

Which one would you wear?

Monday, April 08, 2019

Swans and Irises and Beer


For Carlos’ birthday we went to Swan Lake … no, not the ballet, though Carlos would have loved that, but an actual Swan Lake fin Sumter, which is also home to the Iris Gardens.


Swan Lake Iris Gardens began in 1927 as a private fishing retreat for Hamilton Carr Bland, a local businessman, who created in out of a local swamp. He was also landscaping the grounds of his home with Japanese iris, but when they failed miserably, he consulted expert horticulturists who told him to dig up the iris bulbs and dump them in the swamp. The following spring, the iris burst into bloom and this accidental garden was born; it has since been developed into one of the finest botanical gardens in the country.


Following Bland's lead, in 1938 Mr. A.T. Heath, Sr., deeded additional acreage on the north side of Liberty Street to the city with the stipulation that Mr. Bland’s gardens be developed further. The two gardens are joined by the McDuffie Overpass crossing Liberty St, so that visitors can wander through the 120-acre gardens.


Swan Lake is dotted with colorful islands and wildlife and is the only public park in the United States to feature all eight swan species. It is also home to some of the nation's most intensive plantings of Japanese iris, which bloom yearly in mid to late May and last until the beginning of June—the Iris festival at the gardens is on Memorial Day weekend. The garden also boasts many other floral attractions, including colorful camellias, azaleas, day lilies, and Japanese magnolias; a Butterfly Garden and Chocolate Garden—which contains edible plants such as Chocolate Cherry Tomatoes, Chocolate Corn and Chocolate Mini Bell Peppers.

It certainly was a beautiful way to spend part of the day, but then it was on to lunch …

One of our favorite restaurants in Sumter is Hamptons, but they’ve recently opened a bourbon bar across the street called Sidebar, and so we opted to give that a try since you can eat outdoors, and it was a humidity-free day in South Carolina.

Sidebar also sits downtown in a restored historic building but this place features hundreds of beers and dozens of bourbons, along with BBQ and pub food and the adult milkshake.
Carlos and I took a table outside and watched as Hamptons set up for a special event; they closed off the street and were having a dinner for over three hundred people down the center of Main Street on one looooong table.


Luckily, we didn’t have to help and just sipped beer and ate, gorged, on pub food and a brownie for Carlos’ birthday.

All in all, a really nice, lovely, peaceful way to spend the day.

Monday, July 02, 2018

I Never Promised You A Rose Garden ... But Here It Is

The International Rose Test Garden sits above Portland in Washington Park and is home to more than 10,0000 rose bushes and over 600 varieties. It is the oldest continuously operating public rose test garden in the United States and exemplifies Portland's nickname, "City of Roses".


The roses bloom from April through October with the peak coming in June, which is when we were there, so it was a sight, and a scent, to behold.

In the early 1900s, over twenty miles of Portland's streets had been lined with rose bushes for the 1905 Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition. Portland was already dubbed "The City of Roses" and so the idea of a test garden was a way to solidify the city’s reputation as a rose-growing center internationally.


In 1915 Jesse Currey, president of Portland's Rose Society and Sunday editor of the Oregon Journal, convinced city officials to institute a rose test garden to serve as a safe haven during World War I for hybrid roses grown in Europe. Rose lovers feared that these unique plants would be destroyed in the bombings. The Park Bureau approved the idea in 1917 and by early 1918, hybridists from England began sending roses.


In early 1918, the garden began receiving plants from growers in England and Ireland, as well as Los Angeles, Washington and the Eastern United States. In 1921 Florence Holmes Gerke, the landscape architect for the city of Portland, was charged with designing the International Rose Test Garden and the amphitheater. The amphitheater was designed with the original garden and still hosts many events throughout the year, predominantly classical music concerts and a few plays.


The garden was dedicated in June 1924 and Jesse Currey was appointed as its first rose curator, serving until his death in 1927. Since 1940, the rose garden has been one of the official testing gardens for what is now called the American Garden Rose Selections.


Originally, the garden occupied about a block, sandwiched between a playground and an elk corral and in 1928 the original garden was replaced by a parking lot and moved to its current location. In the 1950s, when Washington Park's zoo moved to its current location, the garden was expanded to its present size of 4.5 acres.


There are several gardens in the Rose Garden; the American Garden Rose Selection test garden covers two terraces of the garden.; the Gold Award Garden, dedicated in 1970, features award-winning roses from the AGRS Test Garden—its gazebo is a popular spot for weddings. The Royal Rosarian Garden displays roses honoring past Prime Ministers of the Royal Rosarians, a civic group which serves as the official greeters and goodwill ambassadors for the City of Portland who serve in the many Rose Festival events and features a stone bench honoring Jesse Currey; the roses in the Royal are no longer commercially available.


In 1975, the Miniature Rose Garden, a test ground to help determine what miniature roses will go to market, was established; it is one of only eight such miniature rose testing grounds for the American Rose Society. The Shakespeare Garden was donated by the Shakespeare Society in 1943 and originally featured botanicals mentioned in the works of William Shakespeare. Over time, the Shakespeare Garden has evolved, planted with summer annuals, tropical plants, year-round shrubs, and roses, all named after characters in Shakespeare's plays.


If you ever get out that way, this is a great spot to spend some time; the flowers are gorgeous, and the aromas are fabulous.

There, I did give you a rose garden.