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Caption Chinese Garden at the Huntington

Spring seems only around the corner at Liu Fang Yuan, or the Garden of Flowing Fragrance, at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens in San Marino. Delicate pink cherry blossoms have begun to appear on trees, and dappled sunlight warms the stone walkways.

There are other changes in the air at the Chinese Garden, as it is more informally known. Workers are putting finishing touches on new pavilions, walkways and landscaping as the newest garden in the Huntington’s collection of more than a dozen readies its first expansion since its 2008 opening.

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On March 8 (March 7 for members), the Chinese Garden premieres three major new architectural elements as part of its second-phase expansion: two pavilions and a rock grotto with a waterfall that visitors can walk under. Still to come for the planned 12-acre site are a small gallery for Chinese art, a hillside pavilion and a penjing (a style of horticulture similar to Japanese bonsai) court. About half the $22 million needed to complete the project has been raised so far.

PHOTOS: Huntington expands its Chinese Garden

The Chinese Garden’s curator, June Li, leads a visitor around the 1.5-acre lake that forms the centerpiece of the Suzhou-style garden, which is modeled after the scholars gardens that thrived during the 16th and 17th century Ming dynasty. Li has helped oversee the creation of the garden since her arrival in 2004, and she also organizes exhibitions of Chinese art.

The path around the lake from the garden’s main entrance is lined with craggy limestone rocks from Lake Tai in China. A small bridge separates the older buildings from the new.

First up after the bridge is a pavilion with open sides, intricate woodwork and a tiled roof with ends that sweep jauntily upward. Li says that this pavilion is designed for visitors to linger in, rest and enjoy the views across the lake; built-in benches along the sides have curved backs.

The space is also designed for performances — music, plays and operas — and once the courtyard is completed, there will be seating for about 350. It’s called the Clear and Transcendent Pavilion, or Qing Yue Tai, to evoke the pureness of music floating over the water. The Huntington has already engaged its first musician in residence, noted pipa player Wu Man, who is composing a piece to premiere in June.

Inside the pavilion is a wide screen made of blond gingko wood. The north-facing upper panels show scenes from the classic Chinese play by Tang Xianzu, “The Peony Pavilion,” a 16th century love story that takes place in a garden. On the other side, facing the lake, the panels show four classic Chinese musical instruments, including the lute-like pipa.

“The garden fosters two major modes of enjoyment: solitude and society,” Wang-go Weng, Chinese scholar and advisor to the garden, has written. “It soothes worldly cares and anxieties and stimulates poetic and artistic sensibilities.”

Most of the visible man-made elements in the garden — columns, rafters, woodwork, tiles and granite bridges — were shipped from China, then assembled by 23 Suzhou workmen who were on site for four months.

“We really needed the Chinese craftsmen because they’re trained in the Chinese traditions of woodwork, roof tiles, laying out the paving,” Li says. “It’s as if we’re preserving the skills here in these buildings.”

Next on the winding path around the lake is the rock grotto — the Lingering Clouds Peak (Liu Yun Xiu). It’s a stack of Taihu rocks through which you can walk and enjoy a thunderous waterfall cascading over you.

“Traditionally they would just pile the rocks together, and they would be held by gravity and mortar,” Li says. However, due to California construction codes, the rocks have been reinforced in place. “In this case, all of these rocks in the ceiling and sides are secured to a cement frame.”

A little farther along is the Waveless Boat Pavilion (Bu Bo Xiao Ting), a pavilion shaped like a leisure boat that provides another spot for gatherings and for gazing at scenery. Everything in the Chinese Garden is designed for poetic and philosophical significance.

In Taoist and Confucian thought, mountains and rocks denote stability and endurance, while water is ever-changing but powerful. All the names of garden features suggest the beautiful or the auspicious. “Waveless” is a literary allusion to a calm and tranquil state of being — in other words, smooth sailing.


‘Cracked ice’ motif in the Huntington’s Chinese Garden

One of the many traditional elements woven into the new section of the Huntington’s Chinese Garden is a “cracked ice” pattern. In this case the diagonal lines are interspersed with a plum blossom design. The motif is seen in handmade gingko wood latticework around the moon gate entrances to the Clear and Transcendent Pavilion and in stone-and-ceramic pathways that link the new pavilions and the rock grotto. It also appears on the nearby Pavilion of the Three Friends, one of the original buildings.

The two symbols “often go together in the decorative arts,” says June Li, curator of the Chinese Garden. “Plum blossoms represent early spring when it’s still really cold, and thawing begins and the ice begins to crack.”

Li says the cracked ice pattern, which has been recorded since the 17th century but is probably older, looks modern to her eye. “I think of the Amish quilts. If you look at crazy quilts, it’s very random but it’s also very planned. And in a way that’s how the cracked ice pattern can develop. It makes for a very nice asymmetrical design.”

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Croton Landscaper Lectures On Good Gardens

CROTON-ON-Hudson, N.Y. — Croton-On-Hudson resident and landscaper Jan Johnsen knows what makes a garden inviting and tranquil.

As part of the Croton Village Garden Club’s Green Living series, Johnsen gave a talk based on her new book “Heaven is a Garden – Designing Serene Outdoor Spaces for Inspiration and Reflect”.

Johnsen’s talk featured a slideshow of various gardens, many of which are in Northern Westchester. 

“This is wonderful,” Johnsen said at the talk. “We need gardens. We need serenity and to be unplugged. We need that outdoor space.”

The characteristics of a serene garden include simplicity and sanctuary, she said. 

“There are spots that are sheltered and protected,” Johnsen said. “It feels cozy. It gives you delight.”

Johnsen quoted Luis Barragan who said, “A garden must combine the poetic and mysterious with the feeling of serenity and joy.”

Gardens should have a power spot and something at the high point of the garden.

“It’s a destination,” Johnsen said. “It works all the time. Make the journey to the high point part of the fun.”

Johnsen also recommended putting columns in the backyard because they are nice to look at.

“They are a nice counter punch to the softness,” Johnsen said.

When it comes to gardens, direction is key. The northern part should be contemplative, while the southern part should be open and expansive with sunflowers and petunias.

The eastern part should be the most auspicious while the western part should be shaded and the place to end the day.

“People like to get together and talk here,”  Johnsen said. 

Color is also an important part of a garden. Johnsen said yellow cheers us up and stimulates while orange is the color of conversation, flamboyance and vitality.

“Red is excitement, power and luck,” Johnsen said. “It really sparks up a garden. Blue induces calm. Green is the most relaxing color.”

Johnsen said gardens help people return to a kinship of nature.

“We can quiet our thoughts and we can reflect, recharge, reconnect, realign and remember,” Johnsen said.

For master gardeners, it’s all about sharing tips, ideas and, most of all …

When Lou Horton retired from a career in education, he promised himself he’d learn about gardening and share that knowledge with others.

The West Chicago man has kept that promise. Now in his 13th year as a University of Illinois Extension master gardener, he works at the DuPage County office’s help desk and at events fielding questions about everything from the emerald ash borer and garden pests, to when to plant vegetables in the spring and whether the harsh winter did permanent damage to lawns and trees.

Master Gardener Help Desks

The DuPage County Master Garden Help Desk is at 1100 E. Warrenville Road, Naperville, and is open 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, May through October. Gardeners may come with their questions, call (630) 955-1123 or email uiemg-dupage@illinois.edu.

During May, mobile Help Desks will also be at the following locations:

• Naperville Community Gardeners Plant Sale in Naperville, 7 a.m. to noon May 10

• SCARCE Get Your Garden Growing event in Glen Ellyn, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. May 10

• West Chicago’s Blooming Fest in downtown West Chicago, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 17

• Lake View Nature Center worm display in Oakbrook Terrace, noon to 4 p.m. May 17

• Roselle Park District Garden Club Plant Sale in Roselle, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. May 17

• Itasca Public Library in Itasca, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. May 24

“I love to talk and think about gardening,” Horton said. “I thoroughly enjoy sharing information and exchanging ideas with other gardeners.”

It’s a sentiment shared by DuPage County’s 123 master gardeners, who go through rigorous training and then volunteer their time helping others.

“My master gardeners amaze me, the amount of time they give and their enthusiasm,” said Sarah Navrotski, program coordinator for the The DuPage County Master Gardener program. “It’s a really popular program.”

Still, many people don’t understand what master gardeners do, Navrotski said. Sure, they know a lot about plants, but they’re not people just acquiring knowledge for themselves, she said. Volunteering their expertise to the community is a required part of the master gardener title.

“I have a love of gardening and I like to volunteer. It seemed like a really good fit to serve the community in a different way,” said Deb Hornell of Glen Ellyn, now in her sixth year as a master gardener.

Training to volunteer

Those who apply to be master gardeners go through an interview process before being accepted into training.

“Some gardening background is nice, but it’s not absolutely required,” Navrotski said.

Those accepted in the program go through 12 weeks of training — learning about everything from soil to botany — in classes taught by University of Illinois educators from 8:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. once a week. The training costs $250.

The next unit training for DuPage, Kane and Kendall counties will be in the fall in the DuPage office, 1100 E. Warrenville Road, Naperville.

During the first year, the master gardener interns must do 60 hours of volunteer work. After the first year, master gardeners are required to put in 30 hours of volunteer work and take 10 hours of continuing education annually.

Spring and summer are the busy season for master gardeners, but the volunteer opportunities are far-ranging and some continue year-round.

In addition to the help desk open at the extension office from spring through fall, master gardeners may staff mobile help desks at libraries and community events, give presentations, serve on a speakers bureau and teach a program on worms in third-grade classrooms.

They work in community gardens in Naperville and Downers Grove to grow vegetables for food pantries and work with special-needs children and students through NEDSRA, Downers Grove North High School and Easter Seals.

Master gardeners also help maintain gardens and grow crops in public areas, such as Kline Creek Farm in West Chicago, Graue Mill Museum in Oak Brook and the Clock Garden in Wood Dale.

Another place to volunteer is the DuPage Convalescent Center, where master gardeners help elderly and disabled residents grow produce in raised beds and help beautify the grounds. Gail Sanders, a second-year master gardener from Carol Stream, said that’s her favorite spot to volunteer.

“Volunteering at the DuPage Convalescent Center is very rewarding because you are working directly with residents a lot of the time,” Sanders said. “They’re very appreciative.”

All sorts of questions

Like all master garden interns, Sanders worked at the help desk at the extension office her first year, but said she found it challenging.

“There’s so much to know about gardening, and you have no idea what people are going to come and ask,” she said.

Hornell said she gets stumped at the help desk “all the time,” but that’s when she turns to the extension’s reference library.

“We’ve been trained to ask a lot of questions and not to feel we have the answer immediately,” she said. “I love those conversations we have with people about what they’re trying to do in their garden.”

Hornell said she gets a lot of questions about lawns, pest management, vegetables, perennials, trees and shrubs.

This year, because of the harsh winter, she and other master gardeners are hearing concerns about snow mold on grass (a fungus that makes the grass look dead), and the survival of other plants and trees.

But the plants may just need more time because spring is about three weeks later than usual, Navrotski said. In many cases, the snow actually acted as a protective cover for the garden.

“I think people worried about losing a lot over the winter are going to be pleasantly surprised,” he said.

Over the years, Horton said he has seen increased interest in growing vegetables and in gardening itself.

“I suspect it’s the fastest growing hobby in the country,” he said.

Concerns about safe food and use of pesticides have added to the interest. People want to know what plants to grow in the right places, Navrotski said.

“There’s a push for sustainability,” she said. “People are thinking more environmentally.”

Master gardeners get some unusual questions as well. Horton recalled a man who brought in a piece of treated lumber that had what appeared to be a drill hole in it. The hole was made by carpenter bees.

“He couldn’t understand why the bees could do that,” he said.

Gardeners are welcome to bring plant samples or insects to the help desk at the extension office, but they’re also welcome to email photos to uiemg-dupage@illinois.edu or call the help desk at (630) 955-1123.

Help desk hours for the rest of the growing season, May through October, are 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Messages may be left at other times and a master gardener will get back to the caller.

Information about gardening and how to become a master gardener also is on the website at web.extension.illinois.edu/dkk.

Gardening tips from Sprouts Greenhouse: How to grow the perfect strawberries

(Lander, Wyo.) – Who doesn’t like fresh strawberries? Or strawberry-rhubarb pie? Or strawberries in your smoothie? Or strawberry preserves on toast? Strawberries start to show up in large quantities at the grocery store this time of year, but it’s not hard to create your own strawberry patch.

If you’ve read previous articles, you’ve already heard the rallying cry of adding organic material to your garden. But really, for strawberries, go crazy. They do best in rich, loamy soil and hefty additions of compost are key. In preparing your site, be sure to add plenty prior to planting. Also add a 1-2” layer in the each year in the fall over the plants.

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First though, you’ll have to make a choice on where to plant. All varieties need at least 8 hours of full sun daily to produce at their best. Then decide on what form you’ll plant, such as a clump or in rows, or perhaps using a fancy form available commercially. A word to the wise: the best way to keep your patch productive for many years is being able to control the runners and thin them out periodically. This may influence how you decide to plant.

As far as what kind to plant, it’s decision time again. There are two main groupings for perennial strawberries: June-bearing and everbearing. As you’ve likely guessed, June-bearing has a short production season, lasting 2-3 weeks early in the summer. This is helpful if you plan on making batches of preserves and want a hefty amount in a short time period. Everbearing will produce steadily from early summer until the first fall frost. That works well if you want a few to add to your morning bowl of cereal throughout the summer.

If you don’t have access to a yard, you can still have fresh strawberries all summer long. The ‘berri basket’ variety was cultivated to excel in pots. They are compact plants with vigorous production. Planting them in hanging pots makes for very easy harvesting- no bending over!

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General tips for keeping your patch healthy and productive:

  • Birds love strawberries too, so put netting over your plants to keep them away. If you don’t, rest assured that you won’t get any of the fruits of your labor. Boo!
  • Help the plants be stronger by pinching off the blossoms for the first season. That way the plant turns its energy into producing roots instead of fruit.
  • Pick rotted fruit- otherwise makes it possible for nematodes and other insects as well as diseases to take root.
  • It’s not that plants get too old, it’s that the plants are heavy feeders and also heavy producers of runners that create more plants. If runners aren’t controlled, what started as well-spaced area transitions into a mat of plants competing for nutrients.
  • Planting in rows makes for easier control in the long run. Here is a great video on revitalizing an older, overgrown strawberry patch planted in rows.

There you have it! This time of year is perfect for establishing a strawberry patch, as most varieties are very tolerant of frost. Get them in the ground soon, and you could be making pies this summer.

We at Sprouts love growing plants, and want to share our love of gardening with you. We hope that these tips help you learn, solve problems, and grow. Our intention is to address basic issues, and provide references for additional information.

You can expect a new tip from us each week on Buckrail.com! We don’t intend for the tips to be the end-all, be-all of the gardening world.

8591 Wyoming 789, Lander, WY 82520

(307) 332-3572.

May garden tips

Spring is officially here! As we move to working in our yards and gardens here are a few May lawn and garden tips from N.C. Cooperative Extension:

Plants in Flower

• Southern Magnolia, Golden Chain Tree, Kousa Dogwood, Hybrid Rhododendron, Mountain Laurel, Satsuki Azalea, Scotch Broom, Deutzia, Beauty Bush, Weigela, Gumpo Azalea, Roses, Clematis, Honeysuckle, Dianthus, Sweet William, Candytuft, Beadered Iris, Peony, Coreopsis, Poppy, Lady Slipper and Summer Annuals

Fertilizing

• Fertilize summer flowering plants like crape myrtle and rose- of-Sharon this month.

• Do not forget to sidedress or fertilize your vegetable six to eight weeks after germination.

Planting

• Plant gladioli bulbs (corms) this month.

• Plant summer annuals like begonia, geranium, marigold, petunia and zinnia this month.

• The following vegetable plants can be set out this month: eggplant, pepper, tomato and sweet potato.

• The following vegetables can be planted this month: beans, lima beans, cantaloupe, corn, cucumbers, okra, southern peas, pumpkin, squash and watermelon.

Pruning

• Prune your hybrid rhododendron after they finish flowering.

• Prune any hedges that have outgrown their desired shape.

• Begin pinching your chrysanthemums and continue through early July.

• Pick off azalea leaf galls as they form.

• Do not cut back spring bulb foliage until it turns yellow and brown.

Spraying

• Spray the following landscape shrubs for the following insect pests: arborvitae-bag worm, azalea-lace bug, boxwood-leaf miner, euonymus-scale, hemlock and juniper-spruce mites, pyracantha-lace bug and hybrid rhododendron borer.

• Spray iris beds for iris borers.

• Spray the following vegetables if insects are observed: cucumber (cucumber beetle), squash (squash borer and aphids, tomato and eggplant (flea beetle), broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower (worms).

• Weekly sprays on red-tip photinia if leaf spot is observed.

• Continue with rose spray program.

• Keep spraying your tree fruits and bunch grapes with a fungicide program.

• Use pesticides sparingly. Spray only when needed.

Lawn Care

• Fertilize zoysia this month after it has greened up. Do NOT fertilize tall fescue now.

• Start warm season lawns like zoysia in May.

• Mowing heights for your lawn are important. Cut tall fescue and bluegrass at three inches, zoysia at one inch.

Propagation

• Take softwood cuttings of plants like azalea, rhododendron, forsythia, clematis, chrysanthemum and geranium in late May if you have a misting system.

Specific Chores

• Purchase locally grown strawberries.

• Move houseplants outside if desired.

• If weather has been dry, give favorite plants a good soaking once a week.

For more garden tips feel free to visit the Vance County Cooperative Extension Center at 305 Young Street in Henderson.

Tips provided by NC Cooperative Extension

Farah opens flagship in Covent Garden

Menswear brand Farah has chosen Seven Dials in Covent Garden, London as the location for their first UK flagship store.

Located on Earlham Street, the 764 square foot flagship opened this weekend and marks a new chapter for the brand, and aims to complement its existing store within the Boxpark in Shoreditch and its e-commerce site.

The flagship houses all the Farah collections, covering both the mainline and the younger Farah Vintage line.

Francisco Gonzalez-Meza Hoffmann, managing director of Farah owner Perry Ellis Europe, said: “We wanted a central London location with a strong heritage of its own for our Farah flagship store. The retail mix and atmosphere of Seven Dials is perfect. We will be in great company in one of the most thriving destinations for fashion in London.”

Sam Bain-Mollison, head of group retail strategy and letting at Shaftesbury, added: “Farah is a great fit for Seven Dials, which is a thriving, cosmopolitan destination with a unique mix of retailers and restaurants. Farah adds to the iconic international fashion offer that sets Seven Dials apart.”

Farah is the latest fashion name to open in the area, over the past few months other fashion retailers including Franklin Marshall, Peter Werth and Le Coq Sportif have chosen the Seven Dials area.

Benneydale’s bargain prices lure buyers looking for do-ups



A 10th of the 85 homes in the King Country township of Benneydale have sold to out of towners for bargain basement prices in the last 16 months in what one real estate agent described as “a bit of a flurry”.

The latest, a derelict three-bedroom weatherboard home on Maniati Rd, sold for $10,000 yesterday.

“We have just signed another contract this morning with another Aucklander just picking up a home that’s in disrepair,” said Bruce Spurdle First National residential sales consultant Mary Tapu.

“The houses you get for that are run down and no-one has done anything to them. Aucklanders will do a great job on them. There’s grass growing through the walls.

“We have sold four houses another four have been private sales on Trade Me.”

Bruce Spurdle First National said it was currently offering 10 properties in Benneydale with an average asking price of $76,000.

Yesterday’s new buyer didn’t want to talk to the Times, but told Tapu he intended to renovate the house and live in it.

“The buyer thinks he has got a steal. He has got big ideas and has got a budget.”

Tapu said similar properties sold for $5000 to $8000 a decade ago.

“Most of the people we have sold to are just looking for a different lifestyle.

Spurdle described the sales as “a bit of a flurry”.

Around 185 people live in Benneydale.

Among the new Benneydale residents are wood turner Gary Howe, who is building a workshop and studio, and mosaic artist Isabelle Isaaco, who is landscaping her gardens with mosaic features.

Waitomo District Mayor Brian Hanna put some of the activity down to the recently opened 85 kilometre-long Pureora Timber Trail at nearby Pureora Forrest Park, which he said was attracting cyclists to the area.

Prime Minister John Key opened the $4.5 million trail about a year ago.

“I think some of it is people realising their assets in Hamilton or Auckland and buying cheap houses and being able to do it up,” Hanna said.

Monica Louis, who moved with her husband Maurice to Benneydale’s old Four Square superette, which they converted into a home a decade ago, recently opened Timber Trail Accommodation.

“There is life in Benneydale. You can see all these people on their bikes on the road because of the Timber Trail.

“It’s very much a place that people are attracted to because of the low property prices, but they tend to be a bit shocked when they discover the high rates,” she said.

The average Benneydale home pays $3000 a year in rates.

“At the moment Benneydale still looks a bit sad,” Louis said. But she expects that to change with the restoration plans new buyers have.

The Timber Trail operations manager Kim Tukaki said the Timber Trail would create sustainable economic value to local communities and the region.

“The Pureora Forest Park stretches across both the Waitomo and Ruapehu Districts, as does the Timber Trail,” she said.

“My feeling is that Benneydale has the potential to become the next Tirau with quaint shops, cafes and accommodation.”

– © Fairfax NZ News



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GreenSpot: Eco friendly options from mowers to blowers

Let me start out by saying that there are some good eco-friendly options. My advice is to not overwhelm yourself. If you can’t or don’t want to eliminate all your gas-powered equipment at once, choose one tool. Replacing one piece of equipment is a great first step.

Traditional gas-powered landscaping equipment makes up 5% of our earth’s pollution. The EPA tells us that if as few as 1,000 lawn mowers were replaced by eco-friendly models, it would eliminate about 9.8 tons of harmful VOC (which is dangerous to our health with long-term effects).

Living in Ridgefield, with most of us having a significant amount of property, this poses a problem. We want to be eco-friendly, but we don’t know how to start eliminating these harmful tools. Here are some ideas to think about, so that when you are ready, you can transition into using eco-friendly equipment.

Reel mower — obviously the greenest choice. This may not be an option if you have a large lawn.

Solar-charged/battery-powered mower — a good choice, providing two hours of energy with no gas.

Cordless rechargeable battery-operated mower — a great choice, using no gas. You can even find cordless rechargeable battery-operated ride-on mowers!

Propane-powered mower — an excellent choice, because propane is nontoxic and not harmful to your health or the environment. Propane cuts the greenhouse emissions in half and reduces carcinogens and toxins.

Extra tip: Consider a mower with mulching power. This disposes of the clippings by turning them into fertilizer for your lawn!

Also consider solar/green-powered blowers, electric blowers, propane-powered blowers, electric chain saws, rechargeable battery-operated chain saws — which are lighter and less noisy as a bonus, propane trimmers, and rechargeable battery-operated trimmers.

Extra tip: If you use landscaping companies to do your yard work, why not look for a company that is eco-friendly. For example, go to Mowgreen.us, a company that is totally eco-friendly!

See you all next week, and remember, it’s fun and easy to be green!

Social Enterprise Pitch semi-finalists selected

Localgood - Great Social Enterprise Pitch logo

Localgood – Great Social Enterprise Pitch logo

Organizers are promoting the Great Social Enterprise Pitch with the hashtag “#Localgood.”



Posted: Monday, May 5, 2014 12:09 pm
|


Updated: 12:45 pm, Mon May 5, 2014.

Social Enterprise Pitch semi-finalists selected

By TIM STUHLDREHER | Business Writer

TownNews.com




Tim Stuhldreher is a Lancaster Newspapers staff writer who covers business and finance. He can be reached at tstuhldreher@lnpnews.com or (717) 481-6137. You can also follow@timstuhldreher on Twitter.

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