The gardener's eye

The Gardener's Eye

Showing posts with label Wagner Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wagner Park. Show all posts

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Wave Hill, the High Line and Wagner Park All in One Day in October


Wave Hill's Flower Garden



Another View of the Flower Garden



The Entrance to the Marco Polo Stufano Conservatory



The Wild Garden



The Aquatic and Monocot Garden at Wave Hill



The Gansevoort Woodland on the High Line



The Washington Grasslands



The Diller-Von Furstenberg Sundeck



The Chelsea Grasslands


The 10th Avenue Square


Rhus glabra on the Sundeck



The Hot Border at Wagner Park



Leonotis leonurus and a Bright Orange Cuphea Make Great Companions




Maude, Tovah and Laura Enjoying the Hot Borders


Last Sunday, three gardening friends and I did a fearless day trip from New Hampshire to NYC and back to visit public gardens in the city. We left at 5:45 am and arrived at Wave Hill, the public garden in the Bronx, at about 10 am. The weather threatened but ended up being very cooperative. The view from the Pergola Overlook across the Hudson River to the Palisades was spectacular. We spent a lot time examining the plant combinations in the Flower Garden. We also visited the Wild Garden and the Aquatic and Monocot Gardens before having a nice lunch on the terrace at the Wave Hill House.

Next, we drove down the Henry Hudson Parkway to the High Line, the recently opened New York City Park, in the Meatpacking District in the Lower West Side of Manhattan. The High Line is a park built on an elevated 1930's freight rail structure. The planting design is inspired by the self-seeded volunteer plants that began to establish themselves after the train made its final delivery in 1980. There are more than 200 species of perennials, grasses, shrubs and trees in the park. The garden was designed by Dutch planting designer, Piet Oudolf. Oudolf is world famous for using grasses in his designs and was the perfect man to take on this project. We spent much of our time there analyzing the way in which one perennial or grass slowly interwove into the next forming a very natural looking tapestry.

Our final stop was Wagner Park, the Lynden B. Miller designed public garden in Battery Park City at the very tip of Manhattan. Some of us had never seen the Statue of Liberty which prominently held court in the Upper Bay where the Hudson River flows into the Atlantic Ocean. The lighting could not have been more beautiful. Wagner Park, like all Lynden's gardens, was meticulously maintained. There were two borders with contrasting hot and cool color themes. Our favorite gardens were the hot borders which were ablaze with a stunning combination of Leonotis leonurus paired with a bright orange cuphea.

We were back on the road by about 6 pm and in our beds by 10:45 pm. It very busy and inspiring day that was totally worth the effort.


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