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The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
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Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
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Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
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Garden Catalog Collector
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Building a Compost Bin
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10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
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How to Start a Vegetable Garden
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Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
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Find the Perfect Tomato
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25 Robust Summer Bloomers
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Big Flowers from Bigleaf Hydrangeas
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All About Starting Seeds
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Cool-Season Annuals
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Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
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Design an Engaging Entryway
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Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
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15 Deer-Resistant Plants
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Backyard Makeover Game
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Variegated Plants Create Drama
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A gardener's checklist for early summer
READER PHOTOS! Springtime at Longwood
comments (16) March 1st, 2011 in blogs
Today's photos are from Viktoria Mullin from Cromwell, Connecticut. She loves to visit Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania in the springtime, and wanted to share some photos she took there last spring, just to get you excited about what's to come! Thanks, Viktoria!
Stay tuned for Viktoria's springtime photos from Chanticleer in tomorrow's post.
Welcome to the Fine Gardening GARDEN PHOTO OF THE DAY blog! Every weekday we post a new photo of a great garden, a spectacular plant, a stunning plant combination, or any number of other subjects. Think of it as your morning jolt of green.
Sign up to get new posts delivered to your inbox each morning so you'll always remember to take a look, or subscribe to our RSS feed. We look forward to sharing our garden travels with you.
READER PHOTOS: We love featuring your photos, too. If you think you have a photo that we should share on the Garden Photo of the day, email us. Send hi-res images if possible. We'll only respond if we plan to use your photo.
posted in: Longwood, spring
Welcome to the Fine Gardening GARDEN PHOTO OF THE DAY blog!
Every weekday we post a new photo of a great garden, a spectacular plant, a stunning plant combination, or any number of other subjects. Think of it as your morning jolt of green.
Sign up to get new posts delivered to your inbox each morning so you'll always remember to take a look, or subscribe to our RSS feed. We look forward to sharing our garden travels with you.
If you think you have a photo that we should share on the Garden Photo of the day, email us. Send hi-res images to mgervais@taunton.com with GPOD in the subject line. We'll only respond if we plan to use your photo.
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Comments (16)
I will definitely try to make a trip there sometime in the near future. Thanks for sharing Viktoria ~ Posted: 5:36 pm on March 1st
I miss the same my spring blooming plants and best spring days which are still in ahead.
Some more about my photos. The photos are taken on 4/10/2010. As I already know, the middle of April and up to the end of May is the best time for spring photo shooting in the Longwood Gardens.
The day was absolutely beautiful and bright. Thus, a little more contrast than I’d like to have my photos done.
I agree with Happily_Gardening thought:...a little background on the Forsythia bush could be helpful. This makes one more good reason for me to visit Longwood this spring again ).
That sparkling with yellow hedge is Forsythia, one of my favorite spring blossom.
Posted: 1:15 pm on March 1st
Forsythia (pronounced /fɔrˈsɪθiə/[1] or /fɔrˈsaɪθiə/) is a genus of flowering plants in the family Oleaceae (olive family). There are about 11 species, mostly native to eastern Asia, but one native to southeastern Europe. The common name is also Forsythia; the genus is named after William Forsyth.
The forsythia bush is a beautiful landscape shrub that grows into a hedge with naturally developing arching stems. Forsythia bushes are one of the earliest spring flowering plants. The blooms of the forsythia bush are a spectacular yellow or pink, depending on the cultivar, and resemble little bells.
The forsythia bush grows best on a site that has full sun or light shade. The forsythia bush is deciduous and they drop their leaves in the fall and are effective screens mainly during the growing season. Forsythia bushes are rapid growers and will fill in an area very quickly.
One of the most frequently asked questions about the forsythia bush is when to prune. Pruning the forsythia bush after flowering is the most widely used method. Cut out about one-third of the old woody growth. This encourages new young growth, which will supply the next season's flowers. Another pruning method is to tip prune the forsythia bush. The tip pruning will result in several new growths developing at that point and the plant will become bushier and more prolific in its flowering.
Forsythia bushes are an ideal plant for borders or screens. The forsythia bush should be planted in full sun or light shade. The forsythia bush was named in honor of the royal British gardener William Forsyth who lived from 1737 to 1804. Posted: 10:23 am on March 1st
The bulb displays are really spectacular, and a teaser for us that are still in the grips of winter in zone 4b. Posted: 10:22 am on March 1st
That's forsythia, behind the bench, isn't it? Or is that too late a blooming time for forsythia? Posted: 10:18 am on March 1st
THanks Posted: 5:21 am on March 1st