The flower gardens at Old Westbury
comments (10) October 7th, 2011 in blogsThe flower gardens at Old Westbury Gardens are a study in symmetry and formality. Here are a few scenes of the late summer beds and their surrounding structures.
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posted in: OldWestbury
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 (10)
For those who don't appreciate honest constructive criticism I feel very sad for you. And for anyone who doesn't believe that I garden you couldn't be more wrong. I work very hard tending to a lovely piece of north Catskill acreage, with many interesting settings and rare plantings that I do my best to keep natural and in harmony with the native wildlife. I have literally thousands of photographs that I'd be happy to share. Here is a recent one that I was very lucky to grab from my back deck right after Irene, the wind was strong and the clouds scuding blocked the sun in an instant, I didn't get a second shot.
http://i54.tinypic.com/98hfd4.jpg
For anyone who doesn't want me to participate here just say so and you'll never hear from me again... I don't make personal attacks and I don't appreciate them.
Best regards,
Tractor1 Posted: 8:11 pm on October 7th
A wonderfully romantic garden! I especially like the garden wall walk. And the green/blue gazebo!
Where is it located? Posted: 2:25 pm on October 7th
Most gardeners will be familiar enough with plants to figure out what that pink thing in the back is and won't need finely focused photographs to enlighten them. And if information about a particular plant is desired then one can always ask and most likely get a reply.
These are beautiful. How nice to have those wonderful backdrops of gazebos and detailed stone or brick walls to work with. These pictures give you a good idea of plants that can be utilized to have abundant flowering at the tail end of the gardening year.
Keep it up Michele. Posted: 10:57 am on October 7th
Do you ever have anything nice to say about anything. Perhaps if you ventured outdoors into a garden once in a while instead of trolling sites on your computer you might not be so crabby. Posted: 10:39 am on October 7th
I understand your frustration with the image resolution. Until about 6 months ago we didn't even have the current functionality on our websites that enlarges the images when you click on them, so readers were unable to view the fine details in images at all. Though the blog posts allow image file sizes up to 4MB, there is a built-in limitation of 800-1200 pixels for width and height. Most days, I need to reduce the size (and quality) of the photos by at least 65%. This image-size limitation is one of the projects our developers are working towards eliminating (since our magazines and websites focus on details and high-quality images)--hopefully, we'll be able to roll out this upgrade before the year is out. Posted: 9:08 am on October 7th
Posted: 8:55 am on October 7th