East Valley Nurseries
Plant nurseries in East San Fernando Valley, CA
First of all, thank you to my friend Alice for pointing out that the Rose Parade is never on a Sunday; therefore it will be held Monday, January 2nd. For those of us who like to see sparkling fresh flower covered floats, I recommend going out to Pasadena Sunday night sometime after about 9pm. All the floats are pulled up on Orange Grove Avenue in front of the Wrigley Mansion waiting for the parade to start the next day. (What did you think, they wait until the last minute?) They are spotlit and it is a festive scene…and you can get really close and see the detail. I took these photos last year between about 10:00pm and 1:00 am. I can only tell you my experience, and hope that nothing has changed. I drove north on South Arroyo Parkway and parked as close as possible to Orange Grove Blvd. between East Colorado Blvd. on the north and East Del Mar Blvd. on the south. The streets are closed off to the east so you will have to walk up a hill but you will see some great old homes. Take some hot chocolate, have an adventure and let me know how it goes! Happy New Year to us all!!!
On the Web:
Saturday, 1⁄7:
- Rose pruning workshop @ Los Angeles County Arboretum, Arcadia (www.arboretum.org)
- Huntington Gardens seminar held in Pomona on Sam Maloof exhibit and seasonal gardening (www.huntington.org)
OK, I admit it. I get a serious case of the blahs over the holidays. I can’t be a hypocrite about it, although I do wish everyone else the happy holiday of their choice. The majestic wreath above kind of fits my mood. It was featured in The Wall Street Journal December 22. Every year the Berkshire Botanical Garden presents their Holiday Market Place fundraiser, including the legendary Gallery of Wreaths. Garden clubs, heads up — this appears to be an excellent way to raise funds. The designers compete to display and sell their creative wreaths.
I had never heard of the Berkshire Botanical Garden. Established in 1934, it is in Western Massachusetts (i.e. the area known as “The Berkshires”). I was looking at the upcoming programs being offered and would love to live near this group. Next summer, my very favorite time of year, I hope to visit. www.berkshirebotanicalgarden.org
On the web:
Sales: there are sales going on..be sure to check with the nurseries concerning the particulars..
Imagine my surprise when I discovered a chapter on this home in the book Lowcountry Plantations Today, given to me by my prescient friend Lisa some years before. Last September my sister Mary Lynn and I were on our way to go kayaking at the ACE Basin near Beaufort, South Carolina when we passed this home out in the middle of nowhere. Surrounded by 100+ year old oaks, the estate includes gorgeous barns as well. According to my Lowcountry book it is called Bonny Hall Plantation and was built circa 1897 on the Combahee River. Once owned by the Doubleday publishing family, it is now reputed to be the domain of a Hollywood producer. Somerset Maugham wrote The Razors Edge in the guest house there in the 1940’s.
Our kayaking guide, Kim, owns Beaufort Kayak Tours (www.Beaufortkayaktours.com) with her husband David. She is a local as well as a naturalist and very well informed about the area. We kayaked in the swamps where the land was used for rice production before the Civil War. Now a lot of the land is owned by wealthy families who use it for hunting part time. This is a good thing because it preserves the land and saves it from development.
On the web:
Australian Native Plant Nursery (click on website at right) features Eucalyptus “Moon Lagoon”, a collectable drought tolerant shrub.
11⁄18: Huntington Gardens (San Marino) offers an all day Ranch symposium on urban agriculture. (www.huntington.org)
11⁄19:
The first leg of my September trip to the Low Country was booked through Road Scholar (formerly Elder Hostel — I really love their new name). Road Scholar is a nonprofit tour company dedicated to “lifelong learning”. They have a mouthwatering array of trips in their catalog, many involving some type of volunteering. My Charleston leg was orchestrated by the College of Charleston, a very old (1770) and wonderful public liberal arts and sciences school. We stayed in a lovely hotel, the Francis Marion, and ate our meals in the student dining room. That was so much fun; carbo loading and enjoying the high energy of the students. In the morning we would hear talks given by experts on the history of the Civil War, Charleston, cooking, music and more; afternoons were devoted to sightseeing. Many of our group had enjoyed 6 or more trips with RS. I would have to give Road Scholar and College of Charleston an “A” for my experience!
On the web:
Australian Native Plant Nursery has a new shipment of books from…Australia! Click on their website to the right of this post.
Thursday, November 10: Huntington Gardens (huntington.org) Talk and sale on Native Trees for Native Gardens by Lili Singer
Saturday, November 12: