Posts in Category: garden

Jack-in-the-pulpit: Wild Gardens of Acadia

The Wild Gardens of Acadia at Sieur de Monts Springs is a project of The Wild Gardens of Acadia committee of The Friends of Acadia. It was actually started by a looser group of volunteers before coming under the auspices of the Friends. It has won awards as example of its kind. Within a very small area at the edge of the forest, with a small stream flowing through, volunteers have collected and cultivated most of the native plants of Mt Desert Island and Acadia National Park. The garden is divided by habitat, from stream-side and a mini bog to a mountain top simulation, and covering just about everything in between. From early spring to late fall there is generally something in bloom, and it well enough labeled so that it is certainly a good place to visit if you are interested in being able to identify these plants in the wild.

This is Jack-in-the-pulpit. From the single plants I saw there a few years ago, there is now an impressive stand of these unique and very interesting plants.

Canon SX50HS. Program with iContrast and Auto Shadow Control. 39mm macro plus 1.5x digital tel-converter. f4 @ 1/50th @ ISO 160. Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

This is one of those shots that is only possible because of the flip out lcd on the Canon SX series. I had to get right down under the plant 🙂

Ascitou Azalea Gardens. Happy Sunday!

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The Ascitou Azalea Gardens in Northeast Harbor on Mt Desert Island, just outside Acadia National Park, can, if you hit it just right when the Azaleas bloom, be all but overwhelming. It is a gentle place, well manicured, with a hint of Japan in the stone and water and Azalea plantings. Very designed. Very beautiful.

Click any of the thumbs to open the image full sized.

Canon SX50HS. A mix to tel-macros at 1200mm equivalent, and wide-macros at 24mm plus 1.5x digital tel-converter. Processed, as always, in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

And for the Sunday Thought. Man might have had a hand in all the shades and colors of the Azalea, and man certainly had a hand in arranging them in Ascitou Gardens…but the fact is, you can not tame the Azalea. It is a wild plant, full of irresistible vigor and something very close to a will to be. The colors can be bold or delicate, but the live is always vibrant. The spirit in the Azalea will out! And it is, at least for me, the tension between that riot of life, the pure spirit, and our attempts to design and improve upon nature that adds to the wonder of the Azalea. I am always thankful to those patient folks who think they can cage the wonder…because it is so much fun to see the wonder break out!

 

Century Plant: Anza Borrego Desert

The Century Plant (Agave americana) is, of course, totally misnamed. It only lives 10 to 30 years. It does, however, have only one flowering, after which the plant dies back to its root runners, to appear again in a different spot. So, while not once every hundred years, the flowering is rare enough to be an event worth noting. This specimen is in the native plant garden atop the Visitor Center at Anza Borrego Desert State Park. And what a setting for the bloom!

Canon SX50HS. Program with iContrast and Auto Shadow Fill. From 190 to 1200mm equivalent field of view. Mostly 1/1000th at ISO 160. Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

Busy Bee: Seattle Washington

The small demonstration garden at the Center for Urban Horticulture in Seattle, the first week in October, was definitely in Northwest Autumn mode. There were actually a surprising number of flowers still in bloom. I am sure the layout of the sunny courtyard with its stone flagging and walls help create a kind of micro climate that prolongs the blooming season. And the bees were certainly taking advantage…busy putting up the last of the season’s pollen to be made into honey for the winter hive.

This telephoto macro was taken at 1800mm equivalent from about 5 feet…that is the full optical zoom of the new Canon SX50HS plus the 1.5x digital tel-converter function. The optical image stabilization of the SX50HS allows for this kind of hand-held extreme telephoto macro.

Canon SX50HS. Program with iContrast and –1/3EV exposure compensation. f6.5 @ 1/160th @ ISO 200. Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

Turtlehead in the Rain

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I have a new camera. I replaced my Canon SX40HS with a newly released SX50HS…longer zoom (50x, 24mm to 1200mm equivalent, faster focus, etc). It came on Wednesday and it has rained non-stop ever since. Still I had to brave the drips to take at least a few shots around the yard. This is a shot at 1200mm from about 8 feet away. ISO 800. Not bad at all.

I like the total wet look, the depth of the color, and the extreme bokah.

f6.5 @ 1/100th. Program with iContrast and – 1 /3EV exposure compensation. Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

5/18/2012: Dew on the Rose, Washington Oaks Gardens, FL

Washington Oaks Gardens has an extensive formal water garden, and, inside a wrought iron fence with trellis gates, a great collection of carefully tended roses. Since I am often there early for the birds, I often catch the dew on the rose in all its glory.

Canon SX40HS. Program with iContrast and –1/3EV exposure compensation.  This is a digital tel-extender macro…with the lens at 24mm and macro where I can focus to 0 cm, and 1.5x digital tel-extender engaged for an equivalent focal length of 36mm and larger image scale. This is a use of the digital tel-extender feature I an sure Canon did not foresee, but results, I think, are convincing.  f4.5 @ 1/1250th @ ISO 125.

Processed in Lightroom for intensity, clarity, and sharpness.

8/6/2011: Sundrops, Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens

One of the wonderful things about the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens is that they have room to do massive beds of flowers…like this display of Sundrops. I like this shot, which was carefully composed to set off the taller stack of flowers against the chaotic background of blooms. It is one of those “look twice” images…as the subject does not jump right out at you…but once you see what is going on, I think it is effective.

Nikon Coolpix P500 at 130mm equivalent field of view, f8 @ 1/500th @ ISO 160. Program with Active D-Lighting. Program shift for the smaller aperture and greater depth of field.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness.

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7/17/2011: Whimsy, The Children’s Garden. Happy Sunday!

The Child’s Garden only opened a year ago the Coastal Maine Botanical Garden, after at least 2 years of development. It is hard to imagine a more whimsical place. White bordered yards with cat picket fences, grass roofed Victorian sheds, tall hollyhocks and red roses, giant sunflowers, old fashioned water pumps, a windmill, a pond with the boats from Wind in the Willows and a life sized brass statue of the bear from Blueberries for Sal, William Carlos William’s Red Wheelbarrow (an actual red wheelbarrow with the poem on the side), a tiny bog with carnivorous plants, a tree house and a wigwam, a bear cave, a windmill, Farmer Macgregor’s vegetable patch and the first annual gourd Olympics. And that is without mentioning the Gnome Shed with its rounded door and a roof of blueberry plants. Whimsy, pure and simple.

 

 

Like most attempts at whimsy, this is a very adult production. The attention to detail, the hyper-inventiveness, the elaboration is very unchildlike. It is not simple, not innocent, but very calculated…calculated to appeal to a child.

It certainly appeals to the child in me. I love it! I appreciate the whimsy and admire the inventiveness. I have no real idea, though, how a child would see it. If the children in attendance on a Friday in July were any evidence, then it certainly has at least a quiet appeal…but then I suspect that the children in attendance were already a select group…as in the children of parents who would appreciate a day at the Coastal Maine Botanical Garden and expect their children will enjoy it too. Children who have been read Wind in the Willows and Peter Rabbit, Peter Pan, and Blueberries for Sal. Children with lovingly fed imaginations. Rare children, I suspect, these days. Then too, it is hard to say how much of the children’s enjoyment of this truly magical place is a simple reflection of the obvious joy their parents take in it.

Ah…but it does not really matter, in the end. Certainly part of our love of whimsy is spiritual, and was succulently captured by Jesus when he told us that it is the children, and those who have (as we say it today) maintained their inner child, who will inherit the kingdom of heaven. Not a childish faith, but a childlike faith is what we all need. And adult whimsy is certainly one of the best approaches to that inner child, and to that faith.

The whimsical Children’s Garden at the Coastal Maine Botanical Garden succeeds, largely, because its creators believed that if they could touch the inner child in themselves, then true children would enjoy it. And that is indeed a childlike faith, and that puts the Children’s Garden half way to heaven as far as I am concerned.

Happy Sunday.