Our wonderful visit to Susquehanna State Park, Maryland.
Our wonderful visit to Susquehanna State Park, Maryland.
The last days of Mid-Fall in our Region, this beautiful Watershed in Southern New Jersey has Atlantic White Cedar, Ilex, Magnolia virginiana, lots of Red Maple, and grasses and sedges along the way among many other species of plants, birds and insects, all in front of a back-round of white sand. There is a canoe dock here, and we did not bring the canoe, but Keeba the Dog loved her exciting walk! Only 40 minutes from The City Of Philadelphia!
Next time we bring the Canoe!
The Garden in The Woods was a place we had heard about for years, and on this fine day we made the visit. A very pleasant afternoon was in store for us! This is a native plant preserve, championing the flora of our natural lands, beginning with a well-appointed parking lot, (which is a great place to showcase the formal use of native plants), and ending with a store of native plants for sale. This is an unforgettable landmark giving us visitors the continental sense-of-place so needed in the cultivated plant landscape dominated by the monolithic list of alien species in the  surrounding Boston suburbs. Here an alternative aesthetic is carefully cultivated and presented, with a bookshop for the data, info, inspiration and roadmaps, a native plant sale to sell you the actual products, and a series of formal gardens to present this alternative landscape to the visitor.
There are signs that tell us visitors about the native plants, and help us get acquainted to them.
As this next picture demonstrates, the native plants attract the beautiful native wildlife, such as this dragonfly.
At the plant sale we bought a blooming Turks Cap Lily and a Trillium sulcatum, which was marked down because the plant had gone dormant and was just a pot with dirt in it. We will see what happens next spring!
Many of the plants in the gardens can be seen in the woods and meadows in and around Monson, Massachusetts (where we were staying) and surrounding New England. Here they were arranged in a a garden setting where varying communities of associated plants were grouped together in a condensed format. Above, Isabelle photographs blooming Black Cohosh.
The well-appointed facilities made this place a very pleasant and relaxing place to enjoy the plants.
And every opportunity to learn at every turn! This is a great place to take gardening notes. We spent an hour and barely moved down the trails!
A great place to get gardening ideas, especially for that native plant garden!
The Bee-Balm, Monarda didyma was in full bloom, a great hummingbird plant.
The Carex pensylvanica , Pennsylvania Sedge lawn was impressive to us, being that we have also created a Pennsylvania sedge lawn in our backyard, which we mow like any other lawn. This native sedge is also very ornamental if left un-mowed as well.
The board-and-batten shed with the green roof was a charming addition to the show. Would have loved to see how this roof was put together, would imagine there is a plastic membrane below all those plants. Thats a garden shed, or is it a shed garden then?
Gotta have that sense of humor! This contained the Asiatic Bittersweet Celastrus orbiculatus, a dreadful vine pushed by the horticulture industrial complex long enough that it was planted widely and has wreaked havoc all across New England. Many unsuspecting buyers were lured with the promise of bright red berries on the vine. While some non -native plants can take over 100 years to become invasive, this one wasted no time at all and immediately began overtaking everything in its path.
Another charming path through the gardens..
The native irises.
A great section featuring the Pitcher plants.
The fruiting Mayapples in the Natural area of the garden.