I don't remember what all I purchased there, but the two things that stick in my mind are my 'Sahohime' Tree Peony and my 'Clear Sky' Passiflora, both purchased from the Lowe's Greenhouse (not the national chain) vendor booth. I have both of these yet today; in fact, they are thriving.
This is a great way to start out the active gardening season. It's like going on a Parade of Homes tour - you want to come home and try to implement so many things you saw that you liked for your own gardens.
Several home and garden and flower shows later, and with much more horticultural experience and knowledge under my belt, I didn't expect to be blown away a second time when we attended this year's rendition of the Cleveland Show, but that's just what happened.
The theme for this year's show was "Rhythm & Hues." From the moment we stepped into the ticketing entrance, where giant floral specimens in test tube vases formed the musical notes on the staff...
...all the way through to the theme gardens...
... we experienced the presence of music interpreted through plants and flowers in a variety of creative ways.
It was at this point that I heard from Kim (blackswamp_girl), and learned that we would not be meeting up today as we'd planned. She had a sick puppy and had to take her to the vet. Thankfully, Coco is going to be okay, and while I was disappointed that I didn't get to see Kim, we made plans to get together when she's home in July, home being about twenty minutes from my house! I invited her to come see my garden and she is going to do that, so I look forward to our meeting!
Mom and I ate lunch there, then continued our journey through the show. In this same building, there were floral arrangements that were meant to interpret different aspects of music --

Though the show is only held every two years, a trip to the Botanical Gardens themselves are worth at least a yearly visit. Woodland walks as well as the theme gardens are overflowing with natural beauty interspersed with planned displays. You can easily spend the day enjoying what the gardens have to offer.
When we walked into that part of the garden, Amelia was enjoying the fountain on this very hot day and several people were also enjoying her enjoying it. Squeals of delight and splashing around in her birthday suit created much conversation and smiles among the adults, and some of us wished we could do what she was doing. One woman, who shall remain nameless, did not share the wish to 'return to nature' with the rest of us, but it wasn't me!
It was fun to see the child-sized features of the Children's Garden and also to watch the kids partaking of the many opportunities relating to nature.
The Hershey Children's Garden was the first public children's garden in the United States, opening in 1999. It's very much a hands-on place and this part of the CBG alone is worth the price of admission if you have children. As you enter, you will see this quote impressed into the concrete:
"Every child should have mud pies, grasshoppers, water-bugs, tadpoles, frogs, and mud-turtles, elderberries, wild strawberries, acorns, chestnuts, trees to climb, brooks to wade in, water-lilies, woodchucks, bats, bees, butterflies, various animals to pet, hayfields, pine-cones, rocks to roll, sand, snakes, huckleberries, and hornets; and any child who has been deprived of these has been deprived of the best part of his education."
~ Luther Burbank, 1920
~ Luther Burbank, 1920
I'm sure there were many aspects of the Flower Show that we missed, including the various seminars, but we still were quite happy having made the 200-mile trip and we'll undoubtedly attend the next show in 2009.
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