Queens Botanical Garden Blog


What to See and Do at QBG in May by Queens Botanical Blogger

The glorious month of May has arrived and QBG is bustling with blooms and activities!

The Kaltman Fragrance Walk’s lilacs are covered in heavenly scented blooms, while the Rose Garden is full of flower buds just about to open. The Woodland Garden’s trees have all leafed out, and shade-loving wildflowers like Solomon’s seal and bleeding hearts decorate the garden paths. Watch for other floral beauties around QBG like lupines, California poppies and bearded iris.

Enjoy a walk through our bucolic 39 acres and be sure to take part in the great activities planned this month – the Children’s Activity Table on Saturdays and Sundays (sponsored by TD Bank), discounted admission as part of National Public Gardens Day (May 11) and New York State Museums Week (starting May 31), plus a Native Plant Tour for NYC Wildflower Week (May 19).

And don’t miss the last weeks of photographer Audrey Gottlieb’s show “Vignettes from the Queens Project” and the artist’s talk also on the 19th.

Folks from the terrific NYC Compost Project in Queens are also busy – catch them at QBG on May 5 at Mama’s Expo, at QBG for a Composting Workshop in Mandarin (May 5), and on May 6 at the Green for Queens Earth Day Fair at the Central YM&YWHA.

Get all the details on our Events Calendar.

Remember Mother’s Day is May 13 and QBG is the perfect place to bring Mom for a relaxing afternoon. Even better, give her a gift that will last all year – membership to QBG!

P.S.  We had a great time at Arbor Fest on April 29 and thank all for visiting!  Check out the photos on the Arbor Fest Photo Gallery.

Photos: H. David Stein, Shari Romar



Spring Tree Care Tips by Queens Botanical Blogger

Welcome to spring! City trees are blooming and leafing out in parks and tree beds alike, bringing much-needed bursts of color to our landscape.

Now is a great time to offer your trees a bit of tender loving care. There are several things you can do to help your tree out, especially in this unnaturally dry and warm spring we are experiencing.

Young street trees (those which have lived less than 5 years in a tree bed) are in the most danger of suffering from lack of water. Keeping the soil moist will ensure that tree roots grow downward and establish themselves in the tree beds.

To prepare the soil for watering, remove any remaining mulch which may have collected animal waste and other pollution throughout the winter. Remove any trash as well. Take a cultivator or other small gardening tool and loosen up the soil throughout the bed, being careful to watch for roots that may be just under the soil. Loosening the soil is an essential step to making sure the water stays in the tree bed and doesn’t drain off into the sewer system.

Adding compost to the tree bed will help the soil retain moisture and provide air space for tree roots to grow. Work no more than an inch or two of compost in first 2 inches of soil. Either vermicompost (from and indoor composting bin) or compost from an outdoor bin or garden store are great additions to a tree bed. If mulch is available, add 1-3 inches of mulch over the loosened soil, maintaining a space of 6 inches around the trunk of the tree free of mulch. The mulch will help retain water in the bed as well and prevent it from evaporating on warm, dry days.

Now, the tree is ready to be watered! Young trees need 15-20 gallons of water a week, all at once. Slowly pour the water into the tree bed (or use a hose on a low-flow setting) until the bed is saturated. Pouring the water in the “moat” area near the trunk created by the mulch is one way to capture water in the tree bed. Let the water absorb into the soil before adding more to keep water from running off onto the street and sidewalk.

Example of a tree bed moat

Example of a tree bed moat

Spring is also a great time to shape up your trees, literally. For decades, TreesNY has been training New Yorkers to safely (and legally) prune NYC street trees. Pruning helps keep trees healthy, safe, and beautiful. The Citizen Pruner course in Queens starts in May and takes place in Long Island City. To find out more and register, please visit treesny.org. If you have trees that need pruning on your block, you can also call TreesNY to alert Citizen Pruners in your neighborhood. If trees in your neighborhood are posing a danger, please submit a pruning request through 311.



The New Intergenerational Garden at QBG by Queens Botanical Blogger

The QBG Blogger could write a post with details about this new and very exciting program, but we’ll defer to the expert — the program’s coordinator, Maureen Regan.  Check out the interview on New York 1 News, and be sure to stop by this Saturday’s Open House from 10am to 2pm.

Intergenerational Garden at Queens Botanical Garden



QBG’s Tasty Tidbits — QQ Cafe & Bakery by Queens Botanical Blogger

Hello and good day Garden lovers!

With spring fully roused from her slumber, now is the perfect time to splash in the warmth of the Garden, and take a soul-easing stroll through the Fragrance Walk or Woodland Garden.  And when your mind starts considering lunch or a snack, why not enjoy one of our local eateries?

Many QBG staffers take a quick walk up Main Street to a local favorite — QQ Cafe & Bakery (42-57 Main Street).  Dishing up some of the best pork buns, dumplings, and cakes around, it’s perfect for a quick, inexpensive meal.  Our staff chow connoisseurs particularly recommend the pickled cabbage bun!

QQ Cafe & Bakery



What to See and Do at QBG in April by Queens Botanical Blogger

Spring is in full bloom at QBG!  This is the perfect time to enjoy all the beauty of the season, and there’s no better place than right here!

The list of flowers in bloom is enormous but some highlights include crabapple and cherry trees, tulips, grape hyacinth, daffodils, magnolias, dogwoods and eastern redbuds.

Our bees are…well, busy bees!  Stop by the Bee Garden and watch them buzzing in and out of the hives to collect pollen.  Just as busy are the birds – our robins are looking for nest sites, the red-winged blackbirds trilling all around the Meadow, and migrating warblers are catching a snack as they continue their journey.  Don’t forget to keep your eyes open for our charming Italian wall lizards as they warm themselves in the sun.

You can be just as busy at the Garden too!  The QBG Store is stocked with great treats and gifts, and stop by the Children’s Activity Table on Saturdays from 1 to 4pm where kids can create a take-home treat.  We hope you can make it for the Intergenerational Garden Open House on April 14, and be sure to mark your calendars for our 2nd Annual Arbor Fest on April 29 – an afternoon filled with family fun!



Meet our New MillionTreesNYC Civic Corps Member by Queens Botanical Blogger

We’re so pleased to welcome Neil Barrett to QBG as our new Civic Corps member working on MillionTreesNYC.  Neil offers us a glimpse into his backround below — or better yet, meet him in person at on our our MillionTreesNYC workshops!

Since arriving from Cornwall, England in October 2010, adapting to life in New York has required significant readjustment as I’ve looked to find both my feet and professional niche. However, when the opportunity to participate in the NYC Civic Corps program presented itself, I immediately recognized the potential of the program and grabbed the opportunity with both hands.

Aside from helping to speed up my integration into my new home, the Civic Corps program – grounded as it is in public service – also allows me to interact and develop relationships with the residents of New York, many of whom I probably wouldn’t have otherwise met. I find this aspect of the program especially appealing as it enables me to interface with those who, like me, are seeking to reconcile their personal environmental values through social engagement and civic participation.

My academic background includes a bachelor’s degree in Business Information Systems from the University West of England, a Trinity College London, Cert. TESOL, and a Post Graduate Diploma in Environmental Decision Making from the UK’s Open University. While my academic goals are currently on hold, I plan to resume my studies upon completion of the Civic Corps program with a view to completing my Master’s degree in Urban Ecology.  Additionally, my work with the Civic Corps program at with the Parks department at Central Forestry requires an understanding of urban forestry and, to develop my understanding of this area, I’ve am also studying to become ISA (International Society of Arborists) certified, something which I am sure will benefit my wider MillionTreesNYC community outreach work.

In the meantime, I remain both excited and committed to continuing and extending the outreach work of MillionTreesNYC. From my base at Queens Botanical Garden, my primary focus will be to extend the MillionTreesNYC message and help educate New Yorkers about the many benefits a healthy urban tree canopy can bring to the city. Additionally, my work will also involve hosting tree care workshops and teaching basic tree stewardship skills. Through this work, I hope to develop and sustain tree stewardship networks, so that individuals and groups can then share their skills and knowledge with others, so that New York’s street trees remain strong, healthy and prosper well into the future.



New Street Trees for Flushing! by Queens Botanical Blogger

We’re so happy to welcome our new residents — lovely street trees thanks to MillionTreesNYC!  Interested in helping your local greenery?  Find out more about our tree care workshops – great fun for the whole family and neighborhood.



A Seasonal Recipe from QBG by Queens Botanical Blogger
November 2, 2011, 9:17 am
Filed under: cooking, family activities, Queens, Recipes

Fall greetings garden lovers!

Here’s a great recipe from Mary, a beloved member of the QBG family, packed with delicious apples.

So swing by the Farmers Market located at QBG,  Fridays from 8:30am to 4pm, and grab some gorgeous apples to try this scrumptious treat at home!

Recipe:   Apple Walnut Supreme Cake

What you’ll need

½ cup chopped walnuts                                                                                                                  

4 cups coarsely chopped apples

1 ¾ cups sugar

2 eggs

½ cup vegetable oil

2 tsp vanilla

2 cups sifted flour

2 tsp baking soda

2 tsp cinnamon

What to do

-Combine apples and sugar. Set aside for 45 minutes until apples are nice and juicy.

-Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

-Add nuts to the apples.

-Mix flour and baking soda.

-In a large bowl mix eggs, oil, vanilla, cinnamon and beat for 1 minute.

-Add the other ingredients to the egg mixture, alternating between the apple mixture and the flour mixture, stirring well.

-Spoon the cake mixture into a baking pan 13” x 9” x 2”.

-Bake for 40- 45 minutes



A Day in the Life of a Street Tree: Tree Deliveries by Shari Romar

Ever wonder how that beautiful, young, new street tree came to be planted on your street? Keep reading for an insider’s look on the MillionTreesNYC tree planting process by Chelsea Clarke, Queens MillionTreesNYC Stewardship Corps Outreach Coordinator!

As we transition from rainy April weather to warmer May temperatures, the planting season is well underway for the urban foresters working at the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation. Spring tree planting typically begins mid-March and continues until late May, or until all the trees are in the ground. But where do all these trees come from? Surely, they don’t just sprout from seed and grow to be 12 feet tall in a day! No, these trees are grown in nurseries for about 7 years, until their diameter at breast height (DBH) measures at least 2.5 inches, and they are deemed capable of surviving in the harsh urban environment of New York City.

In early March, carefully selected trees from nurseries in Maryland, Long Island, Buffalo and sometimes as far as Oregon arrive in New York City on semi-trucks. For easy handling during shipment and planting, a portion of the tree’s roots are removed, and then the remaining mass of roots and soil is wrapped up in burlap and contained by wire cages. This burlap package of roots at the base of the tree is called the root ball. The tree’s branches are tied up with string, much like a Christmas tree, in preparation to load it onto the truck. Trees from Maryland and Long Island are tied securely down onto the back bed of a large semi-truck. If the trees are travelling from as far as Oregon, they will be loaded onto a refrigerated truck.

Trees ready for shipping

Take note of the trees' root balls, and their tied branches.

Trees on truck

Trees tied neatly and securely on the semi-truck.

Once the trees make the journey by truck to NYC, they are delivered to various storage yards all over the city.  The pictures you see here were taken at a storage yard in East New York, Brooklyn.  They trees are then unloaded from the truck using a special machine, grouped by species, and stored in the yard until their new sidewalk home is ready for them, usually just a couple weeks later.

Tree and machine

This handy machine easily slides under the root ball of a tree and lifts it from the truck...

Trees

...to the ground, among trees of the same species, creating a forest of burlap and root balls.

Trees with orange tags

Trees are marked with colorful ribbons to help workers identify the species before planting. Ribbons are removed after planting.

Keep a look out for new trees planted in your neighborhood this spring! Check for the orange bracelet that says SPRING 2011. Don’t see any trees in your neighborhood? Be sure to look for a white spray-painted “T” or the milliontreesnyc.org stencil on the sidewalk that indicate you might be receiving a tree this spring. To request trees for your neighborhood, call 311, and be sure to specify an address.

MillionTreesNYC orange bracelet

Each MillionTreesNYC tree has a colorful bracelet that identifies the year it was planted. Check the young trees on your block to see when they were planted!

MillionTreesNYC stencil

MillionTreesNYC.org Stencil spray-painted using water-based marking chalk.

About the Author:  Hi, my name is Chelsea Clarke, and I am an AmeriCorps member working as the Queens MillionTreesNYC Stewardship Corps Outreach Coordinator at Queens Botanical Garden. I work to set-up Street Tree Care Workshops at the Garden and in Queens neighborhoods where MillionTreesNYC has planted new street trees. Along with the NYC Compost Project in Queens and the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation (NYCDPR), we teach these workshops to inform New York City residents (people like you) how to properly care for your new street trees to ensure that they grow tall and strong to provide you and your community with all the benefits that trees can! Not only do I offer these workshops, but I also work with the NYCDPR at the Central Forestry office to gain insight into the entire tree planting process. Stay tuned for more blog posts from me in the next couple months about tree care and street tree planting processes, from tree procurement to stump removal.



Eco-friendly fall leaf disposal with Project LeafDrop by Queens Botanical Blogger

Project Leaf Drop in association with the Western Queens Compost Initiative welcomes the community to bring their bagged leaves without branches, trash, or wet yard waste, to participating sites on specific dates in October and November.

Project LeafDrop (nycleaves.org) is a coalition of community and botanical gardens, environmental groups, City agencies and community partners dedicated to directing fallen leaves from the trash bin to the compost bin, giving New Yorkers the chance to recycle residential leaves into compost and keep them out of our waste stream. Bagged leaves left curbside are sent to the landfill along with everyday garbage.  Making a difference starts with you!

For More information including dropoff sites and dates visit  http://nycleaves.org/




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