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The good garden blog is about sharing garden inspiration and ideas from historic gardens around the world and some right next door.  Garden stories explore garden history, design, and the garden people behind famous and not-so-famous gardens.  My garden photographs span dozens of places across 5 continents.  Please join me in celebrating good garden design.

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Rhody fever

David April 21, 2016

It is hard not to fall in love with rhododendrons.  My dad filled our childhood garden with as many as he could get his hands on.  In 1964 Milton Walker captured the feeling well,  "To see thousands of [rhododendrons] growing superbly in a natural woodland setting was a sight never to be forgotten.”  His passion led him to create the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden in...

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In Gardenesque, Picturesque Tags Milton Walker, Rhododendron Species Garden, Federal Way, Washington, Rhododendron, Joseph Hooker, Frank Kingdon-Ward, John Champion, Pere Armand David
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Legend of the blue poppy

David May 12, 2015

I’ve just seen my first blue poppies at the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden!  Their color, a fluorescent blue, is so unusual that at first I thought that they were plastic.  The definition of simplicity, each flower just has 4 petals that frame a white pistil and a spray of golden anthers.

The Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden, located outside of Seattle in Federal Way, was founded in 1964 in order to preserve rhododendron from North America, Asia, Australia, and Europe, particularly important given the loss of natural habitat in many parts of the world.  In the US alone, over 20% of rhododendron species are facing extinction and this garden is the only botanical garden dedicated exclusively to preserving them.

Plant hunter Frank Kingdon-Ward

Plant hunter Frank Kingdon-Ward

Arranged in a picturesque setting along curving paths, this garden showcases 700 out of the world’s 1,000 rhododendron species.  And to complement the “rhody’s,” the garden also features companion plants.  During my visit last week it was one of these, the blue poppy, that caught my attention.  

Native to the high altitude Himalaya’s, the blue poppy is extremely rare.  So few had seen one that for a time some questioned whether it existed.

It requires moist well-drained soil in a partially shaded spot protected from the wind. A poppy plant will often die after their first flowering so growers recommend sacrificing the first year’s flowers for hopes of some in subsequent years.  And slugs love them.

Then we come to their unique color.  For starters, less than 10% of flowering plants have blue flowers.  According to David Lee, author of Nature’s Palette: The Science of Plant Color, “There is no true blue pigment in plants, so plants don’t have a direct way of making a blue color.  Plants tweak… pigments to make blue flowers… through a variety of modifications involving pH shifts and mixing of pigments, molecules and ions.”

The flower’s history is tied to plant hunter Frank Kingdon-Ward, the first to export a viable seed. In 1913 he wrote In the Land of the Blue Poppies: Travels of a Naturalist in Eastern Tibet, “up here, at 17,000 feet, springing from amongst huge blocks of grey stone, I found the glorious Cambridge blue poppywort, one of the most beautiful flowers in existence…”  Through his many books he takes us along on adventures to some of the most remote parts of the planet.

Blue poppies bloom for about 3 weeks, so hurry out to the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden to catch them while you can.  And don’t miss Blue Poppy Day at the garden this Saturday.

 
In the Land of the Blue Poppy (1913)

In the Land of the Blue Poppy (1913)

Photo from book. "Waterfall at T'eng-yueh, West Yunnan"

Photo from book. "Waterfall at T'eng-yueh, West Yunnan"

 
In Gardenesque, Picturesque Tags Rhododendron Species Garden, Seattle, Washington, Frank Kingdon-Ward, Blue poppy, plant hunters, plant ideas, Himalaya Blue Poppy, David Lee, Federal Way
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