Showing posts with label Italian Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Italian Garden. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

A Sea of Flowers

Each growing season sees a veritable sea of colorful foliage and blooming plants added to our gardens. More than 10,000 are planted each spring in the Italian Garden alone -- and that is only one of the garden areas we maintain. Many of the plants we add each season are tender annuals and perennials. These are plants that cannot survive our bitter and snowy winters and so we overwinter some in our greenhouses but others we buy or grow each season to be planted when the chance of frost is past.

Italian Garden
More than 10,000 colorful annuals are planted each spring to
create the floral carpet patterns in the Italian Garden
We also plant and maintain a wide range of hardy perennial plants throughout our park. These are plants that can survive the cold winters to sprout up anew as winter looses its grip and warm days return. These include a wide range of different looks, habits, and blooming times. Some favorite perennials include roses, peonies, coneflowers, hibiscus, balloon flowers, water lilies, tulips, daffodils, lenten rose, bloodroot, and more. 

While these plants do not need special winter care to survive, they do require care throughout the growing season to keep them lush and beautiful. They will also occasionally need to be replaced as the lifespan of green plants vary widely from peonies that can span over generations (they can live to be a 100 years or more) to items like clary sage that is a biennial and dies after blooming in its second year.

Old Fashioned Garden
The Old Fashioned Garden features a wide variety of blooming
perennial plants from late spring through fall.
Our Rose Garden provides not only another sea of blooms but it perfumes the air once the roses start to bloom in mid to late June. This garden features 2500 white, red, and pink roses -- Mrs. Thompson's favorite colors. Botanically speaking, all roses are perennial shrubs as they have a main woody trunk even though most don't refer to them this way. (Only specific types of roses are generally referred to as "shrub roses.") Like all such woody plants, careful pruning is needed for best shape, health, and blooms plus other care throughout the season is required to maintain the best health and showy display. 

Rose Garden
Over 2500 rose plants are featured in our Rose Garden
Besides the flowers in our nine historic gardens, color and floral delights are all throughout the site in small corner gardens, containers, and in our arboretum. A changing tapestry of color and shapes greets every Sonnenberg guest every day.

Tulips at Sonnenberg
Spring bulbs add bright color 

While we operate in cooperation with New York State, we are not funded by the State. All gardening needs at Sonnenberg -- and there are many -- are funded through the efforts of our nonprofit organization. Your donation will help to keep the flowers blooming and growing at Sonnenberg for years to come. To make your gift, click the donate button below.



"Happiness will grow if you plant the seeds of love in the garden of hope 
with compassion and care."
- Debasish Mridha

Friday, November 18, 2016

Restoration - A Work in Progress

Preservation, renovation, and restoration efforts at Sonnenberg Gardens is an ever on-going activity as the estate features many structures, statues, and gardens each in need of specialized care. Over the last ten years, $4 million dollars of improvements have been made. Some improvements, like new roofing or statue cleaning, may go largely unnoticed while other work, like this year's Palm House restoration in our greenhouse complex, is hard to miss.

One of the next items slated for restoration is the "Glorietta" in our Italian Garden. The Glorietta is a Garden Folly which is an eccentric or extravagant structure created as a garden or landscape decoration. The Glorietta is one of our most unique and interesting garden pieces and can be seen below.


William Hornaday in his book Masterpieces of Garden Making, published in 1917, has this to say about the Glorietta:
At the southwestern corner of the garden there rises a light and airy white marble summer house, with a domed canopy of iron grille work. I do not know what to call that feature, precisely; but it was imported from Italy, and it is the particular long-distance architectural feature of this garden. In one sense it is an informality; for it is a conspicuous side effect, balanced by nothing. Its real purpose is to carry a strong impression of artistic value clear down the length of the garden, and into its most remote corner.
Age and weather have been hard on the century-old carved marble and wrought iron components of the Glorietta. It is in need of specialized and expensive conservation care. These detailed images show some of the unique design elements as well as examples of the damage the years have caused. 

Sonnenberg Glorietta

Column Base Detail

Column Capital Detail

Reverse View

Ironwork Dome

While we operate in cooperation with New York State, we are not funded by the State. All operational needs and restoration activities at Sonnenberg are funded through the efforts of our nonprofit organization, Your donation will go far in helping to preserve this and other historic structures at Sonnenberg which are irreplaceable treasures. To make your gift, click the donate button below.



Thursday, February 4, 2016

Neptune Gets a Facelift

Due to a conservation grant award from the Greater Hudson Heritage Network, last year we were able to do some work on the Neptune fountain in our Italian Garden. If you are unfamiliar with the fountain, it is the focal point for the our iconic Italian Garden. The sculpture is of Neptune with a sea creature and it is centrally placed on the edge of a large water feature. Neptune is holding a creature between his legs and left hand while his right hand is raised, clutching a club-like object with which he appears to be thrashing the creature between his legs. Seasonally, water spurts from the mouth of the creature into a basin below Neptune’s feet. Historically the basin was surrounded by three carved, oversized sea-shells on the water side but these shells have been removed from the fountain at some time in the past.

The conservation work mostly consisted of removing mineral and biological deposits that had built up on the statue - see the images below for the before and after shots.

A huge thanks goes out to the Greater Hudson Heritage Network for allowing us to help preserve the most prominent and probably recognizable of our statuary collection!

Historic View of the Fountain/Statue:


 Before Treatment:



After Treatment: