Anna Maria Locke

flowers

indoor spring: 2013 Chicago Flower and Garden Show

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Before I share more pretty flower pictures, I'd like to do my blogger duty of acknowledging that Google Reader is going away. I've been a daily GR user since 2009 and I just can't believe them when they say that "usage is declining"! I'm usually supportive of Google's world takeover mission but I don't like how they're manipulating everyone into using Google+. 

Well, anyway, if you're a Google Reader user you've probably found an alternative by now. I've started using Feedly and I love it so far. It takes a little bit longer to load on my computer sometimes but I think it's actually better than GR in that it's easier to organize your blogs and read one at a time.

Another popular option (especially for fellow bloggers) seems to be Bloglovin'.
If you're a Bloglovin fan you can follow me by clicking the link below!


Ok, on to the post!


This weekend Ben and I ventured downtown to check out the 2013 Chicago Flower & Garden Show at Navy Pier. My uncle's bulb company Doornbosch Bros. is responsible for the spectacular tulip displays and since we now live in the city we had to take the opportunity to visit him and my cousins at their bulb booth and experience the gorgeous colors!
 

Since it seems like we are stuck in a perpetual Narnia-style winter here in Chicago, it was SO refreshing to get to see some flowers blooming. If you've read my blog for any stretch of time you know that I love taking photographs of flowers, so I left Ben on his own to wander around the exhibition hall while I spent a good amount of time geeking out and taking tulip portraits!



Each of the 8,000 bulbs were individually planted in a little pot last fall, left in a cooler to simulate winter, "forced" to grow and bloom in a greenhouse last month, and then painstakingly planted in these raised beds!


The hundreds of fellow spring-starved people at the show were all magnetically drawn to the spectacular tulip displays. 









It was an interesting challenge to photograph flowers under harsh spotlights!



Pink tulips are my favorite, can you tell?


The tulips with feathered stripes are called Rembrandt tulips and were highly prized back in the Tulipomania days of the 1600's. Originally the color variations were caused by a virus but growers have developed a way to mimic the coloring patterns in healthy bulbs.





I like hyacinths better than tulips because they smell so good!




If you're interested in planting tulips in your yard, look for large bulbs from an authentic Dutch supplier. Planting season for tulips and other early spring flowers (daffodils, hyacinths, crocus) is in the late fall (October/early Nov) before the first frost. Plant bulbs in clusters of at least 12 for the most dramatic effect! You can plant summer flowers right now. Here are some more planting tips.

I hope you enjoyed this glimpse of spring! Maybe someday we'll see some flowers growing outdoors too...I say as it actually snows outside.

Do you have a favorite flower? 
(Tulips are nice but I really love big fluffy summer blooms like peonies and dahlias the best).

Have you ever tried planting bulbs?

Chihuly at Meijer Gardens

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The other day I realized that I never shared the most gorgeous pictures from my little Michigan trip last month.
Ben and I took a daytrip to Grand Rapids on a hot and muggy day to visit the Frederik Meijer Gardens, an enormous botanical and sculpture garden. 

This summer there was a special exhibit featuring Dale Chihuly, an incredibly talented glass artist.
Chihuly specializes in blown glass sculptures that have an organic look and feel to them, like some sort of freaky flower or creature you might unexpectedly come across in nature.
The exhibit was breathtaking. You would be wandering around the expansive gardens and lawns and turn the corner to find another exhibit of technicolor glass. It was so cool!
 
[each swirl is a separate piece, numbered and mounted on a metal frame]
Oh, and the actual flowers and botanical part of the gardens is equally gorgeous.

They even have a "carnivorous plant" exhibit! The biology nerd in me was super excited, but it is basically just a little room filled with pitcher plants.
 
A couple of my favorite sculptures...
"The American Horse"
enormous
The alphabet people 

And I think Ben's (and maybe my) favorite part of the whole place was the Children's Garden. ;)
It has a special secret entrance....
A flowing model of the Great Lakes system

and wooden boardwalks and treehouses in the forest.


Overall, I would definitely recommend a trip to Meijer Gardens if you are ever in the Grand Rapids vicinity. They have different seasonal exhibits and even concerts in an outdoor amphitheater. It's definitely one of those places where you can wander around all day and feel like you are in a different enchanted world.



May flowers

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Happy June!

Late May/Early June is my absolute favorite time of year.
Everything is lush and green before the heat of the summer zaps the life out of the world, and everything somehow seems so much better with the prospect of the whole summer spread out in front of you.
Even when late May decides to be 90 degrees and a million percent humidity, I am not complaining. After all, soon it will be 100 degrees and two million percent humidity. Good thing I am headed out west before then, muahaha.

All the late spring flowers are pretty much fading but last week I still managed to do a little flower portrait shoot in the backyard.

The perk of being part of a Dutch flower business family is that you get your own personal botanical garden.
The perk of being the oldest child is that once you grow up and move away you are pretty much exempt from all the yardwork.