Ground Cover June 2015 [Summer Edition]

Summer Edition June 2015 Dubuque Arboretum & Botanical Gardens is a non-profit organization supported by tax-exempt gifts and contributions. All gardens are maintained by volunteers. Every tree, shrub, plant and seed is gifted from arboretums and botanical gardens nurseries, growers and friends from all over the world. Mission Statement: To establish, preserve and maintain an arboretum and botanical garden to be a source of information, education, culture and beauty for all to know. No admission fee. Guided tours are available on request. Carts are also available for visitors with limited walking ability. Call the Visitors’ Center, 563.556.2100 for reservations. Fax: 563.556.2443 Email: [email protected] dubuquearboretum.net Garden Hours 1 April-31 October Daily, 7 a.m. to sunset Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays Check out our new website: www.dubuquearboretum.net Language of Flowers Inspires 2015 Season Some gardeners talk to their flowers, but this summer at the DABG the flowers are doing the talking! The theme for our 2015 display gardens is “Victorian Sentiments: Say It with Flowers,” reflecting the popular Victorian custom of communicating special meanings through flowers. To carry out the theme, each of the 16 annual beds next to the Visitor Center displays a different type of flower. A sign in each bed tells the common and botanical names of the flower as well as one of its Victorian meanings. The theme was inspired by The Language of Flowers, a novel by Vanessa Diffenbaugh that the Green Team enjoyed a couple of years ago. This year’s color scheme is pink, purple, and white, and the flowers on display include our old reliable begonias, vinca, salvia, snapdragons, zinnias, and marigolds as well as several less common types: sweet pea, cosmos, heliotrope, nicotiana, a verbena mix, an annual phlox, and a large-leafed purple coleus. The two circular arrangements in the entry bed are reminiscent of the old-fashioned Victorian bouquets called “tussie mussies.” Clusters of purple Victoria salvia are encircled by rows of pink vinca and edged with lavender ageratum. Instead of the traditional lace doily wrapped around the outside of a tussie mussie, our entry bouquets have backgrounds of white begonias. The lower McKay bed features purple salvia, pink begonias, and a ruffle of ageratum over a lacy petticoat of white alyssum. In the upper McKay Plaza garden, an ivory-colored pot with ornate handles (formerly a broken fountain resurrected from one of the sheds) serves as the centerpiece and features pink geraniums from the DABG collection. Purple salvia, pink vinca, and white angelonia complete that bed. The tradition of ascribing meanings to plants goes back to several ancient civilizations but had its heyday during the Victorian era (1837-1901) when it acquired the name “floriography.” In those times, when the outright expression of strong emotions was considered unseemly, a person could indicate his or her feelings by presenting a bouquet of flowers judiciously continued on page 7 1 November-31 March Office Hours: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays 1