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  • … home landscape due to their range of sizes and cultural adaptability. Some viburnums are noted for their fragrant flowers; most bear small fruit that may add visual interest. Many viburnums …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … directly from a greenhouse. Interplant between tulips and other spring flowering bulbs in fall for a spectacular spring display. The plants bulk up into tidy mounds before the worst of Chicago …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … home landscape due to their range of sizes and cultural adaptability. Some viburnums are noted for their fragrant flowers; most bear small fruit that may add visual interest. Many viburnums …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … June and extending into mid-September. This cultivar is stout stemmed and well branched making for a sturdy plant less prone to breakage in large containers and flower beds. A delight in the …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … watch or sleeping on a portable bed nearby. The image may appear bucolic, but more importantly for Rubinberg, it represents a crucial step on his path to recovery from post-traumatic stress … horticulturists and conservationists.” Rubinberg grew up in Skokie and went to basic training for the National Guard in June 2018. All his life he’d been part of a tight-knit Jewish … all the way back down the stairs [figuratively speaking]. After that, I barely left my room for a while.” It was Cooper, his service dog, who helped him find his way. Training Cooper gave …
    Type: Blog
  • … their impact. Invasive species spread widely as they out-compete local native species for resources like food, water, light, and space, and can eventually damage entire landscapes.   … woodland looks like,” said Kayri Havens, Ph.D., chief scientist of the Negaunee Institute for Plant Conservation Science and Action at the Chicago Botanic Garden. “It’s easy to assume the … as an ornamental plant and privacy hedge, common buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica) now accounts for 36 percent of all trees in the Chicago area .   Managing invasive species at the Garden With …
    Type: Blog
  • … lucky enough to see an oriole nest will most likely agree. It can take a week to ten days for the female to complete her nest. She’ll then lay three to seven pale eggs blotched with brown, which hatch in 11 to 14 days. The young remain in the nest for another 11 to 14 days, getting fed constantly by their parents, until they’re able to hop out … to early September, the orioles start singing again—often shorter songs—before they leave for winter vacation. Read a blog post on birding at the Garden …
    Type: Birding
  • … focused on photomorphogenesis, a plant’s response to light. She taught high school for a few years then returned to Howard where she became Head of the Botany department until 1976. She channeled her passion for plants into helping educators at all levels bring science and botany into the classroom … Farming 25 Acres , which is still embraced by farmers today. In an interview with Mother Earth News in 1982, Whatley referred to the clubs as the “lifeblood of the whole setup.” “It enables …
    Type: Blog
  • … of these companion plants focus on yellow, purple, blue, and chartreuse—excellent enhancements for the powerful pinks, reds, and whites of the five different varieties of flowering crabapples: … Wyman’, ‘Profusion’, and the Japanese flowering crabapple. These varieties have been chosen for their sequential bloom time; the long-lasting flower shows; the ornamental quality of the … growing at the Garden. Information from the Experts Proper Tree Planting Trees and Shrubs for Spring Color How to Espalier Crabapple Trees Apple Scab, Crabapple Tree Disease Diagnosing …
    Type: Walks
  • … they collect and study fossil plants. Sort through samples of fossil plant material to look for identifiable leaves, cones, and seeds. You’ll discover how this research helps unlock the …
    Type: Item Detail