Philadelphia Flower Show Aloes
odyssey3
6 years ago
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mesembs
6 years agoodyssey3
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Philadelphia Flower Show: not a lot of Hoyas
Comments (11)Yes, I think one of those was a motoskei. But looks like they halved the hoya display. When I was there, there wasn't just 4. there were about 8 hoyas on display - most of them on the table in my first picture, one or two were elsewhere. I only took individual pics of the most impressive ones, There was a curtisii which looked exactly like a big box H. curtisii would look. And I didn't photograph a plain carnosa - it was a healthy shiny plant, but you know, it's a carnosa. :-) The only type of Hoya for sale I saw was H. carnosa Tricolor aka "Krimson Queen" - 3' or 4' pots for $4 or $5, with discounts if you buy any 3 plants in those small pots....See MorePhiladelphia flower show any aquaponics seminars?
Comments (2)We were at the Philly Flower Show last weekend and unfortunately there is no mention of hydroponics. This years show was an Art and Flowers theme and, in my opinion, has really broken from the traditional gardening I had come to expect from the show. It amazes me that there has never (to my knowledge) been a hydroponics display either from an exhibitor or a vendor. It seems like they want to ignore the fact that for the world to feed the masses hydroponics represents the future. Maybe it's the old thinking that all people who grow hydroponically are growing weed but I do not think hydroponics is getting the good press it deserves and it is time some organization steps up and starts changing some old assumptions....See MorePhiladelphia Flower Show: "Where Is It Headed?"
Comments (40)Molie: thanks for posting those pictures, becaiuse now I'll have some reference points: Sorry to disappoint you folks, but here's the simple answer to the question I posed in this post : "The Philadelphia Flower Show - Where Is It Headed?" "Down The Tubes". . . Rather than just a snarky observation, let me be more specific: look at the first photo of Molie's photos in the reply just above. This was the MASSIVE structure that confronted you at the entrance: three giant picture frames ("ARTiculture", get it?) interspersed with GIANT mobiles (made of plant material, but not noticeably so) which were meant to resemble the work of Alexander Calder - who must have been thrashing in his grave. Given that there are so many of the REAL Calder sculptures and mobiles in the Philadelphia area, why the need for tacky imitations? It gets worse: the frames and mobiles are awash in ever-changing colored lights, (rather like a rock show) which renders the original colors of the mobiles pointless; every hour-on-the-hour, raucous music blares through the space (It was deafening, and you could not escape it) as four aerialists descend, suspended on cables from the rafters, and proceeded to twist and pose next to the mobiles - "living" mobiles, I guess? At most shows in the past that I've attended, people cluster around the entry exhibit and marvel at it . . . in this instance, most folks were moving away as quickly as possible. To be fair, some exhibitors really took the theme - ARTiculture - to heart, and there were a few, a VERY few, successful attempts at mirroring art through display; one of my favorite bulb purveyors, Jacques Armand, a 23-year veteran, captured Mondrian's style perfectly with crisp, single-colored squares and rectangles of flowering bulbs, laid out in a huge rectangle of grass. The huge farm-and-forest landscape by Stoney Bank Nurseries showed you living models of so many of the Wyeth family's paintings. . .it was mesmerizing, and wisely co-sponsered by the Brandywine Museum, where so many of their paintings reside, outside Philadelphia. But these were the exceptions: everywhere else it was flash-and-glam. . .I find it hard to believe that people will actually pay good money for some of garish, over-the-top stuff that so many of these "event planners" and fancy florists put out (they outnumbered the nursery exhibits for the first time ever!) The layout was a nightmare - gone were the cleverly designed pathways that guided you along from one aisle of displays to the next - now, it was a disorganized jumble. a logical path abruptly ends and you're forced left or right, or around a sudden obstacle. We found ourselves missing things and having to constantly back- track. Some of the competitive judging has been lifted out of it's longtime, logical home in the central Horticourt (where ALL the judged material used to reside) and scattered amongst the displays in the main hall. It took my friend and I a few hours to realize WHY all the disarray and confusion - they were trying to hide the fact that there was so much LESS there than usual. Our guess was about 25% fewer exhibitors than normal. . . and the other way they filled unused space: this year, for the first time, we had not one, not two, but THREE cars on the display floor! And the completely re-designed Market Place had so much more space. . . because they had expanded it onto the main floor so that it now fills nearly 50% of the entire show! And the long-sacred rule that only products relating to horticulture could be sold - GONE! - you could find all manner of gadgets, gizmos, cooking utensils, insurance, automobiles, alongside fewer than usual plant people and garden supplies. Our favorite seed shop, carrying a dozen of the best, and most unique seed companies - GONE, a piece of history. And the garden bookshop, a perennial favorite - gone, gone, gone. . . And where they subtly slipped in just two of them a couple of years ago, there are now 6 - SIX, count 'em - stand-up bars for beer and mixed drinks. To cap off my day, two friends arrived about 5:00pm to catch the last four hours of the show; they're a young couple, eager to see the show I've talked about so much over the years (and I'm helping them create the gardens at their new home) . . . we met up, I gave them a map of the show with a few exhibits circled which I hoped might give them ideas for their new garden, and my friend and I left them to it. My friend and I then went home 2½ hours EARLY, something we have NEVER done before! The next day, I had dinner with the young couple: they thought the show was a waste of time (Susie said she learned more and had more fun just going to nurseries with me!) and they would rather have spent the $54. admission, plus parking and the babysitter, on a good dinner out. . . I really didn't want to post this review, because it depresses me even in the re-telling. . .but, hey, things are what they are, and we just move on. If anyone's interested in books "about" the Philadelphia Flower Show in it's hey-day, I have a couple to recommend. Off to "SpringFest", the much smaller flower and garden show in northwestern New Jersey that I posted about last year. . .it, too, has been slowly changing, but it still has the "feel" of an indoor country fair, and the distinct advantage of being held in heated greenhouses. . .and we're supposed to get snow flurries the day we're going this week, which will make it seem TWICE as nice! Carl...See MorePhiladelphia Flower Show, 2015
Comments (7)Well, Disney obviously had a big stake in this year's show, but the principal sponsors were still PNC Bank and Subaru. . .and, no, there were practically no references to classic movies, save in a few of the individual competitions, i.e. such as Beach Blanket Bingo in the seaside gardens contest. After a short while, we just sort of ignored the thematic concept and thoroughly enjoyed some of the great exhibits. Good news for next year's show: the theme will be National Parks & Forests, and will be co-sponsored by the National Parks Service. Carl...See MoreRob Blomquist
6 years agoJeff (5b)
6 years agolast modified: 6 years agoLaura F (z9FL)
6 years agoodyssey3
6 years agolast modified: 6 years agoodyssey3
6 years agolast modified: 6 years agolaticauda
6 years agoLaura F (z9FL)
6 years agoodyssey3
6 years agolast modified: 6 years ago
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