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Author Topic: Log from Denver Botanic Gardens  (Read 3404 times)

Maggi Young

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Log from Denver Botanic Gardens
« on: September 02, 2008, 08:43:27 PM »
Dear Friends, I have often pointed you in the direction of the website of the Denver Botanic Garden, to marvel at the many wonders there...brought to our notice by the irrepressible Panayoti Kelaidis ... DBG's curator,  a great plantsman and one of the world's most charming gentleman.
The website of the DBG is http://www.botanicgardens.org/   but I want to draw your attention to Panayoti's Blog site....
http://www.botanicgardensblog.com/index.php/author/kelaidip/

Here you will find all sorts of tasty nuggets served up in true Panayoti style, with wit and erudition in equal measure. I commend it  to you all....... and please feel free to post your comments to the features in the blog.....Panayoti will welcome your comments, as all diarists welcome feedback!

He may pop up here to take you to task if you don'tgive him feedback on his site, so I think the easy way out is to let him have it! 8)
Enjoy, Friends, I know you will!
Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 7 -ish!

Editor: International Rock Gardener e-magazine

Maggi Young

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Re: Log from Denver Botanic Gardens
« Reply #1 on: September 02, 2008, 09:00:40 PM »
For those of who who do not know this weirdly named guy, Panayoti Kelaidis..... well, he's a Greek, of sorts, who has been gardening for a loonnnnng time and he is the senior Curator and Director of Outreach at the Denver Botanics..... the blogs available are not just his, though... there are contributions from lots of other DBG folks... a great idea to involve them and us, with the workings of the gardens and the thoughts of the workers at that particular coalface.
This is a ventre which I heartily encourage.... it is vital for the interaction of public and staff of such places....witness the popularity of Paul Cumbleton's Wisley log, started here at the SRGC......such endeavours are few and far between at RHS sites, I am sad to say.... good to see the guys and gals in Denver getting on their soap-boxes ( and no, that is nothing like an SRGC fishbox...) to communicate with the world. :)
Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 7 -ish!

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fermi de Sousa

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Re: Log from Denver Botanic Gardens
« Reply #2 on: September 03, 2008, 12:48:34 AM »
For those of who who do not know this weirdly named guy, Panayoti Kelaidis..... well, he's a Greek, of sorts, who has been gardening for a loonnnnng time and he is the senior Curator and Director of Outreach at the Denver Botanics.....
Some people may have old editions of the ARGS journal in which Panayoti wrote under the name "Peter Kallas (or was it Callas?)" He changed his name around the time that he got married and tells the story of when asked why he did so he replied "I'm getting married, how can I remain Callous?". With his sense of humour he will fit in well here!
cheers
fermi
Mr Fermi de Sousa, Redesdale,
Victoria, Australia

Maggi Young

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Re: Log from Denver Botanic Gardens
« Reply #3 on: December 05, 2009, 08:45:00 PM »
An update on  DBG's activities, Panayoti's  photo gallery and the official photos fron the Denver Botanic Gardens photographer, Scott Dressel-Martin......

 New Gallery
 http://www.dresselmartin.com/120309_dbg_highlights_web/index.html
 Mt. Goliath - Imagine Mt. Goliath covered in snow right now!!!
 http://www.dresselmartin.com/goliath-web2/index.html

Panayoti's shots from Denver Botanic Gardens in 2008:

http://picasaweb.google.com/panayoti.kelaidis/DenverBotanicGardens2008#
« Last Edit: December 05, 2009, 08:47:05 PM by Maggi Young »
Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 7 -ish!

Editor: International Rock Gardener e-magazine

Maggi Young

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Re: Log from Denver Botanic Gardens
« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2009, 08:57:01 PM »
http://www.rmcnargs.org/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=59 will take you to the page dealing with the NARGS Study weekend  and AGM....for  July 11-14, 2010  
This event will be organised and hosted by Panayoti's Local Chapter of the North American Rock Garden Society.......http://www.rmcnargs.org/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=1

...........
 note that  "ZZ", another Forumist, is listed as a Speaker! 8)
 Main info is:

NARGS 2010

Romancing the Rockies

The Marriage of Plant and Stone

July 11-14, 2010

Denver & Salida, Colorado

Exploration and field study of the “edaphic factor”: how does limestone or granite substrate influence the flora and biodiversity?

Join the Rocky Mountain Chapter of NARGS for a trip to the undiscovered Colorado that is every bit as beautiful—but somehow more pristine and authentic—as the famous resorts that grab headlines. The meeting is scheduled to coincide with the peak of the alpine season: come dance with Eritrichium and Primula on the very backbone of America!  More information at www.rmcnargs.org, including about coming to high altitude (please read).  Questions to Randy Tatroe, Conference Chair, at saximontana@gmail.com or 303-699-8958.

This unique conference will take place at a historic, renovated steam plant in the picturesque town of Salida (elevation: 7,083 ft [2,159 m]), near the headwaters of the Arkansas River in a broad, U-shaped, glaciated valley.  Salida is poised with the Collegiate Peaks soaring to the West and to the East, the Mosquito Range, with its own cluster of 14’ers.  These two ranges are comprised of Leadville Limestone, which boasts the lion’s share of the Southern Rocky Mountain alpine plant endemic taxa.

Register with the Rocky Mountain Chapter for the meeting and make your own housing reservations in Salida; nowthisiscolorado.com/ has good information.  (Reserve quickly, as this popular town can fill up.)   We have found that although the hotels/motels have rooms listed on the website that they may have additional rooms for rent.  We suggest calling the hotel/motel directly.  See the document link to the left on this page with a list of hotels, motels, B&Bs, and lodges.

A limited number of rooms have been blocked at the following motels: Holiday Inn Express at 719.539.8500 to reserver a room in the room block.  Mention 'North American Rock' and you will get a room with 2 queen beds for $110.94 plus tax per night.  Super 8 at 719.539.6689, mention the 'North American Rock Garden Society' and you will get a room with 2 queen beds for $85.65 plus tax per night.

There are many other local activities in the Salida region, including rafting, historic train rides, hot springs and national parks.

Day 1 (Sunday, 7/11):  Outstanding rock garden visits (on own) around Denver and reception, speakers, and alpine botanic art show and Henry Moore outdoor sculpture exhibit at Denver Botanic Gardens.

Day 2 (Monday, 7/12):  Optional bus from Denver to Salida, with stops for guided botanizing.  Evening reception, dinner on own and speakers Kirk Johnson: “The Rockies through Time: a Geological and Paleobotanical Whirlwind Tour” and Zedenek Zvolanek:  “Tao of Limestone: Great Limestone Mountains and their Plants.”

Day 3 (Tuesday, 7/13):  Hikes, plant sale, exhibits, book sale and dinner, with speakers Wiert Nieuman: “The Recycled Rock Garden from the Lowlands to Rocky Heights” and Marcia Tatroe: “Rock Gardens of the Rockies.”

Day 4 (Wednesday, 7/14):  Hikes, plant sale, exhibits, book sale, closing banquet with business meeting, and speaker Vladimir Kolbintsev: “Central Asia: Lovely Steppe-Sister of the Rockies.”

Day 5 (Thursday, 7/15):  Optional buses back to Denver.

Plant Sale:  
Exceptional plants from regional specialty rock garden nurseries.

Speakers:

Zedenek Zvolanek.
 No rock gardener has created more stunning gardens in more places: across the United States, Canada and much of Europe. He is every bit a notable plant collector who has introduced hundreds of spectacular alpines to rock gardens from Europe and Asia Minor, including Campanula choruhensis, Matthiola montana and Centaurea achtarovii.

Kirk Johnson.  This dynamic speaker joined the Denver Museum of Nature and Science after earning his doctorate in geology and paleobotany from Yale University. He studies fossil plants, terrestrial stratigraphy, geochronology, and dinosaur extinction; and has published many popular and scientific articles on topics ranging from fossil plants and modern rainforests to the ecology of whales and walruses.

Wiert Nieuman
has overseen the magnificent rock garden at Utrecht Botanic Gardens in Netherlands for nearly 30 years; this is not only one of the finest collections of rare alpine plants, but a garden of  great artistic creativity filled with novel and sustainable design.  Long before sustainability became a catchword, Wiert and his staff have used nothing but recycled materials for their construction.

Marcia Tatroe. As a monthly contributor to Sunset Magazine and garden columnist for the Denver Post, no gardener in the Rocky Mountain region has made a greater effort to gauge the pulse of our horticultural scene. Author of Cutting Edge Gardening in the Intermountain West, she has also created one of our region’s more distinctive rock gardens. She and husband Randy travel widely photographing gardens.

Vladimir Kolbintsev.  For over 20 years, Vladimir was research scientist at the Aksu-Dzhabagly nature reserve in Kazakhstan. As a naturalist, he has an amazing grasp of the flora, fauna, geology and ecology of Central Asia; he has led dozens of tour groups through the Tian Shan and Altai Mountains, Colorado’s closest climatic correlative.


Hikes:

                Monarch Pass.  Take in the spectacular scenery on a ten minute gondola ride to a knob above Monarch Pass.  Disembark and immediately you are strolling on a Persian carpet of alpine cushion and mat plants.  Silene acaulis, Eritrichum aretoides, and Minuarta obtusiloba abound.  Easy half mile.


             Independence pass.  From the parking lot, a nearby level trail takes you along an endless field of alpine plants. More than 60 species are to be found on this easy stroll. Tetraneuris grandiflora, Rhodiola integrifolia, and many Erigeron are just a few of the flowers you are sure to see; colors abound! The trail on this land above the trees goes on and on.  Easy.

                Cottonwood Pass.  Discover at least 40 species of alpine plants within several hundred yards of the parking lot.  After lunch overlooking a small alpine pond, more energetic participants may want to hike to a knob a couple of hundred feet above, where Aquilegia coerulea, Saxifraga bronchialis and Phacelia sericea grow tucked into crevasses high above the Continental Divide.  Easy quarter mile or moderate three quarter mile hike.


                Weston Pass.  At Weston Pass a brief, nearly level walk above treeline passes near an old mine and tailing rich in alpine flora.  Among the many flowers are some Mosquito Range endemics like Physaria alpina, and Astragalus molybdenus, while Ipomopsis spicata ssp. capitata fills the air with its fragrance.  The trail can be followed to a small knob which makes for a three mile round trip.  Easy to moderate.


                Mt. Sherman and the Dauntless Mine.  This hike features a fine variety of alpine goodies: mesic (waterloving) plants along the creek and dry-meadow alpines.  Some Mosquito Range endemics to be seen are Astragalus kentrophyta var. implexus and Physaria alpina.  To see all the special flowers, a hike of three miles with an elevation gain of one thousand feet is necessary.  Moderate to difficult.    

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  People:
 
The Convention Committee officers are;

Randy Tatroe - Chair

Panayoti Kelaidis - Program

Ellly Amade and Fran Enright - Hikes

Sally Boyson - Publicity

Gesa Robeson and Joan Sapp - Registration

Hugh MacMillan - Transportation - Web administrator
 
Hope this tempts some of you Folks!!
« Last Edit: March 14, 2010, 09:39:07 PM by Maggi Young »
Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 7 -ish!

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Lesley Cox

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Re: Log from Denver Botanic Gardens
« Reply #5 on: December 06, 2009, 08:22:14 PM »
It sounds wonderfully tempting Maggi. But......
Lesley Cox - near Dunedin, lower east coast, South Island of New Zealand - Zone 9

 


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