McNeely Conservatory summer flower garden

50253One of my favorite places to go, whether to photograph or to soothe my soul is the McNeely Conservatory in Como Park.  The Sunken Garden flower shows are a feast of color to the eyes and a treat to my sense of smell.  Right now the summer flowers are on exhibit in the garden.  I was fortunate to be there one night this past week when there were only a few fellow photographers.  It was peaceful, calm, and very quiet except for the water flowing at the base of the sculpture.  This bronze piece is titled “Play Days” and was created by Harriet Frishmuth in the early 1900’s.  On this night the young woman was surrounded by a beautiful reflection of the evening sky and the blooming flowers of summer.

Coneflower blooms

Under the coneflower 50052The heat of summer brings the purple coneflowers into abundant bloom.  And one of the best places to photograph these delights of summer is in my own backyard.  Most photographers understand how important it is to be in close proximity to what you choose to photograph, allowing you to be there when the light changes, when the scene changes, and to observe and “see” the subject in much more detail.  So my backyard is the perfect practice-field for me.  Last night we enjoyed a beautiful evening — nice light, no winds — a perfect setting for photographing.  This bloom was calling to me to sit on the ground and photograph upward, capturing the opacity of the petals, and colors of the entire plant, and to see it from a different perspective.  Little did I know that there was a small insect hiding underneath too, posing just as I snapped the shutter on the camera.

Clematis

40044It is a beautiful time of year right now — our garden is in full bloom.  I try to walk through the gardens each morning, allowing myself to observe the changes in the flowers and plants and to marvel at the new ones that have just bloomed.  Our roses have burst into bloom, the hydrangeas are coming along, the lilies are budded, but right now it’s the clematis that are stealing the show.  We have over a dozen different varieties, and each is unique in its sun & shade requirements, its bloom time, its size, and its color.  This photo is of one of the newer clematis – silver moon.  It’s bloom is large, soft, and of the palest color – almost as if whispering the shades and hues of its petals.  With a garden in full bloom it’s easy to overlook the cold and snow that Mother Nature sends to us in winter — this makes the wait all the more worthwhile.

Kansas wildflowers

Kansas wildflowers_StaatsWe just recently returned from the Biking across Kansas ride where we traversed from the Colorado border, across the wide state of Kansas, to the eastern border with Missouri.  As the state has had plenty of rain this spring, the landscape was lush and green.  Although I was focused on bicycling (as opposed to photographing), what jumped out to me were the beautiful wildflowers that were dotting the fields and roadsides.  The coneflowers, butterfly milkweed, daisies, spider-wort — all were bursting into bloom.  Last year at this time I spent over two weeks in Iowa and was fortunate to document the daily changes in a prairie area.   That experience gave me a new appreciation for the wildflowers that grace our landscapes with their burst of color and beauty.  So our mode of travel across the state of Kansas by bicycle gave us front-row seats to this amazing display of blooms.

Purple trillium in bloom

Purple trillium 39152In the heart of Minneapolis is a hidden garden gem — the Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden.  With fifteen acres of woodland, wetland, and prairie, it is the oldest public wildflower garden in the nation.  The garden was established in 1907  by botanist Eloise Butler and the Minneapolis Parks Board.  We spent a delightful early Saturday morning at the garden.  These purple trilliums were blooming profusely, along with marsh marigolds, hepatica, anemones, two-leaved toothwart, and trout lilies.