For at least 6 years, most areas of the Greater Kansas City region have not had winter temperatures much below zero Fahrenheit. When I moved here 13 years ago I was constantly reminded of prior bitter cold in excess of -20F and that the area, save for some sheltered spots in the city was "zone 5" with minimum temperatures from -10F to -20F on average. Over the past 13 years of living here, the coldest we have recorded at Powell Gardens at our official weather station was -10F (rounded down). We have even had one winter with a minimum of only+17F! Have we migrated into a new warm zone 6 (average low between 0 and -5F) or are we just in a short mild stretch soon to be broken by a bitterly cold winter?
The region's plants are showing our climate change. Our crape myrtles (Lagerstroemia) were just dieback perennials when I moved here but now are large shrubs and even small trees! Crape Myrtles are hardy above ground only to temperatures around -5F at best. Here, just outside our Visitor Center, gardener Shelly Bruellisauer poses next to our 'Zuni' crape myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica x L. faureri). Spencer Crews, Powell Gardens' former Director of Horticulture and now Director of Omaha's Lauritzen Gardens was astonished to see how large our crape myrtles have grown. It got down to -21F at their garden last winter! They cannot grow crape myrtles there.
Powell Gardens now has quite a few crape myrtles growing around the southern end of the Visitor Center and in the Perennial Garden. Acoma Crape Myrtle is a beautiful clean white blooming cultivar that is a Plant of Merit. Look for it just south of the Visitor Center's Hummingbird Garden.
Hopi Crape Myrtle is a very good pink-blooming crape myrtle and can be seen just outside the Visitor Center. All the crape myrtles with these Native American names are hybrids with more hardiness than typical species. Many of the new hybrids are from the National Arboretum in Washington D.C. but many are also from Oklahoma. Look for dazzling red 'Dynamite' crape myrtle, purple-flowering 'Catawba' crape myrtle and several other cultivars in the Perennial Garden.
Lindley Butterflybush (Buddleia lindleyana) is another tender shrub that has not died back in many years and has become quite a large fountain of its pendant lavender blue flowers. This butterflybush is a favorite of hummingbirds and butterflies and can be seen just out the south end of the Visitor Center while young plants are along the steps down to the Fountain Garden. This butterflybush is sterile but does spread a bit by easily removed runners.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Zone Denial?
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 7:53 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Cure for the Great Tomato Famine of 2009
The cool, wet season over much of the Central and Northeastern United States is responsible for what tomato connoisseur's are calling "the tomato famine of 2009." Powell Gardens' tomatoes got an early start in the greenhouse and have produced reasonably well in the Heartland Harvest Garden. Mark your calendar for this Saturday (August 22nd) to attend Powell Gardens' first "Tomato Fest" where one can observe at least 38 varieties currently producing in the garden. At noon and 2 p.m. Heartland Harvest Garden staff will conduct tomato tours throughout the garden. See http://www.powellgardens.org/ for more details and a full description of all the activities from taste tests to cooking demonstrations and tomato games. Sure to be a cure for anyone suffering from this season's dearth of tomatoes.
Matt Bunch, Horticulturist for the Heartland Harvest Garden, has been "squirreling" away tomatoes from the Heartland Harvest Garden for this Saturday's event. Most are in storage for safe keeping and ripening away from potential pests. All were grown by Matt and his two gardeners: Caitlin Bailey and Barbara Fetchenhier.
A quick look at one of Matt's crate's of tomatoes reveals some beautiful fruit in a variety of colors. A quick "taste" of the Heartland Harvest Garden's prize tomatoes, based on Matt's comments (I, like many, only eat tomatoes after they have been used in cooking!) follows:
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 2:09 PM 1 comments
Labels: Heartland Harvest Garden
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Festival of Butterflies 2009
The butterfly breezeway greets visitors to our annual Festival of Butterflies -- final weekend this Friday to Sunday, August 14-16. The breezeway is filled with wild Monarchs and other butterflies including all stages of a butterfly's life cycle from eggs to caterpillars, chrysalis and adult butterflies.
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 12:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: butterflies, Festival of Butterflies
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Butterflies and a Benevolent Season
Powell Gardens' annual Festival of Butterflies opens on Friday, August 7th at 9:00 a.m. Hundreds of butterflies shipped in as chrysalises are in flight in our conservatory including the spectacular tropical Blue Morpho (Morpho peleides) below.
Blue Morphos are still considered one of the world's most beautiful butterflies. Their large size, buoyant flight and friendly nature make them a visitor sensation in our Conservatory. Their bright coloring comes solely from ambient light. The distance between their layered wing scales (the dust that rubs off in your hand when you touch a butterfly) determines which light is reflected into your eye resulting in the shimmering iridescent blues. We have copied this natural phenomenon in our technology of small handheld electronics to create pixel screens that require less battery power and are easy to read in bright sunlight!
When Blue Morphos rest with their wings closed they are a cryptic brown with marvelous eyespots that may help deter predators.
A visit to the Festival of Butterflies will also ensure you see all the stages of the miraculous metamorphosis process that all butterflies and moths go through from egg to caterpillar, chrysalis or cocoon and adult. This Cecropia moth caterpillar is one "big dude" for a caterpillar with orange, blue and yellow tubercles decorating its body. Staff and volunteers will be on hand to guide any close encounter you wish to make with these fascinating creatures. You will be encouraged to touch them in the Caterpillar Petting Zoo & Monarch Watch Science Center (please do not touch or handle the butterflies at any other location).
Here is a Black Swallowtail chrysalis which we've sewn on to the screen over our butterfly breezeway. The chrysalis is the stage where the caterpillar morphs into the butterfly. Summer Black Swallowtail chrysalises will emerge in about a week. In the fall, this is how they spend the winter to emerge the following spring!
The entrance Butterfly Breezeway features local wild butterflies we have reared from the gardens. It is planted in a beautiful manner with some of the best plants that provide nectar for butterflies. There are also some host plants here -- host plants are the plants which the caterpillars eat to grow from egg to chrysalis stage. Each species of butterfly may have only a few specific plants which it can eat.
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 8:54 AM 0 comments