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Categories
Category Archives: Gardens
Quinquennium
Well, the plan was to be writing from lovely Lucca to mark the fifth anniversary of La Vita Nuova, but fate has decreed otherwise. Instead, I sit contemplating the garden, and will shortly be going with Him Indoors on a … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, Italy, Natural history
Tagged @CUBotanicGarden, anniversary, magnolias, retirement, spring, tulips
2 Comments
Plant of the Month: February 2020
Looking back, I discover that I have never written a ‘Plant of the Month’ piece about clematis, which is very odd, given that they are my favourite plants and by far my worst botanical extravagance. At the present count, I … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Gardens, History, Natural history
Tagged clematis, gardens, plantofthemonth
5 Comments
The Naming of Plants
Richard Chandler Alexander Prior (1809–1902) does not (yet) appear in the pages of the ODNB, though his day may come. He knew and corresponded with many of the great scientists of the nineteenth century; he was a physician whose health … Continue reading
Posted in Bibliography, Biography, Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, History, Natural history, Printing and Publishing
Tagged botany, English plants, Linnaean system, nomenclature, taxonomics
2 Comments
Plant of the Month: January 2020
One of the most mournful utterances you will hear from a gardener is: ‘I had one, but it died.’ Next up is, ‘I had one, but it doesn’t flower any more.’ This is the case, alas, with me and Iris … Continue reading
Tree of the Year
In 2017 I took monthly photos of a particular tree @CUBotanicGarden, and in 2018 I did the same for a hedge. Neither sequence when laid end to end was in fact particularly inspiring, so in 2019 I went for one … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, Natural history
Tagged Acer palmatum 'Osakazuki', Cambridge University Botanic Garden, foliage
2 Comments
Francesco Cupani
The Alpine House @CUBotanicgarden is pretty stunning at the moment, what with the cyclamen, autumn crocus and colchicums – do go and have a look! Among all the incredibly photogenic flowers, I came across Colchicum cupani, which compelled me finally … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Botany, Gardens, History, Italy, London, Natural history
Tagged botany, Francesco Cupani, gardens, Paolo Silvio Boccone, Robert Uvedale, Sicily, sweet peas
6 Comments
A Secret Garden
Of course, a great many gardens in Venice are secret – that is, invisible to the normal passer-by in the calle. But the garden of Palazzo Soranzo Cappello is probably the most famous secret garden in the city (with the … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Botany, Gardens, History, Italy, Literature, Natural history, Printing and Publishing, Venice
Tagged gardens, Henry James, Palazzo Soranzo Cappello, The Aspern Papers, Venice
3 Comments
Anon.
I just made it to ‘Artist: Unknown: Art and Artefacts from the University of Cambridge Museums and Collections’, the current exhibition at Kettle’s Yard. (It continues until 22 September, but the Hedgehog ménage will be away – Venice, since you … Continue reading
Posted in Archaeology, Art, Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, History, Museums and Galleries, Natural history, Venice
Tagged anonymous artworks, attribution, copies, forgery, Kettle's Yard
1 Comment
Plant of the Month: August 2019
Passiflora, the passion flower, is – perhaps unsurprisingly – a genus in the family Passifloraceae, which is itself part of the enormously varied order of Malpighiales, which includes everything from the willow to the violet by way of poinsettias. The … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Cambridge, Exploration, Gardens, Natural history
Tagged Charles Plumier, gardening, Marcello Malpighi, Passiflora, passion flower, passion fruit, plant of the month
3 Comments
Plant of the Month: July 2019
The nasturtium (occasionally nasturtian, or, if you are an A.A. Milne fan, mastershalum) is one of those plants which it is quite easy to overlook for their ubiquitous familiarity. Simple to grow (and to regrow if you save the seeds), … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Exploration, Gardens, History, Natural history
Tagged caterpillars, gardens, nasturtium, plant of the month, seeds, Tropaeolum
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