GARDEN NEWS The
restored historic Formal Garden, designed by Marian Cruger Coffin,
is coming alive now that Spring is here. Each quadrant has been
designed to bloom at a different time. The Rose Garden, at its
peak in May and June and filled with the original antique roses,
has been made possible through a contribution by the Helen Frick
Foundation. Museum horticulturist Cynthia Vonderage has researched
all of the flowers in the Formal Garden. As a result, all now
have signage. The restoration of the Formal Garden has been made
possible through the generosity of the Peggy N. Gerry Foundation
and the New York State Environmental Quality Bond Act as well
as through the fundraising efforts of Friends of the Gardens.
The Gardens as Art Landscape Spectaculars and support from Peter
Tilles, Peter Schlick, Garden Advisors, Garden Tour Committee
and volunteers.
Ecologist and botanist, Dr. andrew N., Greller has identified
and named more than 100 specimen trees on the museum grounds.
Many thanks to Dr. Greller for the contribution of his time and
expertise.
You can help support the gardens with a Garden Membership and
with naming opportunities in the following manner:
•Buy a four-foot teakwood bench ($2,000)
•Contribution to the maintenance of the Pinetum ($2,500)
•Restoration of the Historic Milliken-Bevin Teak Trellis
($20,000)
Garden benches have been donated by Dr. Margaret Cuomo Maier and
Howard Maier in honor of Sandy and Howard Tytel, Peggy and Bruce
Tucker in honor of Judy and Donald Rechler, Emma Goldberg for
Hasmeta Rajkovic and the Regan Family for Patrick and Tara Regan.
The museum docents have donated azaleas in memory of Muriel Poster
and elm trees in honor of Lorraine & Irving Zweifler. The
Zweifler’s children and grandchildren have donated a garden
bench in their honor. Jane Malakoff and her late husband have
donated rows of Okame cherry trees. Mr. & Mrs. Duke Saganich
have donated an Okame cherry tree.
Last Fall, we were the happy hosts for 100 members of the Long
Island Arboricultural Association (LIAA), a group that, each year,
selects a site, and then volunteers horticultural services to
restore or maintain that site. Equipped with bucket gtrucks, saws
and chippers, LIAA members worked on our historic specimen trees.
Many thanks to them for their extraordinary contributions.
This spring presents an ideal time to visit NCMA's gardens to
see for yourself what a treasure these grounds are for the people
of Long Island and beyond.