Back in my 20's I spent many a rainy day tucked in here, enjoying the warmth and plants unlike any around me outside.
That's a nice stapelia! Looking beyond, to the glasshouse behind the conservatory...
And a look back over my shoulder...
So that agave pup the US Customs agents confiscated from me at the Toronto airport (which was a pup from one of my plants in Portland, used as part of a decorative hairpiece) might be somewhere in the conservatory collection? Ha! What are the chances? Slim I am sure.
Another look at the silver spikes of Senecio scaposus, and with that we're back at the beginning of the arid house...
As I wrap up this week's look at the two conservatories I've been lucky to live so close to, I thought it worth asking; what is it about conservatories that elicit such strong opinions, my own included. Back in 2010 on a post I wrote: "I have somewhat mixed feelings about conservatories. Done well they can inspire and transport you to far away, mysterious lands. Done poorly they seem like a zoo for plants (specimens behind bars and pathetically ripped from their natural environments), or worse." On that same post a friend commented: "I've never been a big fan of conservatories (plants should be outside, free!)"
What do you think?
I stand by my remarks above, and I think that the idea that plants belong outside is one that fails to consider location in the equation. People living in places that have long cold winters benefit from having a place to go that fills them with the wonder only plants or garden can bring. Plus the magic of walking into a glasshouse and being transported to a far away land, to me that's priceless. Exposure to plants you wouldn't otherwise be able to see, what a valuable experience.
Which brings me to news I am thrilled to share. Portland has been without a conservatory, the only city in my triad of Pacific Northwest homes to not have a glasshouse filled with plants. Thankfully however, that's going to change! I snapped this screen shot during a recent Hardy Plant Society of Oregon ZOOM program "Connecting to our Natural World: Portland Botanical Gardens" with Sean Hogan and Kate Bodin"...
That's a sketch of what the conservatory at the Portland Botanic Gardens might look like. I am thrilled, positively thrilled. There are a couple of sites being considered for the gardens, and lots of info is available on their gorgeous website: here and Instagram here. While I don't think this glasshouse will be within walking distance of my home, I will still be there all the time! Go Portland Botanic Gardens!
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