What's the news? What did you hear over the garden gate? Notice any errors in the new Directory? Who heard what? Who has learned something to share with us? Who has a great new idea? Who loves to share the miracles of nature? It's all here!
THIS IS THE LAST POST OF THE JUNE 2018 NEWSLETTER.
We arrived in San Francisco on a beautiful, sunny day. Buckets of gorgeous flowers stood on street corners, musicians played their instruments, and the warmth of the sun felt divine. After a very chilly April in NE Ohio, we had arrived in paradise for the GCA Annual Meeting.
The GCA Katharine M. Grosscup Scholarships in Horticulture were awarded to 8 students for the 2018-19 school year, for a total of $21,500. The Scholarships, named in memory of a Shaker Lakes Garden Club member, are managed locally by 3 members of the Shaker Lakes Garden Club, and 3 members of the Garden Club of Cleveland.
At our May 29 Membership meeting Cathi Lehn, from the Mayor’s Office of Sustainable and Sandra Albro, from Holden Forests and Gardens talked about the Sustainable initiatives in the Cleveland area. Below are links to Sustainable Cleveland, The Cleveland Tree Coalition, The Gardenwalk Cleveland pus dates for Sustainable Cleveland events this summer.
It’s hard to believe this is my last President’s Letter. I vividly remember writing my first letter nearly two years ago while on vacation at my family’s summer home in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
The Shaker Lakes Garden Club is holding a reciprocal Visiting Gardens Tour for the Allegheny Garden Club on Wednesday, June 6, 2018. We are opening the tour to our SLGC members on a first come, first served basis. If you have not seen these magnificent gardens, you are in for a treat!
We have much to look forward to over the next few months:
May 18 - Flower Show at McGregor Home May 29 - Membership Meeting at Holden Arboretum featuring a presentation on trees June 26 - Annual Meeting at Nuevo Modern Mexican & Tequila Bar July 10 - Provisional Tea at Julie Given’s home in Shaker Heights
For your ease of entering, to streamline the process, and to save your blood pressure, do yourself a favor. Identify any plant or cut specimen you might enter in advance of the show. Call Martha Marsh, Robin Schachat, or Suzy Hartford for help. Take a closeup of the entry on your phone and send it to us. We will do our best to help you figure out what it is.
Many of you know I am in the GCA Horticulture Judging program; but I am not sure that you know that means I am expected to enter Flower Shows. Like many of you, I have looked at the entries and thought, or even said aloud, “I could do as well or better than that!” But then, to DO as well as or better than that, one must ENTER. And that seems intimidating and mysterious.
It’s almost like being there – well, not really. But a few of the presentations Cynthia Druckenbrod and I enjoyed at the GCA’s NAL Meeting are available, as slide presentations, on the GCA website. The quality of professionalism and research represented in these presentations is astounding. Rather than recap all of them for you, I shall take this opportunity to refer you directly to the original material itself.
J. Sterling Morton and his wife moved from Detroit into the Nebraska Territory in 1854. Morton became editor of Nebraska’s finest newspaper and used journalism to share agricultural information and his enthusiasm for trees.
What's the news? What did you hear over the garden gate? Notice any errors in the new Directory? Who heard what? Who has learned something to share with us? Who has a great new idea? Who loves to share the miracles of nature? It's all here!
I hope many of you are enjoying lovely weather outside of Cleveland during our March hiatus. I am writing from my screened porch in Vero Beach and loving the sunny and breezy 74 degree day.