Brush off winter gloom and transport yourself with these colorful orchid and garden shows

By Beth J. Harpaz, AP
Friday, February 19, 2010

Warm up at colorful indoor orchid and garden shows

NEW YORK — Flowers from around the world will be on display in Philadelphia, orchids in the Bronx will help conjure up Cuba, and the streetscapes of Paris have been reimagined at a garden in St. Louis.

These are a few of the garden and orchid shows taking place now and through the end of March in various parts of the country. While it’s still too cold in many places to enjoy flowers outdoors, these annual events offer visitors a way to shake off “snowmageddon.” They’re also excellent resources for gardening projects, but even if you don’t have a green thumb, the sights and scents of a garden show can provide an uplifting diversion from the final gray days of winter.

Here are some details:

GARDEN SHOWS:

—Philadelphia International Flower Show, Pennsylvania Convention Center, “Passport to the World,” Feb. 28-March 7, www.theflowershow.com. This annual event sponsored by the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society is a mix of elaborate landscaped displays, entertainment and educational events, with an enormous marketplace of more than 140 vendors. This year’s show includes showcase gardens with international themes inspired by the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Africa, Brazil, Singapore and India.

—Chicago Flower & Garden Show, March 6-14, Navy Pier, www.chicagoflower.com. The event includes display gardens, culinary demonstrations, seminars, a marketplace and a children’s activity garden.

—Boston Flower and Garden Show, March 24-28, Seaport World Trade Center, “A Feast for the Senses,” bit.ly/crPPXn. Attractions include lectures, demonstrations, English garden tea, competitions, arrangements in the Japanese Ikebana style, People’s Choice Award, and Blooms, a show sponsored by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society.

ORCHID SHOWS:

—New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, N.Y., “The Orchid Show: Cuba in Flower,” Feb. 27-April 11, www.nybg.org/tos10/. YouTube video about the installation: bit.ly/aygreF.

The garden’s eighth annual orchid show is themed on Cuba, showcasing plants amid depictions of Old Havana and the Cuban countryside, including a tribute to Cuba’s Soroa Orchidarium, a garden devoted to preserving and cultivating orchids and tropical plants.

“In a blending of architecture, design, landscape, and color, we wanted to create an experience for the visitor that was dramatic, vibrant, and colorful while introducing elements of the Cuban experience that evoke the feel and look of the landscape and the country that I knew as a child,” Jorge Sanchez, who grew up in Cuba and designed the exhibit, said in a statement.

—Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, “Orchid Show,” through March 28, www.mobot.org. Orchids here are displayed amid a French-inspired temporary streetscape and garden, including an image of the Eiffel Tower. The garden’s collection of more than 8,000 individual orchid plants is mostly made up of winter-blooming orchids that are rotated in and out of the show as they come into flower.

The garden’s orchid collection dates back to its founding era more than 150 years ago. “The first orchids at the Missouri Botanical Garden were a gift to our founder Henry Shaw in the 1800s,” said garden spokeswoman Karen Hagenow.

—Atlanta Botanical Garden, “Orchid Daze: Towers of Flowers,” through April 11, www.atlantabotanicalgarden.org.

The event takes place in the garden’s Fuqua Orchid center, which houses one of the largest collection of species orchids in the U.S. The show transforms the concept of a garden as a horizontal carpet into a vertical spectacle, with orchids spilling from towering columns.

“The carpets climb the walls and become vibrant wallpapers and flowing banners,” said the show’s designer, Tres Fromme of Mesa Design Group, in a statement. Special events include orchid care clinics, March 6 and April 3, 10 a.m.-noon; the Atlanta Orchid Society Show, March 13, and Vanilla Sunday, March 21, with cooking demonstrations. (The vanilla plant is a member of the orchid family.)

—Orchid Society shows: Complete list of local Orchid Society shows from the American Orchid Society, www.aos.org (click on “Events” and then “Show Schedule.”)

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