April 23, 2011

Spring in Central Park



It is snowing seriously this morning here in Vermont, so looking at these photos that I shot in Central Park on Thursday, a windy but sunny day, is a delight. Early spring was in full bloom, and my first glimpse of it was the forsythia draped over the stone wall on Fifth Avenue. I had just been to the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum to see the marvelous exhibition Color Moves: Art and Fashion by Sonia Delaunay, and walked along Fifth to the 90th Street entrance to the park, wending my way to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.






Two beautifully scented shrubs greeted me at the entrance to the park, one in full bloom, the other with the blooms beginning to open. I don't know the name of this plant, so perhaps a reader can identify it.




There was a brilliant mass of orange tulips shouting happily for attention.




The venerable flowering trees in the lane alongside the reservoir were sprouting leaves and blooms along their trunks.




The greens of shrubs are the bright, fresh yellow-green that only shows in early spring. A bicycle, itself a sign of spring, is nestled in the brilliant foliage.






Behind the Metropolitan Museum are a group of magnolias that were in full bloom, including the stunning white Star magnolia. These seem the most extravagant of flowering trees with their massive bright blooms, so different from the delicacy of cherry or apple.




And along the pathway on the north side of the museum, these modest yellow blooms shine among the detritus of winter. The joys of spring come in packages large and small.

12 comments:

  1. Oh, thank you Altoon! This is lovely. (It has just stopped snowing and turned to rain here in South Woodbury.) And I hope you're going to post about the Delaunay? I still hope to get to it.

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  2. Thanks for the comment Susan. I wasn't planning to do a post on the Delaunay since I wrote about her in my New Year's post.

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  3. welcome back Altoon, your absence wasn't unnoticed!

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  4. well, thank you, rappel; it's nice to be missed.

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  5. Could the scented plant be Daphne? One day I'm going have a couple of daphne's beside my front door, it smells divine :-). You guys seem to be having the loooongest winter.... I'm sure I would have gone a little loopy by now (I have a toddler and have horrors of being stuck inside for days on end)

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  6. I think it is a koreanspice viburnum which is very fragrant and an early bloomer. Your weather makes ours look good; glad you had such a pleasant break — art and flowers!

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  7. Claire, I do have daphne in my garden and there was some beginning to bloom in Central Park, but Linda is correct, it's Korean spice viburnum; I looked at photos online and it looks just right. Thanks for the i.d. Linda.

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  8. Lovely to see these photos of things in bloom in CPW. I suspect you know of it, but, in the event, if you have not been to the CPW Conservatory (across from the 104th-106th off of Fifth), I suspect you would enjoy that, too.

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  9. Raining, I have been to the conservatory garden, but not for many years. Thanks for reminding me of it.

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  10. Ah, magnolias in bloom, lovely! All the flower images are a welcomed sight. Thank you, Altoon. I'm worn out from gardening today, but so glad I could finally really dig in the dirt!

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  11. thanks, Maggie. Isn't it great to get some gardening done!

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  12. I think the last flower may be Ranunculus ficaria.

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