Vintage landscape: Montross Hotel

This hotel garden had an interesting combination treehouse-garden seat called a shoo fly. The 10′ to 12′ elevated platforms were popular along the Gulf Coast as places to catch the breezes and maybe avoid deer flies.

Montross Hotel, Library of Congress

The photo was taken from “the porch of the Hotel De Montrose [sic], Beloxi, Mississippi,” ca. 1895 – 1910, by the Detroit Publishing Co.* The Hotel de Montross (or Montross Hotel, later the Riviera Hotel) looked out on the waters of the Mississippi Sound.

“Anecdotal history of the early 20th century relates that the Hotel de Montross or Montross Hotel was the oldest hotel extant at Biloxi,” according to Ray Bellande of the Biloxi Historical Society. “It was operational before the first railroad was established between Mobile and New Orleans in 1870. Here on the central Beach of Biloxi and Lameuse Street, . . . the Montross Hotel was the focus of social life and fashion. Its pier was the disembarkation place for the society people arriving at Biloxi to enjoy its fine food, hospitality, and the gaiety of life, joie de vivre, that was offered to all visitors. The Montross Hotel flourished as a fine hostelry and boarding establishment until the late 1920s, when it became overshadowed by Biloxi’s modern beach front hotels. . . .”

I also like the light fixture.
I also like the light fixture.

A Hard Rock Hotel and Casino is located in approximately the same place today.

Beloxi has been a summer vacation resort since the first half of the 1800s.


*via Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Wordless Wednesday: Oxford garden

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Chaplain’s Quadrangle garden of Magdalen College, Oxford, September 2012.

Continue reading “Wordless Wednesday: Oxford garden”

Plant supports

I just wanted to show off the plant supports that a local craftsperson recently made for the garden from my “design.”   They’re cut and bent from lightweight rebar, and he gave me two sizes — about 30″ and 5′.

Two plant supports in foreground, back to back.
Two plant supports in foreground, back to back.

I can tie plants directly on to them, or I can slip bamboo poles through the loops to make a supporting grid.  They’re much easier to push into the ground than bamboo or wooden poles, and they should last pretty much forever.

Plant supports and bamboo grid -- with my sorry looking tomatoes.
Plant supports and bamboo grid — with my sorry-looking tomatoes.

Painted reddish-brown (more brown than they look in the photos), they’re unobtrusive in the flower beds.  But I think they would also be fun in really bright colors.

plant supports 3

Vintage landscape: snowy city street

snowy city street, ca. 1900-1910, possibly Detroit, Michigan“What sorcery within a night has made a city street into a fairy glade?” Possibly Detroit, Michigan, ca. 1900-1910.

Photo and caption by Detroit Publishing Co. via Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Today we woke up to a revolution of snow,
its white flag waving over everything . . .

Billy Collins, from “Snow Day

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day: zinnias

The zinnias in our cutting garden (in Rwanda) have begun to bloom this week.

lime zinnia

yellow zinnia, enclos*ure

yellow zinnia detail, enclos*ure

yellow red zinnia, enclos*ure

yellow red zinnia in my garden, enclos*ure

yellow red zinnia detail, enclos*ure

red white zinnia, enclos*ure

Bloom Day: white zinnia at enclos*ure

Bloom Day: zinnias, enclos*ure

white zinnia detail at enclos*ure

Bloom Day: pink zinnia at enclos*ure

Bloom Day: pink zinnia detail, enclos*ure

orange zinnia, enclos*ure

February Bloom Day: orange zinnia in Rwanda, enclos*ure

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day is the 15th day of each month. To see what’s blooming in other garden bloggers’ gardens, check out May Dreams Gardens.

. . .  So unguardedly, unthriftily
do they open up and show themselves that subtlety,
rarity, nuance are almost put to shame. . .

Mona Van Duyn, from “A Bouquet of Zinnias