Philadelphia Flower Show goes Irish
Shamrocks have long enjoyed a monopoly on evoking the luck of the Irish, but at the Philadelphia Flower Show this year, tulips, rhododendrons and azaleas are giving the old classic some competition.
“The Legends of Ireland” is the theme for the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society’s annual show, running today through Sunday, March 11, in the Pennsylvania Convention Center. It could be called the Emerald Isle’s greatest hits.
Leprechauns made of ivy wear impish smiles as they paint a rainbow that dips into a pot of gold-coin yellow leaves. Trickles of water make natural music streaming off the cords of an oversized harp. A cobblestone path leads to a quaint village front, complete with a wool shop, jewelry store and pub.
“Without a pub, it’s not a town,” John Young said of Vallygael, the quintessential Irish village that he dreamed up with his colleagues at the Mens Garden Club of Philadelphia.
Sam Lemheney, the show’s director of design, said the Celts’ rich storytelling heritage guided his work.
The feature exhibit in the center of the show’s 10 landscaped acres was inspired by the legend of Tir-Na-Nog — the land of the young.
“The trees always have leaves, the flowers never stop blooming and the smell of spring is always in the air,” Lemheney said. “It’s just perfect.”
At the show, that translates into giant man-made tree trunks reaching skyward, above a floor of daffodils and ferns that one might imagine as the preferred home for Ireland’s mythical faeries.
Beyond the wood, which shows off Ireland’s natural beauty, the Knot Garden flaunts the artistic skill honed for centuries by the island’s residents. Colorful cut glass and blooming annuals meld together to form sparkling versions of tradition Celtic designs, spread over a mock hillside.
source : www.poconorecord.com


