Here are some of the plants you will find in bloom this month at the Elizabeth Lawrence House & Garden.
Planted in 1961, this Iris japonica has bloomed in front of Elizabeth Lawrence’s house nearly every spring since.
Elizabeth Lawrence brought this Viola striata from an old family cemetery in Georgia.
Cornus florida seedlings came up in front of the house in 2014. They took five years to bloom for the first time; they will only get better with age!
Clematis montana ‘Mayleen’ once again delightfully decorates a downspout on the front corner of the house.
A piece of Elizabeth Lawrence’s original Iris tectorum '‘Album’ was recently restored to its original location—along the terrace path.
Narcissus poeticus var. recurvus was restored to the garden many years ago. It can be shy of blooming, but is the very last daffodil when it does.
The large flowers of Scilla peruviana are an unbelievable hue of blue.
Paeonia lactiflora “Nancy Duncan” is an as-yet-unidentified variety. Its pale pink semi-double flowers make quite a show in one of the sunny borders.
Iris graminea is a delicious delight for the nose as well as the eyes.
An original planting of Epimedium x versicolor ‘Sulphureum’ thrives in front of a low wall near the pool.
A fabulous native orchid, Calanthe discolor provides spring ephemeral interest in the back of the garden along the main path.
Elizabeth’s original Rhododendron indica ‘Mrs. G. G. Gerbing’ glows in the back of the garden.
All through the back of the garden, (what Elizabeth called “the woods”) rivulets of blue Hyacinthoides hispanica provide cool contrast to other spring blooming plants.
Iris germanica ‘Alcazar’, an historic variety, glows along the lower path.
A newer addition to the iris collection, this native Iris vinicolor was a gift from friend Haley Frey of Queens University fame.
Elizabeth’s original Convallaria majalis var. rosea blooms every spring beneath a cherry laurel. Its beloved perfume seems strongest when the sun warms its flowers.