Tag Archives: Flowers

Snapshots: Weekend news you can use

The way I see, if you want the rainbow, you’ve gotta but up with the rain.

Singer/songwriter Dolly Parton



By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


(Courtesy Sunset Succulents)

Craft Bash

Miss perusing the booths full of crafts? Well, the Woodland Mall has got you covered for this week. Saturday, March 20, the mall will be hosting its first Spring Craft Bash, a 1-day event that will showcase a wide variety of handcrafted and vendor Items for sale. The event will run from 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. at the Von Maur wing of the mall and will have books, games, artwork, skincare, home decor items, jewelry, succulents and more.

Art in Bloom

The biannual celebration and competition, Art in Bloom has returned to the Grand Rapids Art Museum for one-weekend only, March 19-21. Visitors are invited to explore the galleries and view floral designs inspired by artwork from the Museum’s permanent collection. Art in Bloom entries will be eligible for two awards: The Public Vote Award and Juried Award. A panel comprised of floral and art experts from the Grand Rapids community will select the Juried Award Winner, which will be announced on Friday, March 22 at 2 pm. The three-day exhibition and competition includes a floral-focused schedule of in-person and virtual offerings. Visitors are encouraged to reserve timed tickets to Art in Bloom in advance. For GRAM’s hours and admission fees, call 616-831-1000 or visit artmuseumgr.org.

Photo by Joanne Bailey-Boorsma

And Blooming Butterflies

The Butterflies are Blooming at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park. If you are planning to go, note you may have to wait in line to get into the facility due to COVID capacity guidelines, especially if you go on the weekend. (It took my family about an hour and half to get in to see the butterflies.) The good news is, while you are waiting, you get to wind through the desert and Victorian gardens, getting up close views of Monarch caterpillars and chrysalis. The Gardens are open 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Monday – Saturday and 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information, visit meijergardens.org.

The Butterfly Debate

The State of Michigan does not have a state insect. Several have been suggested over the years, including (from the top left) the Monarch butterfly, the Karner blue butterfly, the mayfly, and Hungerford’s crawling water beetle. In fact, in 2019, a bill was introduced, inspired by a group of students from West Bloomfield Hills school, to make the Monarch butterfly, which comes to Michigan annual, the state insect. The bill was pushed into committee and has remained there. Trout fisherman say the mayfly because it is a food source for the designated state fish and others have said the Karner blue butterfly because it is endanger and more unique to Michigan, which is the same reason some have given to the Hungerford’s crawling water beetle.

Spring blooms early at Grand Rapids Art Museum hosts biannual event

For the 2019 Art in Bloom event, WKTV got the opportunity for a sneak peek at how a floral design created her piece. (WKTV)

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


The Grand Rapids Art Museum (GRAM) announced today the return of its biannual celebration and competition, Art in Bloom(March 19-21). For one-weekend-only, visitors are invited to explore the galleries and view floral designs inspired by artwork from the Museum’s permanent collection.

Art in Bloom highlights the creativity of West Michigan’s most talented floral designers. The arrangements will be presented alongside the artwork in GRAM’s Level 3 galleries, where guests can cast their vote for their favorite floral arrangement for the selection of the Public Vote Winner.

“The Grand Rapids Art Museum is thrilled to kick off the spring season withArt in Bloom,” commented GRAM Communications Manager Elizabeth Payne. “We look forward to welcoming guests to GRAM’s galleries and encourage everyone to participate in a weekend of floral-inspired fun through our in-person and virtual experiences.”

The 2021 Art in Bloom line-up features 15 floral designers and their interpretation of 15 works from the Museum’s collection—with artwork spanning a wide range of painting, sculpture, mixed-media, and design.

Art in Bloom entries will be eligible for two awards: The Public Vote Award and Juried Award. A panel comprised of floral and art experts from the Grand Rapids community will select the Juried Award Winner, which will be announced on Friday, March 22 at 2 pm. The three-day exhibition and competition include a floral-focused schedule of in-person and virtual offerings.

Weekend Schedule:

Friday, March 19 

Public Hours: 12 – 6 pm, Level 3 Galleries

Juried Winner Announcements: 2 pm, Virtual via Facebook Live

Saturday, March 20

Member Hours: 10 am – 12 pm, Level 3

Public Hours: 12 – 6 pm, Level 3 

Floral-themed Gallery Chats: 1– 3 pm, Level 2

Drop-in Studio: Flower Making: 12 – 6 pm, Cook Auditorium

Floral Design Demonstration with Fleurology Designs: 4:30 – 5 pm, Virtual via Facebook Live

Sunday, March 21

Member Hours: 10 am – 12 pm, Level 3

Public Hours: 12– 6 pm, Level 3 

Public Voting Closes: 1:30 pm

Public Vote Winner Announcement: 2 pm, Virtual via Facebook Live


Visitors are encouraged to reserve timed tickets to Art in Bloom in advance and view the Museum’s health and safety guidelines before visiting. GRAM’s guidelines include face mask requirements, reduced capacity, social distancing measures, regular cleaning and sanitization efforts, and more. For GRAM’s hours and admission fees, call 616.831.1000 or visit artmuseumgr.org.

Windmill Island Gardens Celebrates Peak Week

Windmill Island Gardens will have Peak Week July 24 - 30.
Windmill Island Gardens will have Peak Week July 24 – 30.

During the week of July 24 – 30, Windmill Island Gardens will celebrate Peak Week, the period of summer when the gardens are at the height of their beauty. The week will be filled with flowers and fun for all ages. As an added incentive to enjoy the gardens during Peak Week, an accompanying child can enter for free with every purchase of an adult ticket.

 

The Island’s horticulture staff is excited to share the gardens with the community as they represent the end product of months of designing, planting, and maintenance. This year’s garden theme is “Year of the Butterfly.”  The theme is evident in more than 20 beds which mimic butterfly coloring as well as the new “Vlinder Veld” butterfly-attracting garden.

 

One highlight of the week is the culmination of a photo contest in which guests are encouraged to capture the beauty of the gardens and attractions during the month of July. Pictures should be emailed to windmill@cityofholland.com by Thursday, July 21 to be eligible to win. From July 22-27, a juried winner, a Facebook-vote winner and a visitor-vote winner will be chosen from the Top 5 photos.

 

Tuesday, July 26, is Kid’s Day on the Island. Kids and parents will enjoy scavenger hunts, activity pages, carousel rides, crafts, games, and much more. Of course visitors of all ages are invited to tour the De Zwaan windmill and explore the rest of the Island. As a special double-up treat, TWO accompanying children can enter free with each purchase of an adult ticket on Kid’s Day.

 

On Wednesday, July 27, there will be a night of relaxing fun for the whole family. In a special after-hours event from 6 – 8 pm, guests are invited to tour the gardens with a member of the horticulture staff. The evening will also feature the announcement of winners in the photo competition at 7 pm. This after-hours event is free of charge though not all attractions will be available during this time.

 

Join Windmill Island Gardens during this special time to celebrate Peak Week with flowers, family, and fun. For more details, please visit windmillisland.org or the Windmill Island Gardens Facebook page.

Spring is time for Pure Michigan Blossoms

Marsh Marigold DegraafBy: Dianna Higgs-Stampfler

 

Spring BeautyAs the winter snow melts away, spring wildflowers begin to push their way up through the ground to welcome the new warm-weather season. Located in the heart of the Great Lakes region, Michigan his home to approximately 1700 native wildflower species of all shapes and sizes, found from coast to coast to coast.

 

My love of nature – flowers, trees and birds – comes from my maternal grandmother who helped me in high school with various biology class projects such as my leaf and bug collections. Thanks to grandma, I’ve remained fascinated as an adult by birds (specifically cardinals), trees (birch and gingko) and flowers (lilacs)…but, ironically, not bugs!

 

While all gardens and flowers are beautiful, I’ve been drawn to the natural formation of wildflowers as they grow along the side of the roads as I travel Michigan. The variety of colors, textures and sizes I think make the prettiest impact.

 

According to the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, “all plants are protected on Michigan’s public lands, including road rights-of-ways. Additionally, 243 native plants are listed as threatened or endangered and are protected by Michigan’s Endangered Species Act.

 

picDutchmansBreechesThe wetlands and woodlands present the first displays each spring – when marsh marigold, wild garlic, jackin-the-pulpit, bloodroot, trillium and Dutchman’s breeches make their showing. Blossoms can also be found throughout the summer in the dunelands, meadows, stream banks, shorelines and rocky slopes along the highways and byways.

 

To learn more about Michigan’s wildflowers, download the DNR’s Michigan Wildflower Viewing Guide.

 

Founded in 1986, the Wildflower Association of Michigan encourages the preservation and restoration of Michigan’s native plants and native plant communities.

 

“Michigan’s native plants and plant communities are part of our natural heritage and should be preserved for future generations,” the WAM reports on its website. “By one estimate, 25 percent of Michigan’s plants will be extinct by 2050, as the result of loss of habitat due to development and invasion by aggressive non-native plants—and this estimate doesn’t include the possible effects of global warming. By cultivating native plants in your yard, you can help preserve the existing diversity of native vegetation and wildlife.”

 

The association also reports that:

  • native plants are easy to grow and maintain because they, unlike plants from Europe and Asia and even from other regions of our own continent, are well adapted to our soils and climate, with its extremes of weather;
  • native plants provide food and shelter for the wildlife with which they have evolved over millennia, and recent research is showing that the support for wildlife provided by native vegetation is better than that offered by non-native plants;
  • landscaping with native plants not only lowers water use—it improves water quality;
  • landscaping with native plants helps reduce global warming as many of our native plants are able to store carbon in their deep and extensive root systems, thus permanently removing it from the air.

 

The Michigan Nature Association is a nonprofit conservation organization working to protect Michigan’s rare, threatened and endangered species by protecting the lands and waters they need to survive. Established in 1952, MNA’s members, donors, and volunteers have built a remarkable network of more than 170 nature sanctuaries across the state – the largest network of natural areas established and maintained by a nonprofit conservation organization in Michigan. Through the help of staff, volunteers, members and donors, MNA protects more than 10,000 acres of Michigan’s most special natural areas and stewardship of more than 170 nature sanctuaries and plant preserves in nearly 60 counties around the state.

 

The Loda Lake National Wildflower Sanctuary is located in the heart of the Huron-Manistee National Forests in Baldwin. It is the only wildflower sanctuary in the National Forest System, a project supported both financially and botanically by the Federated Garden Clubs of Michigan for over 70 years.

 

“Loda Lake is ideally suited as a wildflower sanctuary and although near one of Michigan’s busy highways, can still be a natural reservoir of wild plants,” says botanist Clayton Bazuin. “This is due to the large number of ecological associations it affords in which they may survive.”

 

picJackInAPulpitThe property includes a small spring-fed lake, a bog-like wetland area, a creek and marshy areas as well as an oak forest, pine plantations and an early successional old farm site. There are more than 200 wildflower species (and over 500 unique plant species) found at Loda Lake.

 

Aldo Leopold (1887-1948) was an American scientist, ecologist, forester, environmentalist, conservationist and author of A Sand County Almanac (which was published posthumously in 1949 and has sold more than two million copies). He was also a professor at the University of Wisconsin and was influential in the development of modern environmental ethics and in the movement for wilderness conservation.

 

Born and raised in Wisconsin, the Leopold family vacationed in the forested Les Cheneaux Islands in northern Lake Huron, near the cities of Cedarville and Hessel in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The area was a natural playground for young Aldo, who took to exploring the woods and waters—which shaped his future. Aldo’s legacy has taken root in the Les Cheneaux area, with the establishment of a nearly 1700-acre nature preserve on Marquette Island which bears his name (and is maintained by the Little Traverse Conservancy). The Aldo Leopold Festival is also planned for May 13-15, with this year’s theme: “Celebrating the North Huron Birding Trail.”

 

picTrilliumDeGraafMichigan is home to one chapter of The Nature Conservancy—a global organization that works in 69 countries worldwide and all 50 states. In Michigan, this group hosts countless events and maintains about 20 preserves throughout both the Upper and Lower Peninsulas.

 

Michigan is also home to several local, grass-roots organized conservancies, including:

 

Other Michigan eco-friendly organizations can be found here.

 

picLupinePatchLooking to add a natural garden to your property? The Michigan Wildflower Farm, located in Ionia County, is a working farm open for visitation by appointment only.  Open since 1988, they produce native Michigan wildflower and grass seed—most of which is collected from within a 150-mile radius of the farm. Seeds are sold through mail order, telephone, email and fax. They also specialize in installation and management of rain gardens, shoreline restorations, detention and retention basins, bio-swales, wetland mitigations, CRP and SAFE projects, meadows, prairies and gardens. They work with businesses, housing developments, libraries, municipal offices and single homes in urban and rural settings throughout Michigan.

 

As you travel around Pure Michigan in search of wildflowers, be sure to check out Michigan.org for a list of events, lodging properties, attractions, restaurants and more.

 

picMichiganWildflowersCoverSpring Wildflower Events:

 

April 2 – Spring Wildflower Walk – Fernwood Botanical Garden and Nature Preserve Niles

 

April 14 – Wildflowers After Work – Kalamazoo Nature Center

 

April 16 – Small Wonders Fantastic Flowers – Kalamazoo Nature Center

 

April 16 – Maple River Ramble – Philip C. Braun Nature Preserve, Pellston

 

April 21 – Wildflowers After Work – Kalamazoo Nature Center

 

April 23 – EcoStewards Volunteer Kick Off – Little Traverse Conservancy

 

April 23 – Wildflower Folklore – DeGraaf Nature Center, Holland

 

April 30 – Wildflower Walk – Dowagiac Woods Nature Sanctuary

 

May 1 – Spring Has Sprung at Springhill Nature Preserve – Superior Charter Twp

 

May 3 – Spring Wildflower Hike in Pete’s Woods

 

May 4 – Kent Conservation District Native Plant Workshop, Grand Rapids

 

May 7 – Wildflower Hike – Pierce Cedar Creek Institute, Hastings

 

May 7 – Mother’s Day Wildflower Walk – Blandford Nature Center, Grand Rapids

 

May 8 – Mother’s Day Spring Wildflower Walk – Good Hart Farms Preserve, Good Hart

 

May 10 – Spring Wildflower Hike in Pete’s Woods

 

May 13-15 – Aldo Leopold Festival in Les Cheneaux

 

May 21 – Kent Conservation District Native Plant Sale, Grand Rapids

 

May 22 – Wildflower Walk – Michigan Nature Association – Karner Blue Nature Sanctuary

 

May 26 – Spring Wildflower Walk, Holland

 

Safe Travels!

 

This article was republished with permission from Dianna at Promote Michigan. We do our best to help with the promotion of the great State of Michigan!