Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Montreal Botanic 2018 - Part 2


The Montreal Botanic Gardens are made up of many smaller gardens.  
This is the Perennial Garden, filled with flowers you can put in your back yard,
and they will come back year after year.




Some of the nicest and hardiest of the perennials are coneflowers.  In the past, they
came only in lavender, pink, and white, but the Montreal Botanic Gardens has developed
many more colors, some of them very vivid.



Fence and perennial coneflowers.




Some coneflowers.




Yellow Cannas standing five feet high.




Wandering through the various beds in the Perennial Garden.




Many different colored Cannas.  These are actually fairly rare, and Montreal has
one of the largest collections of cannas in the world.  They must be taken indoors
during the severe winter and then brought out again next summer.




Rose Mallows are gigantic flowers, nearly a foot in diameter.  They are related to
Rose of Sharon and Hibiscus.




Rose colored Rose Mallow, twelve inches in diameter.




White Rose Mallows.  There is an entire garden  just of rose mallows in many colors.




White Rose Mallow with Red Center.  There are other whites which do not have the red.




Pink Rose Mallows




Pure White Rose Mallow, no red center.




Pink and White Rose Mallow, more than a foot in diameter.




Esplanade with fountain in Perennial Garden.



Coleus are some of the most common annuals and very easy to grow.  The Gardens
show new varieties of Coleus each year.




Sonora Sunset Coleus.  You can find any color you want to complement your yard.




Five new varieties of Coleus.  These started with tiny plants in early June, but they
grow rapidly if watered well, and this is what they looked like in late August.
They last only a few months; they need to be planted again next year.




The Gardens also have many lovely varieties of Gladiolas.  These are red and white.




Soft Pink Gladiolas




White with a touch of red Gladiolas.




An archway of Blue Petunias.  Each year they make the arch with different flowers,
and it is a very popular spot for visitors to take pictures.




One of the most diverse and colorful flowers in late summer is the dahlia, and
the Gardens had many.  This is "Sandia Melody."




"Cheri" Dahlia




"Parkland Rave" Dahlia




"Purple Flare" Dahlia




"Kosmos 150" White Dahlia




"Touch of Violet" Dahlia




"Red Dazzler" Dahlia




"Tabasco" Dahlia




Callibrachoa/Million Bells in the pots, with Yellow and Orange Cannas




Yellow Cannas, White Daisies, and Yellow Callibrachoa/Million Bells/Mini-Petunias.




This garden was devoted to orange flowers, like Cannas and Zinnias.




Orange Cannas



"Brocade Fire Pelargonium"  This whole area was planted with different red flowers/
Zinnias and Geraniums.




These are various beds of annual flowers, ones which you need to plant each year
and last just for one summer.  There are many benches where you can sit under a tree
to rest your feet and just enjoy the colors.




"Cherry Zahara Zinnias."  These are a new variety, and each flower looks tie-dyed,
they are no longer flat pinks.



 A visitor in the Perennial Garden.


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Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Jean Talon Market 2018


There are two large outdoor farmers' markets in Montreal - Jean Talon is on the Northeast side
and the Atwater is on the Southwest side.  I particularly enjoy the Jean Talon for its
colors and aromas and enormous variety.  I spent several hours walking around.  There are
also specialty fish shops and butchers and cheese shops and flowers.
This is one of the booths; they are open seven days a week.




Peppers of all kinds and colors were available, as well as eggplant in various colors.





Chanterelles Mushrooms are fairly rare, but the "Mushroom Man" had lots.




"Organic" fruit and vegetables are obviously popular in Canada also.




Peppers of many kinds and colors, from sweet to very strong, were everywhere.



Fishmongers were numerous and had all sorts of fish from the Atlantic and Pacific 
as well as lakes.  There was also a fresh oyster bar which had more than a dozen kinds
of fresh oysters.  They had a counter where you could sit and eat.  A tray of 12 oysters,
3 each of 4 varieties, cost $30 CAD (or about $22 U.S.)  Many people were enjoying
the oysters.




Each shop displayed their wares so beautifully, that it looked like a series of
17th century Dutch still lifes.





Peaches and plums were in season, and shops had varieties from a number of the different 
provinces  in Canada, and people obviously knew the difference between peaches from
British Columbia and peaches from Quebec, or elsewhere.




Quebec seems to like garlic of many kinds.  These were very large, but there were
dozens of different sizes and varieties of garlic.




One booth sold dried flowers for the coming winter.




Fruit was very popular, and Canadian know the difference between locations, just as  I know
the difference between a New Jersey blueberry and a California blueberry.  The light tan
fruit is "Quebec Berry" or "Cherry of the Earth."  You can find it only in Quebec and only
at the end of summer.  It has kind of a paper wrapping on it, and the fruit is very sweet and
delicious.  It is never exported or sold elsewhere.




Cauliflower came in many colors and obviously does wonders for soups and salads.




Thesde are mini-cauliflowers.




Some stalls had more than a dozen different types of eggs.




Peppers are both decorative and functional.  This florist was selling strands of peppers
to hang in your kitchen, as well as pepper plants you might like to grow.




Two shops were devoted entirely to sausages, all freshly made.  There were dozens of kinds
in each shop, and customers seemed to know them well, getting one foot of this variety and
two feet of another variety.




Several shops had specialty pates, which I enjoy very much.  Here you can see Pheasant with
Pistachio, Duck with Cognac, and many more.




Several shops were devoted entirely to cheese and had hundreds of varieties of cheese.
Employees were very knowledgeable and could tell you about the flavors and aromas
and how they could be best used.  All the stores were very busy.  These are
all soft cheese.




Mushrooms were very popular, and you could get all sorts of them.




Dried flower bouquets.


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