Up Now: Sculpture in the Garden
…It’s free to visit during normal Garden hours (donations welcome), and all ages are welcome. Most sculptures are available for purchase, and a portion of proceeds benefits the North Carolina…
…It’s free to visit during normal Garden hours (donations welcome), and all ages are welcome. Most sculptures are available for purchase, and a portion of proceeds benefits the North Carolina…
…Ms. Taylor moved there permanently in 1912. 3 “She managed her property as a working farm, going into town to purchase supplies in jeans when other women of her wealthy…
…and all ages are welcome. Most sculptures are available for purchase, and a portion of proceeds benefits the North Carolina Botanical Garden. This year’s show features 77 installations by 50…
…see the Annual Burn Site on the left–a big canebrake. Park at bottom of the slope at the small outlet creek. The wet roadside/shrub border has Lobelia batsonii plants.* …
…not available for purchase, the goal will be to encourage landowners to recognize the beauty and importance of native plants and to maintain habitat that is already in place. Restoring…
…a M.S. in Botany in 1950 and a Ph.D. in Botany in 1961 from the same institution. Dr. Federowicz was a member of the Roman Catholic order of the Congregation…
…miles north of Danbury, emerged as a resort in the early 1850’s. Thornton Reddick purchased the property in May 1849, and by August, 1851, he was rapidly improving the property…
…Hurricane Florence, but those funds fell $150,000 short of the full cost of design, engineering, permits, materials, and labor. In order to open the boardwalk to visitors as soon as…
…leave a legacy in conservation. In the 1950’s Dr. Annie purchased a small farm in what was then a remote part of northern Wake County near the Neuse River. From…
…will be sent. In order to control herbarium pests, incoming specimens to the Vascular Herbarium are frozen for 48 hours or more. Users of the collection who bring specimens in…