Florence’s Iris Garden


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Attenzione! 
2017---The 59th International Iris Show
59° CONCORSO INTERNAZIONALE DELL'IRIS
8 - 13 Maggio 2017

The Iris Garden at Piazzale Michelangelo was begun in
1954. Florence has always had an association with 
the iris; the city's banner has a red iris on a white 
field (and not a lily, as is erroneously believed).

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The City of Florence, in collaboration with the Italian 
Iris Society,holds an annual International Iris
Competition, since 1954 (high bearded and border). 
To date, 150 new varieties of iris have
been introduced.

The rhizomes of each iii variety are sent to Florence 
from breeders around the world in the June-September
period and are grown at the Iris Garden of
Piazzale Michelangelo for three years before being
judged by an International Jury.
It is a 'anonymous contest,' with each registered
plant marked by a code so that the jury learns
the name of the variety and the breeder only after
the judging.

A special prize is offered each year by the city to
the red variety that is closest to that of the Iris 
represented on the City's banner.


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 Don't miss it!  I'll see you there!

Paradise: a walled garden.

Villa Gamberaia in Settignano is truly a paradise for me.  But what on earth (ha ha, get it?) do I mean by “paradise?”

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I mean a walled garden where tranquility is found.  A refuge. A place to restore.

In fact, the word “paradise” entered the English language from the French paradis, inherited from the Latin paradisus, from the Greek parádeisos (παράδεισος).  The Greeks borrowed the word from an Old Iranian paridayda meaning “walled enclosure.” By 500 BCE, the Old Iranian word had been adopted as Assyrian pardesu or “domain.”

In general, “paradise” was first used to indicate the expansive walled gardens of the First Persian Empire. The garden is constantly used as a symbol for paradise, with shade and water as its ideal elements.  ‘Gardens under which rivers flow’ is a frequently used expression for the bliss. The four main rivers of paradise are traditionally thought to be , one of water, one of milk, one of wine and one of purified honey.

This is the origin of the quartered garden, which were divided by means of four water-channels and all contained within a private, walled enclosure.

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With or without masses of blooming flowers, Villa Gamberaia is paradise to me.  Even without literal rivers of milk and honey. :-))  Quiet and birdsong is enough.

 

Paradise found.

I have never seen anything more beautiful in my life than what I saw/experienced today in Settignano.  The combination of elements was astounding:  perfect weather, perfectly blue sky, warm sunshine, antique architecture and garden elements, gorgeous plantings of white and lavender colored wisteria. Add tranquility and birdsong.  For me, it is the ideal combination of parts.  It makes paradise.

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Celebrating the tunnel of wisteria!

When is enough, enough?  When is beauty on overload?

I have no idea.

Here’s more beautiful wisteria from Giardino Bardini.  I can never have too much of it.

 

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Why Leonardo and Raphael, Pontormo and Botticelli, never spent their time painting this glorious flower of the Florentine spring, I will never understand.

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