June 18, 2024

A Garden Tour for Hortulus

June is such a wonderful time for a garden tour.

Most of the garden tours at my farm are conducted in the spring and early summer. Late last week, I welcomed a group from Hortulus, a member of the Garden Club of America based in nearby Greenwich, Connecticut. Founded in 1930, the group's mission is to stimulate the knowledge and passion for gardening and creative design and to protect, restore, and improve the environment through education and conservation. I was very happy to have this group from Hortulus at my farm. I walked them through my gardens and allées, showed them my pool and fruit orchard, and introduced them all to my horses, geese, and peafowl.

Enjoy these photos.

 

June 15, 2024

The "Influencers: 1920s Fashion and the New Woman" Exhibit at Lyndhurst

A new and informative exhibit featuring the impact of three major fashion innovators of the 1920s is now on display at the Gothic Revival Lyndhurst Estate in Tarrytown, New York.

Presented inside the mansion's exhibition gallery, the fascinating "Influencers: 1920s Fashion and the New Woman" show highlights how Coco Chanel, Irene Castle, and Edna St. Vincent Millay crossed racial, cultural, and global barriers to change the way women dressed and to help provide them with more creative control over the pieces they wore and how they presented themselves in public. The exhibit features the interesting progression from restrictive, elaborate, and heavy garments to lighter, more comfortable wear for both daytime and evening outings. It shows the shifts in design, fabrics, and body coverage, and details the history behind these fashion modifications. If you're in the area, I hope you stop to view this collection, which is open now through Monday, September 23rd.

Here are some photos, enjoy.

June 14, 2024

The Lyndhurst Mansion

If you're planning to be in or near Westchester County, New York this summer, try to visit Lyndhurst, a magnificent Gothic Revival country estate and National Historic Landmark located on 67 sprawling acres beside the Hudson River in Tarrytown.

Lyndhurst, which is also known as the Jay Gould estate, was owned and shaped by three prominent area families - The Pauldings, The Merritts, and lastly, by railroad tycoon and financier, Jay Gould. Purchased in 1880, Jay occupied the home until his death in 1892. In 1961, his daughter Anna Gould donated it to the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The estate features 16 elaborately decorated rooms - many lovingly restored and including original furniture left in the home. The surrounding park is an outstanding example of 19th-century landscape design with expansive lawns, specimen tree groves, and curved carriage roads. The property also includes a children's cottage, a bowling alley, a laundry building, a pool house, and the exterior of what was once considered the largest private greenhouse complex in the country.

Here are some photos, enjoy.