Ted and Mary Greig Rhododendron Garden
In Full Flower Now and Through Middle May
May
10, 2004 - In a city the size of Vancouver it may seem at times that
there are no hidden horticultural treasures waiting to take us by surprise,
but you would be wrong. Now, and for the next several weeks, the wood-chipped
lined pathway that encircles the Stanley
Park Pitch & Putt Golf Course is blooming in a confetti of pastel
colours with rhododendrons and azaleas taking centre stage.
This is the location of the Ted and Mary Greig Rhododendron Garden
(yes, azaleas fall into this category) and the Vancouver Park
Board was the grateful recipient of this extensive collection of plants
over 30 years ago. In hearing of the Greigs impending retirement from
their nursery at Royston on Vancouver Island, where they hybridized
rhododendrons, the Park Board was able to secure, enmass, an irreplaceable
group of shrubs.
In
all, about 4,500 plants are necklaced around the golf course beneath
the towering magnolias and evergreens. Of special interest are the Rhododendron
auriculatum hybrids which combine the desirable characteristics
of late bloom time in July and August and scent, something not usually
found in rhodos. An early evening stroll through this area during the
first two weeks in May astounds the park visitor with Italian ice colors
combining bloom and foliage. Summer walkers are equally bowled over
to see colorful rhodos blooming "out of season." You'll find
a good guide book is necessary, such as Gerald Straley's Trees of
Vancouver or the Natural History Society's The Natural History
of Stanley Park with excellent articles by now retired Stanley Park
gardener Alleyne Cook.
We
tip our hats to the Greigs who were generous in their donation comprising
no less than a lifetime's achievement in the guise of these magnificent
specimens. We are told that former Park Board Deputy Superintendent
Bill Livingstone negotiated this gift of public pleasure and
went on to hire rhododendron specialist Alleyne Cook to create the garden
you now can enjoy.
Don't miss it. This is a secret garden worth discovering year after
year.