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SF Flower & Garden Show 2009

This blog was honored with a press pass (thank you Dawn Stranne & Associates) to attend what was to be the last year of the San Francisco Flower & Garden Show. Good news: the show will go on! At the Garden Writers Reception on the evening of Wednesday, March 18, founder, chairman, and producer Duane Kelly announced that a buyer (two in fact) had been found for the show. (The fate of the sister show - the Northwest Flower & Garden Show - is yet to be determined.) Kelly's announcement was met with heartfelt applause. The new owners (left and center, with Duane Kelly in suit and bowtie) were similarly applauded.

I attended last year's show at the Cow Palace in Daly City. This year's show is being held at the San Mateo Event Center. Duane Kelly mentioned that landscaping on the event center's grounds scored highly in early surveys. Interestingly, while the show attendees are responding positively to the new venue, the production company, Salmon Bay Events, is being protested by labor groups at the vehicle and pedestrian entrances.

I spent Thursday, March 19 viewing the display gardens and the plant market. I'll review the gardens in a later post. On my way out, I browsed the book offerings by two Berkeley bookshops: Mrs. Dalloway's on College Avenue and Builders Booksource on Fourth Street.

The books that grabbed my attention reflected several of the themes in the display gardens: edible gardens, gardening in small spaces, rainwater gardens, and garden design generally. From Builders Booksource:

A Handbook for Garden Designers, Rosemary Alexander with Karena Batstone

Rain Gardens, Nigel Dunnett and Andy Clayden; Rainwater Collection for the Mechanically Challenged, Suzy Banks with Richard Heinichen, illustrated by Tre´Arenz

Edible Flower Garden, Rosalind Creasy; Recipes from the Garden, Rosalind Creasy

And from Mrs. Dalloway's:

Fresh Food from Small Spaces, R.J. Ruppenthal; The Edible Garden, Hazel White and Janet H. Sanchez (Sunset Books)

New Garden Design: Inspiring Private Paradises, Zahid Sardar; The Garden Maker's Manual, Rosemary Alexander and Richard Sneesby

Comments

Anonymous said…
Great news that the SF show found a buyer! Sad that our fate in Seattle remains in the balance. I'm sure it's a hard time to be getting into this kind of venture, but I'm hopeful that someone will come forward. I wonder how many of those wonderful books are available at the public library? I have checked out the edible flowers one before but most of the others are new to me. Can't wait to see what I can find! Hm, should have been doing my reading in January when the garden was in hibernation...
Peter Floyd said…
nice flower garden