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Olive W. & George S. Lee Memorial Garden Lee Memorial Garden is a wonderful little gem, tucked away in the woodland setting of New Canaan, Connecticut. Its narrow meandering paths are edged with spring blooming bulbs, ephemerals, ferns, herbaceous plants, an extensive collection of specimen azaleas and rhododendrons, and mature trees which provide dappled shade. Boulder drifts, rocky ledges and a seasonal stream add natural structure to the densely planted terrain. The 2.7 acre garden was developed by George S. Lee, Jr. who set out some 63 years ago to create a “peaceful place where plants can reveal their characteristic beauty in a natural setting.” Lee wrote that his extensive plant collection “has been the fruit of a chronic curiosity to learn what plants would be willing to make their home in New England woods which in this area offer shade, granite rocks and thin, acid, soil.” His property displays a wonderful alternative to clear cutting and planting a lawn in the rocky Connecticut woods. George Lee devoted nearly 40 years of his life to plant collecting. He was eager to share his ideas and plants with fellow gardeners, and made his garden “open at all times for whatever benefit may be derived from it by others.” Upon his death in the 1978, he bequeathed his masterpiece to the Garden Center of New Canaan. Under the Garden Center’s stewardship, Lee Garden has been maintained largely by volunteers for the past 25 years. A trained horticulturalist was hired recently, at the recommendation of the Garden Conservancy, to work with volunteers to rehabilitate the mature plant collection. The garden remains open every day to plant lovers and all who enjoy the serenity of nature. Description of Garden's Plant Collections
The sheer number and variety of plants in the garden present a wonderful learning opportunity for those interested in horticulture and gardening. George Lee, an amateur horticulturist, planted the Garden with every hybrid azalea introduced by Joseph B. Gable, as well as, hybrids of the Gartrell, Knaphill, Exbury, Kaempferi and Ilam types. The rhododendron plantings included hybrids developed by Shamarelle, Gable, Dexter, and Nearing, as well as, native species. The rhododendrons and azaleas bloom under a high canopy of oaks, maples and tulip trees and an intermediate canopy of dogwood and are underplanted with wildflowers, groundcovers and bulbs. Portions of the rhododendron paths are edged with luxuriant masses of epimedium. The Garden’s collection of wildflowers and spring ephemerals include : Bloodroot, Oconee Bells, Trout Lily, Twinleaf, Primrose, Wood Anemone, Virginia Bluebells, Blue-eyed Mary, Trillium, Wood Poppy, May Apple, Bleeding Heart, Lily of the Valley and Marsh Marigold. Bulbs in the Garden include Snowdrops, Winter Aconite, Iris Reticulata, Glory-of-the-Snow, Squill, Narcissus, Grape Hyacinth, Leucojum and Spanish Bluebells. The Garden is most often visited in the spring, commencing with the appearance of the early spring bulbs and ephemerals in March and April and continuing through the display of azaleas and rhododendrons in May and June. The peak of the azalea bloom typically occurs in early May around Mothers’ Day and the peak of the rhododendron bloom follows later in May. Because of the diversity of the azalea and rhododendron collections, some specimens may be observed in bloom from early April into July. There is always something of interest in the Garden for those interested in plants and nature. Listed below are some of the things to see throughout the year. (Yearly variations in weather may speed or delay the peak display by as much as two weeks.)
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