It’s no wonder that Western Connecticut is a magnet for flower lovers each
spring.
Ten acres of daffodils, seven acres of peonies, a neighborhood where
thousands
of dogwoods bloom and a famous nursery’s multi-acre display garden
make for
a spectacular start to the season in this scenic region of the state.
And all of the
displays are open free to the public.
The beauty begins early in April at the Laurel Ridge Foundation near
Litchfield.
The 10,000 daffodil bulbs sowed here in 1941 have multiplied many
times to
form a sea of yellow and white carpeting acres of woodland fields.
Everyone
is invited to enjoy the scene during blooming season through May, when
grounds
are open from dawn to dusk. The area is closed the rest of the year. The
Laurel
Ridge Foundation is located on Wigwam Road, off Route 254 in Northfield,
near Litchfield. See details at litchfielddaffodils.com
Just in time for a special Mothers Day outing, the 81st annual
Dogwood
Festival May 6 to 8 will light up the historic Greenfield Hill
neighborhood in
Fairfield. Plantings that began way back in 1705 have grown to
prodigious
numbers that canopy the byways of this lovely area. Besides the
dogwoods,
the festival offers New England artisans and crafters, an art show, a
tag sale,
a plant boutique, live music, and children’s activities.
Greenfieldhillschurch.com
Mid-May brings the annual Peony Festival, a Technicolor floral show in
Thomaston, where Cricket Hill Gardens is celebrating its 27th
anniversary
as a prize source for these big, beautiful blossoms.
The
family-owned gardens
are a prime source for rare Chinese tree peonies. among the
largest and most
colorful of all flowers. Over 400 varieties can be seen in the
seven acre peony
display garden, along with a demonstration orchard of fruit
trees such as
Asian pears, pawpaws, persimmons, quinces, and heirloom apples.
Tree peonies are expected to bloom this year from the third week of May
to early
June, followed by herbaceous peonies and intersectional peonies
to the third
week of June. The public is invited during this peak season,
when Cricket Hill
will be open Tuesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
treepeony.com
Litchfield’s White Flower Farm, one of American’s leading mail order
sources
for bulbs and perennials, opens its many acres of extravagant d
isplay gardens
with tulips and other seasonal blooms beginning in April.
It remains beautiful
with changing seasonal displays through October.
Hours are 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Whiteflowerfarm.com
For more information about spring gardens and a free copy of Unwind, a
full-color,
152-page booklet detailing what to do and see, and where to stay,
shop and
dine in the Litchfield Hills and Fairfield County in Western
Connecticut,
contact the Western Connecticut Visitors Bureau, PO Box 968,
Litchfield,
CT 06759, (860) 567-45606, or visit their web site at www.visitwesternct.com
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