Fawcett Terrace in Bloom - Brooklyn Botanic Garden
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Fawcett Terrace in Bloom

At the height of summer, when most of the Osborne Garden is blanketed in green, Fawcett Terrace is bursting with color and texture.

The entrance to the Osborne Garden. Photo by Michael Stewart.

The large circular concrete planter that greets you at the Eastern Parkway entrance provides a sampling of what’s to be revealed as you make your way along Fawcett Terrace, which runs above the western border of the Osborne Garden.

Photo by Michael Stewart.

Mixed borders of woody plants and herbaceous perennials provide sprays of color that peek over stone retaining walls and soften the edges of the path.

Gardener Nancy Nieland, who curates the Osborne Garden, is experimenting with lilies this year. Their large and showy flowers carry your gaze along the border, blooming next to subtler perennials like yarrow, with umbels of tiny pale-pink flowers.

Lilium spp. (lily) in the Osborne Garden. Photo by Michael Stewart.

Get a glimpse of bright red behind the trees, where a sea of coppertips (crocosmia) are growing.

A swathe of Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ (coppertips) along Fawcett Terrace. Photo by Kathryn Tam.

This part of the garden is abuzz with movement, too. Insect-attracting native perennials like butterfly weed, purple coneflower, and brown-eyed Susan gently spill into the path.

Asclpias tuberosa (butterfly weed) in the Osborne Garden. Photo by Michael Stewart.
Echinacea purpurea (purple coneflower) in the Osborne Garden. Photo by Michael Stewart.
Rudbeckia triloba (brown-eyed Susan) in the Osborne Garden. Photo by Michael Stewart.

You might be taken by the scale and grandness of the Osborne Garden upon your first encounter. but it’s worth taking the time to appreciate the casual, whimsical gestures of the summer-blooming plants, and the beauty of each individual bloom. Just let the color, or scent, lead you. “It’s really a four-season garden,” Nieland notes. “You always find something blooming or fragrant.”

Campanula poscharskyana (Serbian bellflower) in the Osborne Garden. Photo by Michael Stewart.

Kathryn Tam is a former editor of Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s digital editorial content.

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Image, top of page: Michael Stewart