Posts Tagged ‘Adopt-A-Geranium Day’

Geranium Lovers Occupy Bowling Green Park!

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

The rain held off yesterday and nearly 4,000 Bowling Green Park geraniums found themselves in the arms of thousands of Lower Manhattan residents and workers. In its fourth year, the wildly popular Adopt-a-Geranium event drew a constant stream of flower lovers, who waited patiently in a steadily moving line that wrapped around the park’s historic gates.

Adopt-A-Geranium Day 2011

Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth Berger and Council Member Margaret Chin pass out thousands of fresh geraniums.

Digging flowers up just as fast as they were given away, hardworking Downtown Alliance staff could barely keep up with demand. Luckily Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth Berger and Council Member Margaret Chin were at the helm, helping eager participants select the perfect plant. You can see some of the proud owners with their new flowers here.

Chef Maximo Lopez May

Andaz Wall Street’s Wall & Water Executive Chef Maximo Lopez May stands with his newly adopted geraniums.

Now that all of the geraniums have found loving homes, the Downtown Alliance is excited to prepare for its next Green Around Lower Manhattan event, Fall Community Planting Day, taking place on Saturday, October 22 from 10 AM to Noon. In preparation for spring, volunteers will help plant thousands of tulip bulbs in the same place the geraniums once proudly grew. What better way to occupy one of New York City’s oldest parks!

Top 10 Reasons to Bring a Geranium Home

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

Hello, Lower Manhattan! It’s that time of year again! The autumn breeze is here and it’s time to officially usher it in by giving away the 4,000 geraniums that have been calling Bowling Green Park home. You can come help out or just take a flower or two to add some color to your work space. Me personally, I’ll grab one for every corner of my cubicle; it’s looking a little drab in here. Whatever your reason, appeal to the green in you and come revel in the outdoors before it gets too cold—on Wednesday, October 12  from 10 AM to 12PM in Bowling Green Park.

geranium

If you’re still wondering why you should adopt a geranium this Wednesday, here are the top 10 reasons to bring one of these red beauties home, according to Downtown Alliance staff:

10. Adopting a puppy is too much responsibility.

9. Red is in this season.

8. Geraniums improve the air quality.

7. Geraniums add life to your cubicle.

6. Taking care of a geranium will help you be more Zen.

5. We accidentally dropped our baby-egg in third grade so we need to make up for it.

4. Geraniums are nicer than pet rocks.

3. Geraniums don’t need to be changed or bathed.

2. Taking care of a geranium demonstrates your sensitive side.

1. Last year’s geranium is lonely!

For more information visit, Adopt-A-Geranium Day | Downtown Alliance – Lower Manhattan For inquiries, please contact ContactUs@DowntownNY.com or (212) 566-6700.

The Tale of the Straggly Geranium and How It Won a Reluctant Heart

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

geraniums

By Cheryl Cuddeback

Cheryl Cuddeback is a guest blogger. This year’ s Adopt-a-Geranium Day is Wednesday, October 12 between 10 AM and noon in Bowling Green Park.

Last year I was coerced into taking a plant. As I crossed in front of the National Museum of the American Indian in Lower Manhattan on my way to work, I spotted a familiar white-and green-tent. It offered shelter to a green metallic table crowded by potted geraniums. It was the Downtown Alliance’s annual Adopt‐a‐Geranium Day.

Gardeners were handing out the plants that had adorned Bowling Green Park for the last several months. All summer long, the geraniums of Bowling Green sat among new friends while growing in the sun’s rays amid the roar of yellow cabs and buses driving down Broadway.

They mingled among tourists and worker bees from nearby offices. They felt the summer’s rain and humidity together as one. And now our fine leafed friends were literally being farmed out—separated from one another as they were placed into their own green plastic pot and new soil.

I resolutely walked by the makeshift plant orphanage with my wheeler bag in tow. I told myself that I’m not going to take a geranium. My teenage daughter had recently advised me to get rid of a few of my wayward plants. Rows of spider plants and philodendrons had overtaken our apartment’s window ledges and a file cabinet. I could easily qualify for being flora hoarder. I made it into the lobby of my building, and my mind went into office worker mode.

Fast forward eight hours. When I left work, the evening was well under way. The green-and-white tent was gone. I took comfort in believing that all the geraniums were adopted by new and loving families. Yet as my eyes adjusted to the darkness, there appeared a silhouette of not one but two geraniums. They were behind the recently constructed ultra‐modern Bowling Green 4 and 5 subway entrance. No wonder no one wanted them. They looked like two straggly orphans.

The urge to pick up these neglected, soiled souls was strong, but not as prominent as imagining myself walking over to the Whitehall Street R station wheeling my satchel with one arm and hugging two potted plants against my stomach with the other. Not to mention having to deal with my daughter’s disapproving, rolling eyes when I got home.

I kept going. But as I stood on the subway platform, a thought crept into my mind: What if the plants are still there tomorrow? I decided that if they made it through the evening, I would give them a home—at  my office.

The next morning, I anxiously walked over to the Bowling Green subway entrance. It was as if the universe had left a couple of gifts under a Christmas tree. My two lonely orphans had made it through the night. As I reached down to pick them up, I felt a presence behind me. I turned around

“Where you get?” a short and stout older woman asked me. She was dressed in a brilliant turquoise ensemble complete with a satin turban and she spoke with what sounded like a Slavic accent.

“These are from the park.” I replied. “They were repotted and donated, but it looks like these two were left behind. Would you like one?”  She accepted.

Upstairs at my desk, I placed my new plant beside the geranium I picked up from last year’s geranium give‐away. I couldn’t help but think this year’s plant was in shock. When no one was around, I tried to comfort it by introducing both plants to one another. I also informed my new window sill resident that we were just 12 floors up from Bowling Green.

Now a year has gone by, and soon the geranium volunteers will be back with their tent and tables for another round of recycling nature’s gifts. Maybe I should take that day off —to avoid the plant guilt.

Geraniums Rule!

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

Adopt a Geranium

It began as a handful of people showing up just before 10 o’clock last year, but within minutes that trickle became a flood. Hundreds – soon thousands – of people turned up at the southern end of Bowling Green.

Why was this historic spot such an October hotspot?

For the annual Adopt A Geranium event, in which the Downtown Alliance digs up, pots, and hands out – for free – thousands of geraniums to people who work and live in Lower Manhattan, or are just visiting for the day.

And we’re at it again.

In just a few weeks, on October 12th, we’ll be setting up camp once again at the south entrance to the park, and distributing upwards of 4,000 geraniums between 10 AM and noon.

We expect to see some special guests too. Plus, we’re also going to be taking portraits of folks who pick up the plants (only if you let us take your photo!) to post online.

And, if you think the plants are short-lived after we dig them up, think again. The photo above was taken by Brian DiFeo, who grabbed a geranium last October. And that plant is thriving today at Lower Manhattan’s co-working hotspot, the Hive at 55.

See you on October 12th!

Adopt A Geranium

Monday, October 5th, 2009

An hour before last year’s adopt a geranium day event, there was a line around the perimeter of Bowling Green Park.

This fall, I’m hoping for more of the same.

Last year, in an effort to involve the Downtown community in beautifying our open spaces, we managed Adopt-A-Geranium Day (check out a few photos from the event). Though we were unsure whether many people would show up to claim a free potted geranium from Bowling Green Park, a hoard of Downtown workers showed up on a crisp fall day.

As the event progressed, I saw that people were not just there to be handed a plant. Perhaps to the surprise of the many women in heels and men in ties, their work cubicles and office lighting didn’t sap their bodies of outdoor spirit entirely. They rolled up their sleeves, grabbed trowels and got dirty.

On October 7th and 17th, it’ll be time to do it all again.

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This year we are once again offering Adopt a Geranium Day on Wednesday, October 7th from 10:30AM to 12:30PM. In addition, we will also have our Fall Community Planting Day on Saturday, October 17th, from 11AM to 1PM.

The Adopt a Geranium event will provide participants with a free geranium from the Bowling Green Park, in preparation for our fall tulip bulb planting. Participants will also have the opportunity to dig up their own geranium and pot, if they so choose. The Downtown Alliance will provide woven recyclable totes to carry home the potted geranium. For Fall Community Planting Day, we will have free pumpkins for participants to decorate, in addition to bulb and kale planting.