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Flowering & Fragrant Whimsical Courtyard Butterfly Garden
Designed to reflect the Arts & Crafts character of the Mansion, our uniquely designed garden contains a wide variety of perennials and annuals. Situated in a sheltered central courtyard, the garden is visible from all of the rooms within the Mansion and the adjacent tent pavilion. It is lovingly maintained throughout the year to invite the most colorful blossoms possible.
From the words of Kim Smith, (KimSmithDesigns.com) landscape artist and garden designer for Willowdale Estate:
We are taking extra care to grow only plants that are either regional to the northeast, or are exceedingly well-behaved ornamentals.
The butterfly courtyard at Willowdale Estate flourishes spring, summer, and autumn - flowering, fruiting, and luring pollinators of all sorts.
Butterfly Courtyard Blooming Cycle
 Spring
Delicious pink and white flowering dogwoods and crabapples billow into blossom. The earth between affords a spring carpet of true-blue forget-me-nots, "Spring Green" tulips, and warm, buttercream fragrant jonquils, woven with dashes of the Red of Riding Hood's tulips. The much-awaited Eastern redbud arrives fashionably late in her brilliant Persian pink dotted dress. Ostrich ferns unfurl their fiddleheads and wildflowers violet, rockbell, bloodroot, and bleeding heart dance the spring fete. Lily of-the-valley takes hold the senses and the fragrance of lilacs and viburnums envelop the courtyard. So begins the seasonal revelry of sultry scented blossoms and kaleidoscopic hues.
 Summer
As the summer unfolds, sweetbay and Oyama magnolias exude their lustrous satiny perfume - the fragrant festival swells - and aromatic, butterfly-attracting blossoms begin their florescence. The air becomes impregnated with the scent of lavender, rose, lemon lily, and peony. Coral honeysuckle twines round the entryway and there, you may capture a gleam from the hummingbird's ruby throat. Buttonbush for swallowtails, meadowsweet for azures, a butterfly, or two, or three is spied! Coneflower and cardinal flower, poppy and phlox, moonbeam and catmint, balloon flower and buddleia - yield nectar punch for intrepid travelers. A tableau vivant to bedazzle royal Monarchs, the milkweed and gayfeather feast is arrayed. With whisper soft steps, we catch a glimpse of the clearwing moth nectaring at the verbena, and a sphinx at the wand flower. Never quieting to the dog days of August, a Mexican mariachi of cosmos, nasturtiums, zinnias, and lantana continue to regale. Rose-of-Sharon throws another blossom and Rudbeckia "Autumn Sun" stretches ever taller still.
 Fall
Now the moon vine and morning glories embower the courtyard entryway. Hazy, slanting rays gild the late season glory in the garden. Autumnal hues and fragrances are due in part to copious members of the aster family. New England and New York asters bloom in shades of pink and purple, smooth aster and "October Skies," in shades of lavender blue. The potent perfume of Montauk daisies is surpassed only by that of the apricot-pink washed Korean daisies. Not to be ignored is the divine scent of the peacock orchids, hailing from the banks of the Nile River, and the purple polka dots of toad lily and tissue paper petal-dress of anemone, both of Japanese fame.
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