MySecretGarden

U.S.A., Washington State. USDA zone 8b. Sunset climate zone 5

Tulips Galore. Part 1

We are so fortunate to be able to visit the annual Tulip Festival in the Skagit Valley in Washington state! This year, it was held for the 28th time. Multicolorful  fields of tulips are mesmerizing!



To see more varieties, we visited the RoozenGaarde display garden (3.5 acres filled with almost a quarter of a million of spring-flowering bulbs).
Where else to enjoy the tulips if not in the garden of the largest tulip bulb grower in the U.S.! By the way, the Roozen family business is the largest in the world in growing tulips, irises and daffodils.

What struck me the most was the variety: the mix of colors, forms, shapes and sizes.
Cup-, bowl-, goblet-, star-shaped... Single and double...
One-color and multi-colored...
Clicking on the pictures will make them BIG
Subdued in color and bright and bold...

Highlighted by the sun and glowing...
Tulip razmataz...
Pure, innocently white:
I loved these flowers a lot:
especially when they were blown by the wind:
These stars made me smile:
What a contrast with classic cup-like blooms!
Aren't they a bit childish?

Daffodils  had finished their show in the fields, but not here, in the display garden.
The orange color is not among my favorites, I liked these:

I also liked the lemon-yellow color on the top of the next picture:

And, again, the fields:
The old, moss-covered building looks great in such a surrounding:
One thousand acres of blooming fields belong to the RoozenGaarde company, but there are others... The scene is unbelievably beautiful. 
Add the mountains, some of them snow-capped.... Spectacular!
The next photo is one of my favorites from this trip.
To see the names of the tulips, go to the RoozenGaarde catalogue.
Enjoy!
To be continued with more pictures.
My previous years' posts about this Festival:
***Copyright 2011 TatyanaS

28 comments:

  1. Oh, how lovely. Very enchanting pictures... What wonderful rich color!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow! Great pictures and it must have been truly amazing to be there in person. Did you feel as if you were in Holland? Thanks for posting all these beauties.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Tatyana, what a relief to see a post for gardeners to enjoy, the tulips and photographs are beautiful. I often think as gardeners, we have an inbuilt affinity to our world and the respect which we owe it. But do we really have to bang on about how more green we are compared to the next person (i dont mean you) for goodness sake lighten up.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I ditto Sandra: Your "Enchanting" pictures are to die for. The only thing better is to be there in person. I bet you brought a catalog home and we'll see some of these in your garden next year! :)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Tatyana its seems we have a bit of Holland right here in the States to enjoy...you are so lucky to be close by...absolutely breathtaking photos...

    ReplyDelete
  6. Sandra, thank you!

    Masha, thank you! I've never been to Holland... but I understand what you mean. Many WA tulip growers are Dutch, originally, and they brought their traditions, culture and yes - bulbs!

    Alistair, thank you. I hear what you are saying!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Grace, thank you! We got lucky with weather on Saturday. Originally, we planned to go there last Monday, but someone told us that the tulips were just starting showing their color. There would be less people during working days, of course. But it wasn't bad. As for growing tulips in my garden.... what to do with deers and squirrels?

    Donna, thanks!!! It's very close to us, less than 2 hours driving.

    ReplyDelete
  8. For some reason I didn't realize we blog in the same are of the world! Beautiful tulips, I've only seen the fields of daffodils and now you've shown me what I'm missing. Beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
  9. bakingbarb, hello neighbor. I am going to your blog right now.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Oh thank you for posting such beautiful pics of this years event! I haven't been to the Skagit Festival in a few years and I dearly miss it. I also love how they feature a local artist yearly to create their posters.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Wow! What a spectacular sight. It must just overwhelm the eyes when seeing them in the fields.Thank for sharing the colorful showing.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Wow! Tulips don't do well here, so seeing something like this is like a dream. Love those stars!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Wow! Incredible! Total tulip overload (in a good way). I recognize a few, but would love to have them all.

    ReplyDelete
  14. This is a sight I have to travel to see because they don't grow in my climate. Wonderful pics!

    ReplyDelete
  15. Tatyana,

    What a treat to see all of these beautiful tulips!

    Eileen

    ReplyDelete
  16. Tatyana,

    What a place to visit and the timing is superb! I could not pick a favorite I liked all of the photos! Wish I'd been there.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Amazing. How I missed visiting tulip fields in Japan when they were in season. So many colourful varieties which I admire very much. Thanks for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Thank you everyone! I know, it's a bit overwhelming to see so many blooms, but the place has grassed areas and some benches to sit and relax. The blooming fields are not side by side, you need to drive in between. There are great nurseries there, and the towns are also great. So, my point is - there are breaks which help you not to get toooo overwhelmed!

    ReplyDelete
  19. Must have been amazing to attend this ahow. I really enjoyed your pics.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Tatyana, I thought you had to travel to the Netherlands to see a display like this. Thank you for highlighting this US grower and the beauty of their fields. Carolyn

    ReplyDelete
  21. I can onlt imagine how it felt to see all of these fields in person...breathtaking! That photo with the moss covered buildings should be framed and hanging in your home.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Tatyana, It’s a very rainy Spring day so I thought it would be a good time to check in on you and the other Blogs I follow. Can not be out in the dirt so I am here at the computer. The tulip photos are absolutely beautiful. Really wonderful. I have only a few tulips up near the house because the deer seem to enjoy them too so there are not too many that make it for viewing. But I figure the deer need to "enjoy" them in their own way so I let them be. I recently posted some of the Spring blooms here at Gardens at Waters East, Aconite, dwarf Iris, Crocus, Scilla. Slowly Spring will be here. Jack

    ReplyDelete
  23. absolutely beautiful, thank you for sharing your lovely photos!!

    ReplyDelete
  24. Thank you for the tulip fix ~ simply amazing! So many different varieties and colors. I love, love, love the picture of the tulip field with the old barn in the background.

    ReplyDelete
  25. What day were you there? Must've been Friday or Saturday for that much sun. I was there Friday and would've enjoyed meeting you. Interesting to see how you so differently "saw" with your camera the same things I "saw" with mine. The flowers look so familiar--I know where you were standing, etc.--and yet they also look so different through your lens. Great shots.

    ReplyDelete
  26. What an incredible sight! I LOVE your pic of the moss covered building in the field of tulips. The scene is completely charming. When and how do they dig all these tulips up for sale?

    ReplyDelete
  27. Thank you, my friends! It looks like we have a winner - the picture with a moss-covered barn!
    Kelly, Saturday was our day! Friday, I guess, was less croudy.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Tatyana,
    I cannot thank you enough for sharing those photos! I never really believed there were fields of tulips like that. It is so amazing! I looked through your photos 20 times. I never knew! Thank you for opening my mind and giving me something new to put on my bucket list! Come sit on my porch anytime. Bring a blanket as it is cold in Sou Dacota:)

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for stopping by and for your comment! I appreciate your time! See you soon on your blog!

Blog Archive

Search This Blog

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

I'M GLAD TO SEE YOU!

Labels

Abyssinian Banana (4) Actaea s. (1) Agapanthus (1) Agressive plants (1) Alaska (8) Amaryllis (5) Aquilegia (1) Aralia (4) Arizona (1) Arundel Castle Gardens (1) Autumn (47) Bainbridge Island Gardens (8) Before and After (8) Berry (4) Bird Houses (1) Bloedel Reserve (1) Blotanical (3) Blue Poppy (2) Book review (1) Botanical Gardens (3) Bouquets (9) Butchart Gardens (9) California (3) Calla (1) Canada (2) Chanticleer Garden (1) Clematis (4) Coleus (1) Colonial Gardens (7) Conifers (3) Containers (22) Corydalis (1) Dahlia (5) Dan Klennert (1) Desert Landscape (1) DIG (1) Dogs (14) Dry creek bed (1) Duris Cucumber Farm (1) Elandan Gardens (2) End of Month View (12) England (16) English Gardens (2) Euphorbia (1) Eze France Exotic garden (2) Fall garden (19) Far Reaches Farm (1) Favorite plants (52) Favorite plants. Tree Philodendron (1) Fences (2) Foliage (7) Formal gardens (1) Foxglove (14) France (4) Frankfurt Botanical Garden (1) Front Garden (5) Fuchsia (8) Garden decor (3) garden design (1) Garden elements (48) garden rooms (1) garden structure (1) Garden Tour (1) Garden works (15) Gardening Tips (4) Gardens of nature (11) Gardens to see (113) Gardens to see (tours) (25) Geraniums (2) Germany (5) GH Garden Tour (7) Giveaway (4) Giverny (2) Gossler Farms Nursery (1) Grasses (8) Great Dixter (3) Greenhouse (2) gunnera (4) Hampton Court (1) Hawaii Garden (1) Hellebores (8) Herbs and Vegetables (22) Heronswood (7) Hidcote (1) History of gardening (11) Holidays (25) Hops (1) Hosta (4) Hydrangea (7) Illumination (1) Italy (12) Japanese maple (14) Kew (4) Lakewold Gardens (22) Lavatera (1) Lavender (3) Leucosceptrum stellipilum ‘Ogon' (1) Little and Lewis Garden (1) Lobelia tupa (2) Meconopsis (2) Melianthus major (2) Minter Gardens (1) Missouri Botanical Garden (1) Mount Vernon (1) My Garden (150) My Open Garden (4) MY PICTURE OF THE DAY (80) Neighborhood (9) NPA Open Gardens (13) NWFGS (29) Old Goat Farm (3) Orchids (1) Oregon (4) PalmenGarten (2) Pampas grass (1) Peony (6) Perennials (59) Plant ID (9) Poppy (5) Problem areas (3) Recipes (2) Rhododendron (5) Rock garden (2) Romneya c. (2) Sarah P. Duke Gardens (2) Serre de la Madone (Lawrence Johnston) (1) Shade Garden (20) Shayne Chandler Garden (1) Shrubs (11) Sissinghurst (9) Sky Watch (1) Slope garden (6) Slugs (3) Spring/Summer garden (141) Stachys (1) Succulents (9) Summer/Fall garden (74) Texas Arboretum (1) The Garden of Great Depression (1) Tree Peony (2) Trees (36) Trips (81) Tulip Festival (16) Uncategorized (7) Vegetable garden (4) Vegetables (1) Villa Cimbrone (2) WA (114) Weigela (1) Wells Medina Nursery (1) White garden (3) Wild animals (21) Wild flowers (16) Windcliff (1) Wineries (1) Winter and winter garden (54) Wordless Wednesday (31) Yang's Garden and Nursery (6)
Copyright 2009-2022 TatyanaS, MySecretGarden Blog



*