缅北禁地

close

Great Meadows Garden Club takes visitors ‘down the rabbit hole’ at Wonderland-themed show

2 min read
1 / 5

Photos: Jeffrey William Hughes

Great Meadows Garden Club members pose in their best 鈥淎lice in Wonderland鈥 attire. Pictured, from left, are Rose Bando, Grethen Wagner (who made most of the costumes), Bonnie Fazenbaker, Sandy Kulp, Katie Jaros, Martha Alexander, Kathy Petrucci and Wanda Sherry. Cherie Beal is the caterpillar in front.

2 / 5

Jeffrey William Hughes

Great Meadows Garden Club held an 鈥淎lice in Wonderland鈥-themed event at the Uniontown Country Club.

3 / 5

Jeffrey William Hughes

One of the displays at the Great Meadows Garden Club鈥檚 鈥淎lice in Wonderland鈥-themed flower show and tea party.

4 / 5

Jeffrey William Hughes

Katie Jaros (left) and Martha Alexander (right), both members of the Great Meadows Garden Club, were among the planners for the club鈥檚 鈥淎lice in Wonderland鈥-themed flower show and Mad Hatter tea party.

5 / 5

Jeffrey William Hughes

Hydrangeas submitted for judging at the Great Meadows Garden Club鈥檚 recent show at the Uniontown Country Club.

Great Meadows Garden Club recently hosted the 鈥淎lice in Wonderland鈥 flower show and Mad Hatter鈥檚 tea party.

Guests entered by going 鈥渄own the rabbit hole鈥 and found themselves in a wonderland of floral designs, horticulture and crafts. Club members dressed as characters from the book in costumes made by club member Gretchen Wagner. Many guests also came dressed for the event.

Children enjoyed a scavenger hunt, coloring, and hat making, and a photo booth provided fun for the whole family. At the tea party, guests received tea and cookies.

Floral displays were designed around the 鈥淲onderland鈥 theme, and each section depicted some aspect of the story, including an 鈥渦nbirthday party鈥 on children鈥檚 tables, and 鈥渄own the rabbit hole鈥 fairy gardens. The horticulture and education sections of the show provided information about starting a pollinator garden, wildflowers, home freeze drying, and many floral specimens.

The youth division of the show included children from the East End United Community Center summer program. Elementary students made teacup gardens, and middle school students made fairy gardens for the competition. They also put together an educational board about work the club has done with them in making a community garden along with Penn State Master Gardener help.

The money raised at the free community event will pay for the event itself as well as club projects such as maintenance of the Blue Star memorial at Point Lookout, beautification at the Wharton Township building, garden therapy, and work with the East End United Community Garden and education.

Anyone interested in joining the club can contact its president Martha Alexander at martha.alexander78@ gmail.com.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.