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Water Your Street Trees!

A tree for climbing
Photo by John Hayes Photography.

It’s that time of year again when GM harangues you about caring for our precious street trees. So here is goes:

Water your street trees!

It’s still early in the spring, and trees are only starting to leaf out, so you do not need to start watering street trees immediately. But it will become necessary sooner than you think. So if you have a young tree on the sidewalk in front of your house or apartment, please, please keep it in mind this summer and water it. The basic goal you should have is to water young trees at least once a week, so long as you get a good 20-25 gallons of water.

The preferred watering device is the ooze tube (the bags that go around the bottom of the trees). You can differentiate them from the not-preferred gator bags because the gator bags have zippers. (They’re not preferred because they can create an unhealthy environment around the trunk and you have to remove them after each use.) With the ooze tube you can just fill it up and let it go.

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The Morning Metropolitan

Party HQ
Photo by M.V. Jantzen.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

1600 block of Wisconsin Ave.

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Dumbarton Oaks Announces Reopening Plans

Dumbarton Oaks will finally open its gardens to the general public next month. This news was announced by the institution last week.

Entry will be by timed tickets, which will be offered starting on May 15th. If that is too long for you to wait, season pass holders will be allowed to secure tickets for entry starting April 20th.

GM wonders if this will increase the number of people purchasing season tickets. Getting in three weeks early would be great, especially since this includes the height of the wisteria blooming. But one of the best reasons to get a season pass in normal years is to skip the (often long) line at the gate. With timed entry, the lines will be non-existent. If you think it’s still worth the money for you to get a season pass, buy it here.

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The Morning Metropolitan

Georgetown GLOW
Photo by V. Pickering.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

Dumbarton Oaks

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BID to Add 4,000 Feet of Wider Sidewalks

The Georgetown BID will shortly be widening the sidewalk for over 4,000 feet of sidewalk through the commercial district.

The sidewalk expansions will take the form of raised wooden platforms. Since they are at the same grade as the brick sidewalks themselves, the extension feels like a genuine expansion of the sidewalk. You can see prototype versions of this model in front of Clyde’s and Laduree, among a few other spots. They will be installed on M St. between 29th and 34th streets, and on Wisconsin between Water and Q streets. Once installed, the platforms will grow the sidewalks from an average of width 9.5 feet to 15 feet.

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The Morning Metropolitan

Goose
Photo by V. Pickering.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

3000 block of R St.

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Georgetown Time Machine: Derelict Montrose

Today on Georgetown Time Machine, GM is posting a nice shot of the Montrose estate in a derelict shape.

The photo, from DCPL’s archive, is from 1891, and shows the estate’s front facade from R St. GM wrote about this property last year. This photo was in that post, but the version above is much clearer. Here is what GM wrote about the estate’s later years:

In 1837 [the estate] was sold to William Boyce, who renamed it Montrose, in honor of his familial connections to the Scottish Earls of Montrose.

Although his family continued to own the property until 1911, they did not live in it after 1858. It fell into disrepair, although some tenants brought it back into shape shortly in the 1880s. Eventually, however, it became totally abandoned and derelict. Georgetowners, led by Sarah Louise Rittenhouse, successfully petitioned Congress to purchase the land and dedicate it as park in 1911.

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