
Every year these daylilies bloom at the end of May, often while the last tulips are still blooming, and weeks before most of the other daylilies in the city appear. They came from an unnamed hybrid seedling.


Every year these daylilies bloom at the end of May, often while the last tulips are still blooming, and weeks before most of the other daylilies in the city appear. They came from an unnamed hybrid seedling.
Romanesque lions guard the Allegheny County Courthouse. They would originally have been at street level before Grant Street was lowered by about a storey.
Old Pa Pitt is trying to teach himself to call this beautiful little weed “Purple Archangel,” because it is much more poetic than the name he has always used for it, “Purple Dead-Nettle.”
Why did English bluebells (Hyacinthoides non-scripta) sprout uninvited in a small city yard in Pittsburgh? Because life is better than we deserve.
It may seem hard to believe, but this Art Deco building on Forbes Avenue downtown is being turned into loft apartments.
Because we cannot get to the museum right now, old Pa Pitt is bringing the museum to you. Here are two by Pittsburgh’s great satirical painter David Gilmour Blythe. Above, Good Times (c. 1854-1858). Below, Temperance Pledge (c. 1856-1860). They make a good pair. Both are in the Carnegie Museum of Art.
Matched eagles guard the Grant Street entrance to the Boulevard of the Allies viaduct, built after World War I and named in a fit of residual patriotism.