Neil Morris Fragrances Visiting Trees Review+Boston Park Draw

Maxfield Parrish Cascades

Care selve, ombre beate! 
Vengo in traccia del mio co
r!” (Beloved forests, blessed shadows! I come in search of my heart!)

~ 1736, Georg Friedrich Händel’s opera Atalanta, text by Belisario Valerian

Neil Morris of Neil Morris Fragrances

“I'm a sucker for a walk in the woods and Neil Morris Fragrances Visiting Trees was based on just that – visiting the incredible trees at the Arnold Arboretum in Jamaica Plain. It was a damp and warm late afternoon walk in summer and the scent of the greenery and trees was intoxicating!” ~ Neil Morris

For those of you not familiar, American perfumer Neil Morris is a Boston Boy born and bred in Newton, Massachusetts. He adores the ocean and the woods – and his perfumes reflect this, with recurrent employment of myriad oceanic notes and musks (Midnight Sea, Aegean, Coral, Storm); he spent lyrical childhood hours on the dune-swept beaches of Cape Cod. Neil evokes sylvan settings in fragrances such as North WoodsMidnight ForestDark Season – portraying a fondness for Thoreau’s Walden Pond, Finnish forests explored in youth tattooed in olfactory memory for the rest of us to share. 

Now we experience one of his latest, Visiting Trees – that jewel in the crown of Boston parks, the Arnold Arboretum. Harvard University’s Arnold Arboretum was founded in 1872 and is the largest link in Frederick Law Olmsted’s Emerald Necklace, a 1,100 acre chain of parks and waterways linking Boston and Brookline, Massachusetts. You will all know Olmsted far better as the landscape architect/conservationist who designed New York’s Central Park, Brooklyn’s Prospect Park and landscaping surrounding Washington, D.C.’s United States Capitol Building – among many other famous green places. He is known as the father of landscape architecture. Times alter and we with them. When I arrived in Boston in the summer of 1972, that part of Jamaica Plain was not a place to visit outside of daylight hours. Like Neil, I was later to find it a welcome verdant respite – but at first attempt I lost my sketchy bearings, bewildered and stranded in a rough neighborhood in the dark. If it weren’t for a kindly Caribbean nonagenarian who promptly ordered me to turn around we wouldn’t be having this conversation. Headstrong, I wasn’t to be deterred for long. That sprawling expanse of lush greenery was to be revisited with joy as a young girl enamored, a chaperone on school outings amongst a roving horde of restless school children,on picnics en famille and by my wild lone ever after.

Underforest Justin Peters

 Neil Morris Fragrances Visiting Trees is all about the base; it’s awash in resinous materials which cling like pine sap to the soles of your bare feet. The closest you’ll get to a top note is that blissfully prickly black pepper, hot, arid and spicily floral. This feels perfectly appropriate because black pepper is smitten with myrrh, all dusty ancient echoes from a distant past. Murky, viscous labdanum, floral-woody rosewood furnish an enduring warmth burnished by all the conifers – nootka (a particular Northwestern favorite of Neil’s and mine) and varied colorations of cedar. Patchouli in combination with oakmoss exudes secreted loaminess which feels vastly climate-dependent: ask any perfume lover how this pairing fares on a warm, humid day compared to a cool dry one. Neil’s inspiration occurred in summer swelter-time when odors are magnified incrementally, suspended in the atmosphere like attendant apparitions which dog one’s steps faithfully.  Neil Morris Fragrances Visiting Trees is a leisurely saunter at a preferred pace through wooded glades. You needn’t hurry and overheat; that’s the beauty of a sylvan summer’s day, especially in full blown winter. 

Notes: myrrhVirginia cedarblack peppernootka (Alaskan cedarwood), labdanumpatchouliTexas cedaroakmossbois de rose,moist loam.

~ Ida Meister, Senior Editor and Natural Perfumery Editor

~ Art Direction: Michelyn Camen, Editor-in-Chief

Bottle sweetly provided by the perfumer – you knew I’d love this one! Thank you.

Neil Morris Fragrances Visiting Trees

Thanks to the generosity of perfumer Neil Morris we have one 30 ml bottle for one registered reader worldwide (be sure to register or your comment will not count). To be eligible, tell us what appeals to you about Ida’s review of Neil Morris Fragrances Visiting Trees, where you live and if you have a favorite Neil Morris fragrance. Draw closes 2/14/2019

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 We announce the winners only on our site and on our Facebook page, so like Çafleurebon and use our blog feed…or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume

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35 comments

  • Walking through a forest of trees always calms my soul, even if it’s a small park in the city. Lovely description of this fragrance, Ms Ida. It makes me want to drive directly there and be outside for a few moments. USA

  • I so appreciated the description of a very specific place. I hate being hot and sweaty in the summertime, but I am going to put this review in the back of my head and pull it out the next time I feel like complaining about the heat and humidity. It sounds like the fragrance captures the beauty of the situation, so we can experience that beauty all year round. I live in the US, in North Carolina.

  • Dearest Ida, you never disappoint! You are a weaver of words! Thank you for your magical review of my new perfume – Visiting Trees! And thanks to you, Michelyn, for the lovely imagery! I particularly love Underforest. You have both been so supportive through the years and I want you to know I really appreciate it! Big Hugs!!

  • Excellent review! Growing up in the Pacific Northwest of the US, I have always enjoyed the scent of the forest. Especially intrigued by the note of Nootka in this composition. Have not tried anything from this perfumer. Would love to win this giveaway. Oregon, USA

  • I read the list of notes first and immediately thought to myself: “Gosh, this perfume must be marvellous”: everything about it speaks to me. Comparing Visiting Trees to pine sap was brilliant, that one sentence reminded me of my happy childhood.

    Thank you all for this draw. I live in Russia

  • Ana-Maria Gașpar says:

    Renaissance, beginning.
    I live în România.
    I still haven’t tried none of Neil Morris fragrance, but I would love to

  • I’ve never had the chance to try anything from this house but i love the name Visiting Trees, also i do like the notes list, resinous fragrances are awesome. Thanks for the chance, i am in the EU.

  • Thanks for the review and the draw. I’m not familiar with Neil Morris, but I’ll be looking him up after Ida’s review. I’m a big fans of wood scents and botanical gardens. I haven’t had the chance to visit the Arnold Arboretum, but I’ll be adding that to the list! I’m in the U.S.

  • What a beautiful review and this sounds amazing! Love the description of a humid day walking in the trees! I’m not familiar with Neil Morris but obviously need to be. Thank you for the beautiful draw, I’m in US

  • I have never had a chance to try any of Neil Morris’ perfumes but, this one sounds amazing, “Murky, viscous labdanum, floral-woody rosewood furnish an enduring warmth burnished by all the conifers – nootka“ I love anything with a pine type note. Thanks for the opportunity to try this. I live in the US.

  • I love the name of the fragrance, Visiting Trees. I love visiting the forest because of the scenery and calming atmosphere. This sounds like a wonderful fragrance. I don’t have any favorites because I’m not familiar with Neil Morris.
    I live in USA.

  • I never met a Neil Morris fragrance that I didn’t love. I’m so glad that Ida has showcased him and his new fragrance. What a gorgeous review. I just know exactly what this must smell like, and I know that I will like it. I love Storm, Desert Wind, Afire, Dark Season and a number of others. Thanks for a wonderful review and a awesome draw. I’m in the USA

  • Unfortunately I didn’t encounter Neil Morris fragrances so far. But I love the woods! I would like to compare the smell to some woods here in Switzerland. – Thanks for the draw!

  • I don’t want to visit cities anymore, I want to visit trees! A day in a forest gives so much energy and inspiration, especially among the pines. This description sounds so good, very atmospheric.
    I just checked Neil Morris website, wow, he works with interesting themes. Would love to sample October, Takashimaya, Gotham, Izmir, Café and Aegean.
    Thank you for this introduction to another interesting brand!
    Latvia, EU

  • Neil Morris is great. I own his Burnt Amber that smells of burning woods with floral animalics. Would love to try more. I love the illustrations and the scent of trees, nature. I am in Germany

  • Monica Beaton says:

    I used to love walking through the forest in autumn in Canada – when the trees are putting on a show of incredible colour and the scent changes dramatically – from something green and fresh to something earthy and woody. Nature’s art for all the senses at it’s very best. Beautiful review and art Ida and Michelyn. I love Neil’s use of notes of nature to paint a fragrant picture. I live in Australia (now).

  • Thank you, Ida, for your descriptive journey.
    I haven’t gotten the chance to try any Neil Morris yet, but I am delving into his universe right now.
    I live in Europe, The Netherlands.

  • I love arboretums and trees, so this immediately appealed to me. I also grew up in New England, so this review summoned some nostalgia. I haven’t tried any of Neil Morris’ fragrances but hope to! I live in the US.

  • My parents live in Massachusetts now, so I am going to try to visit the Arnold Arboretum on my next visit. They live in the Berkshires, so I will also walk through the forest near their house and breathe in the fragrance of the woods.
    I love Neil’s Flowers for Men series, especially gardenia.
    I live in the USA.

  • I’m very curious about that. The pine forest has a mysterious scent. It’s a good chance to try this parfum.
    I live in EU.

  • I love arboretums and botanical gardens when I travel. Somehow I missed this one when I was in Boston. I’d love a saunter through the woods. When I retire I will move somewhere warm and sunny, but I would like to find a fragrance that would bring back a memory of the woods to use from time to time. This sounds fantastic. Great review Ida! Thanks for the chance. USA.

  • I love the way Neil Morris treats the base notes (I love his “Earthtones” series). So…reading that this fragrance “is all about the base” makes me….wow!
    I leave in Italy.
    Thanks for the draw!

  • Trees and more trees! Everything green is amazing! Love the notes of this fragrance and Ida’s wonderful words. I live in the US.

  • Wow this one speaks to me …Great review Ida ! Thanks …..I grew up in yukon and northern b.c. also for a few years .We lived deep in the bush so I love nostalgic fragrances like these the nootka tree alaskan cedar used to scare me, id explore woods as a youngster at night they are creepy looking, weeping and dreary,hek in the day also 🙂 Anyway Im glad Neils love for nature and walks in the forest helped birth this wonderful sounding creation the notes tick all the right boxes …It honestly sounds amazing got to try this beauty fingers crossed !

    Thanks for review and awesome giveaway this one sounds like its gonna make some one happy.

    Canada !

  • I too love a walk in the woods. I can easily spend a whole day covering many miles, taking in the sights and smells. The description of this fragrance leads me to believe that it would probably bring back memories of those wonderful times.I haven’t tried a Neil Morris fragrance, but would love to. I live in Canada.

  • I grew up in SE Alaska, surrounded by the Tongass National Forest, and Ida’s review made me think of the wonder of all those trees. So evocative, and Mr. Morris’s paean to trees sounds just as magical. I live in the USA, and thanks for the wonderful opportunity!

  • I’ve never heard of Neil Morris Fragrances. I loved the statement “Neil Morris Fragrances Visiting Trees is all about the base; it’s awash in resinous materials which cling like pine sap to the soles of your bare feet.” I enjoy resinous fragrances and love that rose and patchouli are in this formula (2 of my favorite fragrance notes).
    I live in the USA.

  • I have not tried any perfumes from this brand. Visiting Trees sounds very good, like walk into a beautiful forest. Thank you for the chance. I live in Europe.

  • I love a nootka spruce, and earthy, and mossy and piney scents, so this sounds like a lovely scent to me. I do not have a fav fresh from this house, but would like to try more, they sound so interesting. I’m in the us, thank you for the generous draw.

  • Dorian Fischer says:

    Great review! Have not yet tried any fragrance of this house but I would love to! Love the name “visiting trees”. I love Walking in the forest and wearing this at the same Time sounds amazing. From Vienna Austria

  • RobertNicolasB says:

    Mmmmm, “dusty ancient echoes from a distant past”. I’ve never heard of Neil Morris Fragrances, but this review piques my interest. Thanks for the chance. -USA

  • I love what Neil does with his wood / forest scents. They speak to me in a way that touches my soul As a meaningless aside – Olmstead consulted on the design of the park adjacent to the one where I live in Wilmington. My favorite? Chasing Autumn. Did you need to ask? Love you, Neil!