Jan 14, 2020
Today we celebrate the Father of Paleobotany and the botanical
illustrator honored by King Charles X.
We'll learn about the botanical painter who got sick of painting
flowers (he'd painted 800 of them) and the botanical illustrator
who worked for Curtis's Botanical Magazine and Kew Gardens.
Today’s Unearthed Words feature the hidden (and often
unappreciated) transformations happening in our garden during
January.
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that helps us understand
plant physiology through an intimate and entertaining memoir.
I'll talk about a garden item that can help you propagate your
house plants, and then we’ll wrap things up with the birth flowers
of January.
But first, let's catch up on a few recent events.
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Curated Articles
Horniman Museum's
gardener Wes Shaw - Gardens Illustrated
Horniman Gardens, Forest Hill, London - Spotlight: Wes Shaw
"The last place that blew me away was GARDENS BY THE BAY in
Singapore. Amazing conservatories, landscaping & planting - taking
horticulture to a new level. While I was there, I saw gardeners
abseiling down the side of green walls and volunteers
using tweezers to pick over the
beds.
Gardens should continuously change and evolve. I never see the
point of keeping something looking the same as it did at some point
in the past.
What’s the next big project task you’ll be tackling in the
garden?
We are planning a Winter Garden for an area of the Horniman Gardens
that needs a bit of a refresh.”
High Society: The Expert’s Guide To
Alpines
Here's a great post from @AlysFowler featuring Richard Wilford - an
alpine lover and head of design and collection support at the Royal
Botanic Gardens @KewGardens.
"What Richard doesn’t know about alpines isn’t worth knowing.
'We’ve got a very tall house to grow some very small plants' he
jokes. Alpines are surprisingly easy and hardy and perfect for
tricky corners and small plots. As their name suggests, alpines are
from areas of high elevation, so they love full sun, cool roots,
and cold nights."
Check out Richard Wilford’s Five Easy Alpines:
Sempervivum: will grow on sunny rocks, cracks in
walls, and stony places. Put a little compost into the niches
first, then nudge them in.
Alpine pinks Dianthus alpinus: a tiny
mat-forming evergreen with bright pink flowers. It likes
free-draining conditions and suits pots, gravel path edges, and
window boxes.
Erinus alpinus, or alpine balsam: forms neat
rosettes of narrow leaves and loves crevices.
Campanula cochlearifolia (fairy thimbles or ear leaf
flowers): Nodding blue flowers - Keep its feet
well-drained.
Phlox douglasii: A low-growing perennial - it
grows in dry woodlands. It needs a dry winter, but good drainage
and a sheltered spot by a wall will work.
Now, if you'd like to check out these curated articles for
yourself, you're in luck, because I share all of it
with the Listener Community in the Free
Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community.
There’s no need to take notes or search for links - the next time
you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community and request
to join. I'd love to meet you in the group.
Important Events
1801 Today is the birthday of the French
botanist and the Father of Paleobotany Adolphe-Théodore Brongniart
("Bron-yahr").
Adolphe-Théodore was born in Paris. His father, Alexander, was a
geologist.
There’s no doubt his father’s work helped Adolphe-Théodore become a
pioneer in the field of paleobotany. A paleobotanist is someone who
works with fossil plants. Plants have been living on the planet for
over 400 million years. So, there are plenty of fossil plants to
study and catalog.
As one of the most prominent botanists of the 19th century,
Adolphe-Théodore worked to classify fossil plant forms, and he did
so even before Charles Darwin. Adolphe-Théodore’s work provided
content for his book on the history of plant fossils in 1828.
Adolphe-Théodore published his masterpiece when he was just 27
years old.
Adolphe-Théodore’s writing brought him notoriety and gave him the
moniker "Father of Paleobotany." He was also called the "Linnaeus
of Fossil Plants." Adolphe-Théodore was not so much a fossil plant
discover as he was a fossil plant organizer. He put fossil plants
in order and applied principles for distinguishing them.
In 1841, at the age of 40, Adolphe-Théodore received the Wollaston
Medal for his work with fossil plants. It is the highest award
granted by the Geological Society of London. It must have made his
father, Alexander, very proud.
Adolphe-Théodore was a professor at the Paris Museum of Natural
History. He was the backfill for Andre Michaux, who had left to
explore the flora of North America.
Adolphe-Théodore's wife died young. They had two boys together, and
when Adolphe-Théodore died, he died in the arms of his eldest
son.
1825 King Charles X honored the Belgian
botanical illustrator Pierre-Joseph Redouté with the Legion of
Honor.
To this day, Redouté is one of the most renowned flower painters of
all time. Redouté was born into a Flemish family of painters.
Growing up, his family supported themselves by creating paintings
for the home and for the church.
Redouté was an official court draftsman to Queen Marie Antoinette.
One evening around midnight, she summoned him to appear before her,
and she asked him to paint her a cactus. She was exerting her
control; she wanted to see if Redouté was as talented as was
reported. (He was.)
Redouté also became a favorite of Josephine Bonaparte. Redouté’s
paintings of her flowers at Malmaison are among his most beautiful
works. Today, Redouté is best known for his paintings of lilies and
roses. Roses were his specialty. And, Redouté's work earned
him a nickname; he was known as "the Raffaele of flowers.".
Now, if you'd like to really treat yourself or get a special gift
or a gardener in your life, you should check out the
book by Werner Dressendorfer called Redouté: Selection of the Most
Beautiful Flowers.
This is a large coffee table book. It is probably one of the most
beautiful books I've ever seen; again, it's called Redoute:
A Selection of the Most Beautiful Flowers.
This book came out in September of 2018, and I finally just got
myself a copy of it after mulling it over for over a year. the book
features 144 paintings by Redouté that were published between 1827
and 1833. it's is truly one of my favorite books in my Botanical
Library.
When this book first came out, it retailed for $150.
You can get new copies of Redouté: Selection of the Most
Beautiful Flowers by Werner Dressendorfer and support the show -
using the link in Today Show notes for $83.
I managed to get an excellent used copy for $65. But, as I said,
this is an investment piece, and it's also extraordinarily
beautiful.
I guarantee if you have this book sitting out, your visitors will
be sure to comment, and they probably won't be able to resist
looking through the beautiful paintings. Glorious.
1836 Today is the birthday of the botanical
painter Henri Fantin-Latour (Fahn-tahn Lah-tur”).
It's kind of humorous to me that we end up discussing Henri
Fantin-LaTour today - right after Pierre Joseph Redoute - because
Henri painted flowers as well. But, unlike Pierre Joseph Redoute,
Henri got so sick of painting flowers that he could find no joy in
doing it for the end of his career.
All together, Henry painted well over 800 pictures of flowers over
32 years between 1864 and 1896. By the end of his career, the
entire genre of still life flower painting was life-draining to
him. He despised it. Yet, it's how he made a living, and many of
his paintings bought to be displayed in homes.
The painter James Whistler talked up Henri’s work so much that his
flower paintings were quite famous in England. In fact, during his
lifetime, he was better known in England as a painter than he was
in his native France.
Henri also painted portraits, as well as group portraits of
Parisian artists, and he even painted imaginative compositions. He
enjoyed painting portraits and his other creative work more than
painting flowers. But, it was always the flower paintings that
sold, and so he kept painting them to support himself.
1892 Today is the anniversary of the death of
the exceptionally talented Scottish botanical illustrator Walter
Hood Fitch. He was 75 years old.
Fitch was one of the most prolific botanical artists of all
time.
His illustrations were stunning, and he used vivid colors for his
work.
In 1834, Walter began working for William Hooker. Hooker was the
editor of Curtis's Botanical Magazine. Walter's very first
published plate was of a Mimulus Rose. He didn’t know it then, but
it was one down, and he had over 2,700 more to go.
Hooker loved Walters’s work because his paintings reflected the way
the plants appeared in real life; they weren't fanciful or
embellished, yet they were beautiful. In short order, Walter became
the sole artist for the magazine.
When Hooker became the director of Kew, the promotion meant moving
to London. He talked Walter into moving, too. Pretty soon, Walter
was not only making illustrations for the magazine but for
everything published at Kew.
At the end of his career, around the age of 60, Walter got into a
disagreement with William Hooker’s son, Joseph Dalton Hooker, over
his pay. Walter left his post at Kew and became a freelancer.
During his lifetime, Walter created over 12,000 illustrations that
found their way to publication in various works.
Unearthed Words
There is a famous saying, slow as molasses in January. We often
think nothing is happening in our gardens during the winter, As
Alfred Austin said in his poem, Primroses (Primula vulgaris):
Pale January lay
In its cradle day by day
Dead or living, hard to say.
But this belief that January is a dead time in the garden… well,
nothing could be further from the truth. Today's Unearthed Words
are all about the productivity that takes place in our gardens in
January.
January is the quietest month in the garden. ... But just because
it looks quiet doesn't mean that nothing is happening. The soil,
open to the sky, absorbs the pure rainfall while microorganisms
convert tilled-under fodder into usable nutrients for the next crop
of plants. The feasting earthworms tunnel along, aerating the soil
and preparing it to welcome the seeds and bare roots to come.
— Rosalie Muller Wright, Editor, Sunset
Magazine
Nature looks dead in winter because her life is gathered into her
heart. She withers the plant down to the root that she may
grow it up again, fairer and stronger. She calls her family
together within her inmost home to prepare them for being scattered
abroad upon the face of the earth.
— Hugh Macmillan, Scottish Minister & Naturalist,
1871
Over the land freckled with snow half-thawed
The speculating rooks at their nests cawed
And saw from elm tops, delicate as flower of grass,
What we below could not see, Winter pass.
— Edward Thomas, British Poet
"You think I am dead,"
The apple tree said,
“Because I never have a leaf to show-
Because I stoop,
And my branches droop,
And the dull gray mosses over me grow!
But I'm still alive in trunk and shoot;
The buds of next May
I fold away-
But I pity the withered grass at my root."
"You think I am dead,"
The quick grass said,
"Because I have parted with stem and blade!
But under the ground,
I am safe and sound
With the snow's thick blanket over me laid.
I'm all alive, and ready to shoot,
Come dancing here-
But I pity the flower without branch or root."
"You think I am dead,"
A soft voice said,
"Because not a branch or root I own.
I have never died, but close I hide
In a plumy seed that the wind has sown.
Patient, I wait through the long winter hours;
You will see me again-
I shall laugh at you then,
Out of the eyes of a hundred flowers."
— Edith Matilda Thomas, American Poet
Grow That Garden Library
A Garden of Marvels by Ruth Kassinger
The subtitle to this book is: How We Discovered that Flowers Have
Sex, Leaves Eat Air, and Other Secrets of Plants
This book came out in April of 2015.
Ruth Kassinger didn’t always have a green thumb. in this book,
she'll tell you that until she completely understood how plants
actually worked, she couldn't know precisely what they needed.
Her story starts this way,
“This book was born of a murder, a murder I committed.”
The victim - it turns out-was a beloved kumquat tree. Ruth had
decided to prune it. Her efforts made the tree turn brittle and
brown. It made her wonder:
Why did the kumquat die when a rose bush and a crepe myrtle that
was pruned the very same way were both thriving?
The dilemma is what made Ruth begin a quest to understand more
about plant physiology. This book is part memoir and part
science-class.
Ruth writes with a friendly voice. This book is a beautiful way to
learn basic botany - the marvel of flowers, roots, stems, and
leaves. While we're learning botany from Ruth, we also get to know
her personal stories. Ruth shares how she learned to become a
better gardener. Initially, Ruth made the same mistakes we all
make: over-watering, under fertilizing, making untrue assumptions
about what plants need.
You can get a used copy of A Garden of Marvels by Ruth
Kassinger and support the show, using the Amazon Link in today's
Show Notes for under $5.
Great Gifts for Gardeners
3-Bulb Vase (Plant Terrarium) with Wooden
Stand
Retro Wooden Frame -3 Glass Plant Vases - for Desktop
Rustic wood and vintage design, these decorative glass vases are
perfect for propagating plants like hoya, pathos, Swedish Ivy,
etc.
It is a gorgeous plant prop for your home.
The frame is made of natural wood, mottled surface; three bulb
vases are made of High boron silicon heat resistant glass.
The wooden stand size : 5.5"H x 11" W x 4" D; Each vase : 3.74 H x
2.75 W; Opening – 1 inch Diameter. Perfect for the desktop, in
office, or home.
Accessories complete- Easy to set up - ready for water (the hexagon
screwdriver and screws are included).
Today’s Botanic Spark
January’s birth flowers are the carnation and snowdrop. Let’s take
a moment to celebrate both.
Carnations
Carnations are some of the world's oldest flowers. They have been
cultivated for over 2000 years. The Greeks and Romans used them and
garlands
Carnations are part of the Dianthus family. Their Latin name is
Dianthus caryophyllus. The etymology of the word Dianthus is from
two Greek words. Dios means Divine, and Anthos means Flower. And,
the translation of dianthus means "Flower of the Gods."
Carnations have different meanings based on their color. White
carnations symbolize good luck and pure love. Pink carnations
represent admiration, and a dark red carnation represents affection
and love.
Snowdrops
January’s other birth flower is the Snowdrop (Galanthus).
Snowdrops were named by Carl Linnaeus, who gave them the Latin name
Galanthus nivalis, which means "milk flower of the snow."
Snowdrop is a common name. They were also known as Candlemas Veils
because they typically bloom around Candlemas or February 2nd.
Snowdrops are an indicator flower signaling the transition from
winter into spring. Thus, the meaning of a Snowdrop blossom is
Hope.
The word Galanthophile is the name given to people who love
snowdrops.
And here's a Fun Fact: a substance extracted from snowdrops is used
to treat Alzheimer's Disease.