Feb 10, 2021
Today we celebrate a botanist who gave Meriwether Lewis a crash
course in botany.
We'll also learn about a poet who wrote some touching poems that
incorporated the natural world.
We hear some words about getting the garden ready for growing -
straightforward advice on getting started.
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about a garden style
that’s never gone out of style: cottage gardening.
And then we’ll wrap things up with a pioneer naturalist who wrote
books that became a beloved part of many modern childhoods.
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Important Events
February 10, 1766
Today is the birthday of the American botanist, naturalist, and
physician Benjamin Smith Barton.
Benjamin worked as a Professor of Natural History and Botany at the
University of Pennsylvania, where he authored the very first
textbook on American Botany. In 1803, at Thomas Jefferson's
request, Benjamin was tutoring Meriwether Lewis to get him ready
for the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Now Meriwether had many strengths, but he had little knowledge of
natural history or plants. Thanks to Benjamin's tutelage,
Meriwether was an awesome specimen collector on the Lewis and Clark
Expedition.
After the Expedition, Benjamin was supposed to create a book
describing all of the plant specimens found on their great voyage.
But, for some reason, he never began writing. Instead, the job
ultimately fell to Benjamin's assistant, Frederick Pursh.
And when Frederick ended up having a falling out with Benjamin, he
secretly took the specimens and fled to England. Once there,
Frederick found a patron and published his Flora of North
America in two years' time — much to the embarrassment of
Benjamin Smith Barton and all American botanists.
And, there's an incredible story that came out two years ago, in
February, regarding Benjamin. The story featured a little yellow
butterfly that was found pressed between the pages of one of
Benjamin's manuscripts from 1812 - his Flora
Virginica. And it turns out that a delicate, tiny,
yellow-winged butterfly was discovered by a library fellow named E.
Bennett Jones at the American Philosophical Society as he was
looking through the book.
Well, naturally, this caused a stir, and butterfly experts were
called in to examine the specimen, and they believed that it was
placed deliberately since the butterfly was found on the pages
listed "Plants beloved by Pollinators - such as
Monarda."
After this incredible discovery, the Barton Butterfly, as it came
to be called, was carefully removed and preserved in a suspended
container.
And there was a final touching detail to this story: the butterfly
left an indelible mark on the manuscript. Even with the specimen
now safely preserved in a glass box, the pages bear a little mark
of a golden butterfly-shaped stain in the spot where it lay pressed
for over 200 years before it was discovered.
February 10, 1882
Today is the birthday of the English writer Winifred Mary Letts.
Gardeners love her quote on spring:
That God once loved a garden, we learn in Holy writ.
And seeing gardens in the Spring, I well can credit it.
Winifred also wrote a poem about spring called "Spring the Cheat."
This is one of many poems Winifred wrote about the Great War -
WWI.
Winifred wrote "Spring the Cheat" to remind people that they were
not alone in their suffering. And her poem illustrates how
pointless existence seems during wartime. And Winifred contrasts
the season of rebirth - spring (which is cyclical), with a
war-induced season of loss (which usually spreads across many
seasons and is wildly at odds during spring).
Luminous evenings when the blackbird sways
Upon the rose and tunes his flageolet,
A sea of bluebells down the woodland ways, —
O exquisite spring, all this — and yet — and yet —
Kinder to me the bleak face of December
Who gives no cheating hopes, but says — "Remember."
Another poem that will thrill gardeners is Winifred’s delightful
verse that was written to honor the birth of a dear friend’s baby
(Peter John Dobbs). Winifred's poem is called To a May
Baby, and I've often thought it would be perfect for a
spring baby shower invitation.
To come at Tulip Time how wise!
Perhaps you will not now regret
The shining gardens, jewel set,
Of your first home in Paradise
Nor fret
Because you might not quite forget.
To come at Swallow Time how wise!
When every bird has built a nest;
Now you may fold your wings and rest
And watch this new world with surprise;
A guest
For whom the earth has donned her best.
To come when life is gay how wise!
With lambs and every happy thing
That frisks on foot or sports on wing,
With daisies and with butterflies,
But Spring
Had nought so sweet as you to bring.
Unearthed Words
When one is first beginning to garden or gardening in a place one
does not yet know, soil can seem dumb and unhelpful, just dirt. It
is gray and empty, or yellow, clammy, and stony, or perhaps it is
black and full of worms. Little pebbles might be interspersed all
through it, or big ones, or maybe there is a rock ledge a
spades-depth away. The plants thrive or languish in mysterious
ways.
As one begins to work in it, a sense of the soil sharpens. One gets
to know it's grit or muddiness, it's smell and warmth or chill, how
it holds or drains water, what creatures inhabit it. One might
notice how these qualities connect with each other, how they show
themselves in the ways the plants grow. Most of all one discovers
that the soil does not stay the same, but, like anything alive, it
is always changing and telling its own story.
— Carol Williams, American gardener and author, Bringing
a Garden to Life, Preparing the Ground
Grow That Garden Library
Cottage Gardens by Claire Masset
This book came out in 2020, and the subtitle is A
Celebration of Britain's Most Beautiful Cottage Gardens, with
Advice on Making Your Own.
In this book, Claire shares every possible type of cottage garden.
Famous profiles include writer Thomas Hardy's cottage in Dorset;
the glorious cottage garden at Sissinghurst by Vita Sackville-West
and Harold Nicolson; Beatrix Potter's cottage garden property known
as Hill Top, and many more. Best of all, Claire thoughtfully offers
down-to-earth advice to gardeners who wish to learn how to create
their own cottage garden.
This book is 176 pages of cottage garden inspiration: winding
garden paths lined with hollyhocks, climbing roses and honeysuckle,
orchards, and wildflowers.
You can get a copy of Cottage Gardens by Claire
Masset and
support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for
around $15
Today’s Botanic Spark
Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart
February 10, 1957
Today is the anniversary of the death of Laura Ingalls Wilder.
One of the reasons so many of us have a soft spot in our hearts for
the Little House books is because Laura was so descriptive; she was
a natural storyteller.
In retrospect, I think you may be surprised by the amount of
material in Laura’s books that was devoted to the natural world -
ma’s gardens, the landscapes Laura and her family experienced, and
the reverence for life - plants, animals, and human - all of it is
so cherished by Laura and her loved ones.
In 2017, the author Marta McDowell wrote a book
called The
World of Laura Ingalls Wilder, and in it, she
highlights the frontier landscapes that inspired the Little House
books.
And Marta’s book sheds new light on Laura as a naturalist. In a
blog post, Marta challenged us by writing:
“I’d like to suggest a thought experiment. Instead of
categorizing Laura Ingalls Wilder as an American children’s author,
think of her as a nature writer as well…
Long before she was a writer, Laura Ingalls Wilder was a
gardener and farmer, growing food for the table and raising crops
for sale. Nature was her home, as well as little houses. Through
her life and work, Wilder sowed a deep appreciation for the world
outside one’s own door. Her books still inspire budding naturalists
to plant, preserve and appreciate their own wilder
gardens.”
Well, Marta and I had a lovely chat featured in Episode 585 of the Still
Growing podcast if you’d like to check it out.
And one time, we even had a nice little lunch together as she was
passing through the Twin Cities. Marta is one of my favorite modern
garden authors, and I loved her idea of writing about Laura as a
naturalist.
In researching Laura, I discovered many wonderful things she had
written about the natural world outside of her
wonderful Little House books.
In the Missouri Ruralist, Laura wrote,
“The voices of nature do not speak so plainly to us as we grow
older, but I think it is because, in our busy lives, we neglect her
until we grow out of sympathy. Our ears and eyes grow doll and
Beauties are lost to us that we should still enjoy.
Life was not intended to be simply a round of work, no
matter how interesting and important that work may be. A moment's
pause to watch the glory of a sunrise or a sunset is so satisfying,
while a bird song will set the steps to music all day
long.”
In early February 1918, over a hundred years ago this month, Laura
wrote:
“Now is the time to make a garden!
Anyone can be a successful gardener at this time of year and I
know of no pleasanter occupation these cold, snowy days, then to
sit warm and snug by the fire making a garden with a pencil, and a
seed catalog. What perfect vegetables do we raise in that way and
so many of them! Our radishes are crisp and sweet,our lettuce
tender and our tomatoes smooth and beautifully colored. Best of
all, there is not a bug or worm in the whole garden and the work is
so easily done.
In imagination we see the plants in our spring garden, all in
straight, thrifty rows with the fruit of each plant and vine
numerous and beautiful as the pictures before us. How near the real
garden of next summer approaches the ideal garden of our winter
fancies depends upon how practically we dream and how hard we
work.”
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember:
"For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."