Jan 28, 2021
Today we celebrate a colonial botanist who introduced nearly 200
plants to British horticulture after sourcing them from his good
friend John Bartram in America.
We'll also learn about the man who mastered growing the Poinsettia
and established it as the official plant of Christmas.
We’ll hear some wonderful thoughts on the Common Daisy (Bellis
perennis) from one of my favorite writers.
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about styling your home
with botanicals - making your own horticultural haven.
And then we’ll wrap things up with the story of a woman who found
her way to the best job ever: creating herb gardens.
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Curated News
New Year Plant Hunt 2021: Day One |
BSBI: Botanical Society of Britain & Ireland | Louise
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Important Events
January 28, 1694
Today is the birthday of a Fellow of the Royal Society, an avid
gardener, and a friend to many scientific leaders in London in the
mid-18th century, Peter Collinson.
Peter Collinson introduced nearly 200 species of plants to British
horticulture - importing many from his friend John Bartram in
America.
And when the American gardener John Custis learned that Peter was
looking for the mountain cowslip (Primula auricula), he happily
sent him a sample. Auricula means ear-shaped, and the mountain
cowslip is commonly known as a bear's ear - from the shape of its
leaves. And the cowslip is a spring-flowering plant, and it is
native to the mountains of Europe.
Custis also sent Peter a Virginia Bluebell Or Virginia cowslip
(Mertensia virginica). This plant is another spring beauty that can
be found in woodlands.
And I have to say that the blue about Virginia Bluebell is so
striking - it's an old fashioned favorite for many gardeners. The
Virginia Bluebell is known as lungwort or oyster wort. And it got
those rather unattractive common names because people believed the
plant could treat lung disorders, and also, the leaves taste like
oysters.
Virginia bluebells bloom alongside daffodils, so you end up with a
beautiful yellow and blue combination in the spring garden -
something highly desired and gorgeous. Peter was not the only
gardener in search of Virginia bluebells. Thomas Jefferson grew
them at Monticello ("MontiCHELLo”) and loved them so much that they
were often referred to as Jefferson's blue funnel
flowers.
As for Peter, he once wrote,
"Forget not me and my garden."
Given Peter’s influence on English gardens, he would be pleased to
know that, after all these years, he has not been forgotten.
In fact, in 2010, the author Andrea Wulf wrote about Peter in her
book The
Brother Gardeners: A Generation of Gentlemen Naturalists and the
Birth of an Obsession - one of my favorite books
by one of my favorite authors.
January 28, 1895
Today is the birthday of the nurseryman known as “Mr. Poinsettia,”
Paul Ecke Sr. ("Eck-EE"), and he was born in Magdeburg,
Germany.
Paul and his family immigrated to the United States in 1906.
And when Paul took over his father's nursery business located on
Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood in the early 1920s, the Poinsettia
(Euphorbia pulcherrima) was a fragile, outdoor, wild plant. And
Paul fell in love with the Poinsettia immediately. And Paul felt
that the Poinsettia was perfectly created for the holiday season
because the bloom occurred naturally during that time of year.
By 1924, Paul was forced out of Hollywood by the movie business,
and that's when he brought his family and the nursery to San Diego
County.
Paul and his wife Magdalena had four children, and they purchased
40 acres of land in Encinitas("en-sin-EE-tis"). It was here that
Paul would turn his passion for Poinsettias into a powerhouse. And
at one point, his nursery controlled 90% of the Poinsettia market
in the United States.
At first, Paul raised Poinsettias in the fields on his ranch. Each
spring, the plants were harvested and then loaded onto two railroad
cars and sent to greenhouse growers all along the east coast.
And when Paul wasn't growing Poinsettias, he was talking
Poinsettias. It wasn't too long before Paul started calling
Poinsettias "The Christmas Flower"; Paul was endlessly marketing
Poinsettias and praising their attributes as a harbinger of
Christmas.
Initially, Paul worked to decrease the growing time of the
Poinsettia. By getting the time to bloom down from 18 months to 8
months, Paul made it possible for the Poinsettia to be grown
indoors.
And after figuring out how to propagate the plant through cuttings
indoors, Paul was soon able to ship Poinsettias around the world by
plane.
In the 1960s, Paul’s son, Paul Jr., took over the business, and he
cleverly sent Poinsettias to all the major television shows. When
the holiday programs aired, there were the Poinsettias - in their
glory - decorating the sets and stages of all the most popular TV
shows.
When Paul Junior learned that women's magazines did their
photoshoots for the holidays over the summer, he began growing a
Poinsettia crop that peaked in July. Magazines
like Women's
Day and Sunset were thrilled to
feature the Poinsettia in their Christmas magazines - alongside
Christmas Trees and Mistletoe. This venture was regarded as the
Ecke family's most significant marketing success and made the
Poinsettia synonymous with Christmas.
Today gardeners will be fascinated to learn that the Ecke family
distinguished themselves as a superior grower of Poinsettias by
using a secret technique to keep their plants compact and hardy.
Their solution was simple: they grafted two varieties of
Poinsettias together, causing every seedling to branch and become
bushy.
Competitor Poinsettias were leggy and prone to falling open. Not
so, with the Ecke Poinsettia.
By the 1990s, the Ecke growing secret was out of the bag, and
competitors began grafting Poinsettias together to compete.
Today the Ecke family does not grow a single Poinsettia on their
farm in San Diego County.
Finally, one of Paul's Poinsettia pet peeves is the commonly-held
belief that Poinsettias are poisonous. Over the years, sometimes
that fear would prevent a pet owner or a young mother from buying a
Poinsettia. Paul Ecke recognized the threat posed by this false
belief. And so, Paul fought to reveal the truth one interview at a
time.
It turns out that a 50-pound child would have to eat roughly 500
Poinsettia leaves before they would even begin to have a stomach
ache. Furthermore, the plant is not dangerous to pets. And here's
where things get crayze: Paul would regularly eat Poinsettia leaves
on camera during interviews over the holiday season to prove his
point.
When the Ecke nursery sold in 2012, it still controlled over half
the Poinsettia market in the world. During the holiday season,
roughly seventy-five million Poinsettia plants are sold - most to
women over 40.
Unearthed Words
The daisy’s genus name, Belis (martial or warlike), refers to its
use by Roman doctors as a common treatment for battlefield wounds.
John Gerard, the sixteenth-century herbalist and author of the
first important herbal in English, wrote:
“The leaves stamped take away bruises and swellings ...
whereupon it was called in old time Bruisewort."
But daisies weren’t just popular medicine. They were also popular
for making prophecies. You’ve certainly learned the most famous
one:
“He loves me, he loves me not."
The last petal decides the question—but its unreliability is
unfortunately notorious.
You can, however, tell the seasons by the coming of
daisies:
It's spring in the English Midlands, and people say when you can
put your foot on nine daisies.
But be careful: Dreaming of daisies in spring or summer brings good
luck;
If you dream of them in fall or winter, however, bad luck is on the
way.
— Susan Wittig Albert, author, China
Bayles Book of Days, January 38
Grow That Garden Library
Botanical Style by Selina Lake
This book came out in 2016, and the subtitle is Inspirational
decorating with nature, plants, and florals.
In this book, stylist Selina Lake shows,
“how to tap into the current trend for bringing nature, plants,
and florals into the heart of the home.”
Selina reviews the ingredients she uses to achieve her signature
look—antique botanical prints and artworks, flower stalls, potting
sheds, and houseplants. Then she shares how these items can be used
to transform your home into a botanical paradise.
Next, Selina shares five aspects of her botanical styling, from
Vintage Botanicals and Boho Botanicals to Natural Botanicals and
Tropical specimens.
This book is 160 pages of Selina’s innovative style tips for
working with botanicals to create a modern garden ambiance in your
home.
You can get a copy of Botanical Style by Selina Lake and
support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for
around $4
Today’s Botanic Spark
Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart
January 28, 1983
On this day, The Charlotte News shared an
article by Edie Lowe called “Herb Garden Just Like Artwork.”
Here’s an excerpt:
“To Deborah Zimmerman designing an herb garden is like painting a
picture or composing a song.
“You have to orchestrate a harmonious blend of textures and
colors and heights.
When designing a garden, my canvas is the ground.
My picture is of the finished garden. My song is the finished
garden."
Deborah’s latest design is a formal Elizabethan herb garden in the
backyard of the restored Blair-Bowden House on Poplar Street.
Deborah became interested in herbs and spices about 12 years
ago.
"I started a little business called Helping Hand Services…
planting herbs and spices in people's gardens.
It started out as a means of supporting myself in school. It
grew so quickly, and I enjoyed it so much.
I found myself feeling here I am being creative, and I'm
getting paid for it.
I’m spreading beauty in yards working with plants and soil -
which I love - and I'm getting paid to learn and
create."
Deborah is continually studying herbs and spices.
She is particularly fond of designing gardens like those from the
Elizabethan era in the 16th and 17th centuries.
"There is not much difference in the Elizabethan gardens of the
18th century and Victorian gardens. The (main) difference is the
type of herbs they favored in their gardens.
The Elizabethan Gardens were more apt to have highly scented
plants because of the period’s sanitation problems.
They would pick herbs and spread them on the walks and floors.
As company came and walked on the herbs, they'd be crushed,
releasing the scents. Herbs were the air fresheners of the
day."
Because people seldom bathed, scented herbs and spices were also
worn in pomanders around their necks.
The Victorian era was more sophisticated. Baths became popular.
Perfumes and scented water made from herbs and spices were
used.
"Victorian people loved rose water. The damask rose was the
popular flower then. It is the most highly scented rose there
is.”
Deborah’s 4th Ward garden, covering a 10-by-10-foot space, is
fashioned with circles and diamonds inside a square.
Each of the four points of the square is finished in a fleur-de-lis
pattern.
Deborah used creeping thyme and candytuft as a border hedge for the
garden. The rest of the pattern is carried out with lavender,
rosemary, lemon, verbena, aromatic herbs, clove pinks, rose
geranium, basil, sage, savory, chives, coriander, and camomile.
The 100-square-foot garden… will cost between $250 and $600.
“The most important thing is to like what you are
doing…
If you are happy in your work, you tend to grow.”
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember:
"For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."