Nov 26, 2020
Today we celebrate the man who proved plants have a circadian
rhythm.
We'll also learn about the nurseryman who helped establish
Rochester, New York, as a “City in a Forest.”
We’ll remember the pioneer seedsman who started the largest
mail-order seed company in the world.
We celebrate Thanksgiving with some verses about this time of
year.
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a beautiful book of fruit
prints.
And then we’ll wrap things up with the story of a woman who
discovered the importance of biological diversity to water
health.
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Important Events
November 26, 1678
Today is the birthday of the French geophysicist, astronomer, and
most notably, chronobiologist Jean-Jacques d'Ortous de Mairan.
Mairan's job as a chronobiologist is a job one rarely hears about
these days.
In 1729, Mairan put together an experiment showing the existence of
a circadian rhythm in plants.
Mairan took a Mimosa pudica ("poo-DEE-cah")plant - the heliotrope
commonly called the sensitive plant - and put it in constant
darkness in a cupboard. All the while, he recorded the plant's
behavior. And what do you know? The plant had a natural rhythm of
opening and closing its leaves - even if it couldn't absorb
sunlight. Now, Mairan didn't think that the plant had an internal
clock, but he DID believe that it could attune itself to the sun -
even if the plant was blocked from it.
No matter the accuracy of Mairan's conclusions, his work was on to
something, and it established the foundation for chronobiology or
the internal circadian clock.
November 26, 1906
Today is the anniversary of the death of the German-American
horticulturist and nurseryman George Ellwanger ("El-WANG-ur").
In the mid-1800s, George Ellwanger and his Irish business partner
and experienced nurseryman, Patrick Barry, claimed their Rochester,
New York nursery was the largest in the world. Built on 650 acres
along Mount Hope Avenue, George started his business on land that
boasted an old pear orchard.
A renaissance man, George also started writing books on a variety
of topics - from gardening and gastronomy to poetry. A perpetual
seeker, George returned to Europe to hunt for fine trees to
propagate in America.
The fruit of George’s vision is evident throughout Rochester but
perhaps no more so than in the grand European beeches that dot the
city streets and parks. The beeches include several unique species
like fern-leaved, copper, purple, and weeping beeches. Today,
Rochester has 168 different trees within the city limits, and
Charles Sprague Sargent dubbed Rochester the “City in a
Forest.”
George and Patrick were also known for their fruit trees. In 1900,
Mount Hope Nursery exhibited 118 varieties of pears at the Paris
Exhibition, which won them a gold medal diploma.
In 1888, George and Patrick donated 20 acres of their Mount Hope
Nursery along with hundreds of plants to the City of Rochester,
which resulted in the creation of beautiful Highland Park. In a
Noah’s-Ark-like gesture, George and Patrick donated two of every
tree specimen in their nursery toward the effort to create Highland
Park.
Twelve years after George died on this day, The Mount Hope Nursery
closed for good.
Today, Highland Park is home to an annual Lilac Festival. Each year
visitors stroll the grounds to smell the lilacs, visit Warner
Castle and experience the Sunken Garden.
Here are some words George wrote about beech trees from his lovely
book called The Garden’s Story:
“If we take yellow alone for the color-standard, the beech is
without an equal. A beech, indeed, is always beautiful.
Its colors still remain attractive in late November, varying
from rich Roman ochre to deep-brown bronze and from pale rose-buff
to lustrous, satiny gray.
Its harmony is of marked loveliness in winter, a faded elegance
clinging to it like a chastened autumnal memory.”
And here’s a thought from George regarding mushrooms from his book
called The Pleasures of the Table:
"Mushrooms are like men - the bad most closely counterfeit the
good."
November 26, 1915
Today is the anniversary of the death of the pioneer seedsman and
founder of the Burpee seed company, W. Atlee Burpee - the “W” stood
for Washington.
Atlee died at 57; just two days after Thanksgiving in 1915.
As a young boy, Atlee immigrated from England with his parents. The
Burpees settled in Philadelphia, and when Burpee started his
business, it was at 219 Church Street in the city of Brotherly
Love. Although his father was disappointed that Atlee didn’t follow
in his footsteps to become a doctor, Atlee’s mother was sympathetic
to her son’s interests. The family loved to tell how Atlee started
in business selling poultry with $1,000 seed money from his
mother.
Atlee handled every aspect of his seed business - from writing
descriptions and creating the seed packaging to create a unique
catalog every year. Before Atlee, sweet peas were imported from
England. By WWI, Atlee sold more sweet peas than anyone else in the
world, and he even outsold British seed companies in England.
Overtime, Burpee became known for Atlee’s famous motto: Burpee
Seeds Grow. As a result of his dedication to quality and
innovation, Burpee became the world’s largest mail-order seed
company.
The spring of 2020 brought a new milestone to Burpee. As people
worldwide experienced lockdowns due to COVID-19, Burpee sold more
seed than any time in its 144-year history.
And here’s a little-remembered fact about the founder of Burpee
seeds: he was cousins on his mother’s side with the legendary
American botanist, horticulturist, and pioneer Luther Burbank.
Unearthed Words
It looked like the world was covered in a cobbler crust of brown
sugar and cinnamon.
— Sarah Addison Allen, American author
Chestnuts are delicacies for princes and a lusty and masculine food
for rustics and make women well-complexioned.
— John Evelyn, English writer, gardener, and diarist
T Thanks for time to be together, turkey, talk, and tangy
weather.
H for harvest stored away, home, and hearth, and holiday.
A for autumn's frosty art and abundance in the heart.
N for neighbors, and November, nice things, new things to
remember.
K for kitchen, kettles' croon, kith, and kin expected
soon.
S for sizzles, sights, and sounds, and something special that
abounds.
That spells THANKS for joy in living and a jolly good
Thanksgiving.
— Aileen Fisher, American writer, children’s book author, and
poet, All in a Word
Grow That Garden Library
Wall Art Made Easy by Barbara Ann Kirby
This book came out in 2019, and the subtitle is Ready to Frame
Vintage Redoute Fruit Prints: 30 Beautiful Illustrations to
Transform Your Home.
In this book, Barbara shares thirty beautiful fruit illustrations
by Pierre-Joseph Redouté (1759-1840), the renowned painter and
botanist from the Southern Netherlands.
The images feature grapefruit, plums, cherries, figs, raspberries,
quince, pomegranate, and other fruits from France that were painted
between 1801-1819.
Each 7” x 10” image is ideal for framing and can be easily removed
from the book by cutting along the lines.
This book is 66 pages of vintage fruit illustrations by
Redouté.
You can get a copy of Wall Art Made Easy by Barbara Ann
Kirby 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
November 26, 1907
Today is the birthday of the botanist Ruth Myrtle Patrick.
Ruth developed new methods for measuring the health of freshwater
ecosystems. Today, the Patrick Principle measures the biological
diversity of a stream; the greater the diversity, the greater the
health of the water.
Ruth learned much from her botanist father, Frank. Looking back on
her childhood, Ruth said,
“I collected everything: worms, mushrooms, plants,
rocks.
I remember the feeling I got when my father would roll back the
top of his big desk in the library and roll out the
microscope...
it was miraculous,
looking through a window at the whole other world."
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember:
"For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."