Oct 3, 2022
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The Friday
Newsletter | Daily
Gardener Community
Historical Events
National Butterfly and Hummingbird Day
Look at the Leaves Day
1877 Birth of Otto Emery
Jennings, former curator at the Carnegie Museum of Natural
History and devoted scientist.
In 1904, Jennings started as the custodian at the Carnegie Museum,
where, over the next 41 years, he held almost every position before
becoming the director of the Museum in 1945.
Today, the Jennings Nature Reserve near Butler, Pennsylvania, is
named for Otto Jennings. Otto worked to protect the 20-acre area
because it was a natural habitat for the native Blazing
Star (Liatris spicata "Ly-at-truss
Spah-cah-tah"). The Jennings Reserve was expressly established to
ensure that the Blazing Star could spread and multiply.
The Blazing Star is native to North America and is known by other
common names, including the Gayfeather or Prairie Star. The Blazing
Star is a late-bloomer and features majestic plumes in purple or
white. Blazing
Star is a gardener favorite, easy to grow and
propagate, it's low maintenance, makes excellent cut flowers, and
pollinators love them (Monarchs go crazy for Blazing Star). The
Blazing Star grows up to 16 in tall, but if you want something more
elevated, its cousin, the Prairie Blazing Star, can grow five feet
tall.
1891 Birth of Lewis Stiles Gannett, American
journalist, and author.
Lewis wrote The
Living One, Magazine
Beach, The
Siege, and two Millennium novels: Gehenna and Force
Majeure.
In Cream
Hill: Discoveries of a Weekend
Countryman (1949), Lewis wrote:
But each spring . . . a gardening instinct, sore as the sap
rising in the trees, stirs within us. We look about and decide to
tame another little bit of ground.
Lewis also wrote,
Gardening is a kind of disease. It infects you, you cannot
escape it.
When you go visiting, your eyes rove about the garden; you
interrupt the serious cocktail drinking because of an irresistible
impulse to get up and pull a weed.
1895 Birth of Sergei Yesenin (books
about this person), Russian lyric poet.
One current biographical account of Sergei's life said, "his poems
[became] the people's songs."
Today, the Yesenin Monument graces the Tauride Garden in the center
of Saint Petersburg. The likeness of Sergei Yesenin, seated in a
thoughtful pose, is made of solid white marble.
There are words that are difficult to translate ie Russian because
there is no English equivalent. For instance, there is a word that
translates to "mushroom rain." A mushroom rain is a gentle,
fragrant rain that wets the forest floor in a steady, lazy fashion.
It's the kind of rain that is perfect for mushroom cultivation.
In terms of his use of language, Sergei Yesenin was not averse to
adding new words to the Russian lexicon. He once created a Russian
word to describe how sand ripples across the surface when blown by
the wind - something Sergei would have seen daily growing up along
the banks of the Oka river near the birch forests in his
hometown.
Sergei's first poem Beryoza (The Birch Tree),
was published in a children's magazine in January of 1914. Today
Sergei's Birch tree poem is still taught in Russian schools. Birch
trees are a powerful symbol in Russia, where folklore held that
planting birches around a village had the power to ward off
cholera.
A beloved tree in Russia, Birch trees can be found growing across
the breadth and depth of the country. In addition to the birch,
Sergei wrote about the maple, willow, fir, lime tree, poplar, and
bird cherry.
Here's an excerpt from The Birch Tree:
Under my own window
White is birch's hue •
Snowy blanket-shadow,
Silver patterned too.
On its fluffy branches
With a snowy hem
Tassels' blossom blanches
Fringe's icy gem.
Standing, birch is yearning,
Silent, sleepy spire,
Falling snow is burning
In its golden fire.
Lazy dawn in wrinkles,
Circling all around,
Now its branches sprinkle
Newly silver-crowned.
Sergei once wrote,
In this world you can
search for everything,
except Love and death.
They find you when the
time comes.
All will pass like the smoke of white apple trees
Seized by the gold of autumn.
I will no longer be young.
1900 Birth of Thomas Wolfe (books
by this author), American novelist.
Thomas once wrote,
All things on earth point home in old October:
sailors to sea, travelers to walls and fences,
hunters to field and hollow and the long voice of the
hounds,
the lover to the love he has forsaken.
He also wrote,
And the flowers grew in rioting glory...
Garden and Gun magazine once shared this quote about
Thomas Wolfe:
Thomas Wolfe may have said 'You can't go home again,' but I
can.
Just give me some vinegar and red pepper and I'm
there.
Today, the Thomas Wolfe Memorial Garden in Chapel Hill is a living
memorial to Thomas.
Thomas attended the University of North Carolina and remained one
of their most famous alumni. And there is, at Chapell Hill, a
wonderful sculpture of an angel in the Thomas Wolfe Memorial
Garden. The poignant words from Thomas's novel Look Homeward, Angel
is inscribed above the piece and read:
O lost, and by the wind grieved, ghost, come back
again
Thomas once wrote,
...bewildered again before the unsearchable riddle - out of
death, life, out of the coarse rank earth, a flower.
Grow That Garden Library™ Book Recommendation
Successfully Grow & Garden Citrus Fruit Trees Using Pots
and Containers by Madison
Pierce
This book came out in 2020, and the subtitle is Simple
Ideas For Small Outdoor Spaces.
This book gets very high ratings on Amazon. It came out a year a,
go in May of 2021. And the subtitle is A Beginner's Guide
to Selecting the Right Tree, Pots, and Containers for indoors and
outdoors - and also covers Pests, Diseases, and Transplanting -
so tons of information, all about growing citrus.
Now I have many friends up here in Minnesota who would never even
dream of growing citrus indoors. And so I think they would be
absolutely floored to learn that it is possible - if you know what
you're doing and take the proper precautions.
This is something that Madison acknowledges herself.
She writes,
Many avid gardeners discover that growing fruit trees directly
in the ground presents various difficult to overcome complexities.
For this reason, this entire book focuses on how to effectively
(and most successfully) grow strong, sturdy citrus fruit trees
in pots and containers which produce fruit
bountifully.
If you're going to go to the trouble of trying to grow fruit trees,
you might as well amp up your chances of success by following the
guidance in Madison's book.
Well, by now, you might be wondering who Madison Pierce is.
She writes,
I am a devoted wife and mother, and to say that I am a fruit
tree enthusiast would be an understatement. - live and
breathe gardening, and one of my main focus areas is fruit
trees. Whenever someone sees and samples the fruit from my garden,
they marvel at just how much effort must have gone into
nurturing and growing them.
While I admit that a considerable amount of heart and soul has
gone into my garden, it was a process to get the basics down to a
fine art. Ever since I equipped myself with practical gardening
knowledge, the process has been more straightforward than expected
and immensely rewarding. I share my wealth of citrus fruit tree
gardening knowledge and experience with other passionate gardeners
because I want like-minded people to derive the same joy I have
from the process.
There are several crucial elements to growing and nurturing
exceptional citrus trees. First and foremost, it's about getting to
know what citrus trees like and dislike. Just like you and me,
trees have their lifestyle preferences, so it stands to reason that
if you give your trees what they want and need most, they will
reward you with an abundance of fruit. It's important to note that
you will reap the rewards of the time, effort, and care you put in.
At this point, educating yourself is of the utmost
importance.
And, so with that, you are off to the races with Madison Pearce as
your guide.
Consider this book a masterclass on growing citrus and fruit trees
in pots and containers.
Growing citrus could be a fun little activity for you, especially
if you're moving your gardening indoors over the winter. It could
be a fun little project for you and the kids to work on together.
Something worth considering...
You can get a copy of Successfully Grow & Garden Citrus
Fruit Trees Using Pots and Containers by Madison Pierce and support
the show using the Amazon link in today's show notes for around
$18.
Botanic Spark
1920/2010 Birth of Philippa
Foot (books
by this author), philosopher. She also died on this
day.
Philippa's mother was Esther Cleveland, the daughter of Grover
Cleveland, and she was the first presidential child to be born in
the White House.
She understood that philosophy could be confusing. She once
mused,
You ask a philosopher a question and after he or she has talked
for a bit, you don't understand your question anymore.
Philippa always sought to keep her work simple. She found
inspiration in nature and kept her main points short and sweet. She
advised,
In moral philosophy, it is useful, I believe, to think about
plants.
In an interview with Philosophy Now's Rick
Lewis, Philippa explained that, due to her work studying
goodness, she believed that human vices are merely a
natural defect. And just as flaws exist in nature, they also exist
in humanity. Philippa believed that morality was rooted in
nature.
In 2012, it was revealed that Philippa was romantically involved
with Iris Murdoch (books
by this author) in the 1960s. The women had met
at Oxford, and though their friendship faltered at times, the two
remained lifelong friends.
On July 8, 1968, Iris wrote to Philippa. She was staying at a
friend's home in Inverness in Scotland. Iris wrote,
I had forgotten the beauty of this place. The highlands are a
vast rock garden - hundreds of kinds of tiny things flower and the
variety of the woodland - it has no horrible Schwarzwald ' look.
Much walking has been done and a little swimming but it's damn
cold. Not a soul in many days of walking have met no one, and seen
no one over those vast hillsides.
Do you suffer from chronic anxiety? I think not. It is a vice,
a form of deep fear.
I'd like to talk to you about this sometime.
Write to me. [.. •]
Much love
I
Almost two decades later, in 1985, Iris would write to Philippa
again,
I imagine you now in the sun, surrounded by those magic trees,
in a garden of flowers, looking out upon the glittering
dolphin-crowded sea.
Dear old Europe, poor old Europe. (Dear old planet, poor old
planet.)
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener
And remember: For a happy, healthy life, garden every
day.