Apr 29, 2022
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The Friday
Newsletter | Daily
Gardener Community
Historical Events
St. Robert's Day
Saint Robert of Molesme ("mo-LESS-mah") was an 11th-century
herbalist, abbot, and founder of the Cistercian ("sis-TUR-shin")
order - a Catholic religious order of monks and nuns that branched
off from the Benedictines. They are also known as Bernardines
("BUR-nah-deen"), after the highly influential Bernard of
Clairvaux, or as White Monks - a reference to the color of the cowl
worn over their habits as opposed to the black cowl worn by
Benedictines. They are commonly called Trappists.
Many common wildflowers are named in honor of St. Robert.
Some believe that Herb Robert, or Bird's Eye, the little Wild
Geranium, was named in honor of St. Robert.
Another theory is that Herb Robert is named for Robin Goodfellow, a
pseudonym for the forest sprite known as Puck.
1852 On this day, Henri Frederic Amiel, Swiss
philosopher and poet, wrote in his journal:
I went out into the garden to see what progress the spring was
making. I strolled from the irises to the lilacs, round the
flowerbeds, and in the shrubberies. Delightful surprise! At the
corner of the walk, half-hidden under a thick clump of shrubs, a
small-leaved corchorus had flowered during the night... the
little shrub glittered before me...
Mother of marvels, mysterious and tender Nature, why do we not
live more in thee?
1869 Birth of Agnes Chase, American
botanist.
Agnes was an agrostologist—a studier of grass. She was a petite,
fearless, indefatigable person and entirely self-taught as a
botanist.
Her first position was as an illustrator at the USDA’s Bureau of
Plant Industry in Washington, D.C., working for the botanist Albert
Spear Hitchcock.
When Hitchcock applied for funding to go on expeditions, higher-ups
approved the travel for Hitchcock, but not for Agnes - saying the
job should belong to "real research men."
Undeterred, Agnes raised her own funding to go on the expeditions.
She cleverly partnered with missionaries in Latin America to
arrange for accommodations with host families. She shrewdly
observed,
The missionaries travel everywhere, and like botanists do it on
as little money as possible. They gave me information that saved me
much time and trouble.
During a climb of one of Brazil's highest mountains, Agnes
reportedly returned to camp with a "skirt filled with plant
specimens."
One of her major works, the "First Book of Grasses," was translated
into Spanish and Portuguese. It taught generations of Latin
American botanists who recognized Agnes's contributions long before
their American counterparts.
When Hitchcock retired, Agnes was his backfill. When Agnes reached
retirement age, she ignored the rite of passage altogether and
refused to be put out to pasture. She kept going to work - six days
a week - overseeing the largest collection of grasses in the world
in her office under the red towers at her beloved Smithsonian
Institution. When Agnes was 89, she became the eighth person to
become an honorary fellow of the Smithsonian. A reporter covering
the event said,
Dr. Chase looked impatient as if she were muttering to herself,
"This may be well and good, but it isn't getting any grass
classified, sonny."
While researching Agnes Chase, I came across this little article in
The St. Louis Star and Times.
Agnes gave one of her books on grass a biblical title, The
Meek That Inherit the Earth. The story pointed out that,
Mrs. Chase began her study of grass by reading about it in the
Bible.
In the very first chapter of Genesis, ...the first living thing
the Creator made was grass.
... for grass is fundamental to life.
[Agnes] said, "Grass is what holds the earth together. Grass
made it possible for the human race to abandon... cave life and
follow herds. Civilization was based on grass [and] this
significance... still holds."
1954 Birth of Jerry Seinfeld, American
stand-up comedian, actor, writer, and producer.
He is best known for playing a semi-fictionalized version of
himself in the sitcom Seinfeld, which he created and wrote with
Larry David.
He once joked,
Why do people give each other flowers to celebrate various
important occasions?
They’re killing living creatures?
Why restrict it to plants?
"Sweetheart, let’s make up. Have this deceased
squirrel."
2017 On this day in 2017, The New
York Times tweeted that,
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden cherry blossom festival is set for
today and tomorrow, regardless of when nature [decided] to push
play.
Grow That Garden Library™ Book Recommendation
The Language of Butterflies by Wendy
Williams
This book came out in 2020, and the subtitle is How
Thieves, Hoarders, Scientists, and Other Obsessives Unlocked the
Secrets of the World's Favorite Insect.
If you're a fan of blue morpho butterflies, you're going to love
the cover of Wendy's book because it is covered with a kaleidoscope
of blue morpho butterflies. So it's impossibly beautiful.
And Wendy's book is a five-star book on Amazon.
Now Wendy is an author who loves spending time outdoors. She loves
skiing. She loves horseback riding. (In fact, her first bestselling
book was called The Horse. And Wendy has traveled the
world. She's spent a lot of time in Africa, Europe, and North
American mountain chains and prairies.
But when it comes to just regular daily life, Wendy lives in Cape
Cod in Massachusetts with her husband and her Border Collie,
Taff.
Now I love the way that Wendy writes because she's very
conversational. And I also like how she organized this book into
three main sections: the past, the present, and the future.
And then, to show you how friendly her writing is, her chapters
have very intriguing titles. In the section on the past,
there's The Gateway Drug, The Number One
Butterfly, and then How Butterflies Saved
Charles Darwin's Bacon. (Great chapter.)
And then, in the present, chapters include A Parasol of
Monarchs, The Honeymoon Hotel, and On
The Rain Dance Ranch. Great story there.
And then, in the future section, Wendy's chapters
include The Social Butterfly, The Paroxysms
of Ecstasy, and The Butterfly Highway.
And Wendy is right; butterflies are the world's most beloved
insects. They've been called flying flowers, and gardeners are
passionate about butterflies. And many gardeners today are working
to help save the Monarch from extinction.
Now The Washington Post said this about Wendy's book,
Williams takes us on a humorous and beautifully crafted journey
that explores both the nature of these curious and highly
intelligent insects. And the eccentric individuals who coveted
them.
And, of course, most of those folks were scientists and or
botanists. So I love this book, and I love all of those
stories.
This book is 256 pages Of butterflies. It's eye-opening and tender.
It's an incredibly profound look at butterflies - it's a butterfly
biography. And it examines the vital role that butterflies play in
our world.
You can get a copy of The Language of Butterflies by Wendy
Williams and support the show using the Amazon link in today's show
notes for around $2.
Botanic Spark
Here's an excerpt from Karel Ćapek's chapter on The
Gardener's April from his book
The Gardener's Year (1984).
Gardeners have certainly arisen by culture and not by natural
selection. If they had developed naturally, they would look
differently.
They would have legs like beetles, so that they need not sit on
their heels. And they would have wings - in the first place for
their beauty and secondly, so that they might float over the
beds.
Those who have no experience can not imagine how one's legs are
in the way when there's nothing to stand on.
How stupidly long they are... Or how impossibly short they
are if one has to reach to the other side of the bed without
treading on a clump of pyrethrum (that's chrysanthemum) or on the
shoots of Columbine.
If only one could hang in a belt and swim over the beds. Or
have at least four hands with only a head and a cap and nothing
else.
But because the gardener is outwardly constructed as
imperfectly as other people, all he can do is to show us of what he
is capable. To balance on tiptoe on one foot, to float in the air
like a Russian dancer, to straddle four yards wide, to step as
lightly as a butterfly or a wagtail, to reach everywhere and avoid
everything, and still try to keep some sort of respectability so
that people will not laugh at him.
Of course, at a passing glance, from a distance, you don't see
anything of the gardener but his romp. Everything else like the
head, arms, and legs is hidden underneath.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener
And remember: For a happy, healthy life, garden every
day.