Jan 28, 2020
Today we celebrate an eighteenth-century man who was a friend of
many famous gardeners.
And, the Danish surgeon associated with many wonderful plants from
the Himalayas.
We'll learn about the Swedish botanist who had a thing for algae
and the man who started the only arboretum between the Mississippi
River and the Rocky Mountains.
Today’s Unearthed Words feature poems and prose about winter's
cold.
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a wonderful book about weird
plants.
I'll talk about a beautiful item that would make the perfect
Valentine's gift for a gardener or a special gift for a loved
one,
And, then we’ll wrap things up with the story of the man who made
the poinsettia a harbinger of Christmas.
But first, let's catch up on a few recent events.
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Curated Articles
Hidden women of history: Maria Sibylla Merian, 17th-century
entomologist and scientific adventurer
Here's a great post about Maria Sibylla Merian. Click to read all
about her.
Brassica Oleracea
‘January King’ From @GWmag
'January King' is a fantastic variety of savoy cabbage. Here's how
to grow it.
Now, if you'd like to check out these curated articles for
yourself, you're in luck, because I share all of it
with the Listener Community in the
Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener
Community.
There’s no need to take notes or search for links - the next time
you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community and request
to join. I'd love to meet you in the group.
Important Events
1694 Today is the birthday of a Fellow of the
Royal Society, an avid gardener, and a friend to many scientific
leaders in the mid-18th century in the city of London, Peter
Collinson.
Peter Collinson introduced nearly 200 species of plants to British
horticulture - importing many from his friend John Bartram in
America.
When the American gardener John Custis learned that Collinson 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. The cowslip is a spring-flowering plant, and it is native
to the mountainous areas of Europe.
Custis also sent Collinson a Virginia Bluebell Or Virginia cowslip
( Mertensia virginica). This plant is another Spring Beauty I can
be found in Woodlands. The blue about Virginia Bluebell is so
striking, and it's an old fashioned favorite for many gardeners.
The Virginia Bluebell is also known as lungwort or oyster wort. The
plant was believed to have medicinal properties for treating lung
disorders, and the leaves taste like oysters. Virginia bluebells
bloom alongside daffodils, so you end up with a beautiful yellow
and blue combination together in the garden - something highly
coveted and absolutely gorgeous. Collinson was not the only
gardener in search of Virginia bluebells. Thomas Jefferson grew
them at Monticello and loved them so much that they were often
referred to as Jefferson's blue funnel flowers. Monticello
("MontiCHELLo”)
Collinson once wrote, "Forget not me & 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 2010, the author Andrea Wulf popularized Collinson in the
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.
1786 Today is the birthday of the Danish surgeon
and botanist Nathaniel Wallich.
Nathaniel served as the Superintendent of East India Company's
Botanical Garden in Calcutta, India. Wallich's early work involved
writing a Flora of Asia. The palm Wallichia disticha
(“wall-IK-ee-uh DIS-tik-uh”) was named in Wallich’s honor. The name
of the species - disticha - comes from the Greek “distichos” (“dis”
means two and “stichos” means line). Distichos refers to the leaves
of this palm, which emerge in two rows on opposite sides of the
stem.
The Wallinchia disticha is a very special palm, and it is native to
the base of the Himalayas. The trunk is quite beautiful because it
is covered in a trellis of fiber mat - simply gorgeous. This palm
can grow to 30 feet tall, but it is a short-lived palm with a life
span of just 15 years.
In 1824, Wallich was the first to describe the giant Himalayan Lily
(Cardiocrinum giganteum) - the largest species of Lily. It is hardy
in USDA Zones 7-9. The giant Himalayan Lily can grow up to 12 feet
tall. Once it is finished blooming, the mother Lily bulb dies, but
luckily, numerous offsets develop from the parent bulb. This dying
off is common among plants that push a bloom many feet into the
air. It takes enormous energy to create a towering and flowering
stalk.
If you decide you’d like to grow giant Himalayan Lilies, (and who
wouldn’t?) expect blooms anytime after year four.
Today, the Nathaniel Wallich Memorial Lecture takes place every
year at the Indian Museum in Kolkata on Foundation Day. Wallich
founded the museum in 1814.
Wallich is buried in Kensal Green cemetery in London alongside many
prominent botanists - like James Edward Smith (a founder of the
Linnean Society London), John Claudius Loudon (Scottish writer),
Sir James McGrigor (Scottish botanist), Archibald Menzies
(surgeon), Robert Brown (discoverer of Brownian motion), and David
Don (the Linnaean Society Librarian and 1st Professor of Botany
Kings College London).
1859 Today is the anniversary of the death of a
Swedish botanist who specialized in algae - Carl Adolph Agardh
(“AW-guard”).
In 1817, Carl published his masterpiece - a book on the algae of
Scandinavia. Carl’s work studying algae was a major endeavor from
the time he was a young man until his mid-fifties. At that time, he
became the bishop of Karlstad. The position was all-consuming, and
Carl put his botanical studies behind him.
1870 Today is the birthday of the physician,
naturalist, and civic leader of the south-central Kansas town of
Belle Plaine - Dr. Walter E. Bartlett. In 1910, Bartlett started
the Bartlett Arboretum By purchasing 15 acres of land on the edge
of a town called Belle Plaine - about 20 miles south of Wichita.
The property had good soil, and it also had a little creek. One of
Bartlett's initial moves was too dam up the creek and create a lake
for waterfowl. In the flat expanse of Kansas, Bartlett was tree
obsessed. He planted them everywhere - lining walkways, drives, and
Riverbanks.
Bartlett was all so civic-minded, and he added a baseball diamond
complete with a grandstand to the arboretum and a running track and
a place for trap shooting as well.
After Walter died, the park was managed by his son Glenn who was a
landscape architect. Glenn had studied the Gardens at Versailles -
noting that they were transformed out of sand dunes and marshes.
Back home, the Bartlett Arboretum had similar challenges.
Glenn married Margaret Myers, who was an artist, a magazine fashion
designer, a floral designer, a Garden Club organizer, and an
instructor. Combining their fantastic skillsets, Glenn and Margaret
turned the Arboretum into something quite beautiful.
Together, they Incorporated tree specimens from all over the world.
Using dredged dirt from the lake, they created Islands. At one
point, the Bartlett Arboretum was the only Arboretum between the
Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains. Known for its beautiful
spring tradition called Tulip Time, the Arboretum featured a tulip
bed with over 40,000 bulbs.
In 1997, the Arboretum was sold to Robin Macy. Macy was one of the
founding members of the Dixie Chicks, and she is the current
steward of the Bartlett Arboretum. Naturally, Robin incorporated
music into the Arb.
The Facebook Group for the Arboretum recently shared a register
page from April 7th, 1929, and across the top of the register,
Bartlett had quoted Wordsworth, “He is the happiest who has the
power to gather wisdom from a flower.” The folks who tend the
flowers and trees at the Bartlett Arboretum make people happy all
year long.
Unearthed Words
Here are some poems about the winter’s cold. (As I read this, it’s
2 degrees in lovely Maple Grove, Minnesota.)
The birds are gone, The ground is white,
The winds are wild, They chill and bite;
The ground is thick with slush and sleet,
And I barely feel my feet."
It's not the case, though some might wish it so
Who from a window watch the blizzard blow
White riot through their branches vague and stark,
That they keep snug beneath their pelted bark.
They take affliction in until it jells
To crystal ice between their frozen cells ...
— Richard Wilbur, American Poet, Orchard Trees -
January
Snow and sleet, and sleet and snow.
Will the Winter never go?
What do beggar children do
With no fire to cuddle to,
Perhaps with nowhere warm to go?
Snow and sleet, and sleet and snow.
Hail and ice, and ice and hail,
Water frozen in the pail.
See the robins, brown and red,
They are waiting to be fed.
Poor dears, battling in the gale!
Hail and ice, and ice and hail.
— Katherine Mansfield, New Zealand Poet & Writer,
Winter Song
Blow, blow, thou winter wind, thou art not so unkind as man's
ingratitude.
— William Shakespeare, English Poet, Playwright, &
Actor
The Winter’s cheek flushed as if he had drained
Spring, Summer, and Autumn at a draught...
— Edward Thomas, British Poet, Essayist & Novelist,
"The Manor Farm"
Someone painted pictures on my
Windowpane last night --
Willow trees with trailing boughs
And flowers, frosty white,
And lovely crystal butterflies;
But when the morning sun
Touched them with its golden beams,
They vanished one by one.
— Helen Bayley Davis, Baltimore Poet, Maryland Federation
of Women’s Clubs Poet Laureate, Jack Frost (Written in 1929 and
sold to the Christian Science Monitor)
Grow That Garden Library
Weird Plants by Chris Thorogood
Chris is a botanist at Oxford Botanic Garden. The cover of Chris's
book is captivating - it shows a very weird plant - it almost looks
like a claw - and its grasp is the title of the book weird
plants.
In this book published by Kew Gardens, Chris shares all of the
weird and wacky plants that he's encountered during his travels.
There are orchids that look like a female insect, and there are
giant pitcher plants as well as other carnivorous plants that take
down all kinds of prey. One thing's for certain, the weirdness
factor of all of these plants has helped them survive for
centuries.
Gardeners will get a kick out of the seven categories that Chris
uses to organize these strange species: Vampires, Killers,
Fraudsters, Jailers, Accomplices, Survivors, and Hitchhikers.
Chris's writing is complemented by his incredibly detailed oil
paintings and his fascinating range of botanical expertise. As
someone who works with student gardeners regularly, I appreciate
botanists who are able to make plants interesting - taking topics
and subjects that may otherwise prove boring and making them
utterly captivating. Chris is that kind of garden communicator.
In addition to Weird Plants, Chris is the author of Field
Guide to the Wild Flowers of the Western
Mediterranean and co-author of Field
Guide to the Wild Flowers of the Algarve;
bothare published by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
You can get a used copy of Weird Plants by Chris Thorogood
and support the show, using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes
for under $9.
Great Gifts for Gardeners
Good Directions 0113VB Heart Fly-Thru Bird Feeder
Birdfeeder, Copper Finish $68.64
The Heart Fly-Thru™ Bird Feeder by Good Directions combines
simplicity with elegance. Designed to show birds you love to feed
them from the bottom of your heart! The heart fly-thru bird feeder
by Good Directions invites birds in for a snack, & helps
birders' Favorite activity last All day long! Featuring a charming
heart shape & a LONG-LASTING Copper Finish, This bird feeder is
the perfect addition to any garden setting. The feeder is easy to
hang, Easy to love, & because it's also see-through, it's
easy-to-know-when-to-fill! Measuring 15"H x 13"W x 3" D, it's sized
to hold a generous 4-1/2 lb. Of seed!
A beautiful piece for Valentine’s day or for a special birthday. If
you know someone who loves to watch the birds from their house or
deck, this will make a nice addition to any bird feeder or
birdhouse collection. This gift will always remind them how much
they are loved; thus, the heart design.
Today’s Botanic Spark
1895 Today is the birthday of the nurseryman known
as “Mr. Poinsettia,” Paul Ecke ("Eck-EE"), Sr. He was born in
Magdeburg, Germany.
Paul and his family immigrated to the United States in 1906.
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. Paul fell in love
with the Poinsettia and immediately felt that the plant was a
perfect fit for the holiday season because the bloom time occurred
naturally during that time.
By 1924, Paul was forced out of Hollywood by the movie business,
and he brought his family and the nursery to San Diego County. He
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 - at one
point, his nursery controlled 90% of the Poinsettia market in the
United States.
At first, Paul raised poinsettias in the fields on the ranch. Each
spring, the plants were harvested and then loaded on two railroad
cars and sent to Greenhouse Growers all along the east coast.
When Paul wasn't growing poinsettias, he was talking poinsettias.
He started calling it "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. After figuring out how to propagate the plant through
cuttings indoors, Paul was soon able to ship poinsettias around the
world by plane.
Paul’s son, Paul Jr., took over the business in the 1960s. He
cleverly sent poinsettias to TV shows. When the holiday programs
aired, there were the poinsettias - in their glory - decorating the
sets and stages of all the major programs.
When Paul Junior learned that women's magazines did their
photoshoots for the holidays over the summer, he began growing a
poinsettia crop that piqued 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 biggest marketing success and made
the Poinsettia synonymous with Christmas.
And gardeners will be fascinated to learn that the Ecke family was
able to distinguish 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 in order to
compete.
Today the Ecke family does not grow any poinsettias on their farm
in San Diego County.
Finally, one of Paul's Poinsettia pet peeves is the commonly-held
belief that Poinsettias are poisonous. Sometimes that fear would
prevent a pet owner or a young mother from buying the plant. Paul
Ecke recognized the threat posed by this false belief. He 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. To prove this point, Paul would
regularly eat Poinsettia leaves on camera during interviews over
the holiday season.
When the Ecke nursery was sold in 2012, it still controlled over
half the poinsettia market worldwide. During the holiday season,
roughly seventy-five million poinsettia plants are sold - most to
women over the age of 40.