Sep 24, 2021
Today in botanical history, we celebrate a British Spy/American
Farmer, a social reformer and poet, and an American writer.
We’ll hear an excerpt from a book written by the beloved Canadian
writer Lucy Maud Montgomery.
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about homestead life -
from growing great produce to canning and preserving.
And then we’ll wrap things up with a look back at Minnie Hite
Moody’s garden column from this day in 1980. She made a bouquet of
weeds and then wrote about it.
Curated News
The
Complete Fall Garden Checklist |
Garden Therapy | Stephanie Rose
Important Events
September 24, 1789
Death of Metcalf Bowler, British-American merchant, and politician.
As a young man, Metcalf came to America with his father. He
successfully marketed a local apple known as the Rhode Island
Greening Apple as part of his business. The apple later became the
official state fruit of Rhode Island. A gentleman farmer, Metcalf
himself was an avid horticulturist, and he was purported to have
the most beautiful garden in the state. Metcalf was a successful
merchant until the revolutionary war, which ruined him financially.
In the 1920s, after stumbling on letters and examining handwriting,
historians accidentally learned Metcalf had spied for the British.
His love of nature may have inspired his code name: Rusticus. After
the war, Metcalf wrote a book called A Treatise on
Agriculture and Practical Husbandry(1786). Metcalf, the spy,
sent a copy to George Washington, who wrote him back and tucked the
copy away in his library.
September 24, 1825
Birth of Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, African-American suffragist,
social reformer, abolitionist, writer, and poet. Her famous quote
is, “we are all bound up together in one great bundle of humanity.”
Her writing was mostly dedicated to her work for justice, but
occasionally she would write about nature. Here’s an excerpt from
her poem The Crocuses:
Soon a host of lovely flowers
From vales and woodland burst;
But in all that fair procession
The crocuses were first.
September 24, 1913
Birth of Wilson Rawls, American writer. His embarrassment caused
him to burn his manuscripts so his fiancee, Sophie, wouldn’t see
them. Later she implored him to re-write one of the five stories
from memory, which resulted in Where the Red Fern
Grows (1961). The red fern was not an actual plant, but
it served as the centerpiece of the novel. In the book, Wilson
wrote,
I had heard the old Indian legend about the red fern. How a
little Indian boy and girl were lost in a blizzard and had frozen
to death. In the spring, when they were found, a beautiful red fern
had grown up between their two bodies. The story went on to say
that only an angel could plant the seeds of a red fern and that
they never died; where one grew, that spot was sacred.
Unearthed Words
There were several things concerning which Miss Cornelia wished to
unburden her soul. The funeral had to be all talked over, of
course. Susan and Miss Cornelia thrashed this out between them;
Anne took no part or delight in such ghoulish conversations. She
sat a little apart and watched the autumnal flame of dahlias in the
garden and the dreaming, glamorous harbor of the September sunset.
Mary Vance sat beside her, knitting meekly. Mary’s heart was down
in the Rainbow Valley, whence came sweet, distance-softened sounds
of children’s laughter, but her fingers were under Miss Cornelia’s
eye. She had to knit so many rounds of her stocking before she
might go to the valley. Mary knit and held her tongue but used her
ears. “I never saw a nicer-looking corpse,” said Miss Cornelia
judicially. “Myra Murray was always a pretty woman—she was a
Corey.”
― Lucy Maud Montgomery, Rainbow
Valley
Grow That Garden Library
Welcome to the Farm by Shaye Elliott
This book came out in 2017, and the subtitle is How-to Wisdom from
The Elliott Homestead.
Shaye lives with her family in the Pacific Northwest. She’s the
founder of the blog, The Elliott Homestead. She is a
beekeeper, gardener and enjoys preserving a variety of foods for
the winter larder.
This book is truly a welcome to the Elliott Farm, and Shaye shares
everything she’s gleaned about growing the good food right in her
own backyard. Shaye teaches a ton in this book - how to harvest
organic produce, plant an orchard, build a greenhouse, winter
sowing and growing, make cider and wine, can jams and jellies,
raise chickens and bees, and even milk a dairy cow (and make
butter). ,
This book is 336 pages of jam-packed goodness from a mini-farm to
help homesteaders and urban farmers alike.
You can get a copy of Welcome to the Farm by Shaye Elliott
and support the show using the Amazon Link in today’s Show Notes
for around $10.
Today’s Botanic Spark
Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart
September 24, 1980
On this day, Minnie Hite Moody wrote in her garden column about her
bouquet made of weeds:
Somehow or other I failed to get any flower seeds planted this
past summer. June brought its plague of groundhogs, and what with
replanting my beans and other necessities. July was here before I
had caught up with myself, and then came the storms and rain. It
was even too wet for me to go seeking Queen Anne's lace and daisies
in the fringes of the golf course, though what with mechanical
mowers and weed sprays, I would have had to search far and wide for
the simple weed-blossoms once so familiar. So all through July and
August I had to skrimish for enough blooms to enliven what in the
Deep South is spoken of as the "eating table." I am used to flowers
on the table, and while I receive more than my share of elegant
hothouse flowers, they do not suit Grandma's plain white ash table
with which she went to housekeeping in 1872. September, however,
kindly improved my situation. Along my property frontage where the
Ohio Electric railroad tracks predated the WPA sidewalk, the pale
lavender blooms of soap-wort, commonly called Pretty Betty, began
to peep out. Now soapwort, which the books call Saponaria, a genus
of hardy annual and perennial Old-World herbs of the Pink Family,
is regarded as just an old weed and not very special. Believe me,
it was special in our great-grandmothers' day, for bar soap and
detergents were far in the future, unless she made her own soap
with grease and lye.l tried washing with soapwort myself one time,
just to see how it worked, and was pleasantly sur prised. But I'm
careful to call it Pretty Betty when I have it in a table bouquet.
My friends seem to react to that name better than they do to
soapwort. In some sections of the country, the name seems to be
Bouncing Bet, which I mention as an alternate. The books say that
soapwort (alias Pretty Betty or Bouncing Bet) comes in clusters of
pink, white or red flowers. The only ones I ever have seen are pale
lavender-blues, white, or pinkish. By themselves they don't make an
especially stunning bouquet, so it is fortunate that ironweed
blooms at the same time of year. Ironweed blossoms are purple, and
I know Garden Club ladies who would swoon at the sight of the
bouquet right now gracing my eating table, for it has purple
ironweed, Pretty Betty of a questionable shade, maybe blue, maybe
lavender, along with some bright yellow Rudbeckia blossoms and a
spray or two of Eupatorim per-foliatum, which is acceptable by that
name, but not as plain old good-for-nothing boneset. As a matter of
fact, boneset used to ease aches and pains fully as well as some of
the costly arthritis and rheumatism pills of the present. All the
"old wife" of bygone days had to do was gather the herb when the
bloom was brightest, tie it into a bunch and hang it from the
ceiling beams. The late Euell Gibbons in his books claimed that he
simply laid boneset for drying on newspapers placed on his attic
floor. When the boneset is thoroughly dry. stalks and stems are
discarded, and the dried leaves crumbled into airtight jars. If you
don't need boneset tea for rheumatic ailments, it is said to be
good for fevers, colds, catarrh, dropsy, general debility,
dyspepsia, and "trouble arising from intemperance." In other words,
hangover. Rudbeckia is that golden September bloom named in honor,
of Swedish botanist Olaus Rud-beck (1830-1702).
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember:
“For a happy, healthy life, garden every day.”