Sep 28, 2021
Today in botanical history, we celebrate an Irish physician and
botanist, an English poet and critic, and an African-American
poet.
We'll hear an excerpt from Elin Hilderbrand.
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that tells the story of
3,500 acres of land and its return to the wild.
And then we'll wrap things up with an Australian-English writer,
gardener, and traveler.
Subscribe
Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart
To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or
Google to
“Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener
Podcast.”
And she will. It's just that easy.
The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter
Sign up for the
FREE Friday Newsletter featuring:
Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a
book from the Grow That Garden Library™
bookshelf.
Gardener Greetings
Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth
to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org
Facebook Group
If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original
blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the
Listener Community in the
Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener
Community.
So, there's no need to take notes or search for links.
The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily
Gardener Community, where you'd
search for a friend... and request to join.
I'd love to meet you in the group.
Curated News
A Native Super-Edible on the
Rise |
gardencentermag.com | Jolene Hansen
Important Events
September 28, 1793
Birth of Thomas Coulter, Irish physician, botanist, and explorer.
He founded the herbarium at Trinity College, Dublin. He spent a
year and a half studying with the great Swiss botanist Augustin de
Candolle before exploring Mexico and the American Southwest in the
early 1900s. Today he is remembered in the names of several plants.
The Romneya coulteri or the Coulter poppy is a white-blossomed
flower native to southern California and Baja California. Also
called the California tree poppy, the Coulter poppy has the largest
flower of any poppy.
Another Southern California specimen, the Coulter pine, is known
for creating the largest pine cones in the world. Called
"widowmakers" by the locals, each pinecone can weigh up to ten
pounds.
September 28, 1824
Birth of Francis Turner Palgrave, English poet and critic. He
compiled The Golden Treasury (1861), which
featured English Songs and Lyrics. The popular anthology is still
published with new editions under Francis Palgrave's name.
In Eutopia, Francis wrote,
There is a garden where lilies
And roses are side by side;
And all day between them in silence
The silken butterflies glide.
I may not enter the garden,
Though I know the road thereto;
And morn by morn to the gateway
I see the children go.
They bring back light on their faces;
But they cannot bring back to me
What the lilies say to the roses,
Or the songs of the butterflies be.
September 28, 1867
Birth of James Edwin Campbell, African-American dialectic poet. In
his poem, A Night in June, he wrote,
"What so rare as a day in June?"
O poet, hast thou never known
A night in rose-voluptuous June?
And in When The Fruit Trees Bloom, James wrote,
When the fruit trees bloom,
Pink of peach and white of plum,
And the pear-trees’ cones of snow
In the old back orchard blow --
Planted fifty years ago!
And the cherries' long white row
Gives the sweetest prophecy
Of the banquet that will be,
When the suns and winds of June
Shall have kissed to fruit the bloom --
Then Falstaffian bumble-bees
Drain the blossoms to the lees.
When the fruit trees bloom.
Unearthed Words
The Herb Farm reminded Marguerite of the farms in France; it was
like a farm in a child's picture book. There was a white wooden
fence that penned in sheep and goats, a chicken coop where a dozen
warm eggs cost a dollar, a red barn for the two bay horses, and a
greenhouse. Half of the greenhouse did what greenhouses do, while
the other half had been fashioned into very primitive retail space.
The vegetables were sold from wooden crates, all of them grown
organically before such a process even had a name- corn, tomatoes,
lettuces, seventeen kinds of herbs, squash, zucchini, carrots with
the bushy tops left on, spring onions, radishes, cucumbers,
peppers, strawberries for two short weeks in June, pumpkins after
the fifteenth of September. There was chèvre made on the premises
from the milk of the goats; there was fresh butter. And when
Marguerite showed up for the first time in the summer of 1975,
there was a ten-year-old boy who had been given the undignified job
of cutting zinnias, snapdragons, and bachelor buttons and gathering
them into attractive-looking bunches.
― Elin Hilderbrand, The
Love Season
Grow That Garden Library
Wilding by Isabella Tree
This book came out in 2019, and the subtitle is The Return
of Nature to a British Farm.
In this book, Isabella (whose last name - Tree - is perfect for a
book on nature) guides us through the result of a massive rewilding
project in West Sussex known as the Knepp ("Nep") experiment
because it took place on the Knepp Estate.
Isabelle and her husband Charlie bought the estate in the 1980s
from Charlie's grandparents. After recognizing that intensive
farming on heavy clay was economically unsustainable, they decided
to step back and let nature take over. To mimic the large animals
that roamed Britain in the wild, they introduced free-roaming
cattle, ponies, pigs, and deer and let nature dictate the outcome
on 3,500 acres. The animal activity turns out to be the key to
kickstarting diversity in flora and fauna. They removed the
infrastructure of traditional farming like drains and fencing. In a
little over a decade, wildlife and plant diversity returned. Knepp
became home to turtle doves, nightingales, peregrine falcons, and
lesser spotted woodpeckers. The beauty of a functioning ecosystem
is that it sustains and encourages life all by itself.
This book is 384 pages of a personal memoir and a nature memoir -
it's hopeful, inspirational, and above all, doable.
You can get a copy of Wilding by Isabella
Tree and
support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for
around $9
Today's Botanic Spark
Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart
September 28, 1885
Birth of Clara Coltman Rogers Vyvyan, Australian-English writer and
gardener. She used the pen names C. C. Rogers and C. C. Vyvyan.
After working in the slums of East London as a social worker and a
nurse in WWI, Clara married the 10th Vyvyan baronet, who was
27-years her senior and lived on a 15th-century estate known as
Trelowarren. The two were quite compatible and shared eleven happy
years together. Both of them enjoyed nature. One of Clara's dearest
friends was Daphne du Maurier, who used Clara's centuries-old home
and gardens as the setting for her novels Frenchman's
Creek and Rebecca. In Friends and
Contemporaries, Clara's friend A L Rowse recognized the
use of the Trelowarren landscape and wrote,
The colonnade of trees in Rebecca, by the way, is the avenue of
over-arching ilexes there, like a cathedral aisle.
When Daphne visited Trelowarren for the first time, she fell in
love with its rugged landscape and timeless quality. She described
it as "the most beautiful place imaginable." After her visit,
Daphne wrote in her diary,
I simply hated leaving Trelowarren. Few places have made such a
profound impression on me.
Trelowarren similarly inspired Clara, and when her husband died,
she started market gardening and writing to help financially
maintain her West Cornwall estate. She wrote over twenty books
during her life of adventure and beauty. When she was 67, she
traveled to the Alaskan Klondyke and embarked on a 400-mile walk
with the aid of two guides. The result was her book Down
the Rhone on Foot. Most of her books were about her beloved
Cornwall and, of course, her gardens. In her Letters from
a Cornish Garden (1972), she shared a collection of
delightful essays about gardening. Her friend Daphne du Maurier
wrote the forward.
Clara wrote,
As one grows older, one should grow more expert at finding
beauty in unexpected places, in deserts and even in towns, in
ordinary human faces, and among wild weeds.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember:
"For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."