Sep 30, 2021
Today in botanical history, we celebrate an old English poet, a
Mexican botanist, and a British gardener and survivalist who was
way ahead of his time.
We'll hear an excerpt from a beautiful Jack Gilbert poem
We Grow That Garden Library™ with a garden classic of our time from
a contemporary garden expert.
And then we'll wrap things up with a fun movie that featured a
botanist. It debuted six years ago today in England.
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Curated News
Is a
coconut a fruit, nut, or seed? |
Library of Congress
Important Events
September 30, 1669
Death of Henry King, English poet. He served as Bishop of
Chichester and was close friends with John Donne. He wrote,
Brave flowers - that I could gallant it like
you,
And be as little vain!
You come abroad, and make a harmless show,
And to your beds again.
You are not proud: you know your birth:
For your embroidered garments are from earth.
September 30, 1901
Birth of Helia Bravo Hollis, Mexican botanist. She was the first
woman to graduate with a degree in biology in Mexico. By 29, she
was curator of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (Mexico
City) herbarium, where she studied cacti. Her work brought
notoriety, and she became known as The Queen of the Cacti. She
co-wrote her masterpiece, Las Cactaceas de México, with Hernando
Sánchez-Mejorada. In 1951, she cofounded the Mexican Cactus
Society, which planned to celebrate her 100th birthday in 2001, but
she died four days shy of the century mark. In 1980, Monaco's
Princess Grace Kelly, who was also fond of cacti, presented Helia
with the second-ever Golden Cactus Award. Helia helped found the
Botanical Gardens at UNAM, where she served as the director
throughout the 1960s. Once, when a strike occurred at the gardens,
she offset her workers' lost wages with her own savings. In 2018,
Google commemorated Helia's 117th birthday with a Google Doodle.
Online, there is a memorable image of Helia dressed in a
skirt and blazer - with a knife in her hand - and standing next to
an enormous Echinocactus platyacanthus, aka the giant barrel
cactus. In Mexico, where the cactus is a native, the hairs are
harvested for weaving, and a traditional candy is made from boiling
the pith. Today, the Helia Bravo Hollis Botanical Garden, with more
than 80 species of Cactaceae, is found at the Biosphere Reserve of
Tehuacán.
Helia once wrote,
My reason for living is biology and cacti.
September 30, 1910
Birth of Edward Solomon Hyams, British gardener, French scholar,
historian, anarchist, and writer. He was a gardening correspondent
for the Illustrated London News and The
Spectator and various horticultural journals. After
WWII, he lived a self-sufficient lifestyle at Nut Tree Cottages in
Molash in Kent. He planted a small vineyard and later
wrote The Grape Vine in England (1949). The
following year, he wrote From the Waste
Land (1950), which describes the transformation of three
acres at Nut Tree Cottages into a market garden that generated food
and income. In The Gardener's Bedside Book (1968), he
wrote,
I have never been interested in and am incapable of writing
about the great hybrid garden tulips. I do not mean to condemn them
or anything foolish like that; but one cannot be interested in
every kind of garden plant, and that particular kind has never made
any real appeal to me whatsoever. But the botanical species tulips
are quite another matter.
Unearthed Words
Love is like a garden in the heart, he said.
They asked him what he meant by garden.
He explained about gardens. "In the cities,"
he said, "there are places walled off where color
and decorum are magnified into a civilization.
Like a beautiful woman," he said. How like
a woman, they asked. He remembered their wives
and said garden was just a figure of speech,
then called for drinks all around. Two rounds
later he was crying.
― Jack Gilbert, Ovid in Tears, The
Dance Most of All: Poems
Grow That Garden Library
Windcliff by Daniel J. Hinkley
This book came out in 2020, and the subtitle is A Story of
People, Plants, and Gardens.
In this book, we learn about Windcliff - one of two magnificent
gardens created by the plantsman, nurseryman, and plant hunter Dan
Hinkley. (Dan also created Heronswood.)
“These iconic gardens, and the story of how one gave rise to
the other, are celebrated in Hinkley’s deeply personal Windcliff.
In a lively style that mingles audacious opinions on garden design
with cautionary tales of planting missteps, Hinkley shares his
infectious passion for plants.”
In these pages, you will fall in love with Windcliff thanks to the
gorgeous photography and fall even deeper in love hearing about the
careful way Dan created Windcliff, from the exceptional plants he
selected to his pragmatic garden advice.
This book is 280 pages of creating a garden with a modern master
who loves plants and is delighted to share his stunning garden with
us.
You can get a copy of Windcliff by Daniel J. Hinkley and
support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for
around $22.
Today's Botanic Spark
Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart
September 30, 2015
On this day, The Martian, featuring Matt Damon as
botanist Mark Watney premiered in England. In the movie, Mark is
accidentally left on Mars and is forced to grow potatoes to stay
alive until he is rescued.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember:
"For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."