Pots and Plans

My mother loved to use antique pots to hold plants and cut flowers, and when I was growing up our house was filled with an assortment of old brass kettles, copper wash boilers and salt-glazed pottery crocks.  The crocks were the most interesting because they were “country” pieces, used on farms in the last quarter … Read more

Walking Iris

My friend Anne Marie Senior can grow anything.  She can also cook anything and make it taste good.  On top of that, she is a natural decorator.  With the help of her husband, Kenton, she transformed a cinder block garage in suburban New Jersey into a summerhouse reminiscent of country houses in her native Jamaica.  … Read more

November

When I am alone in my garden in November I often think about music, especially Ralph Vaughn Williams’ elegiac settings of English folk tunes.  My favorite is the haunting “Fantasia on Greensleeves,” because the musical images just seem right for the season of chilly winds, early sunsets and mornings when the grass glistens with frost.  … Read more

Beauty of Bath

In late October, Daylight Savings Time ends; we reset our internal and external clocks, and gain a much-needed hour of sleep.  In the United States, we’ve been engaging in this seasonal ritual for so long that almost no one finds it ironic that the majority of us have to literally turn back time before we … Read more

One Step Forward and One Step Back

Sometimes life’s little surprises produce a chain reaction of events that affect the garden. This is the story of one such chain. About a year ago we decided that it was past time to paint the house. We signed a contract with the painter and resolved to get the exterior in perfect shape before the … Read more