Twining Susan

I am not always wildly successful at growing plants from seeds.  This is because, I don’t have a full-fledged seed-starting set-up indoors and I do have a full-time job.  Excuses aside, I am much better at letting plants sow themselves outdoors and grubbing out the occasional unwanted seedlings.   That method ensures that I can lavish … Read more

Heat Wave

Way back in 1939 Ethel Water’s sang a set of torrid lyrics written by Irving Berlin.  The first line goes: `“Oh, we’re having a heat wave, a tropical heat wave.” Many of us are singing that song right now. Berlin’s “heat wave” was generated by an unnamed human temptress.  Our current heat wave is generated … Read more

Cinqfoil

Shrubby cinquefoil or Potentilla fruticosa is the rose’s often-overlooked relative.  It boasts so many conspicuous virtues—hardiness, varmint-resistance, a repeat-blooming habit and beauty—but somehow it lacks the flash of the eternally beloved rose. I am, of course, addicted to roses, but not long ago I finally bought a pink-flowered potentilla and now I wonder why I … Read more

Anne Spencer

Years ago I drove up a long hilly road and an equally long, bumpy driveway in Austerlitz, New York, to visit “Steepletop”, the home of twentieth century American poet Edna St. Vincent Millay.  One of the plants that grew on the Steepletop property, in Millay’s time and now, is the “poet’s daffodil” or Narcissus poeticus.  … Read more

Daisy Tales

My house was built in 1882.  Two years later, in 1884, botanist Luther Burbank (1849-1926) began to build a better daisy.  Another seventeen years passed while Burbank crossed various daisy species.  Finally, in 1901, he introduced a new ornamental plant named after Mount Shasta, one of California’s natural wonders.  The Shasta daisy, Leucanthemum x superbum, … Read more