Hibiscus Everywhere

If I were paranoid, I would say that I am being stalked by the mallow family.  Regular people cannot imagine such a thing, but we plant lovers sometimes can.  Consider the following….While walking on a country road in central New York State, I saw a stand of tall, single-flowered hollyhocks blooming by the side of … Read more

Florists call the tall, golden-topped stems “solidago” when they include them in expensive bouquets.  I suspect that more than one person has glanced at one of those solidago-laden arrangements and said, “It looks just like goldenrod to me.” And that person would be right. Solidago is simply goldenrod in fancy dress. Just as ancient alchemists … Read more

Buck Garden

Most people think small when they think of rock gardens—miniature plants in confined spaces.  Leonard J. Buck (1894-1974) was not one of those people.  Buck, who made a fortune importing and exporting metal ores, created a thirty-three acre rock garden at his estate in Far Hills, New Jersey.  Buck has been gone for forty years, … Read more

Greenwood Redux

Nearly a decade ago, I first visited Greenwood Gardens in Short Hills, New Jersey.  The owners of Greenwood, 28 acres of gardens, structures, outbuildings and naturalized areas, were beginning the process of making the transition from private property to public garden.  Deterioration was encroaching on the property, which had its moments of greatest glory in … Read more

Lemoine Legacy

Back in the days when dinosaurs roamed the earth, before plant breeding was the domain of huge conglomerates, the breeding and nursery business often ran in families.  The Lemoine family of Nancy, France was one of those multi-generational concerns, breeding and selling plants from 1849 through 1960. Victor Lemoine, his wife, Marie Louise, their son, … Read more