Crotons

CROTON The word “croton” or the Latin binomial, Codiaeum variegatum, might not ring a bell, but if you frequent garden centers or indoor plant merchandisers, you have probably seen the tropical specimens that go by those names. The flowers are insignificant, but the foliage is gaudy–large, leathery, semi-upright leaves in shades of bright yellow, green … Read more

Supermarket Hellebores

SUPERMARKET HELLEBORES Plants can grow in all kinds of unlikely places. Tiny alpine specimens find footholds in rock crevices. Cacti bloom in the desert. Now, it seems, hellebores grow in supermarkets. Innovations arising from globalized plant breeding efforts have moved us forward another step–I think. At this time of year, the supermarkets’ plant and flower … Read more

Cedric Morris

CEDRIC MORRIS             There seems to be a strong link between artists of various types and gardening.  Poet Emily Dickinson assembled a private herbarium as a young child and had a lifelong interest in flowers.  Celia Thaxter, an American poet at the end of the nineteenth century, was better known posthumously for her garden on … Read more

Beth Chatto

BETH CHATTO             The fall clean-up has brought me face to face, once again, with the difficult areas of my garden.  One of these trouble spots lurks in the front.  It is home to an array of plants already, but it still looks flat, shady and uninteresting.  Another bed, in the back, is slightly less … Read more

Knotty Problem

KNOTTY PROBLEM             The other day I was looking at a print that resembled a Delft tile.  The focal point was a quatrefoil enclosing a vase of stylized flowers.  The symmetry, flowers and unbroken outline reminded me of a knot garden, a form of planting I have admired for years.  Now that the gardening season … Read more