Hastening Spring

Last fall, while most gardeners were putting in tulip bulbs, the spring-flowering shrubs were quietly going about the annual business of producing the buds from which long-awaited flowers will begin sprouting about a month from now.  While we shivered through the winter thinking that the snow-covered branches were asleep, they were, in fact, readying themselves … Read more

All Things Irish

Around St. Patrick’s Day I like to dip into Thomas Cahill’s wonderful book, How the Irish Saved Civilization.  The title is lofty, but the book is very accessible and focuses on how Irish monks helped preserve great works of Classical learning as civilization traveled the path of time from the Roman era to the medieval … Read more

Toads in Bloom

I am partial to toads.  Greenish-brown and warty, they perform useful functions in the garden, including consumption of troublesome plant pests.  Despite those virtues, they are usually exempted from the good press lavished on their relatives, the frogs.  This probably happens because frogs, with their smooth skins and slender profiles are considered the most glamorous … Read more

Marvel of Peru

Marvel of Peru is a plant that lives up to its name, even though it rarely, if ever, appears on garden center pallets.  Practical gardeners call it”four o’clock.”  Botanists, starting with Linnaeus, the great eighteenth century father of binomial nomenclature, refer to it with a Latin superlative — Mirabilis jalopa. Whatever you call it, the … Read more

Joseph Rock

If I were to succeed in the nefarious scheme of annexing my neighbor’s property, I would immediately create a garden room devoted to peonies of all sorts.  In my mind’s eye, the scene unfolds, with hundreds of garden peonies, otherwise known as Paeonia lactiflora, in bloom.  Tree peonies—Paeonia suffuticosa–would abound.  Intersectional types, a marriage of … Read more