Tommies

I am absolutely ridiculous about the first flowers of spring.  I start checking the beds around New Year’s, hungry for even the smallest bit of color in my drab slice of suburbia.  When I do spot something—crocus, snowdrop or winter flowering jasmine blossoms—I feel my spirits lift.  It may be 25 degrees and sleeting, but … Read more

Hope Springing

This year, Presidents’ Day marked the first foray into the winter-struck garden.  The temperature was finally above 45 degrees, the endless rain had stopped, and it was a Federal holiday.  That trifecta of events was the winning combination that sent me out of doors first thing in the morning.  I reconnoitered, pulled out the garden … Read more

Corkscrew Vine

Thomas Jefferson collected many things, including plants.  But there was one specimen that he could never lay hands on: Vigna caracalla or corkscrew vine.  Writing to one of his plant suppliers, Jefferson described the flowering vine, a member of the legume or Fabiaceae family, as “the most beautiful bean in the world.” I think of … Read more

Cafe au Lait

Last week I was considering dahlia selections, because I want to plant lots of them in my front border come spring.  Dazzled by the sizes, colors and configurations of the available dahlias, I was especially struck by one, ‘Café au Lait’.  The catalog quoted a description from Brides.com that characterized its color as “creamy pink, … Read more

Bishop’s Hat

When is a barberry not a barberry?  When it is a bishop’s hat. And sometimes that bishop’s hat is also known as barrenwort, fairy wings or even horny goat weed.  In all cases, the plant in question is epimedium, a shade-loving, spring bloomer that covers ground in a very appealing way. When most of us … Read more