Night Flyers

NIGHT FLYERS             You may have been too distracted by heat waves, summer chores or garden watering to notice, but National Moth Week is upon us.  The celebration, a New Jersey-based initiative, takes place this year from July twentieth through twenty-eighth and aims to raise awareness of moths and the role they play in biodiversity. … Read more

Ditch Lilies

A long time ago, someone actually planted a tawny orange daylily—Hemerocallis fulva—on purpose.  I am sure the individual in question planted only one and was amazed five years later when it had morphed into an enormous clump and threatened to devour the entire garden.  That is what tawny orange daylilies do.  At this time of … Read more

Everlasting Pea

I have already reported on my conspicuous lack of success with tomatoes.  For years I also tried to grow annual ornamental sweet peas—Lathyrus odoratus–with only limited results.  This year is different.  I have thriving sweet peas for exactly one reason—I ignored them completely from the time they were planted. I didn’t order any sweet pea … Read more

Tomato Angst

TOMATO ANGST             I grow lots of plants –roses that leap to new altitudes every year and daylilies in ever-expanding clumps.  My hellebores regularly give birth to numerous offspring and the hardy geraniums thrive.  If I believed in green thumbs, I might justifiably say that I have one. But no matter what I do, I … Read more

Heron’s Bill

The Victorians and Edwardians had a passion for rock or alpine gardens, creating extensive pseudo-alpine landscapes from actual rocks, artificial rocks and various forms of debris, up to and including broken dishes.  Fashionable gardeners filled the cracks and crevices of these layouts with alpine plants newly discovered by plant hunters in various mountainous regions of … Read more