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

Cleaning Up

Jane Austen introduced Pride and Prejudice with the line, “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.”  If Miss Austen wrote about gardening, she would certainly have said, “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a person in possession of … Read more

Christmas Rose

When I was growing up in western New York, we generally had the annual January thaw after a prolonged cold snap.  In my part of the world this year, we had a prolonged thaw first, followed by a daunting cold snap.  It hardly seems fair, and is, in fact, downright disheartening. To avoid the blues, … Read more

Book Reveiw: My Secret Garden by Alan Titchmarsh

Alan Titchmarsh is quintessentially English, from his last name to his loves—gardening, dogs, country life and the Queen.  Best known to Americans from the imported gardening makeover series, Ground Force, Titchmarsh is a celebrity in Britain.  He hosts the BBC’s round the clock coverage of the Chelsea Flower Show every year, has written numerous garden … Read more

Resolutions

I always make New Year’s resolutions.  I also tend to make resolutions at the beginning of each month and the beginning of each day.  This sounds like a ritualized form of punishment, but I find that making resolutions is a little like panning for gold—most of what turns up is useless, but occasionally you find … Read more