Mystery Plant

MYSTERY PLANT             When my daughter, Kate, was little, she used to bring me bouquets of fallen leaves that she gathered on her way home from school.  Now, as a college student with a summer job in the City, she sometimes brings home interesting plants that she finds at the Union Square Greenmarket.  Yesterday she … Read more

Rainy Days

RAINY DAYS             I grew up in a western New York town located about ten miles from an agricultural area known locally as “The Muck”.  The Muck had been created from drained swampland in the first third of the twentieth century and was famous for its soil fertility.  Onions were the biggest crop and millions … Read more

Coreopsis

COREOPSIS             I think of coreopsis as a high summer flower.  Its bright yellow, daisy-shaped blooms seem most appropriate on hot sunny days when the petals look like golden rays.  Since it is still only late spring, I was surprised last week when my Coreopsis grandiflora or large-flowered coreopsis suffered a burst of early exuberance … Read more

The Gardener and the Dog

THE GARDENER AND THE DOG             A friend of mine is the proud human companion of an adolescent golden retriever.  The dog, whom I will call “B.”, to avoid embarrassing him, is among the most intelligent and handsome of his breed, but he seems to have some of the same problems as male human adolescents.  … Read more

Further Adventures of Molly the Witch

  FURTHER ADVENTURES OF MOLLY THE WITCH             Three years ago I bought a wonderful species peony with an unpronounceable Latin name: Paeonia daurica ssp mlokosevitschii.  Known to its friends as “Molly the Witch,” this peony is native to the Caucasus Mountains and features delectable poppy-like flowers the color of spring sunlight.  Fat clusters of … Read more