Granny’s Bonnet

Last week I saw a one-gallon container of old-fashioned double columbines at my neighborhood big box store. This is a sure sign that columbine—aquilegia to horticulturists—has arrived in a big way. The plants, generally short-lived perennials, have been spring harbingers in the Old and New Worlds for centuries. Now they are suddenly as à la … Read more

Phlox ‘Katherine’

It is amazing how far afield you can go on a rainy day when you are trying to order garden phlox.  In my case I went all the way to Long Island in the 1920’s, with detours that went even further back.  All of this started as a quest for information about a particular tall … Read more

A Peony’s Tale

  (Photo courtesy of Old House Gardens) When I walk around my garden I hear voices.  Sometimes those voices come from across the street, where my neighbor is pulling weeds to the accompaniment of talk radio.  More often though, the voices are inside my head, retelling the stories of each plant that I pass.  Those … Read more

Spiders in Summer

In the last two weeks I have gotten used to seeing tall garden phlox in the summer gardens in my neighborhood.  This morning I walked farther afield and saw masses of another tall, old-fashioned favorite—cleome or spider flower.  The cleome were part of a cottage garden planting scheme and when I saw it from a … Read more

Hyacinth Discovery

Every gardener has “holy grails”—plants that they have waited years to acquire.  Sometimes they are new introductions or discoveries that are prohibitively expensive; other times they are species or varieties that have gained popularity in Europe or the Far East and haven’t made their way to U.S. shores. I have some evergreen “holy grails” that … Read more