Mourning Widow

I last thought seriously about Geranium phaeum, aka “the mourning widow,” about six years ago.  I was in the first throes of a serious love affair with all kinds of hardy geraniums and was swept off my feet by the phaeum species, because it thrives so well in shade.  I bought one and it died, … Read more

Hearts on Fire

Bleeding heart—Lamprocapnos spectabilis–has shed seeds, if not blood, all over my garden.  I probably planted the first one deliberately ten years ago, though I have no memory of doing so.  Now, they are everywhere.  Normally those words would constitute the start of a rant about garden thuggery.  In this case, however, I have no complaint.  … Read more

Flowering Tobacco

Over the centuries, humans have had a complex relationship with members of the tobacco—Nicotiana—family.  We have praised them, vilified them, smoked some species, distilled others into insecticides and burned still others in various rituals.  One thing is clear.  When it comes to ornamental or flowering tobacco, there is much to praise and almost nothing to … Read more

Fragrant Primroses

Fragrances and music have a tendency to seep right into your head and stay there.  This past week, as the predicted “snowpocalypse” turned into a “sno-vereaction,” the scent of a particular primrose took up residence in my brain.  Now I am on a quest for similar scented beauties for my spring garden. The brain take-over … Read more

Anxiously Awaiting Hellebores

It is one month since the winter solstice and the daylight is making its tentative return. The winter so far in my little corner of the world has been a succession of long gray days with an occasional dusting of snow to remind us of the season.  Most days I am able to cast encouraging … Read more