The Daily Gardener
Subscribe Apple [https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-daily-gardener/id1458062597] | Google [https://playmusic.app.goo.gl/?ibi=com.google.PlayMusic&isi=691797987&ius=googleplaymusic&apn=com.google.android.music&link=https://play.google.com/music/m/Im4i25xyanawqu5fin7oy6smrnm?t%3DThe_Daily_Gardener%26pcampaignid%3DMKT-na-all-co-pr-mu-pod-16] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5ODID572hLPggNp9WZBnzC] | Stitcher [https://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=387618] | iHeart [https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-daily-gardener-51539428/?cmp=web_share] Support The Daily Gardener Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/TheDailyGardener] Buy Me A Coffee [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/DailyGardener] Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter [https://thedailygardener.us3.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=1f92c654190e77439b2813550&id=5f0634e0cd] | Daily Gardener Community [https://www.facebook.com/groups/thedailygardener/] Today's Show Notes This is the time of year to throw a spring garden party. It doesn't have to be fancy. A few chairs. A pitcher of something cold. And a neighbor you haven't seen since the leaves came down. The garden does most of the work. It sets the table. It arranges the flowers. And it gives everyone something to talk about. Because nothing starts a conversation faster than a bloom someone hasn't seen before. You can offer to walk your guests through the beds. Encourage them to touch something new and green. Or smell an herb. Have a little one pull a radish. If you've got one ready. Sharing your garden is the best gift of all. And you don't have to give anything away. Just open the gate. And let people in. Today's Garden History 1906 Enid Annenberg Haupt was born in Chicago. She once said, "Nature is my religion. There is no life in concrete and paint." Enid spent ninety-nine years living that statement. Growing up, she was the fourth child of eight in the Annenberg family. A dynasty built on publishing. And the hard politics of American media. She found her way into the orbit of orchids. It started when her second husband, Ira Haupt, courted her with a single spray of cymbidium orchids. And Enid—raised surrounded by money and power—looked at the orchid and saw something that meant more to her than all of it. Beauty. She was so smitten with orchids that for her wedding, she requested thirteen orchid plants instead of jewelry. Professionally, Enid ran Seventeen magazine for sixteen years. And transformed it into a serious primer on careers and literature for young women. Reflecting on her active lifestyle, she once said, "I haven't the time for boredom." But it was gardens that became the great work of her life. When the Victorian conservatory at the New York Botanical Garden was about to be demolished, Enid sold jewelry from her personal collection. To make the first five-million-dollar gift that saved it. As she aged, Enid came to see plants as something people needed. But also something that made the world a better place. And she believed beauty was not just a luxury. But a human right. Over the years, Enid gave more than thirty-four million dollars to the Botanical Garden alone. And she funded a four-acre garden on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Behind the Smithsonian Castle. Above all, she wanted it to feel like it had always been there. Waiting for visitors on the day it opened. So that the average person could walk in and feel peace immediately. When she bought George Washington's former estate in Virginia. River Farm. She turned around and donated it to the American Horticultural Society. Enid also cared about accessibility. And she built one of the first wheelchair-accessible gardens. At a hospital. Where children could reach the flowers from their chairs. And when the money ran short on many of the projects she helped sponsor, Enid sold Impressionist paintings from her own private collection. Her inheritance. Monet. Van Gogh. Gauguin. Cézanne. Renoir. Fifteen masterpieces. For twenty-five million dollars. Unlike many who found gardens, Enid believed that if you helped create a garden, you must endow it. Because a gift without a future is just a burden. One that often ends up lost to time. By the time Enid died in 2005, she had given away more than one hundred and forty million dollars. Nearly all of it to gardens and green spaces open to the public. Which makes Enid Annenberg Haupt the greatest patron American horticulture has ever known. 2018 Beth Chatto died peacefully at her home in Elmstead Market, in Essex, England. She was ninety-four years old. Beth was born in 1923. Her mother gave her her first trowel. And that was the beginning. When Beth married the botanist Andrew Chatto, his research into the origins of plants helped shape her thinking. Her work centered on a single, radical idea: Right plant. Right place. It sounds obvious now. But it wasn't at the time. In the 1950s, the British gardening ideal was a manicured lawn. And stiff beds of annuals. Ripped out every autumn. And replanted every spring. If the soil was wrong, you changed the soil. If the ground was too wet, you drained it. Beth said no to all of it. She encouraged gardeners to flip the paradigm. To find plants that already want to grow where they are. In her late thirties, Beth began work on a difficult piece of land. Boggy hollows. Parched gravel beds. Brambles. Scrub. Her neighbors told her to forget it. But Beth saw five gardens. She dug out ponds. Shaped them like clouds. On the dry gravel, she planted silver-leafed plants. That color told her everything she needed to know. Those plants would not need pampering. So she chose euphorbias. Lavender. And giant feathery grasses. That caught the wind and light. Like something breathing. Beth once said, "I don't want a garden that looks like a florist shop. I want a garden that looks like a piece of the world." Nearly twenty years later, she brought her ideas to the Chelsea Flower Show. The traditionalists were horrified. Beth displayed grasses. And common plants like cow parsley. Things most people called weeds. And yet she won the gold medal. And then again. In all, Beth won ten consecutive gold medals. Her boldest move came when she was nearly seventy. She planted a gravel garden on a former parking lot. And never watered it. Not once. Outside of rain, it remains unwatered. And still blooms today. Beth credited her artistic eye to her friend, the painter Cedric Morris. He taught her to see the garden as a canvas. And her dearest garden friend was Christopher Lloyd. Christo. Of Great Dixter. In the garden, they were opposites. Beth was silver and restrained. Christo was orange and chaos. She once wrote to him: "I feel like a tired old horse, plodding along… then comes your letter, like a sharp spur." Beth's gardens. Seven and a half acres in the Essex countryside. Are now a National Heritage landscape. And her granddaughter Julia runs the nursery today. Her insight remains one of the quietest laws in modern gardening: Right plant. Right place. Unearthed Words In today's Unearthed Words, we hear from the English poet and memoirist Laurie Lee, who died on this day in 1997. Laurie grew up in the Slad Valley in Gloucestershire. A small Cotswold village. With steep lanes. And half-wild gardens. His memoir Cider with Rosie is a love letter to a vanishing rural world. Written especially to honor his mother. Here is Laurie remembering her in the garden: "So with the family gone, Mother lived as she wished… Slowly, snugly, she grew into her background, warm on her grassy bank, poking and peering among the flowery bushes, dishevelled and bright as they. Serenely unkempt were those final years, free from conflict, doubt or dismay, while she reverted gently to a rustic simplicity as a moss-rose reverts to a wild one." Earlier, Laurie wrote of her gift with roses: "She could grow them anywhere, at any time, and they seemed to live longer for her… She grew them with rough, almost slap-dash love, but her hands possessed such an understanding of their needs they seemed to turn to her like another sun." Laurie's mother was not a formal gardener. Or a designer. She worked without a plan. Welcomed self-seeders. And forgave the weeds. Laurie described her this way: "All day she trotted to and fro, flushed and garrulous, pouring flowers into every pot and jug she could find… until [the] dim interior [of the house] seemed entirely possessed by the world outside — a still green pool flooding with honeyed tides of summer." That passage is more than a description. It's a restoration. Word by word. Laurie brings her back. Book Recommendation In a Green Shade by Allen Lacy [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0618003789?coliid=I447ZCNPKBWPG&colid=MPDX26D6IB9U&psc=1&linkCode=ll1&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=cbc657a4088b699a4c626eab6a5e75f0&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl] https://www.amazon.com/dp/0618003789?coliid=I447ZCNPKBWPG&colid=MPDX26D6IB9U&psc=1&linkCode=ll1&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=cbc657a4088b699a4c626eab6a5e75f0&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl It's time to Grow That Garden Library, with today's book: In a Green Shade by Allen Lacy. This book is part of Mother's Day Week here on The Daily Gardener. And that means all of this week's Book Recommendations feature garden stories about care, inheritance, teaching, and the quiet ways gardening is passed from one generation to the next. In a Green Shade gathers Allen's essays on gardens and gardeners. Most of these pieces were originally written for a newsletter called Homeground. A father-and-son project that Allen almost didn't start. In the introduction, Allen tells the story: "Soon after I gave up my column in the Times, my younger son, Michael, a magazine art director, began mumbling that he and I should publish a gardening newsletter together. I resisted, but he persisted, entreating me to consider the wonders of desktop publishing and the miracles of software programs with strange names not in any known language. Finally, on Christmas Eve, he nudged me again. This time I said yes. On New Year's Eve Michael dropped by to show me the design dummy for Homeground. The newsletter comes out quarterly and runs to sixteen pages an issue. It's now approaching its eighth year. I had new things to worry about, such as the costs of paper, advertising, and postage. We started off with no subscribers, and then we got a few, and a few more every month. We have had a satisfying renewal rate, but Martha Stewart need not fear our competition." On the page, Allen writes like a gardener who has been working the same land for a very long time. He doesn't give advice. He simply shares what he notices. And for Mother's Day Week, this book speaks to that gentle continuity. Honoring the gardeners who came before us. Who taught by example. Often without ever naming what they were doing. Botanic Spark And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart. 1907 Daphne du Maurier was born in London. Most people know Daphne from her novel Rebecca. With that unforgettable opening line: "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again." But Manderley was not entirely imagined. It was a real place. Menabilly. On the southern coast of Cornwall. Overlooking the sea. As a young woman, Daphne stumbled upon the property. Pushed through brambles. Followed an overgrown path. And when the house appeared, it felt like a dream. She fell in love with it immediately. With the wildness of the land. Rhododendrons gone feral. Rare specimens planted long ago. All tangled together in what she called an alien marriage. In 1943, Daphne leased Menabilly. Moved in. And began to tend it back to life. Not redesigning it. Simply living with it. Walking its paths every day. Writing her books in a small hut. With the garden just outside her window. Her daughters remembered that wherever she lived, the house was always full of flowers. In one of her books, a child slips away from a garden party and into the woods. And Daphne wrote: "The woods were made for secrecy. They did not recognize her as the garden did." For Daphne, gardens were not decoration. They were witness. The one place that truly knew you. She lived at Menabilly for more than two decades. And when the lease ended, she was heartbroken. She had given the garden her best years. And it had shaped her life's work in return. Daphne du Maurier died in 1989. She was eighty-one. Final Thoughts This is the time of year when the garden does most of the work. Take some time to enjoy it. Grab a couple of chairs. Something cold to drink. And sit beside a neighbor you haven't seen in a while. Fill the kiddie pool. Add a little Epsom salt. Soak your feet. And suddenly. It's a party. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.
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