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 Here's an exercise to try. Take a minute today and write a letter that describes your garden. What do you love about it? What do you enjoy doing there? What are your favorite flowers? What areas give you trouble? Be honest. Be specific. Write it the way you'd tell a friend who's never seen your garden. Then clip a few flowers from the beds. Tuck them into the envelope. Seal it. Date it. And put it away. Now imagine doing this every year. A stack of letters. A record of seasons. A portrait of the gardener you were in May of 2026. And how different that gardener will be in May of 2036. What a gift for a future you. What a gift for your grandchildren. Today's Garden History 1752 Albrecht Daniel Thaer was born in Celle, Germany. Before Albrecht was a man of the soil, he was a man of the sickbed. At the University of Göttingen, he trained as a physician. And later served as a court doctor for royalty. He was very good at his job. But eighteenth-century medicine was still primitive. He often watched patients die from things he couldn't fix. And it wore on him. But then came the garden. Attached to his house, Albrecht had a small plot. Nothing grand. Just a place to grow flowers in his spare hours. What started as an amusement quickly became an obsession. He treated the garden like a science class. Experimenting with carnations and auriculas. After his marriage, he expanded. Obtaining four hectares outside the city gates as a wedding gift for his wife. The garden became both ornamental. And productive. From the start, Albrecht kept records. Every input. Every output. Every change in the soil. And he used what he learned to teach others. In 1804, he moved to Brandenburg. And purchased an estate. Gut Möglin. Two years later, he founded the Möglin Agricultural Institute. The first agricultural college in Prussia. Often called the cradle of scientific agriculture. Before Albrecht's work, farming was guided by feel. By folklore. By instinct. Albrecht made it a science. With textbooks. Lectures. And data. His masterwork, Principles of Rational Agriculture, became the standard across Europe. Earning him the title: Father of Modern Scientific Agriculture. After years of observation, Albrecht championed crop rotation. Never grow the same thing in the same place twice. The soil, like the body, needed variety. And rest. At the center of his thinking was humus. That dark, crumbly, living layer of soil. He believed plants fed on it. He was wrong. A tree doesn't eat the earth. It builds itself from the sky. From carbon dioxide. From light. But here's the thing. Albrecht's advice still worked. Because compost feeds the microbes. And microbes build healthy soil. Healthy soil grows strong plants. He was wrong about the chemistry. But right about the care. Today, regenerative gardeners are circling back to everything he taught. Feed the soil. Not the plant. Build the humus. Close the loop. Albrecht died at seventy-six. On his beloved estate. His eyesight had failed him the year before. The great observer left in the dark. In his final years, he asked to be buried in his garden. On the shore of a clear pond. Surrounded by trees he had planted himself. He called those trees his children. Over his grave, they placed a pyramid of flowers. Not marble. Not bronze. Just petals. One tribute said it best: "The ornaments of nature's rich temple mourn for their departed friend." 1905 Federico Delpino died in Naples. He was seventy-one years old. Federico was born in 1833. A fragile child. Thin. Prone to illness. His mother's remedy was the garden. She kept him outside for hours every day. Not because she knew the science. But because she knew her son. And to her, Federico needed the garden. It worked both ways. The garden needed watching. And Federico watched. Ants climbing stems. Bees disappearing into flowers. Emerging dusted in yellow. Years later, Federico would say that as a child, he had already begun to think about studying plants. Life had other plans. When his father died, Federico left school. Took a job at a customs house. Counting crates. Stamping documents. Supporting his family. For fourteen years, he worked there. But never left the garden behind. In his free time, he studied nature. No university. No lab. No mentor. Just his eyes. And his patience. In 1867, he published Thoughts on Plant Biology. And changed botany forever. Stop naming the parts. Start watching what the plant does. Federico saw plant life as negotiation. A night-blooming flower? That's for moths. A deep tube of nectar? That's for butterflies. Nectar, he said, was a wage. Plants hire help. They advertise with petals. They pay with sugar. And when the bee arrives, it carries pollen forward. Work complete. He also saw plants hiring bodyguards. Acacias with hollow thorns. Housing ants. Feeding them. And in return, the ants protected the tree. He called this relationship myrmecophily. Mutual benefit between ants and plants. Federico wrote to Charles Darwin. Darwin was fascinated. And frustrated. Because he couldn't read Italian. Federico later became director of the Naples Botanic Garden. A long way from the customs desk. He once wrote: "The plant is not a simple machine. It is an individual that acts with a purpose." He died on this day in 1905. Buried in Naples. Among the Illustrious. All because his mother sent a fragile boy outside. And told him to stay. Unearthed Words In today's Unearthed Words, we hear from the American poet Georgia Douglas Johnson, who died on this day in 1966. Georgia was a central voice of the Harlem Renaissance. By day, she worked a government job in Washington, D.C. By night, she wrote. After the house was quiet. After the dishes were done. She called herself a "writer by night." As her reputation grew, her home became a gathering place. Young Black poets. Langston Hughes. Countee Cullen. Finding their voices. But when her own heart grew heavy, Georgia turned to nature. Here is her poem Hope: The oak tarries long in the depth of the seed, While the sharp blades of clover rise and fall, And the plants of the garden fulfill their need, But the oak is silent and makes no call. It fuses the strength of the sun and the soil, In the secret dark of the silent years, It weaves a garment of patient toil, And drinks of the rain of the valley's tears. Till a hundred years are gone and past, And the bough is great and the trunk is vast! Clover rises quickly. Falls quickly. But the oak waits. Some days we are the clover. Quick. Useful. And gone. And some days we are the oak. Doing our work quietly. In our own time. Book Recommendation The Regenerative Landscaper by Erik Ohlsen [https://www.amazon.com/dp/1957869089?psc=1&pd_rd_i=1957869089&pd_rd_w=IhTBz&content-id=amzn1.sym.8c2f9165-8e93-42a1-8313-73d3809141a2&pf_rd_p=8c2f9165-8e93-42a1-8313-73d3809141a2&pf_rd_r=GF18NK7PZAHE7Y14KF49&pd_rd_wg=lgqSj&pd_rd_r=df930091-3aea-41f2-93d0-afb995fdb1f5&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9kZXRhaWw&linkCode=ll1&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=135c95b47f6bf530f7f9cdf64f2dd042&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl] https://www.amazon.com/dp/1957869089?psc=1&pd_rd_i=1957869089&pd_rd_w=IhTBz&content-id=amzn1.sym.8c2f9165-8e93-42a1-8313-73d3809141a2&pf_rd_p=8c2f9165-8e93-42a1-8313-73d3809141a2&pf_rd_r=GF18NK7PZAHE7Y14KF49&pd_rd_wg=lgqSj&pd_rd_r=df930091-3aea-41f2-93d0-afb995fdb1f5&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9kZXRhaWw&linkCode=ll1&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=135c95b47f6bf530f7f9cdf64f2dd042&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl It's time to Grow That Garden Library, with today's book: The Regenerative Landscaper by Erik Ohlsen. 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. Erik opens his book with a scene. You step out your back door. Birdsong everywhere. A basket on your arm. And within ten minutes, it's full. Vegetables. Herbs. Eggs. Fruit. And a bundle of flowers resting on top. This is what Erik calls "a landscape of real abundance." Not a fantasy. But something to build. Erik is a permaculture designer. And his book is a field guide to creating landscapes that produce. Not through force. But through relationship. He writes about soil health. Water stewardship. Biodiversity. And resilience. But what holds the book together is the work. Years of building soil. Planting trees whose fruit you may never see. Designing water systems that slow rain. And let it soak. He asks a simple question: What are you leaving behind? Because healthy soil is not built in a season. It is layered. Fed. Protected. Observed. And passed on. Botanic Spark And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart. 1865 Edward Augustus Bowles was born in Enfield, England. His friends called him Gussie. He was the youngest of four children. And once planned to become a priest. But tragedy changed everything. His sister Cornelia died at nineteen. Then his brother John died at twenty-seven. The same year. Half the children in the house gone. Before New Year's. Gussie returned home. To his parents. And to the garden. He never went back to Cambridge. Never became a priest. At some point that year, he pressed his initials into the brick wall of the kitchen garden. E.A.B. 1887. Not perfect. Not polished. Just a mark. A young man saying: I am still here. Gussie spent the next sixty-seven years in that garden. And those initials remain. In the brick. Near the gateway to the pond. Still legible today. Final Thoughts Mid-May has a strange quality. Everything is moving. And yet nothing has quite arrived. The whole season still ahead. It asks a different kind of patience. Not the endurance of winter. But the patience of watching something begin. To come to life. In its own way. Maybe not the way you expected. And that's the work of May. To watch. And to wait. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.
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