The Daily Gardener

May 13, 2026 Enid Annenberg Haupt, Beth Chatto, Laurie Lee, In a Green Shade by Allen Lacy, and Daphne du Maurier

20 min · 13. touko 202620 min
jakson May 13, 2026 Enid Annenberg Haupt, Beth Chatto, Laurie Lee, In a Green Shade by Allen Lacy, and Daphne du Maurier kansikuva

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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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jakson May 19, 2026 Kate Furbish, Genevieve Gillette, Katharine Stewart, The Alcatraz Rose by Anthony Eglin, and Nellie Melba kansikuva

May 19, 2026 Kate Furbish, Genevieve Gillette, Katharine Stewart, The Alcatraz Rose by Anthony Eglin, and Nellie Melba

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 Today is Plant Something Day. And I know — you probably don't need a holiday to tell you to plant something. You've been planting for weeks. But I like what this day can be if you let it. Not just — plant something. But — plant something you've been meaning to get to. Something more of what you already love. Something your grandmother grew. Something you keep seeing at the nursery and putting back. Or something to remember someone. It doesn't have to be big. One pot. One seed. Or one division from the thing that's finally big enough to share. May in Minnesota is generous right now. The soil is warm. The evenings are long. And there's still time to put something in the ground and watch it decide what it wants to become. Today's Garden History 1834 Kate Furbish was born in Exeter, New Hampshire. When she was still an infant, Kate's family moved to Brunswick. And that was where she stayed — nearly all her life. As a child, her father took her into the woods and taught her all he knew about nature. And even though Kate studied painting for a time in Paris and attended botany lectures in Boston — she always came back to Brunswick. But then, in her mid-thirties, Kate gave herself a task that no one asked for and no one funded. To find, collect, and paint every flowering plant in the state of Maine. She started at thirty-six. It took her nearly forty years to finish her quest. Throughout those years, Kate traveled alone to the most remote parts of the state — Aroostook County, the Saint John River, the bogs and the riverbanks and the places where no woman was expected to go. Despite being a single woman, she rode mail coaches with no springs in the seats and no backs to lean on. But she did carry a revolver. Ingenious to a fault, Kate built rafts out of scrap lumber to reach plants growing in the middle of swamps. And she crawled on her stomach through bogs to sketch what she found. And in instances when the ground got too soft, she backed out on her hands and knees. Her unending devotion to wildflowers led the French Canadians in the northern towns to call Kate the Posey Woman. Yet somehow, she didn't mind. Though the people in Brunswick proper simply called her crazy. Kate liked that much less — but it didn't slow her down. She once wrote, "Had I listened to those who discouraged me, I should be as ignorant as they are of its natural beauties." Traveling along the Saint John River, Kate once came upon a plant with dull yellow leaves — a lousewort no one had ever recorded. She sent her findings to Sereno Watson at Harvard. Watson named the plant in her honor. When Kate responded by letter, to say she would visit the school, she also issued this opinion: "My second reason for writing is to say, that were it not for the fact that I can find no plants named for a female botanist in your manual, I should object to 'Pedicularis Furbishae'... But as a new species is rarely found in New England and few plants are named for women, it pleases me." And that is how the plant named for Kate stuck. She gave it her blessing. A tiny leap forward for women thanks to a tiny step forward for herself. Nearly a century later, that same lousewort was rediscovered after decades of no sightings, growing on land about to be flooded by a billion-dollar dam. Its presence helped stop the project — eighty-eight thousand acres of northern Maine forest saved by a little plant found by Kate all those years ago, with mud on her skirt and a revolver on the seat beside her. Ultimately, her Flora of Maine — fourteen folio volumes and more than thirteen hundred watercolors — went to Bowdoin College. The four thousand sheets of dried plants she painstakingly collected went to her friend Sereno Watson at Harvard. Ever humble, Kate claimed no artistic merit. She called it simply truthful representation. Kate once said that flower and botanical books had been her only friends when she collected. She wrote: "The flowers [have been] my only society and the manuals [my] only literature for months [all] together. Happy, happy hours." Kate Furbish lived to ninety-seven. And if flowers were her only friends, she'd known plenty during her life and was never truly alone. In 2020, the Kate Furbish Elementary School opened in Brunswick. Its hallways were lined with her watercolors — so that children walk past the plants of Maine every morning on their way to class. 1898 E. Genevieve Gillette was born in Lansing, Michigan. Her family and friends called her Genevieve. When Genevieve was three, her family moved to a farm on the Grand River in Dimondale. Every spring, her father would take her into the woods to kneel by the brook with the trailing arbutus flowering around them, and say, "Can you hear what it is saying? It's talking to us." She never forgot that. When her dad died when she was a teenager, the family sold the farm. But the memories of her father wrapped up in those moments in nature stayed with Genevieve forever. After high school, Genevieve enrolled at Michigan Agricultural College and in 1920 became the first woman to graduate from its first landscape architecture program. After dozens of applications, she received just one offer — from the landscape architect Jens Jensen in Chicago. A man who designed with native trees and believed trees enjoy each other's company. Jensen paid her twenty-five dollars a week. At first, Genevieve was only allowed to answer the phone. But Jensen saw her potential and pestered her to return to Michigan and start a state park system. So she did. When Genevieve went back home, she met an old classmate and friend named P.J. Hoffmaster, who had become Michigan's first superintendent of state parks. Together, P.J. and Genevieve began a quest to find and save special places throughout Michigan. On weekends, she scouted for park land — driving across the state alone, identifying thirty state parks, like Hartwick Pines, Ludington, and the Porcupine Mountains. She slept under the boughs of evergreen trees, inspected shorelines, walked dunes, and knelt in the woods the way she had with her father. And when Sleeping Bear Dunes was about to be developed into condominiums, she made repeated trips to Washington, D.C. until it was protected as a national lakeshore. For decades, Genevieve worked as an unpaid volunteer. The Detroit Free Press called her a saving angel. Although she admitted that talking to legislators terrified her, she did it anyway. And when P.J. died of a heart attack in 1951, she was left to carry their vision alone. She kept going. And didn't stop. Somehow, Genevieve found an inner courage she didn't know she had. Which is how she founded the Michigan Parks Association and then kept working for another thirty-five years. Although she never married or had children, she said she felt that the parks were her life's work. By 1965, President Johnson invited her to serve on his committee for recreation and natural beauty. When Genevieve heard the news, she called it the honor of her career. After all the scouting, and the planning, and the struggle to save the most glorious wild spaces in the state, Genevieve could look back and see her part in all of it. She died on May 23rd, 1986 — just four days after her eighty-eighth birthday. Genevieve's final wish was that money from her estate be used to buy park land. And that's how three hundred thousand dollars went to purchase five thousand acres along Lake Huron — saving the limestone cobble beaches, the deep sand dunes, and the small dwarf lake iris that grew happily only in that place. Even when Michiganders thought she had finished her work, she managed to save the best gift for last. Unearthed Words In today's Unearthed Words, we hear a passage from A Garden in the Hills, a garden diary by the Scottish gardener and writer Katharine Stewart, written on this day in 1994. Katharine wrote from Abriachan, a hillside village near Loch Ness in Scotland. Katharine's garden lay beside a burn — a small Highland stream — with birches, currants, and wind off the water. After all the years living on the hills, Katharine understood that May in the north is never guaranteed. "If April is the cruellest month, May, so far this year, is not much kinder. Still, the tatties and the first sowings of vegetables are in the ground, though they'll be wise enough to bide their time before emerging. The birches are greening and in the hollow by the burn there's the gleam of celandine. Chaffinches are singing non-stop and a thrush is shouting from the top of the highest pine. Some years ago, when there was no one living in these parts, I came upon a garden, a long, narrow stretch beside the burn. Rhubarb plants had grown to the size of small trees, there were blackcurrant bushes drastically overgrown, but alive, and gooseberries still bearing pale yellow fruit. I took cuttings of these and now have half a dozen good bushes fruiting happily. This little garden must have had a really devoted gardener, for in one corner was a lilac and in another a gean — a wild cherry." Katharine found that abandoned garden beside the burn — rhubarb the size of small trees, gooseberries still bearing — and her first instinct was to take cuttings. Abandoned gardens are just another way of describing someone else's devotion left dormant for a while, but still alive in the ground, waiting for the right person to find it. Book Recommendation The Alcatraz Rose by Anthony Eglin [https://www.amazon.com/Alcatraz-Rose-Lawrence-Kingston-Mystery/dp/1502707039?_encoding=UTF8&dib_tag=se&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.oc2k90HoMTOGetN0SsBoKg.KmwCIishO4tDJn7KecF2IHLhIxHgPkYuq1hU3TmpS-M&qid=1775957662&sr=1-1&linkCode=ll2&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=95f4003012c3dd3f774ef79424b9719e&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl] https://www.amazon.com/Alcatraz-Rose-Lawrence-Kingston-Mystery/dp/1502707039?_encoding=UTF8&dib_tag=se&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.oc2k90HoMTOGetN0SsBoKg.KmwCIishO4tDJn7KecF2IHLhIxHgPkYuq1hU3TmpS-M&qid=1775957662&sr=1-1&linkCode=ll2&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=95f4003012c3dd3f774ef79424b9719e&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl This book is part of Garden Mysteries Week, which means all this week's book recommendations feature tales of intrigue, plants, and poison straight from the garden. We close the week with another rose mystery — this time from Anthony Eglin, who gave us The Blue Rose on Monday. A thirteen-year-old girl asks botanist Lawrence Kingston to reopen a case: Her mother's disappearance. Eight years unsolved. And almost at the same moment, word arrives that an English rose — extinct for fifty years — has been found growing on Alcatraz Island, five thousand miles from where it last bloomed. Two mysteries. One botanist. And a connection nobody sees coming. The American Rose Society called it a bestseller. Garden Design gave Eglin a Gold Trowel Award. And The Blue Rose won a French award for mystery novel of the year. This is garden fiction from someone who knows exactly what roses mean — and exactly how dangerous that knowledge can be. This week, our garden had secrets. Next week, we go back to the soil. Botanic Spark And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart. 1861 Nellie Melba was born in Melbourne, Australia. Nellie sang on every great stage in Europe and beyond — for decades. And then, after all of it — the standing ovations, and the farewells — Nellie came home. One evening, driving through the Yarra Valley, she spotted a for-sale sign on a gate near Coldstream. Nellie looked across at the blue hills of her childhood — the same familiar landscape and the same familiar light — and the house, with sixty acres, was bought on the spot. After claiming the property for herself, Nellie named it Coombe Cottage. And quickly set about making it her own. There, she planted a cypress hedge six hundred meters long, enclosing the whole of it — a sense of mystery that has lasted more than a hundred years. When twenty thousand daffodils arrived from the Blue Mountains of New South Wales as a gift from a farmer in exchange for a private performance, they became a happy part of the spring landscape and a stark counterpoint to Nellie's own suffering. Nellie had known real grief — a marriage that became a cage, and a son taken from her and carried to another continent. Nellie held all of that and still, she planted those daffodils. In 1925, as if sensing that people wanted to know her better, Nellie wrote: "If you wish to understand me at all, you must understand, first and foremost, that I am an Australian." Though she was the most famous voice in the world, in the end, all Nellie wanted was a garden, a cypress hedge, and the blue hills of home. Today, the Nellie Melba rose has a pale pink opening from magenta buds. It is long-stemmed and nearly thornless. It is beautiful. Elegant. And a little mysterious. Final Thoughts May has this way of making everything feel possible. And maybe it is. Maybe that's not the season lying to you. Maybe the season is just giving you a window. And it's up to you whether you use it or stand there admiring the light. I've been thinking about that — how the best planting days aren't the ones you plan. They're the ones where you walk outside with your coffee and something catches your eye and you think: Today. Not because it's perfect. But because it's time. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.

19. touko 202618 min
jakson May 18, 2026 Wilhelm Hofmeister, Wolfgang Oehme, George Meredith, The Blue Rose by Anthony Eglin, and Bertrand Russell kansikuva

May 18, 2026 Wilhelm Hofmeister, Wolfgang Oehme, George Meredith, The Blue Rose by Anthony Eglin, and Bertrand Russell

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 Mid-May mornings in Minnesota come early now. The light is already there when you walk out. The soil is warm enough to hold what you give it. And if you're lucky, there's someone beside you — handing you a flat, holding the stake, pulling the same weeds you were about to pull. The garden does most of the talking. I gardened with my friend Judy for a few summers, and what I remember most isn't any single plant we put in — it's those early mornings. She'd show up with something in a pot. I'd send her home with something in a bag. After a while we joked that our gardens were becoming one. Many hands, light work. And something else, too — many hands, more noticing. You catch things you'd miss alone. There's no shortcut to that. You just have to show up on the same morning, with dirt on both sets of hands, and let the garden be the thing between you. Today's Garden History 1824 Wilhelm Hofmeister was born in Leipzig. Wilhelm never finished formal schooling. He worked in his father's shop — selling sheet music, stacking books, and greeting customers. But every morning, before the shop opened, he would sit studying plant specimens with his face mere inches from the leaves. Wilhelm was severely nearsighted, but he refused to wear glasses. So anything beyond six inches was a blur. But up close, his vision was quite vivid. While other botanists squinted through clunky brass microscopes, Wilhelm could just bring a moss, a fern, a sliver of cone right up to his eyes and see plainly what most people would miss. Somehow he could dissect what others needed lenses to see — if they could see it at all. At just twenty-seven, Wilhelm had published a monograph showing something no one had pieced together. In it, he showed that a fern doesn't simply make more ferns. It drops spores that grow into something else entirely — a tiny, flat, heart-shaped thing you'd step right over and never notice. And that tiny thing is what produces the next fern. Parent and child, looking nothing alike — taking turns. He found the same pattern in mosses, in pines, and in every plant he studied. He called the phenomenon alternation of generations. In 1847, he married Agnes Lurgenstein. Together, they had nine children. Agnes held the household steady while Wilhelm focused on his work. Soon, the universities came calling. Heidelberg offered a professorship and oversight of the Botanical Garden — despite the fact that Wilhelm had no degree. Yet he had earned it at his kitchen table, before dawn, with his face two inches from a leaf or petal or stem. But then there was profound loss. Over a brutal five-year period, Wilhelm buried his darling Agnes. Then his youngest daughter. Then both surviving sons. Then his half-brother. Seven of his nine children gone before him. His student Karl von Goebel later wrote that he succumbed to the weight of his own grief. On his birthday, Wilhelm suffered the first of several strokes. Seven months later, he died in Lindenau, near Leipzig — near where his story began. Wilhelm was fifty-two. What lingers is the image of a nearsighted man in a dark kitchen at four in the morning, his face so close to a fern it seemed ridiculous. The man who literally couldn't see far saw the smallest thing — and it changed how we understand every plant alive. 1930 Wolfgang Oehme was born in Chemnitz, Germany. Wolfgang started growing plants at five in a corner of his parents' community garden. He was nine when WWII started. By the time it ended, the cities he knew were rubble. At seventeen, Wolfgang apprenticed at a nursery in Bitterfeld. He learned Latin names and propagation. And he also learned that a plant doesn't care who's in charge of the government. It was there that he discovered the work of Karl Foerster — the famous German plantsman who believed gardens should move, should catch the wind, like the grass named in his honor. Foerster called grasses the hair of the earth. He never forgot that. After Wolfgang fled East Germany, he ended up in Baltimore. He looked around and saw lawns with clipped hedges and foundation evergreens, and impatiens in rows. Wolfgang later said, "When I came to Baltimore, it was like a desert. I went on a crusade." When American nurseries didn't carry the plants Wolfgang needed — he smuggled seeds into the country through hollowed-out books. He found a partner in James van Sweden — a polished architect who could charm clients into ripping up their lawns. Wolfgang was the opposite. Short. Thick German accent. More at home with a shovel than with people. Together, James and Wolfgang invented what became known as the New American Garden — sweeping drifts of ornamental grasses, black-eyed Susans, Russian sage, coneflowers — planted not in dots but in waves, hundreds at a time, so that when the wind came, the whole garden moved like water. As a result, their firm, OVS, designed gardens for the Federal Reserve, Reagan National Airport, and the National World War II Memorial. Wolfgang never stopped being possessive. If someone had planted impatiens where his grasses had been, he would stop the car, get out, and start pulling them up. In a heat of passion, he once told a client, "This is my garden, not yours." But in a clearer moment, Wolfgang also said, "Human beings need nature; nature does not need human beings." And then followed quickly with, "I like it wild." After thirty years of landscapes, the friction between Wolfgang and James van Sweden finally cracked. In the end, he spent his final years in a small apartment, far from the grand terraces of movement made by his hands. He died at eighty-one, on December 15th, 2011, in Towson, Maryland. But he did not want a funeral. Just before he died, Wolfgang had returned to Bitterfeld in East Germany — the town where he had apprenticed as a teenager in the rubble — taking pictures of the many thousands of grasses and perennials on old industrial land. Somehow, after all the garden making, the photos of that earlier work were what Wolfgang clung to in the end. Unearthed Words In today's Unearthed Words, we hear an excerpt from a poem by the English novelist and poet George Meredith, who died on this day in 1909. George spent his final decades at Flint Cottage, at the foot of Box Hill in Surrey. Even when illness confined George to a bath-chair, he insisted on being taken up the hill. He believed a person had to keep walking into the landscape to understand it. His book of poems was published in 1851. In it, he wrote one of his most enchanting and lyrical poems called Love in the Valley. It was said that after Tennyson read it, he could not stop thinking about it. The poem offers vivid imagery of a young country woman and George's unrequited love for her. George describes a farmhouse, an orchard, and a bubbling wellspring and wrote that the young lady is as "Shy as the squirrel and wayward as the swallow, And swift as the swallow along the river's light." By the end of the poem, he compares her to heaven. Here's the last verse: Could I find a place to be alone with heaven, I would speak my heart out: heaven is my need. Every woodland tree is flushing like the dog-wood, Flashing like the whitebeam, swaying like the reed. Flushing like the dog-wood crimson in October; Streaming like the flag-reed South-West blown; Flashing as in gusts the sudden-lighted white beam: All seem to know what is for heaven alone. George could barely walk by the time he wrote those words. He was a man being pushed up a hill outside in a chair. And yet the poem is all motion — branches swaying, leaves turning, and light flashing on trees in the sun. And I often think of that moment. George writing from inside a landscape he could no longer enter on his own. Book Recommendation The Blue Rose by Anthony Eglin [https://www.amazon.com/Blue-Rose-English-Mystery-Mysteries/dp/1250005337?&linkCode=ll2&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=ac13978dbaad6460d3f9d933c59e2dfc&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl] https://www.amazon.com/Blue-Rose-English-Mystery-Mysteries/dp/1250005337?&linkCode=ll2&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=ac13978dbaad6460d3f9d933c59e2dfc&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl This fiction book selection is part of Garden Mysteries Week, which means all this week's book recommendations feature tales of intrigue, plants, and poison straight from the garden. Alex and Kate Sheppard have found their dream home — a Wiltshire parsonage with a two-acre walled garden. And in that garden, they find something impossible: A blue rose. No blue rose exists in nature. None has ever been grown. And yet there it is. What follows is a thriller about coded journals, genetic experiments, and what happens when the world finds out you have something everyone wants. Anthony Eglin is a member of the American Rose Society. And it shows — the roses in this book are as real as the danger. Botanic Spark And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart. 1872 Bertrand Russell was born at Pembroke Lodge in Richmond Park, England — a grand house set inside a sweeping garden overlooking the Thames Valley. Bertrand was orphaned at three, and raised by a grandmother who was strict and Victorian and not given to softness. Over the course of his childhood, he spent a lot of time alone in that garden, watching sunsets, and staying quiet. Bertrand spent decades writing about logic, mathematics, peace, and the question he never stopped asking — how does a person find happiness? And then Bertrand wrote this: Every time I talk to a savant, I feel quite sure that happiness is no longer a possibility. Yet when I talk with my gardener, I'm convinced of the opposite. To think of Bertrand searching for a happy person only to find the answer lay in his gardener — the man who came each day and waged quiet war against the rabbits — steady but purposeful and entirely at peace. Bertrand also told a story about a parson who had terrified his congregation by announcing that the second coming was imminent — and very imminent indeed. The congregation was frightened until someone noticed that the parson who had foretold a tale of doom was seen out in his own garden planting trees. Bertrand loved that image. Apparently, even a man who believed the end was near couldn't help but put something in the ground and wait for it to grow. Bertrand died at ninety-seven. He never stopped believing that the world was full of what he called magical things — patiently waiting for our wits to grow sharper. Maybe that's what the garden is. A little magic. And a lot of waiting. Final Thoughts If there's someone you garden alongside — even loosely, even just a few times a season — that's not a small thing. It's not about efficiency, though the work does go faster. It's the fact that someone else saw your garden on a Tuesday in May, when the light was a certain way and the peonies hadn't opened yet. That's a kind of knowing that doesn't get recorded anywhere. It just lives between you. And if you don't have that person right now — you might be that person for someone else and not even know it. The one who shows up with a division wrapped in wet newspaper. The one who says, "That looks good there." May is still making itself. There's time. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.

Eilen17 min
jakson May 15, 2026 William Henry Harvey, Blanche and Oakes Ames, Mikhail Bulgakov, Your Natural Garden by Kelly D. Norris, and Emily Dickinson kansikuva

May 15, 2026 William Henry Harvey, Blanche and Oakes Ames, Mikhail Bulgakov, Your Natural Garden by Kelly D. Norris, and Emily Dickinson

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 Every gardener has a lost garden. Maybe it was your grandmother's. Maybe it was the one you left behind when you had to move. Maybe it's a spot you drove by last week. Just to check. And now barely recognize. Lost gardens stay with us longer than we expect. The smell of a tomato leaf. The color of a peony. The way the light hits a certain spot in the afternoon. You can bring a lost garden back this spring. Not all of it. You don't need all of it. Just one plant that used to be there. One cutting. One color. Even a windchime or a stepping stone can call a whole garden back to you. Rosemary is the herb of remembrance. That's why it's the logo of this show. Remember. If you've lost a garden you loved, plant something that remembers it for you this season. And if you know a garden friend carrying a lost garden in their heart, feel free to share this episode. Sometimes it helps just to hear that someone else remembers too. Today's Garden History 1866 William Henry Harvey died in Torquay, England. He was fifty-five years old. William once wrote that being "useless, various, and abstruse" was reason enough to love a science. And of course, he meant botany. Born in 1811 in Limerick, Ireland, William was the youngest of eleven children in a Quaker family. As a boy, it was his nanny who sparked his love of flowers. William was drawn to the things most people stepped over. Seaweeds. Mosses. Algae. Small organisms clinging to rock at the edge of the tide. He was the first to classify algae by color. Green. Red. And brown. A system still used today. But the real story of William is what he lost. In 1835, his brother Joseph was appointed Colonial Treasurer in Cape Town. William sailed with him. Eager for adventure. Eager to explore the flora of the Cape. But Joseph's health failed almost immediately. He sailed home. And died at sea. William stayed. Thousands of miles from everything he knew. He took his brother's post. Sat at his desk. Did the work. And in his spare hours, collected plants. Every specimen was a letter to a ghost. Eventually, William returned to Dublin. To his sister Hannah. His anchor. While he traveled the world—Australia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Fiji, Chile— Hannah stayed home. She received his parcels. Damp boxes filled with seaweed and seeds. She dried them. Filed them. Recorded them. Together, they built a body of work. Over one hundred thousand specimens. More than seven hundred fifty species of algae described. William also sent seeds and bulbs back to Europe. Proteas. Heaths. Pelargoniums. Plants now so common, we rarely think about how they arrived. But we have William to thank. He mentored anyone who showed interest. Lighthouse keepers. Clergymen's wives. Amateur collectors on windy shores. He sent them books. Identified their finds. Gave them a voice. One of his most cherished friendships was with Margaret Gatty. A mother with little money. No microscope. William sent her his own materials. Encouraged her to write. Her book, British Sea-weeds, stayed in use for nearly a century. William didn't want a legacy for himself. He wanted one for the plants. He wanted them remembered. And for that, he is remembered too. A genus now bears his name. Harveya. But his true monument is the herbarium at Trinity College. Organized with care. Built by a man who believed naming plants was a kind of prayer. 1900 Blanche Ames married Oakes Ames. A partnership that would shape botany for the next fifty years. Their love story began with orchids. Oakes, a young Harvard botanist, sent Blanche rare specimens instead of roses. And Blanche was captivated. They married. And became partners in science. Oakes collected. More than sixty-four thousand orchid specimens. But Blanche was the eye. At her drawing table, she created thousands of precise illustrations for Oakes's seven-volume Orchidaceae. Her drawings are still used today. Oakes insisted she sign every one. In an era when wives were invisible. He made her visible. He called her his colleague. In 1922, they traveled to Berlin. Blanche copied herbarium sheets by hand. Years later, when bombs destroyed the originals, her copies remained. She had saved them. With her art. Their life together was full of moments like that. Once, when their car broke down in the Yucatán, Blanche repaired it. With a hairpin. And a bullet. She also designed their home. A stone mansion on twelve hundred acres. Borderland. After Oakes died, Blanche carved his tombstone herself. Etching orchids into the stone. She kept going. At eighty, she wrote a six-hundred-page biography of her father. At ninety, she patented an antipollution toilet. When Blanche died in 1969, she was ninety-one. The New York Times called her "Mrs. Oakes Ames, Botanist's Widow." Not artist. Not architect. Not inventor. But widow. The world had not caught up to her. But her work remains. Her initials still on every drawing. B.A. Thousands of them. Still precise. Still beautiful. Unearthed Words In today's Unearthed Words, we hear from the Russian novelist Mikhail Bulgakov, born on this day in 1891. Mikhail began as a doctor. And lived through revolution, war, and censorship. Much of his work was banned. At one point, he burned a manuscript in despair. Then rewrote it from memory. His masterpiece, The Master and Margarita, opens with a woman carrying yellow flowers. He wrote: "She was carrying some repulsive, alarming yellow flowers. God knows what they're called, but for some reason they're the first to appear in Moscow… She looked at me with surprise, and I was suddenly struck by her extraordinary, lonely beauty. 'Do you like my flowers?'… 'No.'" Those flowers were almost certainly mimosa. The first bloom after winter in Moscow. Bright. Feathery. Fragrant. In Russian culture, yellow flowers signal betrayal. Or madness. And yet they also signal spring. Arrival. A beginning. Only a gardener understands how something can be both. Book Recommendation Your Natural Garden by Kelly D. Norris [https://www.amazon.com/Your-Natural-Garden-Practical-Ecologically/dp/0760388229?crid=2PEYQW2DOB1NN&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.tfvKDcfHyizRvrrxlVp9QsdYaMxsJRxmUu4XymAeC_9gTTtlctOPkYogIO5upyauj1kMFLoT7usBZYj3kEjGhNN_tepLw4XHg7HHOxhm39PtEjvM0AoLov6BdKVXROBhNKWWhFfRbWkZB2E3JDUbA_WSPy_Qidv0BHzHpxHYbhjqxIMtfBqxIN63wWVOo3AuQKkB8tCZ_u0AirdjqLFmFw.80DYdE3SH4E0StGS_mjErwTqcV_gQodc0-Q5h4SVk_g&dib_tag=se&keywords=Your+Natural+Garden+by+Kelly+D.+Norris&qid=1768325908&s=books&sprefix=your+natural+garden+by+kelly+d.+norris%2Cstripbooks%2C240&sr=1-1&linkCode=ll1&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=433b662561bcbb6698b6c6e51fe77637&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl] https://www.amazon.com/Your-Natural-Garden-Practical-Ecologically/dp/0760388229?crid=2PEYQW2DOB1NN&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.tfvKDcfHyizRvrrxlVp9QsdYaMxsJRxmUu4XymAeC_9gTTtlctOPkYogIO5upyauj1kMFLoT7usBZYj3kEjGhNN_tepLw4XHg7HHOxhm39PtEjvM0AoLov6BdKVXROBhNKWWhFfRbWkZB2E3JDUbA_WSPy_Qidv0BHzHpxHYbhjqxIMtfBqxIN63wWVOo3AuQKkB8tCZ_u0AirdjqLFmFw.80DYdE3SH4E0StGS_mjErwTqcV_gQodc0-Q5h4SVk_g&dib_tag=se&keywords=Your+Natural+Garden+by+Kelly+D.+Norris&qid=1768325908&s=books&sprefix=your+natural+garden+by+kelly+d.+norris%2Cstripbooks%2C240&sr=1-1&linkCode=ll1&tag=gardenradione-20&linkId=433b662561bcbb6698b6c6e51fe77637&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl It's time to Grow That Garden Library, with today's book: Your Natural Garden by Kelly D. Norris. 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. Kelly writes with a deep reverence for place. He invites gardeners to work with native plants. To design in harmony with the local ecology. Not as a trend. But as belonging. In the introduction, Kelly wrote: "Living well with a place requires a relationship… But having a relationship with landscape and the life it supports doesn't immediately command more work. It does, however, warrant more attention." He writes about prairie grasses. Wildflowers. Pollinator corridors. Landscapes that reflect place rather than fashion. This book expands what inheritance can mean. Not just roses and recipes. But living systems. Care that can be passed forward. Botanic Spark And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart. 1886 Emily Dickinson died in Amherst, Massachusetts. She was fifty-five years old. Emily lived most of her life between her home and her garden. She kept a glass conservatory. Growing gardenias and camellias through New England winters. She also kept an herbarium. Over four hundred pressed plants. Each labeled in her own hand. Emily gardened on her knees. She said she felt always attached to mud. Though she lived quietly, she found ways to reach out. She would lower a basket from her window. Filled with warm gingerbread. For neighborhood children below. Small offerings. Made with care. Left at the edge of her world. She knew her world deeply. So deeply that she named what others only felt. She wrote: Summer has two Beginnings — Beginning once in June — Beginning in October Affectingly again — Emily knew that seasons are often sweetest as they leave. She also wrote: For thee to bloom, I'll skip the tomb And sow my blossoms o'er — Pray gather me — Anemone — Thy flower — forevermore. At the end, when she could no longer write, she dictated her final letter. Four words: Little Cousins — Called back. She was going home. Today, her garden still grows. The same heirloom varieties. Still rooted. After a lifetime of loving plants, Emily knew: Some things are deciduous. And some are not. Final Thoughts Every garden you've ever loved is still with you. Not as a photograph. But as a way of seeing. The garden you lost taught your hands something. Your eye. Your sense of color. Of light. Of place. Lost gardens don't disappear. They show up again. In the next bed you plant. In the next seed you choose. In the next moment you pause and notice something no one else noticed. Every garden ahead of you carries every garden behind you. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.

15. touko 202620 min
jakson May 14, 2026 Albrecht Daniel Thaer, Federico Delpino, Georgia Douglas Johnson, The Regenerative Landscaper by Erik Ohlsen, and Edward Augustus Bowles kansikuva

May 14, 2026 Albrecht Daniel Thaer, Federico Delpino, Georgia Douglas Johnson, The Regenerative Landscaper by Erik Ohlsen, and Edward Augustus Bowles

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.

14. touko 202620 min
jakson May 13, 2026 Enid Annenberg Haupt, Beth Chatto, Laurie Lee, In a Green Shade by Allen Lacy, and Daphne du Maurier kansikuva

May 13, 2026 Enid Annenberg Haupt, Beth Chatto, Laurie Lee, In a Green Shade by Allen Lacy, and Daphne du Maurier

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.

13. touko 202620 min