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# Friday, March 30, 2007
Sara Begg, Executive Editor

Better than Doing Nothing


I'm a bit of a garden lecture junkie. Even if I've seen a speaker and their slides before, I'll often sit through it again just to see what else I can pick up. The speakers who I can't listen to twice or three times however are the super-critical ones. I'm sure you've heard them before, they often show pictures of anonymous lawns strewn with garden ornamentia, wrought iron, and what Tony Avent might refer to as green meatballs (aka shrubs shorn into tight little balls). The idea is to point out what you don't want to accomplish in the garden. Everyone laughs knowingly, "thinking, ha ha, I would NEVER do that in my garden". I guess what bothers me though isn't the mean spirit of it--I'm imbued with my own mean streak that runs rampant from time to time--or that the owner is in the audience, its that like it or not, that gardener is trying and putting time into their garden. Taking care of an outdoor space. And that is something everyone should strive for.

This occurred to me today on my morning walk to work while I hunted for neighborly crocuses and snowdrops in bloom, since mine are all still in green sprout mode. My neighborhood consists of a range of houses and gardens. Big, well-cared-for houses are spread out between a mix of homes ranging from average to ramshackle. The gardens fall into the same range, some are well-planned out and maintained and others are, well, yards that are a total mess---long overgrown, sick shrubs serving as garbage receptacles, weeds as tall as a 3rd grader, and old appliances left to rot. One garden stuck out to me though. Maybe the gardeners don't have a lot of time, but they've given it some thought and planted one lovely pee-gee hydrangea. The rest of the area is mulched over, but free of weeds and garbage. It might not be my style and I might be chomping at the bit to give the owners my extra plants to fill in their huge gaps. But at the end of the day I can appreciate and admire their effort at making our neighborhood a little bit more fun and interesting to walk through. 

Read Meg's Blog



Friday, March 30, 2007 1:18:25 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1] 
# Monday, March 12, 2007
Sara Begg, Executive Editor

Spring is definitely on the way here in Boston. A new set of colchicum foliage is sprouting in the garden (the first group came up in January and got badly burnt by the cold), yet another reason to grow these pretty pale lavender fall bloomers. They give you green sprouts early. Kind of cheating, I guess, since there'll be no flower until fall, but they still give you that excited spring feeling.

Even with the warmer air blowing through town and the early signs of spring, I still need to seek out explosions of color elsewhere, either in magazines, books, and particularly, on the web. One site that I always go to at this time of year is Annie's Annuals. Annie--who is based in California--sells a riot of color, her plant listing is huge and made up of both common and unusual annuals and perennials, many of them heirloom cottage plants and California natives. The navigation on the site is easy and seductive. I often end up setting up a shopping cart, filling it, and then abandoning it when I realize there is still snow outside my window and shipping from California isn't necessarily the cheapest thing. 

We ran a story on Annie a couple of years ago in our July/August 2005 issue. It is worth a read and we'll be uploading it to the site in a couple of days. But for now, here's a short list of Annie's 'Must Haves':
Helianthus 'Giant Sungold'
Geranium pyrenaicum 'Bill Wallis'
Scabiosa caucasica 'Fama'
Agrostemma githago 'Milas'
Scabiosa atropurpurea 'Black'
Orlaya grandiflora
Nemophila menziesii
Viola 'Etain'
Wahlenbergia spp.
Alonsoa meridonalis 'Apricot'

All are pretty gorgeous, I've seen a few of these in garden action, but I've only grown one myself: Viola 'Etain' . This little charmer costs a little extra but it is definitely worth every penny, with its pale lemon yellow petals edged in a medium purple. Might sound wierd, but it is perfect.

Read Meg's Blog



Monday, March 12, 2007 8:30:05 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
# Thursday, March 01, 2007
Sara Begg, Executive Editor

The best way to get what you want for your birthday is to ask for it. At work, I requested a  transplanting party. The Streptocarpus came from a plant that was originally a leaf cutting done 4 years ago here at Horticulture and the other plant (another type of gesneriad) is Chirita 'Chastity' which I bought a while ago from Logees. It has slender, elegant, pale pink tubes with dark pink streaks. I like the leaves of this plant because they look a bit like fresh, young lettuce--when you stand back five feet and squint your eyes.








Read Meg's blog


Thursday, March 01, 2007 6:02:55 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1] 
# Monday, February 26, 2007
Sara Begg, Executive Editor

My cat Rudy has taken to sitting on our bathroom cabinet looking out the window to the backyard. This vantage point puts us at about eye level when I stand beside him. It also gives me a unique view of my garden, not to mention—and why Rudy sits there—a good location for bird watching.

Lately my young daughter (who wants to do everything Rudy does) “asks” to get up to look out the window too. I used to get impatient holding her there looking out, but now I’m finding it is a good excuse to zone out and really look at my garden and the bare bones it presents in the middle of winter. I haven’t come up with any genius design solutions or planting plans yet, but it has given me lots to think about.

Standing there for five minutes at a time also reminds me to water my myrtle topiaries, or rather, my myrtle topiary (since two have died recently from a lack of liquid refreshment).

Read Meg's blog



Monday, February 26, 2007 3:16:37 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [3] 
# Thursday, February 15, 2007
Sara Begg, Executive Editor

Sitting at my desk with the sun streaming through the window, I can almost imagine I’m back in Mexico. But then I step outside and am faced with the reality of our newly arrived winter. Not that I’m complaining, my garden is finally snugly covered in a blanket of snow—capped with a crust of ice. Plus to find the time to leave everything behind to travel to a warm, exotic place in the middle of winter is a true luxury—especially one as rich in flora as the Pacific coast of Mexico.


We visited an area about one hour north of Puerta Vallarta and were met by the dinosaur-like frigate birds, diving penguins, and more hummingbirds than I’ve ever seen. When we first arrived, I was yelling for everyone to look at the hummers, but then I realized that hummingbirds are pretty common down there and my urgency wore off.


The plant life was the biggest treat (other than the avocados) and we were lucky enough to be staying at a house with a great garden. It was packed with agaves, bananas, citrus, palms, gingers, bouganvilleas, and many plants that were unidentifiable to me. Two were particularly striking. The first plant was a tree that had orchidlike blooms of pale pink with fuschia streaks coming out of the throat. It looks a bit like a hibiscus, but was incredibly fragrant. The other plant looked like it was a giant purple crinum, although I’m not entirely sure.  Let me know if you can identify it.






Read Meg's blog


Thursday, February 15, 2007 9:27:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [7] 
# Friday, January 26, 2007
Sara Begg, Executive Editor

Our complete lack of winter here in Boston meant that three weeks ago crocuses were pushing their noses up, the buds of flowering quince, magnolias, cherries, and forsythia began to swell, and frankly I think most of us had begun to give up on winter. In some ways it was nice to experience the type of winter that might be more common in South Carolina, but mostly , I felt cheated and more than a little unsettled. The spring catalogs have started to arrive, but how could I be "ready" for spring when winter hadn't even arrived.

But that all changed at the beginning of last week and continued since then. In fact, last Friday was one of the coldest days I've experienced in a while (we hit a low of 3 degrees F) and I've definitely lost the Melianthus major I'd left out to get lightly "zapped" by the cold before moving it to the basement for a spell of dormancy, and ditto for the farfugia I'd been drooling over all summer. I'm going to move them downstairs now and see how they do. My guess is that they will have entered what I like to call permanent dormancy. Oh well, more room for new plants when spring comes. And frankly, now that winter's finally here, I'm ready to start dreaming of spring.







Read Meghan Lynch's Blog


Friday, January 26, 2007 2:51:40 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [13]