Down the garden path ...

Down the garden path ...
...and strolling through a garden of memories

~Grandmother Never Bought a Plant~

I suppose that is not literally true since in the beginning she bought vegetables and fruits for eating and then used their seeds to start plants.

Grandmother's garden was filled with many plants--I wish I could remember all of them--including Sweet Gum, Peach, Fig, Weeping Willow, and Magnolia trees; white and blue Hydrangeas, Azaleas, various Roses, Bleeding Hearts, Ferns, Periwinkle; Weigelia, Privet, and Barberry shrubs; succulents, and a vegetable garden.

Grandmother's garden was developed from "found" items, so to speak. My grandmother knew that plants could be started from the seeds they produced (no sterile hybrids for her). She also exchanged plants and cuttings with her neighbors. If she liked a plant, she made as many as she wanted from cuttings or seeds. Her neighborhood was filled with open fields (nowadays, almost gone for the rest of us), and these areas were great places to find plants.

Obviously, one of the things my grandmother brought to this garden and learned from it--was patience. In this era of instant gratification, we forget that good things are worth the wait, that patience really is a virtue, and that there is nothing wrong with frugality, either!

~Gertrude Jekyll, Jim Crockett, Grandmother, & I~

~Gertrude Jekyll, Jim Crockett, Grandmother, & I~

~Biographies~

*My grandmother started me down the garden path and Gertrude and Jim push me along. I do know that while all my mentors are deceased, I hear their voices loud and clear -- know the environment in which you want to garden, gardening is hard work, gardens take time to develop, start plants from cuttings, and that nature is not always on our side. In other words, be realistic, be frugal, and have patience.

*Gertrude Jekyll (1843 - 1932; photogragh from her book: Colour Schemes for the Flower Garden) has had the most pronounced influence on English and American gardening. She studied the landscape and designed flower borders, woodlands, and specimen tree and shrubery placement with regard to color, vista, soil, and year-round pleasure. Gertrude Jekyll approached the garden as a canvas. It has been said that Monet planted his gardens to paint them while Gertrude Jekyll's garden was the painting.

*James Underwood Crockett (1915 - 1979; photograph from his book: Crockett's Victory Garden) was the original host of PBS's The Victory Garden, then called Crockett's Victory Garden. I was fortunate to see his weekly shows. He showed that while gardening was work, it was also enjoyable with great rewards. While reading gardening books is informative, it was great to see and hear a gardener in action and see the results. It was good for morale! Jim made a statement on a show about asters that has become famous in my family because not only does it apply to gardening -- it applies to many things in life: Life is too short to stake asters.

*Painting of a child who reminds me of myself and grandmother in her garden: Monet - The Artist's Garden at Vetheuil.


~Gardening in Connecticut~

The Ice Age was not a good thing for gardeners in this area. On its march to Long Island and the sea, the glacier removed the soil down the bedrock and then when it melted, it dropped terminal moraine (rocks) in its wake -- except for southern Long Island where it was nice enough to deposit a glacial outwash plain (sand).

My family gardened on Long Island. When I moved to Connecticut and wanted to garden, I bought a shovel. What did I know? Quickly after that, my husband bought a pick axe.

Gardening here means "digging" out rocks and then going off to buy a truckload of topsoil--and while you are at it: sharp (not play or all-purpose) sand, and a ton of peat moss--to fill in the holes so that your plants may live long and prosper.

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Monday, November 15, 2010

Arm chair gardening

Although we have had some good weather for new plantings and transplanting old plants, I guess I became lazy and closed down until spring. I may do some things if my whimsy takes me … but nothing is a “must do” outside except to put stakes into the ground in the summer perennial border marking the individual planting areas within the border. I will be been busy thinking, though.

Must-do thinking:
1. *Which plants should be in the summer border – which are first choice and which are alternates?
2. What to do with the little garden off the kitchen porch?
3. How to work out the” two or three step and flower area” (for want of a better designation) from the lawn area down to behind the perennial border and into the property line shrub border?
4. How to nicely end the perennial bed at the house end?
5. Rework the straight edging where the roses are (and transplant the roses) and the straight edging of the little planting area outside the den window?
6. Since the linden tree (bless its heart) is growing tall and wide and makes marvelous shade, it is shading the little garden bed near it that used to be in the sun. What to put there instead, and where to transplant the climbing roses, privet, Siberian iris, and daylilies that are there now?
7. Since we have removed the “dwarf” Alberta spruce (they may grow slowly but they still grow tall!), we have space in the area for which other plants? Shall I also make the bed deeper?

On the back burner:
The perennial border (which had to be raised on its back edge) is backed by 2x10s with wooden stakes holding them in place. It would be nice to have something more elegant at some point … or maybe not.

My goodness, even thinking is tiring – I need a cup of tea!

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