Posts Tagged ‘gardening’

Roses of Sharon and Jericho

Posted August 20, 2008 by
in Cabinet of Curiosities | Add your comment »

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Here’s a picture of my latest garden surprise—a Rose of Sharon bush that looked all but dead when we moved in, miraculously came back to life, and then lost a bunch of leaves when we transplanted it to the other side of the garden. Needless to say, I was not expecting flowers, but flowers are here, and they’re spectacular!

The name “Rose of Sharon” reminds me of Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath (which I haven’t read since sophomore year of high school and can only dimly recollect), because there’s a character in the book who’s called Rosasharn, after the plant. It’s a Biblical name—in the King James translation of the Song of Solomon, the beloved claims “I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys”—though that’s apparently a mistranslation of the Hebrew word for “crocus.”

When I lived in Europe, I had a plant called the Rose of Jericho, which is basically a tumbleweed: put it into a bowl of water and it unfurls its frothy leaves, take it out and it curls up into a dry, brown ball and goes to sleep.

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The brave new world of bonsai

Posted July 14, 2008 by
in Cabinet of Curiosities | 1 comment »

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I made an impulse purchase at the garden center recently: a beautiful little dwarf pomegranate that I walked by and fell in love with. It’s too cold here in New York to let it winter outdoors, but for the moment it looks fabulous in its little pot on my patio.

Apparently, dwarf pomegranates are very popular bonsai plants. Right now, that seems like more work than I can handle (I’m still figuring out plant names and what I should and shouldn’t compost), but I’m very curious about it. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden has a whole greenhouse full of bonsai trees, and if I remember right, some of them are decades old.

Do any of you bonsai? (Can I use that as a verb?) How did you get into it?

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Daylilies!

Posted July 2, 2008 by
in Where to Go? | Add your comment »

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My garden is small, and young, so everything seems precious. The bowlful or two of strawberries we harvested last month felt like the best I’d ever tasted; now, my first daylily blossom—pictured above just after a light summer rain—strikes me as beyond gorgeous. I even love its small asymmetries, because they make it seem more natural and less expertly cultivated.

The daylily offers a great lesson in appreciating the beauty of a moment. Most daylilies blossom only for a single day, opening in the morning and closing up at nightfall. (Each plant has several blossoms, though, so the pleasure’s not quite so ephemeral.)

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Cats v. garden…

Posted June 17, 2008 by
in Where to Go? | Add your comment »

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Don’t get me wrong: I like cats. I think they’re fine animals. It’s when they use my flower bed as a litterbox that I start to get annoyed. They love soft, loose soil, and they don’t seem to care what they have to step on or dig around in order to get to it. Plus, they’ve been here for longer than I have, and old habits are hard to change.

I started small: the smell of citrus will supposedly deter them, so I went out and bought a bag of lemons and scattered the juice and rinds all over the garden and shed. An hour later, my tender little cosmos seedlings (which I’d taken extra care to protect) were covered in dirt, with a pile of poop nearby.

I planted things that people’d said cats don’t like—lavender and rue. Didn’t help. Neither did my cedar mulch.

Then I went to my local garden center and bought some very strong-smelling herbal pellets—essence of clove, citrus, sesame, and God knows what else. No luck: the cats were absolutely unfazed.

Finally, I decided to get physical. On the advice of a different garden center, I bought a big package of kebab sticks from my local supermarket and stuck them all around the flowerbed, plugging the gaps between flowers and all around my youngest plants. It looks ridiculous, but it works! Last Sunday, I watched from the window as one of the neighborhood cats headed straight for his favorite patch. He stopped and stared for some time before giving up and leaving the yard, but leave the yard he soon did… it was so satisfying.

Once my plants are a bit better established, I figure I won’t need the sticks. In the meantime, I’m glad to say that the war is finally over!

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Mary, Mary, quite contrary…

Posted May 21, 2008 by
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Gardening is not for the impatient. By now, most of my new plants are safely in the ground—day lilies, daisies, irises and the like—and after all of that hard work, how I’d love to see something in bloom! (My beloved tulips didn’t last long, sadly.)

This weekend, I was feeling particularly impatient, so I decided to go back and look at some photographs I took before I started. I may not have the luscious English garden of my dreams (and the fence is still falling apart), but it’s comforting to see how far I’ve come… even if a lot of it’s due to the ivy that I didn’t actually plant myself.

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Tulips!

Posted April 28, 2008 by
in Where to Go? | 1 comment »

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I’ve got all the enthusiasm of a beginning gardener—and very little skill or knowledge—so it feels like a bit of a miracle to see my tulips blossoming. Meanwhile, I’ve been removing dead debris from the rest of the flower bed and slowly acquiring more plants. Now if I could only persuade the neighborhood cats to go elsewhere when they poop…

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Country, city, compost

Posted April 14, 2008 by
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When I was growing up, my mother always kept a “yuck bucket” under the sink to store our biodegradable waste: stale bread, leftovers, eggshells and coffee grounds… periodically, someone would be tasked with taking it outside and dumping its contents on top of her compost pile.

Here in New York City, though, composting is rarely practical. Indoor bins are expensive, and besides, who has room for them? Few of us have any outdoor space, either, and when we do, our yards are quite small.

Fortunately for my own tiny yard, they now make reasonably small, compact outdoor composting bins; the one I just bought online is made from recycled plastic, and it doesn’t look atrocious tucked away on one side of the patio. Apparently our yard has also been blessed with a number of tiny red earthworms—earthworms are great for compost—so I dropped a couple in the bin last weekend to give them something new to chew on. (If they don’t like what they find, they can crawl back out through the bottom.) I’m so glad to be able to put our garbage to good use, and I can’t wait to put the finished compost on my flower bed: there’s no better fertilizer, I’ve heard.

Do you compost?

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How does your garden grow?

Posted March 26, 2008 by
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Winter always seems to overstay its welcome, but this year I’ve got a new reason to look forward to spring: after years of apartment living, I recently moved into a small house in Red Hook, Brooklyn, which means, among other things, that I now have my own little yard. There wasn’t much growing when we moved in last December, but I just poked my head outside and noticed a couple of—tulips, it looks like, and some kind of thick grass?—pushing their heads above ground.

I don’t have much of a green thumb, but I can’t wait to see what else pops up, and do a little planting of my own. I’m going to start small, and practical: raspberries to cover up some of portions of the fence, tomatoes, herbs, maybe a lily or two (I love lilies). Then, if all goes well, I’ll branch out next year into some more adventurous options. We’ll see.

Do you have a garden? What do you grow?

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