Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Green-Eyed Monster, Galanthus-Inspired

It was Shakespeare, not Beatrix Potter, who forever linked the phrase "green-eyed monster" with jealousy via Othello, written in or around 1603.  Arch-villian Iago dangles the metaphor in front of the title character. In my case, it applies not to fair Desdemona but to snowdrops.

What engenders this envy?  Snowdrops, various species in the genus Galanthus, trump winter.  For me they begin to bloom in January, and for Beatrix Potter she reported them in flower not long after Christmas.  She loved them, "There are thousands in front of the windows and in the lane. That is why I have an untidy garden. I won't have the dear things dug up in summer, they are so much prettier growing in natural clams, instead of being dried off and planted singly."  I concur, Miss Potter.

So imagine, if you will, when my friend of pen-and-trowel, Judy Glattstein, sent me this image on Halloween.


These, I learned, are Galanthus reginae-olgae, native to Southern Greece, specifically the Peloponnese (which always bring's Ralph Kramden's "string of poloponies"to mind -- I was a huge fan of The Honeymooners).  However this is no laughing matter.  Snowdrops on Halloween?!?  I turned that particularly gardener's shade of green-with-envy.

Judy, who is doyenne of bulbs, told me that there is another in her garden, a cultivar named 'Potter's Prelude.' Blooming around Thanksgiving, ("hiss," goes the monster), it honors the fellow who found it, Jack Potter, rather than Beatrix.  Still, a nice connection.  For those of you who are fans of a more recent Potter named Harry, Severus Snape kept a glass jar of galanthus on his desk at Hogwarts, for potions no doubt.

Beatrix Potter was not above gardener's envy.  She sniffed when her friend and neighbor Cecily's dahlias outlasted her's.  It is a condition common to gardeners then and now, there and here.  And thank you, Judy, for inspiring this post and next year's bulb order.

For more about Judy's amazing garden follow this link:  Bellewood in Bloom, green-eyed monster guaranteed.


Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Stolen Plants Always Grow

In her first year of gardening at Hill Top Farm, Beatrix Potter acquired plants in a variety of ways.

Gardening neighbors showed up with donations. At one point Beatrix Potter wrote to her friend, Millie that she was being inundated with plants. I suppose that everyone in the village who had been putting off dividing those perennials got out their spades when they saw this newbee on the scene.
Mrs. Taylor showed up bring "a very well meant but slightly ill-time present of saxifrage… she brought out a large newspaper full."

Beatrix shopped at a nursery across the lake, easily accessible by the steam ferry that traveled from Far Sawrey to the opposite shore. About obtaining plants, she was not shy. "I went to see an old lady at Windermere, & impudently took a large basket & trowel with me. She had the most untidy overgrown garden I ever saw. I got nice things in handfuls without any shame."

My hands-down favorite of Beatrix Potter's plant acquisition strategies she described thusly, "… Stolen plants always grow, I stole some ‘honesty’ yesterday, it was put to be burnt in a heap of garden refuse!"

The honesty to which Miss Potter refers is this plant:

Honesty (Lunaria annua) in bloom

Lunaria annua is a biennial, germinating and forming vigorous plants one season and blooming the following spring with a four-petalled magenta flower.  It is related to cabbages and kales in the Brassica family.  I always called it money plant, as it is really grown not for its blooms but for the papery sheaths that surround its seeds:

The sheathes of Honesty after the seeds fall

I suppose it is also called money plant, because it tends to multiply as, one hopes, as ones money does. Still, "honesty" is the perfect name for this Potter-pilfered plant.  I feel a particular affinity because I have been known on occasion to pinch seeds from someone else's garden.  Every year when a certain chartreuse-flowering tobacco (Nicotiana langsdorfii) blooms in my garden, I have a tiny twinge of guilt.  Or is that a frisson of pleasure?

Sunday, November 3, 2013

The Wonderful World of Giveaways

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life by Marta McDowell

Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life

by Marta McDowell

Giveaway ends December 03, 2013.

See the giveaway details at Goodreads.

Enter to win