Winter Views – Three for Thursday

  • Post published:01/27/2011
  • Post comments:5 Comments

Another snowfall left another 5 inches of powdery snow. The plow was here at 6:30. No excuse for a lie in. This is the view from my south bedroom window. With all these frequent snows the fields remain pristine and white. This is the view from the west bedroom window. This is how I spend the first half hour of the morning, winter or summer, with my coffee and a book. My chair is right near the woodstove.…

How Constance Spry Prepared Her Flowers

  • Post published:01/26/2011
  • Post comments:2 Comments

Many of us probably don’t fuss very much when we are making a flower arrangement for our dining table. We run out into the garden and cut a little bit of whatever is in bloom and a few leaves, put them in a vase with little fuss and we are done. However if we are make a more important arrangement for a special party, for a friend’s wedding, or the church altar, we will need more flowers and…

Spry’s Fresh Bouquets

  • Post published:01/25/2011
  • Post comments:5 Comments

Constance Spry found beauty in places others had not noticed. The unexpected drama of the plants she used surprised and delighted people. She turned to the vegetable garden and found one of her favorite plants – kale – but used other vegetables and fruits to brilliant effect. Her arrangements would not have the same  startling effect today, because the ideas she propounded, her cry to forget about the rules and have fun, to see beauty in the commonplace…

Constance Spry

  • Post published:01/24/2011
  • Post comments:1 Comment

“I want to shout out: do what you please, follow your own star; be original if you want to be and don’t if you don’t want to be. Just be natural and gay and light-hearted and pretty and simple and overflowing and general and baroque and bare and austere and stylized and wild and daring and conservative, and learn and learn and learn. Open your minds to every form of beauty.” Constance Spry Those passionate words came from…

Who Was Madame Hardy?

  • Post published:01/22/2011
  • Post comments:5 Comments

Many of the plants in our garden have a name attached to them. I have grown the Madame Hardy rose, and assumed she was a real woman. Others have a name that is less obviously that of a real person like Anemone nererosa 'Robinsoniana'.   But who are these people whose names are attached to plants. Who was Perry, or Mrs. R.O. Backhouse or the Vicomtesse Byng? It is easy to know who is being honored when you…

Worms in the Kitchen

  • Post published:01/21/2011
  • Post comments:1 Comment

You have to look really close, but the worms are more than surviving in my worm bin, which I said I would never keep in my kitchen. I was afraid of fruit flies. When it was time to bring the worm bin in from outside  in September I put them in the Great Room which is not heated except for lots of solar gain during the day, that kept temperatures above 50 at night. That did not last.…

Ice Persists

  • Post published:01/20/2011
  • Post comments:5 Comments

Icing on the Lawn Beds. Iced lilacs. The long road to home. It's a long time til spring.

En Francais – s’il vous plait

  • Post published:01/18/2011
  • Post comments:7 Comments

With all the trouble we bloggers can have with scrapers stealing our stellar images it is good to know that there are honorable people all around the world.  I received an email from M. Frederic Douard from a French bioenergy company asking to use my Hawley firewood image on their website. Permission was given, d'accord! And I am the photo du jour!  You can't really see it on this screen shot, but when the cursor hovers over the…

Jere Gettle and Comstock, Ferre Seeds

  • Post published:01/17/2011
  • Post comments:7 Comments

Fourteen years ago, at the age of 17, Jere Gettle put together his first list of heirloom seeds and mailed it to 550 gardeners. Now he oversees a veritable empire consisting of the Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company, the Bakersville Pioneer Village complete with seed store, bakery, restaurant, jail, herbal apothecary, music barns with monthly festivals and more in Missouri, and the Petaluma Seed Bank in California, which opened last spring. Most recently he bought the Comstock, Ferre…