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2007 Newsletters

Scentsations

48022_6 On this week’s show, Vicki samples essential oils distilled from some of our favorite flowers. I even blended a few to make my own floral/herbal perfumes. Vicki’s favorites were one blend of lemon verbena, grapefruit and lemon skin oils; and a similar concoction with additions of rose, vetiver (made form the roots of a tropical grass) and cedar. The blends are surprising, and as long as the touches of citrus do not overpower, the blend smells more “fresh” than lemony.

Scent is about the most individual, alluring and mysterious aspects to plants. Until recently, scientists claimed that everyone smelled the same. I’ve never thought that to be true – not only do people have varying senses of smell; different fragrances are appealing or repellant to different people in varying degrees. And women detect and enjoy fragrances different than men.  As Vicki reminds me, my acute sense of smell is a blessing and a curse (as a trip around the streets of New York on the day before trash pickup is all too clear).

There is still a bit of time left to acquire bulb with fragrant flowers: hyacinth, jonquil, even tulip – a flower usually described as “scentless.”

The sweetest of the daffodil relatives for fragrance is the species Narcissus jonquilla, the true jonquil. Where the paper white is heavy, the jonquil is delicate. 8443_3 There is a faint fragrance of the other daffodils, but with a cool honeysuckle note and the barest hint of lemon and spice. The jonquil reminds me of linen drying on the clothesline, with honeysuckle and a top note of sweet butter. (Sweet is a word we often use for fragrance, but sugar itself does not have a detectable scent since it doesn’t evaporate.)

How do noses and brains recognize scent? There are two divergent theories explaining how we detect and evaluate air-born molecules --“Shape” and “Vibration.” The differing theorists are engaged in a heated debate. One premise suggests that the shape of the molecules is recognized. Diane Ackerman (author of A Natural History of the Senses) describes the dominant acceptable explanation -- shape theory. Geometric connections between molecules and the neuron niches into which they fit help us analyze fragrance. So a wedge-shaped molecule fits into a V-shaped indentation inside the nose. 

Chandler Burr’s book, The Emperor of Scent: A Story of Perfume, Obsession, and the Last Mystery of the Senses, documents scientist Luca Turin’s attempt to prove that we recognize odors primarily by their molecular vibration. The "vibrationists" see the nose like a spectroscope, an instrument that can dissect the atomic makeup of a molecule. Turin says we see color by vibration, hear music by vibration, and smell smells by vibration, too, and the nose is a biological spectroscope.  Gardenias_small_2 Bear in mind that humans can taste only five flavors: sweet, sour, bitter, and salty, and the fifth flavor derived from the amino acid, glutamate, known to the Japanese as umami. However, we can analyze some 10,000 different smells. When we detect an essence, we are sampling the source, which gives a bit of itself away – as a blossom degrades or a bruised herb’s scented oil-filled cells burst. Not all flowers have odor, at least not accessible to humans, although some other creatures might recognize the scent. Flowers, after all, evolved fragrance to attract partners -- pollinators, and we are lucky to benefit by coincidence. Fragrance is a sacrifice plants make, and a gift to us gardeners. 

Ken's Advice for Growing Roses & Renee Shepherd

April 10, 2007

Dear Friends,

I've been told that my maternal grandmother, who died before I was born, had an exceptionally green thumb. That must have been the case, since she grew and propagated roses with great skill--something I have not achieved. Is it my fault? Ken's Grandmother sitting with her roses in Brooklyn, NYI think it could be the roses themselves--more, or less-- and certainly in my New Jersey garden, it's a matter of more shade and less sun.

Roses, like moss on rocks, like to grow where they like to grow. Very often it is not the gardener's skill that determines success with roses, but location, location, location. My most successful rose was 'Iceberg,' which I grew in a container on my rooftop garden in SoHo. It thrived for years. In the semi-shaded garden in New Jersey, with cool damp summer nights, 'Iceberg' was a long-suffering failure. But I have not given up on roses...I continue to search for those that will be happy in my garden.

Photo: My grandmother, sitting with her roses in Brooklyn, NY


Growing roses successfully in the garden is not a matter of luck, it happens when we follow a few simple, but needful steps. I've written an article outlining my tips for success with roses and we have posted it on the Ken Druse REAL DIRT site. Click here if you would like to read "Ken's Advice For Growing Roses."

Peach Drift Rose

And the Winners are...

A big Thank You! to all who entered our contest!

The winners of the Peach Drift Rose contest are:
  1. Jonelle Phillips, in Texas
  2. Susan Martin, in New Jersey
  3. Moonie Etherington, in Virginia
  4. Diann Thoma, in Illinois
  5. Rhonda Hertwig
You should be receiving your bare root roses shortly. And if you have never planted bare root roses before, I do provide specific instructions in my article.

 Be Sure to Listen to this week's episode of
Ken Druse REAL DIRT:


Vicki and I talk with Renee Shepherd, the seeds woman who helped change what Americans sow--and eat.Ken's Grandmother sitting with her roses in Brooklyn, NY Renee tells us about some the exciting new flower and vegetable introductions available only from Renee's Garden.

This week Ken and Vicki talk with Renee Shepherd, the seeds woman who helped to change what Americans sow--and eat.

An Auction & What the Storm Left Behind

April 23, 2007


A note from Vicki:

Ken would be writing this newsletter note, but he's out trying to rescue his garden. Last Monday (following the Nor'easter), the worst yet flood swept across the island--the garden became the river for two days.
Click here to view a brief video Ken shot of the "event."

It would be nice, I suppose, if the alluvial discharge brought delicious, nutritious additives to the garden - but it doesn't. Sand and sticks, logs, even rocks washed over the wall. Ken found a concrete block in the middle of the cropped meadow.

So, that's where he is; in between editing his next book and getting ready for theAuction Logo Delaware Center for Horticulture's 27th annual Rare Plant Auction® to be held at Longwood Gardens this coming weekend--where Ken will make his presentation as this year's Celebrated Plant Expert.

As stated on their web site: "The Rare Plant Auction® benefits the Delaware Center for Horticulture's Community Garden Program which sustains and encourages community gardening projects throughout neighborhoods of Wilmington, Delaware, transforming lots and streets into inspired garden spaces infused with community pride.

Through collaboration with neighborhood groups, social service, municipal and government agencies, DCH strives to generate cooperative revitalization of city blocks, roadsides, parks and open spaces. Our Community Gardens, Public Landscapes and Tree Programs go far beyond the physical improvement of air, water and beautiful places." Please visit their web site to learn more about this worthy, non-profit organization.

If you click on these words, you can  listen to Ken talk about the auction...and more (he gives some great tips for "making more plants" from those already growing in your garden).

May We Introduce You

Be sure to listen to the April 28th episode of
Ken Druse REAL DIRT wherein we learn about some exciting new plant introductions!**

April 27, 2007

Dear Friends,

Being an ex-college radical, I am immediately suspicious of "The Man," a.ka. big companies that seem to dominate the market place. Consequently, Monrovia Growers, with giant displays at garden centers of pricey but not overpriced plants, got my toga in a twist. That is, until I let go of my prejudice and took a really good look at this company.

There isn't space to get into great detail here, but my opinion of Monrovia did an about-face when I learned the following:

In March  2006, California State agriculture inspectors found Phytophthora ramorum (Sudden Oak Death fungus) on some of the
158 thousand plants  shipped by Monrovia to 900 independent nurseries and garden centers in the US and Canada. I had to investigate the story first hand.

Instead of trying to keep it a secret, Monrovia did the right thing: Not only did they recall all of the shipped plants, Monrovia ended up destroying a total of 1.3 million plants in question. The loss to the company was a staggering $9 million. The message to me is: Monrovia is a company I should support. Click here to read Monrovia's Company Values Statement.

But enough about history, what about now:

the CANDY STORE IS OPEN!

In our latest episode of REAL DIRT, I talk with Nicholas Staddon
Director of New Plant Introductions, for Monrovia Growers and ask him to tell us what new and exciting things we can expect from them right now. The answer:

plants, plants, and more marvelous plants that Vicki and I are eager to get our hands on!

**Listen now:

Ken interviews Nicholas Staddon from Monrovia, about some of the new plant introductions...which vicki can't wait to get her hands on! (Please forgive the audio problems in this show; we are working hard to solve the issues.)

Click on the links to go to Monrovia's plant descriptions:

Hydrangea quercifolia 'Vaughn's Lillie'

Snowberries

Magical® Gold Forsythia
Forsythia x intermedia 'Kolgold'

Birch Tree Tales

May 31, 2007

Dear Friends,

Beads_at_annes_gadren A few months before Hurricane Katrina hit Louisiana, I visited author Anne Rice's house in the Garden District neighborhood of New Orleans. During Mardi Gras, people throw strings of beads out of windows and off of balconies, covering everything including street lights where the beads remain for weeks to months.. A sculpture in Rice's garden of a young goddess (flora?), was wearing several strands of shiny beads.  (left) I found it an especially touching coincidence, in the aftermath of the flood here in New Jersey, to see a young tree with a string of silver beads caught amongst the debris at its base. (below, right)

Things are settling down, but as of this writing, there are still two-foot-high sand dunes on the open circle of cropped meadow.Beads_at_kens

The day before the flood, I planted 13 trees. One was a sapling from a mail-order nursery. 12 were transplants from a "splinter nursery" bed where I had been holding them since they were seedlings. Four were paper birch (Betual papifera) that went to high ground by the driveway, and eight were sweet birch (B. lenta), the source of birch beer. I planted those trees by the path, so that when I pass this spot with visitors, I can snap off a twig and share the sweet birch's aroma -- a blend of wintergreen, cherry and the dominant aroma we think of as root beer - it even smells fizzy.

Root beer has its origins in what is referred to as "small beers." Small beers are a collection of local beverages (some alcoholic, some not) made during colonial times in America from a variety of herbs, barks, and roots that included: birch beer, sarsparilla beer, ginger beer and root beer. Ingredients in early root beers included allspice, birch bark, coriander, juniper, ginger, wintergreen, hops, burdock root, dandelion root, spikenard, pipsissewa, guaiacum chips, sarsaparilla, spicewood, wild cherry bark, yellow dock, prickly ash bark, sassafras root, vanilla beans, hops, dog grass, molasses and licorice.

Charles Hires, a Philadelphia pharmacist, added carbonation to an herbal tea made from a recipe containing twenty-five herbs, berries and roots. He introduced his brew to the public at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial exhibition. A & W Root Beer, now the number one selling root beer in the world, was founded by Roy Allen, who began marketing his concoction in 1919.

I love birch beer, a drink I find lighter-tasting than root beer. When I was a kid we bought a clear version, but brown and especially red birch beers are also available today. Very few of them are all-natural. One exception is Boylan's Birch Beer, which was created in an apothecary in the early 1890's and developed into the most popular flavor of The Boylan Sodaworks. Boylan was a bottling and keg filling operation located in the heart of Paterson, NJ, the first industrialized city in the country. Competition increased however, and in the 1930's Boylan was forced to close its bottling lines, leaving Boylan's Draught Birch Beer as its only product. Boylan's is still made, today, and except for yucca extract and a benzoate preservative, is the same as the original.

Birch_beer I do not know if there are any root beers on the market today that do not have "artificial and natural flavors," not to mention corn syrup. There are a few reasons for this, economics is one. Another is the fact that in the mid-60's, the FDA discovered that a chemical called safrole found in sassafras, the primary source of the root in root beer, caused cancer in rats, and proceeded to ban its sale for edible uses. This sent the root beer industry into a frenzy trying to find a replacement flavoring. A few companies happened on a combination of licorice root (that's not anise, and doesn't taste like it) and wintergreen, but most opted for a synthesized extract.

The non-alcoholic drink of the Old West saloons, sasparilla could have been made from Sasparilla or Sarsparilla; two different plants with ridiculously similar common names.  The drink was indeed made from it's namesake, an herbaceous Northeastern plant, Aralia nudicaulis that looks very much like ginseng and is, in fact, related. Sarsparilla is Smilax officinalis.

Back to my thirteen, newly planted trees: During the flood, I ventured out into the downpour to check on the trees. Two of the four paper birch were knocked over by the wind and rain. I managed to right them, stake and tie them. I looked for the little tree from the mail order nursery, but couldn't find it. Just for the heck of it, I plunged my arm into the rushing water where I had planted the tree, and low and behold, it was there, on its side, stuck in some dried weeds. (My neighbor Jill was yelling at me to get the heck out of the flood waters.)

As for the sweet birch, planted right in the wake of the rushing water, two remained where I planted them. One was held in place by a nearby rock that also diverted the force of the water. A second one remained in place because a concrete block, delivered over the stone wall by the flood, settled at its base. I discovered a third, fourth, fifth and sixth stuck in shrubs and covered by debris. One week later, I found the tallest, an eight-foot tree, inside the limbs of a young dawn redwood. I planted it at once and it is alive, leafing out and about a week behind the others.

But, you win some and you lose some. One of the birch trees seems to be gone, forever, perhaps nestling into a pocket of soil - sweetening some other piece of land downriver. I am afraid the nursery-bought tree is not looking good - it's looking dead.

Birch lenta

Some times one has to just grin and bear it, kick back with a nice cold birch beer, and wait to see what nature has in store for the future. (Have I mentioned the profusion of bugs?)


Until next time,

Ken

P.S. You can purchase Boylan's Birch Beer and/or some really good ginger beers at the online store The Soda Shop or The Soda King.

Hot Flora

Design Rules!
Flora Grubb Gardens opened in April, 2007, and may forecast what state-of-the-retail-nursery-art will look like in years to come.

June 15, 2007

Dear Friends,

In 2003, Flora Grubb (named for her great-grandmother, and appropriate - Flora the demi-goddess of the garden and grub, well--) and her business partner Saul Nadler bought a palmdoors tree wholesale grower and began a retail nursery. It blossomed, and recently moved to a new location in the "China Basin," an industrial neighborhood in San Francisco. Industrial spaces inspired the "store's" design with corrugated steel painted terracotta or galvanized silver; recycled wood covering columns indoors and out, a clear roof in some areas, and even a junked car (planted for display).

The new Flora Grubb Gardens opened in April, 2007, and it is beyond state of the art - it is art. The nursery will be setting trends for years to come.
doors

You can find all sorts of plants there, especially ones you have never seen before. You can also find more familiar ones, but these will be treated with the same remarkable design savvy as other offerings from pairs of front doors to polished concrete chaise lounge.doors

Instead of arranging plants alphabetically, or even by type (annuals, perennials, shrubs, trees, for instance), the living things are clustered by color and texture in retail vignettes not seen beyond a Pottery Barn catalog; one that is seemingly on fire, since the striking arrangements crackle and glow.

From pots to plants to furniture, books and accessories (there is even a coffee bar), Flora Grubb Gardens is a must see destination that will transform its location from being off the beaten track to a spot people will beat a path to. Flora Grubb Gardens is to the China Basin what artists were to SoHo in New York City. I can't wait to watch the transformation.
doors
Flora Grubb Gardens
1634 Jerrold Ave.
San Francisco
415-626-7256
Flora Grubb website
                      

 

Where Has 'Harkness Hybrid' Gone?

July 12, 2007

Dear Friends,

Many years ago, I saw a tall mullein, verbascum, known as 'Harkness Hybrid' growing at Willowwood Arboretum in Chester, New Jersey. Willowwood was the home of the Tubbs brothers and then their ward, Dr. Benjamin Blackburn, upon whose death it became a public garden. Besides 100 species and varieties of willow, there are meadows, ornamental plants, rare and unusual trees. Tubbs and Blackburn turned the 130 acres of former farmland the into a home for 3500 species and varieties. 'Harkness Hybrid' at Willowwood

'Harkness Hybrid' grew to seven feet tall and produced numerous flower spikes with a profusion of two-inch-wide yellow flowers for over a month. When I finally had a spot with enough sunlight - the gravel garden on the island - I tried to find seeds for the plant. The English seed company Thompson & Morgan used to offer it, but it was no longer in their catalog. Today, searches in places like the Royal Horticultural Society's Plant Finder yield nothing.


I telephoned Willowwood, but no one working there today had heard of the plant which has been lost over years of renovation. About four years ago, I got two seedlings purported to be the one I sought from a gardener in Pennsylvania. They grew and flourished and bloomed the second year (these are biennials). The plants were multi-stemmed, but not really as spectacular as the one I had seen at Willowwood. The following year, volunteers appeared in the vicinity, but the seedlings that grew to maturity were not like 'Harkness Hybrid,' either. Perhaps the seeds passed from person to person had hybridized with local mulleins and others in the garden, making the offspring something similar, but definitely not 'Harkness.'

This summer, a plant appeared on the gravel driveway, which looks a bit like the amazing old mullein variety. And what it lacks in stature, it makes up for in tenacity -- it is a tough, determined plant.

A couple of weeks ago, I had several tons of gravel delivered (I have wanted to expand the gravel garden for years) and when the dump truck arrived they had to unload the crushed rock very near the verbascum in the driveway. The large pile spread onto the base of the mullein-but the stone did not kill it - -just gave it a decided lean to the west. The candelabra turned into a menorah!

verbascum menorah

I plan to collect and save seeds (perhaps select seeds only from the chunkiest offspring) and see if I can re-establish a 'Harkness Hybrid'-like mullein.

There are many mulleins that happily grow from seed like the roadside escapee we often see (V. thapsus), and the satisfying species V. chaixii. There are, however, superb hybrids like 'Southern Charm' that actually seem to be perennial. On the other hand, several of the newest verbascum hybrids simply will not survive a winter for me. Although purported to be hardy in my Zone six garden, and despite being given excellent drainage, these showy plants bloom their heads off for the first summer from purchased plants, and perhaps, bloom themselves to death. I once tried cutting all the flower spikes off to see if that would prolong its life, but it didn't. I've never seen a seedling, and even if one did appear, it would not "come true" (be identical to its parent). The hybrids could be sterile, and since they are the products of specific crosses they can only be propagated vegetatively, via cuttings.
Carribean Crush

If you can grow plants like 'Helen Johnson,' Jackie,' 'Caribbean Crush' (at right) and 'Honey Dijon' (my favorite) for more than one blooming season, please share your know-how.

Thanks so much for reading, and happy gardening,


Ken

                      

 

What People Are Saying

Are you a Ken Druse REAL DIRT listener?

We'd like to share some of the very kind words many of you have written about our podcast:

Amy, in New York state: "Ken, I e-mailed you a few weeks ago to let you know how excited I was to discover you had a website and a radio show. I have been spending the last few weeks trying to catch up on your older podcasts. I am SO addicted now and I am learning a great deal from both of you...You two are great.  I look forward to learning more from you! "

Jenny in South Carolina: I recently discovered your pod cast and I love it.  Your program this week really made me laugh.

Jackie, in Maine: "I am inspired by your conversations and find myself scribbling plant names furiously while listening,..Keep it up, I love listening!"

Annetta, in Virginia: "Some people wouldn't miss an episode of "The Sopranos" or "Desperate Housewives". I am hooked on neither but rather I am a Ken Druse (and Vicki Johnson) groupie...You two have a great on-air rapport sharing not only your vast gardening knowledge but other interests as well, including cooking. You enjoy a laugh together and possibly even a recent cold. The program offers entertainment as well as information and professional opinion."

Joanie, in Pennsylvania: "Both of you are among the crème of the crop in the gardening world- authentic, credible, informative and simply lovely."   

Linda, in Pennsylvania: "Keep up the great work! I love you guys!!!" 

 

Please join us every week for the
Ken Druse REAL DIRT, the Podcast*
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P.S. Do you have a question, a comment, or garden dilemma? I love your emails, so please write at kendruserealdirt@yahoo.com