Subscribe to our RSS feed

Post Categories

Authors

Archives

Of flowers and faces: choose.

Young Basotho herdsman on Sani Pass, 2007

I am distressed quite often when I hear people apologize
Read more »

Great Plains Exploration Trip to Kansas

I have taken many trips to many countries, but few fieldtrips I have taken have taught me more than joining Larry Vickerman and Mike Bone last summer on a foray through Kansas. Yes! Kansas!
Read more »

Winter wandering: Hellebore and Epimedium in Switzerland

Helleborus foetidus blooming last weekend in Munchenstein, Switzerland

Not many people would choose February to go plant hunting in Switzerland,
Read more »

A late rose for Christmas? (Helleborus niger)

Helleborus niger, blooming January 26, 2012 at my house

There are a number of plants that are clever enough to bloom during the winter months: none
Read more »

Forget-us-not! (Plant Select is true and blue)…

Who doesn’t love blue in flowers? Do our gardens ever have enough blue? Well…
Read more »

Disaster! Los Angeles Botanic Gardens rise to the Challenge!

The dictionary definition of a botanic garden is “a garden for
Read more »

Phlox: the All American genus

Phlox by Jim Locklear (Published by Timber press)

Okay: I lied.
Read more »

Passing of a gardener

Frank Cabot (Photo by Marina Schinz)

This last weekend we lost the most eminent gardener of our era, and possibly the greatest gardener America has ever produced. Francis Higginson Cabot passed away peacefully at his home in Malbaie, Quebec. Frank possessed the vision and means to practice horticulture on a nearly mythical scale: he created not one but two extraordinary gardens of enormous scope: Stonecrop in Cold Spring, New York, and Les Quatres Vents in Quebec. He pursued other gardens on almost as ambitiously in scale in Wales, New Zealand and New Mexico. He took a leadership role in many organizations, notably chairing the Board of the New York Botanical Garden in the seventies, and serving as Treasurer of the North American Rock Garden society for seven years.
Read more »