Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Top Garden Books of 2024

Here is a list of the best gardening books that were reviewed in 2024 in the Washington Gardener Magazine. These 10 selections are listed below in no particular order.

Buy a few of these for yourself and for the plant geeks, garden lovers, and horticultural nerds in your life! 
(Note that if you click on the links, it takes you to the book's Amazon page and we get a few pennies if you order it from there through our affiliate link. We have also included the Bookshop.org link from our account for those who do not use Amazon.)

1. What Makes a Garden: A Considered Approach to Garden Design

Author: Jinny Blom

Publisher: Frances Lincoln

Order Link: https://amzn.to/44PiJEF and https://bookshop.org/a/79479/9780711282957

Cost: $50.00

Reviewer Marsha Douma wrote, "Jinny Blom’s newest book is a comprehensively fascinating and uniquely thoughtful book on garden design. This is not the more usual, practical garden design book which has suggestions and templates for the beds and various flower combinations. Quite the opposite. What Makes a Garden is about the myriad elements to consider when creating a garden. ."

2. The Garden Against Time: In Search of a Common Paradise

Author: Olivia Laing

Publisher: W.W. Norton and Company

Order Link: https://amzn.to/404y2sH and https://bookshop.org/a/79479/9780393882001

List Price: $27.99

Reviewer Beth Py-Lieberman wrote, "In January of 2020, Olivia Laing, a British essayist, novelist, and memoirist, discovered a Suffolk home with an abandoned garden formerly owned by designer Mark Rumary, known for his work at the award-winning nursery Notcutts. Laing had recently married poet Ian Patterson; and their combined income afforded the third-of-an-acre property, located about two-and-a-half-hours northeast of London...In this magnificent read, essays featuring a vast tapestry of classic literature, the decorative arts, and histories both classic and contemporary are set against Laing’s own hard labors to rediscover Rumary’s horticultural vision."

3. The Galanthophiles: 160 Years of Snowdrop Devotees

Authors: Jane Kilpatrick and Jennifer Harner

Publisher: Orphans Publishing

List Price: $62.10

Order Links: https://amzn.to/3O8zIKK

Reviewer Jim Dronenburg wrote, "This book is an historian’s look at the cultivation of Galanthus (snowdrops), primarily in Britain. It starts with the species as they came into the country, and then the cultivars and hybrids—through the lens of the stories of the people who grew and promoted snowdrops...Admittedly, if you want a hands-on, 'do thus and so' snowdrop book, this isn’t for you, but if you want to know how you came to get the ones you have (or could get; snowdrops do well here), this is a book well worth the reading. "

4. The Geriatric Gardener 2.0

Author: Duane Pancoast

Publisher: The Pancoast Concern, Ltd.

Order Link: https://thepancoastconcern.com/the_geriatric_gardener

List Price: $19.99

Reviewer: Beth Py-Lieberman wrote, "Pancoast’s new book is one that might actually tuck nicely into the Christmas stocking of even an energetic young gardener. The reason? His sage tips might save any gardener a few extra steps and provide some long-term safety ideas to ward off the accidental fall.
Adaptive gardening, he says, is to garden smarter, not harder. 'Tend your garden, don’t toil in it,' he advises."

5. From Wasteland to Wonder: Easy Ways We Can Heal Earth in the Sub/Urban Landscape

Author: Basil Camu

Publisher: Leaf & Limb

List Price: Free/$10.75

Order Links: https://www.leaflimb.com/wonder/

Reviewer Zachary Intrater wrote, "This book is an excellent guide for anyone who wants to do their part in helping heal the planet. Camu does a great job of explaining some of the specific issues with our current environmental practices in a manner that is thorough yet easily digestible, while also providing solutions. Another great thing about this book is that all of the potential solutions and recommendations that Camu offers are things that can be easily done by your average reader. From Wasteland to Wonder is practical, informative, and useful—do yourself and our planet a favor and give it a read!"

6. Growing Bulbs in the Natural Garden: Innovative Techniques for Combining Bulbs and Perennials in Every Season

Author: Jacqueline van der Kloet

Publisher: Timber Press

List Price: $35.00

Order Links: https://amzn.to/3LsRoPz and https://bookshop.org/a/79479/9781643264028

Reviewer Josh Panepento wrote, "The author uses her experience as a garden designer in North America, Europe, and Asia to create an intriguing mix of personal stories, pictures, and how-to guides...I recommend this book to anyone growing bulbs, no matter how much experience you have because it can inspire a new project. I also recommend it to anyone who enjoys flipping through colorful flower photos. "


7. Nature at Your Door: Connecting with the Wild and Green in the Urban and Suburban Landscape

Author: Sara A. Gagné 

Publisher: Stackpole Books

List Price: $29.95

Order Links: https://amzn.to/3Umr6nk and https://bookshop.org/a/79479/9780811772266

Reviewer Teri Speight wrote, "This is quite the informative book, filled with usable information, relevant to urban, as well as suburban settings. Many times, it is hard to address both conditions with one reference. However, author Sara A. Gagné has done an excellent job of assessing the needs of the total landscape and beyond."

8. Bird-Friendly Gardening: Guidance and Projects for Supporting Birds in Your Landscape

Author: Jen McGuinness

Publisher: Cool Springs Press

List Price: $27.99

Order Links: https://amzn.to/3XNRE2L and https://bookshop.org/a/79479/9780760382110

Reviewer Marsha Douma wrote: "If you want to attract more birds to your garden or invite them to visit your balcony, this is the perfect book to help you do that. The subtitle, “Guidance and Projects for Supporting Birds in Your Landscape,” is an accurate description of the generous instructive offerings in this book...I enthusiastically recommend this book to all bird lovers who want to attract them to where they live. Also to all gardeners who want to not only have plants in their garden that are beautiful, but ones that can support more birds at the same time."

9. Bonsai Master Class: Lessons and Tips from a Japanese Master For All the Most Popular Types of Bonsai

Author: Kunio Kobayashi

Illustrated by: Mai Ly Degnan

Publisher: Tuttle

List Price: $24.99 

Order Links: https://amzn.to/49a8iMa and https://bookshop.org/a/79479/9784805317433

Reviewer Cassie Peo wrote, "As a beginner gardener myself, I had very little bonsai knowledge, but this book provides a great introduction to the art and inspired me to do more research about the history of bonsai. This book would make a great gift for anyone looking to get into bonsai or for longtime fans. Kobayashi’s love for bonsai is evident on every page and will inspire all audiences."

10. A Gardener at the End of the World

Author: Margot Anne Kelley 

Publisher: David R. Godine Publisher

List Price: $28.95

Order Links: https://amzn.to/4bC00iN and https://bookshop.org/a/79479/9781567927344

Reviewer Beth Py-Lieberman wrote, "Four years have passed and we can’t keep ourselves from marking the traumatic moments in those perilous first weeks when reports trickled in of people in China sickening from the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2...Kelley has penned a vivid reminder of that year in her new book...Kelley’s evocative memories gently compel the reader down that perilous road on a necessary journey to revisit the multiple traumas of the year 2020. The author’s deep dives into past pandemics, human disease transmission, global trade, and the origins of crops and plants are viewed through the lens of the garden that Kelley and her husband Rob maintain on their one-acre homestead. As the couple hunkers down for what would become more than a year of isolation, Kelley, a cancer survivor with a weakened immune system, envisions the process of gardening as a 'defiance.' Her 2020 garden would become 'a way to propagate life and health and pleasure and optimism when death feels terrifyingly present.' "

Here are our past year's listings of our Top Garden Books:

- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2023 are here
- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2022 are here
- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2021 are here
- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2020 are here
- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2019 are here
- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2018 are here
- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2017 are here
- The Top 10 Garden Books of 2016 are posted here

Monday, December 30, 2024

Monday Thoughts: “I prefer winter and fall, when you can feel the bone structure in the landscape---the loneliness of it---the dead feeling of winter. Something waits beneath it---the whole story doesn't show.” ― Andrew Wyeth

“I prefer winter and fall, when you can feel the bone structure in the landscape---the loneliness of it---the dead feeling of winter. Something waits beneath it---the whole story doesn't show.” 

― Andrew Wyeth

Saturday, December 28, 2024

Thanks for Listening to the GardenDC Podcast: Check Out Our Top 10 List of 2024

Thank you to all of our GardenDC Podcast listeners, supporters, guests, and contributors! We had a great year and are looking forward to much more educational and informational fun in 2025--including winning a Horti Award for Best Gardening Podcast! While we are on holiday break, now is a great chance to jump in and catch up on any of the 222 episodes that you may have missed or re-listen to your past favorites.

Here are our Top 10 episodes from our fifth season in order of number of listens:


2. Mad About Mulches

3. Planning Your Vegetable Garden 

4. Making More Plants 

5. Dogwood 
6. Elderberry 

7. Birdscaping

8. Amsonia 

9. New Plants and Products for 2024

10. Hollies 

  • You can see the Top 10 List from our first season (2020, episodes 1-40) here.
  • You can see the Top 10 List from our second season (2021, episodes 41-86) here.
  • You can see the Top 10 List from our third season (2022, episodes 87-131) here.
  • You can see the Top 10 List from our fourth season (2023, episodes 132-176) here.

Note that the GardenDC podcast is taking a break for the holiday season and will be back later in early January. 

BTW, YOU can become a listener supporter for as little as $0.99 per month! 
See how at: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gardendc/support.

We welcome your questions and comments! You can leave a voice mail message for us at: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gardendc/message Note that we may use these messages on a future episode.

And be sure to leave us a 5-star review on your favorite podcast platform plus share us on social media with #GardenDC, so other gardeners can find us too!

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

2025 Garden PHOTO CONTEST Kicks Off!

 

The 19th Annual Washington Gardener Magazine Photo Contest kicks off now! The entry period is January 1-20, 2025. 

Note that eligible entries must have been taken during the 2024 calendar year in a garden setting within 150-mile radius of Washington, DC.

WE HAVE FOUR MAJOR ENTRY CATEGORIES:

~ Garden Views (landscape scenes)

~ Garden Vignettes (groupings of plants in beds or containers, unusual color or texture combinations, garden focal points, and still scenes)

~ Small Wonders (flower or plant part close-ups)

~ Garden Creatures (any living creature in a garden setting)

Remember that garden photos need not all be taken during the first week of May nor should they all be tight close-ups of a red rose. Look for the unusual and for beauty in the off-season too. Our judges give equal weight to the following criteria when evaluating the entries: technical merit, composition, impact, and creativity.

Anyone can enter: professional or amateur, adult or student, local area gardener or visiting DC tourist. Past winners have included teenagers entering their first-ever photo contest and home gardeners trying out their new digital cameras. Our next Grand Prize Winner could be YOU!

SEE THIS PAGE FOR THE FULL CONTEST DETAILS
 (CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO READ IT AT FULL SIZE*):



Also, here is the entry form text:

Washington Gardener Magazine Photo Contest Entry Form
• Name -      
• Full address-
• Phone number –
• Email –
• Years of photography experience-
• Whether you are a Pro or Amateur-
• Image File name and title-
• A brief description of each image-
• The category each image is to be entered in -
• The location where each image was taken -
• All available photographic information regarding the image (i.e. camera type, lens, lighting, etc.)

For any contest inquiries, contact DCGardenPhotos@aol.com.

*A PDF of the rules is available on request to the DCGardenPhotos@aol.com email, if the JPG above is not legible for you.

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Win a copy of Black Flora in our December 2024 Washington Gardener Magazine Reader Contest

UPDATE: We have our winners:
- Peter F
- Robert A
- Deborah N
Congrats to all!

For our December 2024 Washington Gardener Reader Contest, we are giving away three copies of Black Flora by Teresa Speight. 

   Unearthing the floral legacies of the past, celebrating the present, and inspiring younger generations of plant-lovers, Black Flora is the first book to feature profiles of contemporary Black experts innovating in the world of flowers. Author and longtime gardener, Teresa Speight, offers a beautiful intersection of flowers and community. With iridescent lettering across the cover, stunning photos throughout, and insights from more than 20 growers, florists, and designers from around the U.S., each with a deep reverence for nature, this breathtaking book showcases a range of floral expertise. Both a celebration of now and a vision for the future, Black Flora honors floriculture’s creative vanguard and is a must-have for every lover of design, style, gardening and—of course—flowers.

   To enter to win one of the book copies, send an email by 5:00pm on December 31 to WashingtonGardenerMagazine@gmail.com with “Black Flora” in the Subject line and in the body of the email. Tell us what your favorite article was in the December 2024 issue of Washington Gardener and why. Please include your full name and mailing address. Winners will be announced and notified on/about January 1. (Replies might be published.)

Friday, December 20, 2024

The Lilac in Nosferatu: Symbolism of Lilacs and Death

Do you swoon at the scent of lilacs? It is a favorite floral scent for many and a flowering shrub that others cherish for their childhood memories of smelling it in an older relatives' garden.

Lily-Rose Depp stars as Ellen Hutter in director Robert Eggers’ NOSFERATU, a Focus Features release.
Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2024 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

The lilac takes on a symbolic life of it own in a new horror film being released in theaters on Christmas Day 2024.

I attended a preview screening of  "Nosferatu" on Friday, December 13. It is a remake of the 1922 classic horror film, which was based on (completely ripped off, *ahem*) the "Dracula" novel by Bram Stoker. (Warning: The film is gruesome and hard to watch in many sections. It is definitely not for all.)

In an early scene in the film, the young newly married Thomas Hutter runs home in the driving rain with his hat covering a huge bouquet of cut lilacs for his new bride, Ellen. He is not a rich man, so this is quite an extravagant gesture and meant to make up for the fact that he will soon be taking a long work trip away from her. When she receives them she screams in anguish and claims that the flowers are a waste and that they will all die. I have always found people who make this statement to be churlish and ignorant. It really is a silly assertion given that the lilac flowers' vase life indoors is virtually the same as it is on the plant itself (one to two weeks), so why not go ahead and cut some to enjoy while they last!

The lilac is native to Eastern Europe, so it is no wonder Count Orlok is drawn to them since they would have reminded them of the springtimes of his human youth. And that is where I have one serious issue with the movie, which takes place in 1838 during the weeks leading up to Christmas. How anyone of this time period would source a big bouquet of these springtime flowers is a mystery. It is not a plant that can be forced into bloom prior to February/March nor does it grow in southern locations where it could be imported from as lilacs need a cold winter to set their flower buds.

Lilac, the color itself which was named after the flower, is associated with youth and purity. In the film, Ellen wears a lilac dress and cloak and some (faux) lilacs in her hair. She also cuts the end ogf her hair and puts it into a locket for Thomas on his travels. (SPOILER ALERT: This locket is grabbed by Count Orlok and he smells the hair in it mentioning the scent of lilacs.)

According to LovFlowers.co, "lilacs symbolize renewal and the promise of new beginnings, as they are among the first flowers to bloom in spring. This makes them a wonderful representation of rebirth and growth. In Victorian England, lilacs were also a symbol of love and remembrance, often given to loved ones as a sign of devotion"

The lilacs use in funerals is described by the Schilling Funeral Home as a "common choice for the funeral or memorial tribute of a young person or someone who had a childlike nature or good heart. With its signature floral scent and youthful appearance, lilies signify purity and innocence. They are often brought to funerals and memorials to represent the idea that the deceased’s soul has become peaceful and innocent in death or that the deceased will be reborn in a new life."

SPOILER ALERT: This funereal use of lilacs is apropos for strewing around Ellen's body after her sacrifice at the end of the film and being robbed of her innocent youth. Moreover, it likely helped to combat the putrid smell of the Count's schriveled corpse laying on her.

Lilacs have many other layers of meanings. American folklore recommends them for warding off evil sprits and the Victorians associated them with "old love" and remembrance as the shrubs are long-lived (often lasting a century or more in the garden).

 According to this article, they were not associated with death until the springtime assassination and funeral of Abraham Lincoln, which is a few decades after the events in this film. Smell is the most evocative of scents and can bring a person right back to a signficant time and place where they smelled a certain fragrance before. In the case of lilacs, Walt Whitman writes of Lincoln's passing, "I find myself always reminded of great tragedy of that day by the sight and odor of these blossoms. It never fails."

The article's author Melissa Gouty continues, "the scent of lilacs is what he associated with his grief, and he immortalized that in his eulogical poem about the death of President Abraham Lincoln, When Lilacs Last In Dooryard Bloom’d.

Interestingly, the smell of lilacs releases the organic chemical compound Indole (present in both feces and flowers). As a John Hopkins University blog post explains, "lilacs can smell fresh at first and then, quickly thereafter, decayed and rotten...tempering the promise of spring with an indolic hint of decay and desolation." The film "Nosferatu" aims to do the same with its haunting story and stunning imagery that linger in one's mind far after the film has been viewed. Indolic, indeed. 


The print shown above
 is by Open Sea Design and is inspired by "Ellen Hutter, a haunted young woman pursued by a terrifying vampire infatuated with her." They also offer this card with just a simple lilac flower on it. 
For information on actually growing lilacs yourself, go to our Lilac Plant Profile here.
Note that there is also a limited edition NOSFERATU perfume for $125.00. (It is currently sold out!) It is described as having a "chilling scent of wilting lilacs, velvety vegan ambergris and strikes of lightning that fill the air with petrichor and electricity—It's both delicate and hedonistic."

On a side note, if you are interested in adding more "Nosferatu" flowers to your goth garden. Check out this dark--purple daylily with a chartreuse-green throat. I have found no other flowers or plants with "Nosferatu" in their names. Plant breeders get on your marks - get set - go! Find out more about goth gardening here and here.

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