Sunday, October 12, 2025

Plant Story--New England Aster, Symphyotrichum novae-angliae

The New England aster (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae aster family, Asteraceae) is very widespread; in North America it is found from the Atlantic to the Pacific, missing only very dry states like Nevada. Distribution maps show it as native across all that range, but it is an attractive plant that was brought into gardens long ago and may have escaped and naturalized. 

New England aster, Symphytotrichum novae-anglae
New England aster 

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Travel Story--Wales

I took a tour in Wales, mainly along the coast. Wales, the southwest corner of Britain, is about 170 miles long and 60 miles wide, but hills, mountains, and rivers make it a lot more complex.  My tour, with Road Scholar, began just north of Wales in Manchester, and circled south along the coast, finally turning east to Cardiff and then London. 

We saw lots of green pastures, with cows or sheep

Wales countryside from the bus

Sunday, September 28, 2025

American Squashes


zucchini and yellow summer squash
zucchini and yellow summer squash

Sorting out the squashes is a job for experts, which I am not. They are wonderfully confused.

“True squashes” are plants in the genus Cucurbita (Cucurbitaceae, cucumber family). About 15 species make up Cucurbita, all of them native to the Americas. 

Melons, such as cantalope genus Cucumis, watermelon, genus Citrullus (blog about watermelon) and others--all the melons--are from Asia, Africa or Europe. 

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Chrysanthemums: Fall Greetings!


red chrysanthemums
red chrysanthemums 

As summer fades into fall, a different set of plants dominate the landscape.  In my garden, the chrysanthemums that were an unassuming cluster of leaves all summer are now covered in blossoms.  My fruit trees are dropping apples and peaches. Burning bush (Euonymous) and maples start to turn color.  

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Pollinators and Flower Visitors

All sorts of small animals can be found on flowers. All of them can safely be called flower visitors. Of the flower visitors, some are pollinators. What is the difference?

moth visiting sunflower

Sunday, September 7, 2025

Plant Story--Oxalis, Wood Sorrel

Wood sorrels, Oxalis, with flowers like little yellow stars, are common plants in disturbed areas across much of North America. They are worth a second look. 

wood sorrel, Oxalis
common wood sorrel, Oxalis stricta

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Gardening is Changing

Gardens and yards are changing. People are reducing their use of herbicides and pesticides. Planting more water-wise plants. Adding natives. Appreciating mixes of plants not just monocultures, whether in the lawn or the flowerbeds. All of this is revising our ideas of what an attractive yard is. 

front yard with natives
front yard, natives (and others), no lawn grass