Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Meadowlark Gardens


Meadowlark Gardens
One of my very favorite places is Meadowlark Gardens, which is about a 20 minute drive from our house. W and I go there for walks quite often, in all seasons of the year.  A snowy walk in winter is especially beautiful.  I like knowing that it was donated by a couple who lived there and farmed the land for 50 years before they donated the nearly 75 acres to the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority. They were academics and environmentalists who loved the Virginia countryside. They raised sheep dogs, farmed wheat, and planted flower gardens on the land and as suburbia grew around them, they decided to donate the land to "create a permanence in the land...a way by which the farm could remain a haven for trees, shrubs and flowers to preserve the bounty of the Virginia country side." How cool is that,  to farm land for 50 years and then donate the land you loved so it can be taken care of and enjoyed by people for years to come. It is what all gardeners dream about, that their gardens will endure.

Probably my favorite time of the year at Meadowlark is May, when the tree peonies bloom and about a week after, the herbaceous peonies. It has an amazing collection of peonies. And the daylilies,  hundreds of varieties. Amazing azaleas, ferns, iris. A fabulous lilac garden. When we were there on Sunday, the salvias were in high bloom--a huge bed with all different kinds of salvias. Another favorite of mine is the Hosta Walk, a little path through the woods, lined with all varieties of hostas, ferns, and hellebores. It is magical in the spring, when the hostas are just emerging and the wildflowers are blooming.

 Love it there.

Walk through the woods
Love this
Beautyberry
One of 3 lakes
A favorite sculpture
Hosta Walk
Conifer Garden
Pretty wildflower

Monday, September 19, 2011

Happy Birthday Bob

Last night we went over to Bob and Carol's to celebrate Bob's birthday! It was fun to see them and hear about the first weeks of school for Jackson and Keenan. Carol is back to work, Keenan is playing soccer and lacrosse this fall, and Jackson made the j.v. soccer team at high school, so they are very busy!  Carol made chicken and steak fajitas with onions and peppers, and a rice and black bean dish for dinner. Birthday cake was an apple spice cake with cream cheese frosting, and all was delish. They had just been to the Grand Canyon this summer so we talked alot about our trip and they gave us some tips for things to see and do.
Happy Birthday Bob
Walt and Bob in their pretty yard
And because Bob is going to his 40th high school reunion at St. Joe's this weekend,  and because you know I love the old photos, here is an old one of Bob, I think at his high school graduation.

Bob, 1971?
Not much gardening (well, not any) this weekend, as I had to work on Saturday.  On Sunday morning W and I went for a long walk at Meadowlark and it really felt like fall. W went for his first run since hurting his leg in the afternoon and he felt pretty good, so he's thinking he may still be able to do the MCM in October. It keeps looking like rain around here, but every day is just cloudy and gray. A busy week coming up as I have to work every day. We are getting new computers and a new phone system in the library this week, as well as an upgrade of our catalog and checkout system, so it should be a crazy week at the library. Nothing ever goes smoothly, so we are expecting to be without computers at all for a day or so. That's always fun.

My library during the big rain

Saturday, September 17, 2011

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks

My book group met last night to discuss The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. I had been wanting to read this book for awhile and it was a good selection for book group--lots to talk about. It is a non-fiction account of a 30-year-old, poor black woman in 1950s Baltimore. She was diagnosed with a particularly aggressive type of cervical cancer in February 1951 and was treated, unsuccessfully (she died in October 1951), at Johns Hopkins, which at that time was the only hospital that would treat black patients.  Henrietta Lacks was treated with radium inserts, but first the doctors took two samples of her cancerous tissue and passed them off to researchers, without her permission or knowledge. Scientists found that HeLa cells (as they were later named from her first and last names) had an uncanny ability to reproduce, and become "immortal." The story is about how doctors and researchers used her cancer cells for research, eventually sold those cells to biomedical research companies,  and in fact are still being used in medical research today. HeLa cells have contributed to the polio vaccine, chemotherapies,  and treatments for herpes, leukemia, influenza and Parkinson diesease,  IVF,  and gene mapping-- and her cells were part of the research into the genes that cause cancer and those that suppress it. HeLa cells have also gone into space, testing how cells react to zero gravity.

This is a story of cancer, medical ethics, racism, poverty and health care. We all liked the book a lot, and were in awe of how the author blended the stories together of Henrietta's illness, the medical and scientific communities, and the surviving Lacks family.  Rebecca Skloot spent 10 years researching the book, gathering information from the medical community and slowly gaining the trust of the Lacks family and ultimately helping them to understand what had happened with Henrietta's cells. As one of Henrietta Lacks's cousins put it, "Nobody round here never understood how she dead and that thing still livin. That's where the mystery's at." The family was extremely poor and uneducated and were never told what was being done with the HeLa cells, let alone given any explanation that they could understand, thus causing much confusion and fear within the family. When they found out the cells were being used, they thought their mother was still alive in some form. It is the author Skloot who arranges for Henrietta's daughter, Deborah, to come into a lab and actually see the cells and be given the explanation she needed.

Then of course there is the issue of money, and whether the family should have received any money for the use of Henrietta's cells, which helped to launch a multi-billion-dollar industry. This is a family that has never had health insurance.  That issue itself was the subject of much discussion in our group.  The book reads easily and is an important reminder that there are real people behind every biological sample used in medical research. We were all glad we read it.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Sea of Pink

My front garden is a sea of pink this morning--zinnias, sedums, asters, anemones. The cooler weather has revived alot of the fleurs. It is very chilly this morning, 48 degrees when we woke up. It feels like fall! It will be a good weekend to work in the garden,  to get in some "Tidy Time," as Henry Mitchell calls it. 


Thursday, September 15, 2011

Mobile Blogging

So Brooks was over tonight for chicken enchiladas and he told me about the new app for my phone for Blogger. So I wrote this post, took the picture, and posted it, all from my phone. Pretty cool! You're gonna have to get a smartphone, Biff!

Snowy Whites


Autumn Clematis
 I have alot of color in my garden, but I think my favorite flowers might be the white flowers. I love the crispness of them, and the contrast they make with all the green. One of my dreams is to see Vita Sackville-West's white garden at Sissinghurst.
My dream garden (Sissinghurst)
 I would love to have an all-white garden. Some years ago I attempted to make a "white corner"-- I put white azaleas under a white Snowbell tree (Styrax), with white daffodils. It sounded good but somehow it doesn't scream white garden to me.  Could it be because it's just a corner?!  My autumn clematis is amazing...we cut it back to the ground every spring and look at it now! It is unstoppable. Maybe a little too much, but it's hard to give up the show it makes in the fall. These are all white flowers blooming in my garden this morning, September 15. Not quite Sissinghurst, but still pretty, right?


I love whites against silvery plants like this Japanese fern. And variegated foliage--don't get me started.



Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Defiance

Henry Mitchell
I have started re-reading one of my favorite garden writers, Henry Mitchell, who used to write for the Washington Post.  When I first moved to Washington, D.C. in the 1970s I started reading his "Earthman" column in the Post.  My best friend Patty and I used to love his columns so much and talked about them often, even after she moved to Portland in 1978. We would talk about and plan our gardens even before we had gardens. When his books came out we gave them to each other as gifts. I first heard of hyacinth beans from him, and how to plan a garden on paper. It was because of him that I started keeping records of when things bloom year to year. I think the first column I remember of his was about daffodils and it is because of him that I plant the daffodil "Cheerfulness" in my garden.  I learned about the  Bishop's Garden at the National Cathedral and Dumbarton Oaks from Henry Mitchell, and they are two of my very favorite places.  I haven't read him for awhile and it was such a pleasure to pick up The Essential Earthman again and rediscover all the gems inside. Here is a favorite passage:

"There are no green thumbs or black thumbs. There are only gardeners and non-gardeners. Gardeners are the ones who ruin after ruin get on with the high defiance of nature herself, creating, in the very face of her chaos and tornado, the bower of roses and the pride of irises. It sounds very well to garden a "natural way." You may see the natural way in any desert, any swamp, any leech-filled laurel hell. Defiance, on the other hand, is what makes gardeners."

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Cornus 'Kousa'



My Kousa dogwood is so pretty right now that it made me want to look back at pictures of it earlier in the season.  The pictures above are of the Kousa just leafing out in April, then in May, when it was in full bloom. It's funny, some years the blooms are sparse, and other years it is covered with masses of bloom. This spring was a good one, it was literally covered with the snowy white blooms.  I wonder if it is related to the amount of rainfall we get?


After the flowers come these berries in July and August. Supposedly they are edible.


The fruit gradually turn pinkish,  then red in late August and September, and look at them now! So pretty. The birds love them, and I find half-eaten fruit in the grass.


It almost looks like an apple tree! In the fall the leaves will turn a purplish red. Lots of interest all year round from this tree.


Monday, September 12, 2011

Weekend in Chapel Hill

At Sugarland, my favorite bakery in Chapel Hill
W and I took a quick trip to Chapel Hill this weekend to visit Julia for her birthday. I had to take her her birthday cake! Julia had a business class until 4 on Saturday, so we arrived around 2 and had barbecue sandwiches at Spanky's and then met her after class. We saw the house where she is living with 5 friends (and Lylah, the sweetest dog ever), then made our way to Franklin Street for a glass of wine at West End Wine Bar before dinner at Elaine's on Franklin, a really nice restaurant. As Julia said, it's a restaurant you take your parents to, i.e, expensive.

Julia seems to be enjoying her first year of public health classes, but is finding it a challenge trying to balance life between the business school and the public health school, and still working part time for Rex Hospital. She is very busy! We had a nice visit, mostly revolved around eating, which is fine with all of us. Sunday was a beautiful day and we walked around the UNC campus and the Coker Arboretum, which is right in the middle of the campus ("a pocket of peaceful serenity") and is one of my favorite spots. Had breakfast at Crook's Corner, then took a drive to Pittsboro and Jordan Lake, with a stop at A Southern Season, a really cool gourmet market in Chapel Hill. Then one last stop at a mediterannean deli for some sustenance (haha) before we headed home to Virginia around 5:30. A quick visit, but lots of fun and good to see our birthday girl.


Julia with sweet Lylah
At the arboretum

Salad Sampler at Mediterranean Deli

Friday, September 9, 2011

Phew That Was Alot of Rain!


Wow did we ever have a lot of rain yesterday.  I went out in the morning and took these pictures in the rain, before the torrential rains started. And continued for hours. And hours. Hard, violent rain. I don't remember ever having so much hard rain. Our backyard has a river running through it.  The poor spiders have probably lost their intricate webs. Tree branches are bent over with rain. Plants are smooshed. Walks are washed away. Anyway...before the deluge, I was taking a "walkabout" as Margaret Roach calls it,  assessing the garden and thinking about the things I need/want to do in the garden this fall. Always lots to do.




The first thing I want to do (or have my garden boy do!) is to dig out a whole section of hostas, siberian iris, and lily of the valley (below) in my front garden. The hostas are just common ones, the siberian iris is pretty for about 5 minutes, and I have tons of lily of the valley elsewhere.  They are mostly hidden by the massive tree peony, and the whole area just looks messy most of the summer. I think I will pull them all out and maybe plant a few tried and true sedums 'Autumn Joy,' that will look good most of the time. Or maybe just let the tree peony be the star of the show. No, will definitely plant something there.

Oh, and it's still raining this morning--hard. Yikes.