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The Practical Flower Garden
The Practical Flower Garden
The Practical Flower Garden
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The Practical Flower Garden

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“The Practical Flower Garden” is a classic hardening handbook written by Helena Rutherfurd Ely. It contains a wealth of information and simple instructions on gardening, covering everything from preparatory details and equipment, to planting and propagating a range of common and uncommon garden plants. Helena Rutherfurd Ely was an American author and gardener who co-founded the Garden Club of America, responsible for publishing three very influential books that moving away from Victorian style gardens in favour of more informal gardening. Other notale works by this author include: “A Woman's Hardy Garden” (1903) and “Another Hardy Garden Book” (1905). Many vintage books such as this are increasingly scarce and expensive. It is with this in mind that we are republishing this volume now in an affordable, modern, high-quality edition complete with a specially-commissioned new introduction on the history of gardening.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 26, 2016
ISBN9781473351110
The Practical Flower Garden

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    The Practical Flower Garden - Helena Rutherfurd Ely

    THE PRACTICAL

    FLOWER GARDEN

    BY

    HELENA RUTHERFURD ELY

    AUTHOR OF A WOMAN’S HARDT GARDEN,

    ANOTHER HARDY GARDEN BOOK, ETC.

    WITH ILLUSTRATIONS MADE FROM PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN IN THE AUTHOR’S

    GARDEN, AND IN THE CONNECTICUT GARDEN

    1913

    Copyright © 2013 Read Books Ltd.

    This book is copyright and may not be reproduced or copied in any way without the express permission of the publisher in writing

    British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

    A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

    A Short History of Gardening

    Gardening is the practice of growing and cultivating plants as part of horticulture more broadly. In most domestic gardens, there are two main sets of plants; ‘ornamental plants’, grown for their flowers, foliage or overall appearance – and ‘useful plants’ such as root vegetables, leaf vegetables, fruits and herbs, grown for consumption or other uses. For many people, gardening is an incredibly relaxing and rewarding pastime, ranging from caring for large fruit orchards to residential yards including lawns, foundation plantings or flora in simple containers. Gardening is separated from farming or forestry more broadly in that it tends to be much more labour-intensive; involving active participation in the growing of plants.

    Home-gardening has an incredibly long history, rooted in the ‘forest gardening’ practices of prehistoric times. In the gradual process of families improving their immediate environment, useful tree and vine species were identified, protected and improved whilst undesirable species were eliminated. Eventually foreign species were also selected and incorporated into the ‘gardens.’ It was only after the emergence of the first civilisations that wealthy individuals began to create gardens for aesthetic purposes. Egyptian tomb paintings from around 1500 BC provide some of the earliest physical evidence of ornamental horticulture and landscape design; depicting lotus ponds surrounded by symmetrical rows of acacias and palms. A notable example of an ancient ornamental garden was the ‘Hanging Gardens of Babylon’ – one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

    Ancient Rome had dozens of great gardens, and Roman estates tended to be laid out with hedges and vines and contained a wide variety of flowers – acanthus, cornflowers, crocus, cyclamen, hyacinth, iris, ivy, lavender, lilies, myrtle, narcissus, poppy, rosemary and violets as well as statues and sculptures. Flower beds were also popular in the courtyards of rich Romans. The Middle Ages represented a period of decline for gardens with aesthetic purposes however. After the fall of Rome gardening was done with the purpose of growing medicinal herbs and/or decorating church altars. It was mostly monasteries that carried on the tradition of garden design and horticultural techniques during the medieval period in Europe. By the late thirteenth century, rich Europeans began to grow gardens for leisure as well as for medicinal herbs and vegetables. They generally surrounded them with walls – hence, the ‘walled garden.’

    These gardens advanced by the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries into symmetrical, proportioned and balanced designs with a more classical appearance. Gardens in the renaissance were adorned with sculptures (in a nod to Roman heritage), topiary and fountains. These fountains often contained ‘water jokes’ – hidden cascades which suddenly soaked visitors. The most famous fountains of this kind were found in the Villa d’Este (1550-1572) at Tivoli near Rome. By the late seventeenth century, European gardeners had started planting new flowers such as tulips, marigolds and sunflowers.

    These highly complex designs, largely created by the aristocracy slowly gave way to the individual gardener however – and this is where this book comes in! Cottage Gardens first emerged during the Elizabethan times, originally created by poorer workers to provide themselves with food and herbs, with flowers planted amongst them for decoration. Farm workers were generally provided with cottages set in a small garden—about an acre—where they could grow food, keep pigs, chickens and often bees; the latter necessitating the planting of decorative pollen flora. By Elizabethan times there was more prosperity, and thus more room to grow flowers. Most of the early cottage garden flowers would have had practical uses though—violets were spread on the floor (for their pleasant scent and keeping out vermin); calendulas and primroses were both attractive and used in cooking. Others, such as sweet william and hollyhocks were grown entirely for their beauty.

    Here lies the roots of today’s home-gardener; further influenced by the ‘new style’ in eighteenth century England which replaced the more formal, symmetrical ‘Garden à la française’. Such gardens, close to works of art, were often inspired by paintings in the classical style of landscapes by Claude Lorraine and Nicolas Poussin. The work of Lancelot 'Capability' Brown, described as ‘England’s greatest gardener’ was particularly influential. We hope that the reader is inspired by this book, and the long and varied history of gardening itself, to experiment with some home-gardening of their own. Enjoy.

    THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO

    MY BEST FRIEND AND

    SEVEREST CRITIC

    PREFACE

    IN this little book are given the results of my experience in practical work in the flower garden during the last five years, in caring for the grass and evergreens, arranging flowers to secure constant color effects, raising plants and trees from seeds, and the use of fertilizers most suited to the needs of the various plants and productive of the best results.

    The chapter on the Wild Garden owes its being to the maker of the Connecticut Garden, who has given me frequent opportunities of watching its development, and much of the information contained in the chapter. To him also I am indebted for the beautiful photographs which may serve as an inspiration to those who would find delight in creating a similar garden of native plants and shrubs.

    March, 1911

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

    COLOR PLATES

    FULL-PAGE HALF-TONE PLATES

    ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT

    COLOR ARRANGEMENTS OF FLOWERS

    CHAPTER I

    COLOR ARRANGEMENTS OF FLOWERS

    SHOULD those winter town-dwellers who are lovers of nature, and whose thoughts during the ice-bound months continually wander to their own gardens or to trees and green places which they know and love, chance to take a short trip into the near country in mid-March, a brightness and touch of warmth in the sunshine, and certain awakenings of nature, will bring to them a thrill of delight in the knowledge that the winter is past.

    Snowbanks may be lingering in dark nooks; there may still be a fringe of ice upon the brooks that wander through the woods; but in marshy places the skunk cabbage is unfolding its broad leaves; the downy buds are expanding upon the willows; many maples show a tinge of the red of coming blossoms; grass that has been properly cared for is already emerald-green; crocuses and snowdrops are bravely blooming in sheltered places, and, if one gently lifts the covering of the beds where daffodils have slept through the winter, their slender green tips will be seen pushing through the brown earth. Frogs in sunny ponds are beginning to pipe their shrill song, the robins have come back, and the town-dweller returns to the noisy city of brick and stone possessed by the longing that spring calls forth, to be at work among the growing things and to watch nature as she comes to life again.

    The happy owners of gardens know that now no day should be lost. With every new sun, the buds on trees and shrubs expand and the plants awaken, one by one. The ground must be prepared, seeds sown, and, in fact, the most delightful season in the gardener’s life has come, for now she is inspired by hope. The many misfortunes that may overtake her garden in later months have now no place in her thoughts. Rose bugs, mildew, cut-worm, rust, and the dreadful summer drought, have for her, as yet, no existence. Every seed will germinate and become a sturdy plant which will blossom the season through. All the color arrangements planned will satisfy her anticipations; the spring, summer and early autumn are to bring her ample fruition for her present labors; for the blessed new birth of imagination and hope, which comes to the nature-lover in the youth of the year, makes all things seem possible.

    Even an experienced gardener is often led away by the fascinating descriptions in the plant and seedsmen’s catalogues, whose pictures both fire and bewilder the imagination. And what could be more heavenly for a woman gardener than to be able to grow all these flowers and plants, and to attain the marvelous results pictured in the catalogues; to have all the space she wanted in which to grow them, to have all the men she needed—really good and efficient men—to cultivate them, and a husband who never grumbled about the amount of manure or fertilizer she used!

    We who have borne the stress of many years of gardening are now generally able, when making our spring and autumn lists, to harden our hearts to the temptations offered us in the pages of the catalogues. Of course, we often want everything we see, but are able to keep ourselves within limits. We can sympathize with and understand, however, the difficulty of the young woman who is making her first garden, and know well how she often spends time and money, only to reap disappointment. When she reads in catalogues such descriptions as Magnificent flowers, strong and robust, A new type of phenomenally robust growth, Magnificent and indispensable flowering plants, we know how easily she may be misled.

    It is not necessary to have in her garden every plant that any one else has had, but we should endeavor to achieve our results by growing those flowers which are best suited to the locality where we live, and which give us the most remuneration for our trouble, and then, as our experience grows, gradually increase the varieties.

    Of course, one often tries a new plant, from a desire to experiment or from curiosity, just as one chooses a salad Marguerite or a coupe San Jacques, or other dish with a strange name, from a restaurant menu, and returns again to the old flowers, as to the simple dishes.

    There will often be a visitor come to see the garden, generally a woman, who will look about critically and then remark, I do not see such and such a flower; when you must acknowledge that you not only have not grown it but have never heard of it. But do not be discouraged, as such inquiries are not meant unkindly, and even the largest garden has not space for every flower that can be grown.

    Enough cannot be said upon the advantages of close planting, which produces not only a more even effect of color, but also an appearance of greater luxuriance. The flowers really do better when closely set, as the ground is thus shaded by the foliage, and does not become so dry as where the planting is sparse.

    We should also practice intensive gardening, which provides successive crops of flowers in the same bed or border, and better utilizes every inch of space, arranging so that one flower will promptly follow another in the same place. The asters should be fine plants ready to take the places of the Canterbury bells; gladioli should be planted to bloom where the foxgloves stood; cosmos should be raised to spread its feathery branches where the tall hollyhocks have been cut down; tuberous-rooted begonias should be planted to fill later the places in the border where tulips welcomed the spring; and seedlings of annuals should be set everywhere,—not one or two of a kind planted indiscriminately, but so that each border will have masses in colors that blend.

    All of this work requires much thought and experiment, opens a wide and fascinating field to the amateur, and gives an added zest to the joys of gardening.

    Even before the frost has entirely left the ground, shrubs, hedges, vines, and climbing roses should be fertilized, so that the spring rains may carry the tonic directly to the roots of the plants. Manure (it no longer can be called barnyard, since in no self-respecting barn-yard can manure be gathered today), mixed with bone meal in the proportion of five shovels to the wheelbarrow of manure, is best for the purpose.

    As soon as the ground can be dug, shrubs and hardy vines should be transplanted, or set out. All soft-wooded trees, such as poplars, willows, catalpas, tulips,

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