A wild-flower garden has a most
attractive sound. One thinks of long tramps in the woods, collecting material,
and then of the fun in fixing up a real for sure wild garden.
Many people say they have no luck
at all with such a garden. It is not a question of luck, but a question of
understanding, for wild flowers are like people and each has its personality.
What a plant has been accustomed to in Nature it desires always. In fact
, when
removed from its own sort of living conditions, it sickens and dies. That is
enough to tell us that we should copy Nature herself. Suppose you are hunting
wild flowers. As you choose certain flowers from the woods, notice the soil
they are in, the place, conditions, the surroundings, and the neighbours.
Suppose you find dog-tooth
violets and wind-flowers growing near together. Then place them so in your own
new garden. Suppose you find a certain violet enjoying an open situation; then
it should always have the same. You see the point, do you not? If you wish wild
flowers to grow in a tame garden make them feel at home. Cheat them into almost
believing that they are still in their native haunts.
Wild flowers ought to be
transplanted after blossoming time is over. Take a trowel and a basket into the
woods with you. As you take up a few, a columbine, or a hepatica, be sure to
take with the roots some of the plant's own soil, which must be packed about it
when replanted.
The bed into which these plants
are to go should be prepared carefully before this trip of yours. Surely you do
not wish to bring those plants back to wait over a day or night before
planting. They should go into new quarters at once. The bed needs soil from the
woods, deep and rich and full of leaf mold. The under drainage system should be
excellent. Then plants are not to go into water-logged ground. Some people
think that all wood plants should have a soil saturated with water. But the
woods themselves are not water-logged. It may be that you will need to dig your
garden up very deeply and put some stone in the bottom. Over this the top soil
should go. And on top, where the top soil once was, put a new layer of the rich
soil you brought from the woods.
Before planting water the soil
well. Then as you make places for the plants put into each hole some of the
soil which belongs to the plant which is to be put there.
I think it would be a rather nice
plan to have a wild-flower garden giving a succession of bloom from early
spring to late fall; so let us start off with March, the hepatica, spring
beauty and saxifrage. Then comes April bearing in its arms the beautiful columbine,
the tiny bluets and wild geranium. For May there are the dog-tooth violet and
the wood anemone, false Solomon's seal, Jack-in-the-pulpit, wake robin,
bloodroot and violets. June will give the bellflower, mullein, bee balm and
foxglove. I would choose the gay butterfly weed for July. Let turtle head,
aster, Joe Pye weed, and Queen Anne's lace make the rest of the season
brilliant until frost.
Let us have a bit about the likes
and dislikes of these plants. After you are once started you'll keep on adding
to this wild-flower list.
There is no one who doesn't love
the hepatica. Before the spring has really decided to come, this little flower
pokes its head up and puts all else to shame. Tucked under a covering of dry
leaves the blossoms wait for a ray of warm sunshine to bring them out. These
embryo flowers are further protected by a fuzzy covering. This reminds one of a
similar protective covering which new fern leaves have. In the spring a
hepatica plant wastes no time on getting a new suit of leaves. It makes its old
ones do until the blossom has had its day. Then the new leaves, started to be
sure before this, have a chance. These delayed, are ready to help out next
season. You will find hepaticas growing in clusters, sort of family groups. They
are likely to be found in rather open places in the woods. The soil is found to
be rich and loose. So these should go only in partly shaded places and under
good soil conditions. If planted with other woods specimens give them the
benefit of a rather exposed position, that they may catch the early spring
sunshine. I should cover hepaticas over with a light litter of leaves in the
fall. During the last days of February, unless the weather is extreme take this
leaf covering away. You'll find the hepatica blossoms all ready to poke up
their heads.
The spring beauty hardly allows
the hepatica to get ahead of her. With a white flower which has dainty tracings
of pink, a thin, wiry stem, and narrow, grass-like leaves, this spring flower
cannot be mistaken. You will find spring beauties growing in great patches in
rather open places. Plant a number of the roots and allow the sun good
opportunity to get at them. For this plant loves the sun.
The other March flower mentioned
is the saxifrage. This belongs in quite a different sort of environment. It is
a plant which grows in dry and rocky places. Often one will find it in chinks
of rock. There is an old tale to the effect that the saxifrage roots twine
about rocks and work their way into them so that the rock itself splits.
Anyway, it is a rock garden plant. I have found it in dry, sandy places right
on the borders of a big rock. It has white flower clusters borne on hairy
stems.
The columbine is another plant
that is quite likely to be found in rocky places. Standing below a ledge and
looking up, one sees nestled here and there in rocky crevices one plant or more
of columbine. The nodding red heads bob on wiry, slender stems. The roots do
not strike deeply into the soil; in fact, often the soil hardly covers them.
Now, just because the columbine has little soil, it does not signify that it is
indifferent to the soil conditions. For it always has lived, and always should
live, under good drainage conditions. I wonder if it has struck you, how really
hygienic plants are? Plenty of fresh air, proper drainage, and good food are
fundamentals with plants.
It is evident from study of these
plants how easy it is to find out what plants like. After studying their
feelings, then do not make the mistake of huddling them all together under poor
drainage conditions.
I always have a feeling of
personal affection for the bluets. When they come I always feel that now things
are beginning to settle down outdoors. They start with rich, lovely, little
delicate blue blossoms. As June gets hotter and hotter their colour fades a
bit, until at times they look quite worn and white. Some people call them
Quaker ladies, others innocence. Under any name they are charming. They grow in
colonies, sometimes in sunny fields, sometimes by the road-side. From this we
learn that they are more particular about the open sunlight than about the
soil.
If you desire a flower to pick
and use for bouquets, then the wild geranium is not your flower. It droops very
quickly after picking and almost immediately drops its petals. But the purplish
flowers are showy, and the leaves, while rather coarse, are deeply cut. This
latter effect gives a certain boldness to the plant that is rather attractive.
The plant is found in rather moist, partly shaded portions of the woods. I like
this plant in the garden. It adds good colour and permanent colour as long as
blooming time lasts, since there is no object in picking it.
There are numbers and numbers of
wild flowers I might have suggested. These I have mentioned were not given for
the purpose of a flower guide, but with just one end in view your understanding
of how to study soil conditions for the work of starting a wild-flower garden.
If you fear results, take but one
or two flowers and study just what you select. Having mastered, or better,
become acquainted with a few, add more another year to your garden. I think you
will love your wild garden best of all before you are through with it. It is a
real study, you see.
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