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SAVE THE INSECTS — AND THE WORLD!

Ok, that sounds a bit cheeky, but it is not an exaggeration. We need a robust insect population to survive.  Why am I writing about the importance of insects on a garden design blog?  Because the world’s insect population has fallen precipitously in recent years, and those of us who garden can do our part to  help restore the balance. 

 

Insects are critical to  the earth’s ecosystem in many ways. First, as pollinators, they are a necessary part of food production. At least a third of all agricultural crops are dependent on insect pollination for production.  Strawberries, apples, and tomatoes are just a few of  the foods reliant on insect pollination.

Perennials that draw pollinating insects are planted alongside vegetables in Gravetye Manor’s  kitchen garden.

Second, they are a tasty and essential part of the diets of many birds, fish and animals.

A Great Blue Heron hangs out along the Capital Trees Low Line. Herons eat fish, and fish eat insects.

Third,  as Professor Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson writes in the Wall Street Journal (subscription required), “among the essential services that insects perform for us and the planet is waste management. As life ends for plants and animals of all sizes, from midges to moose, somebody or something has to break up and eliminate the dead organic matter. It might not be a hotshot job, but the processes of decomposition and decay are critical to life on Earth.”

 

A butterfly feeds on a rotting fig.

 

Insects will contribute to the necessary decomposition of the apples that fall to the ground. Rampisham Hill Farm, Dorset, England.

Here are a few fascinating statistics cited  by  Sverdrup-Thygeson, a professor of conservation biology at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, and the author of the book Buzz, Sting, Bite:  Why We Need Bugs :

  • While  humans have doubled our population in the past 40 years, the number of insects has been reduced by almost half, according to a 2014 report in the journal Science.
  • Three quarters of all known plant and animal species on this planet are insects. Those giant quantities help to keep nature in balance, so anything that affects them ultimately affects us.
  • Herbivores eat just 10% of all plant production.  90% is left lying on the ground — impressive amounts of protein and carbohydrates in need of recycling. Insects eat the rotten remains, which not only clears the ground of dead plants and animals, but also returns the nutrients to the soil. Without it, new life could not grow.

Shrubs, trees, and wildflowers border this field, providing pollinators for the crops, shelter and food for birds and wildlife, and erosion control to protect streams.

 

WHAT WE CAN DO TO HELP

  1. Plant more trees, shrubs, vines and perennials on your property.  Shoot for making a large percentage of those plants native, as those are the plants our native insects rely on.   Reduce the amount of mown lawn, and increase planting beds and meadows. Consider planting fewer “double” flower cultivars, as these tend to contain little nectar, and are difficult for pollinators to access.  Leave as many wild, undisturbed areas as possible to support wildlife.

Native Virginia Bluebells (Mertensia virginica) spread under a Crapemyrtle (Lagerstroemia indica) at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden.

 

This four-season border at Dumbarton Oaks includes native and non-native perennials, and, importantly, provides nectar, pollen, food, and shelter year- round.

 

Native Blue Flag Iris (Iris versicolor) and Sensitive Fern (Onoclea sensibilis) are planted in a large swath.

 

The owner of this Little Compton, Rhode Island garden limits the amount of mowed lawn, allowing meadow to grow along the edge of Brigg’s Marsh, which filters pollutants, limits erosion, and attracts  and protects insects.

 

 

Perennials and grasses are cultivated in a meadow planting at Sakonnet Garden. Owners John Gwynne and Mikel Folcarelli continuously study and experiment with the best methods of providing a biodiverse habitat for specific species of birds native to the area.

 

2. Reconsider what it means to have a cultivated garden.  For those who love a manicured garden, try to throw a little caution to the wind and become a bit less tidy.   Do not cut back perennials and grasses until late winter or early spring,and leave as many wild, undisturbed areas as possible, allowing wildlife to use the plants for shelter, food and nesting material.  

Capital Trees leaves the native Joe Pye Weed (Eutrochium purpureum) throughout the winter along the Low Line and at Great Shiplock Park in the rain garden.

 

Members of the Groundworks RVA Green Team cut back the Joe Pye Weed and grasses in the rain garden at Great Shiplock Park in late winter.

 

Capital One employees volunteer their time with Capital Trees to cut back shrubs and perennials in late winter. Capital Trees leaves most plants unpruned throughout the fall and winter to provide food, shelter and nesting material for wildlife at Great Shiplock Park and the Low Line.

 

3.  Cease or minimize the  use of pesticides. Many of you have heard me say that I’m a Darwinist gardener.  I began as such because I just didn’t have the time or inclination to deal with high-maintenance  plants that could not thrive without my special attention or intervention.   As it turns out, my laziness paid off, as this is also the most environmentally sound way to garden. Pesticides are not selective.  They kill whatever they come into contact with.  Spray a plant to kill one pest (or the entire property to kill mosquitos), and you kill other species that come into contact with the poison, thus affecting the entire ecosystem. 

Bees feast on a Poppy in the Gravetye Manor kitchen garden.

 

Gravetye Manor leaves the fields unmowed throughout the growing season, cutting a path near the water’s edge.

 

4.  For those with larger properties, including farms, offset the monoculture of crops by allowing wide buffers to border the fields, and increase the amount of land dedicated to meadows, hedgerows, verges or tree canopy.

Flora and Ed allow grasses and wildflowers to grow  through much of their property in Lasham, England. Flora owns a cooking school on the property and grows some of the food used for her delicious meals.

 

5.  If your property includes woodlands, allow some fallen trees and branches to decay, providing  homes for insects. 

Woodland plants grow alongside the decaying tree stumps in Sakonnet Garden.

 

6.  Encourage your locality and state to  increase conservation and wilderness areas;   to  plant more shrubs, trees and perennials in public parks and increase the matrix of green spaces throughout the city and region; to join the verge movement, by decreasing the frequency of mowing in roads’ rights-of-way during the growing season. 

Native Foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia) grows at the edge of the CSX viaduct along the Capital Trees Low Line and Virginia Capital Trail.

 

Perennials and native trees grow along the Capital Trees Low Line and Virginia Capital Trail in Richmond’s Shockoe Bottom.

 

James River Association’s Amber Ellis leads a group of volunteers planting native woodland perennials at the James River Park System’s Chapel Island. JRA and Capital Trees work with the JRPS Invasive Plant Task Force to restore native habitat throughout the James River Park System.

 

In England, Plantlife is leading the charge to encourage localities to allow roadside verges to go unmown duirng the growing season. Let’s do the same in our own localities. It saves the government money and increases the amount of public space providing wildlife habitat.

 

How cool is this insect house at Sakonnet Garden?  By using a variety of materials, the insect house (also called an insect hotel) attracts a wide range of insects. 

 

You can just see the wheels turning as Hylah Boyd, who forwarded me the Sverdrup-Thygeson article, surveys the landscape.  The Capital Trees Board member has recommended that  boy scouts and other volunteer groups build insect houses in Richmond’s parks and public landscapes. Capital Trees is exploring the possibility of building one along the Low Line.

 

In conclusion, I again quote Sverdrup-Thygeson: “high biological diversity makes ecosystems more resistant and resilient.  . .  A varied global landscape provides many more opportunities for the flourishing of complex insect life — and everything that depends on it, including us.”

 

 

 

Let’s do our part to make sure that we can continue to enjoy fantastical steel dandelions (at the Royal Horticulture Society’s Wisley Garden) as well as nature’s version.

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HOLLYWOOD CEMETERY’S HERITAGE ROSES

 

Hollywood

Richmond’s historic Hollywood Cemetery, renowned for being the resting place for many notable Virginians, is also home to a vast collection of heritage roses, many with fascinating histories of their own. I first became acquainted with Hollywood’s roses in 2011, when I worked with fellow members of the James River Garden Club (JRGC) to update Hollywood’s Notable Tree and Rose Map.  James River’s Evie Scott, Hollywood general manager David Gilliam and Van Yahres Associates, a site design firm in Charlottesville that advises Hollywood on its legacy trees, led the endeavor.

cabbage

Connie believes the Goodall Rose is ‘Radiance’, a hybrid tea.

Fast forward to the summer of 2012, when Kelly Wilbanks,  Executive Director of Friends of Hollywood, turned her attention to the roses. Kelly understands both the historic and horticultural importance of the roses to the cemetery.  Determined to find someone with rose knowledge to help her at Hollywood, she attended a Richmond Rose Society meeting.  Kelly says, “I wasn’t even sure what help meant and had no idea where it might lead or what it might produce.”

not sure

‘Cecile Brunner’ climbing rose envelopes the Harrison monument

Happily for Kelly, Connie HIlker, owner of Hartwood Roses in Spotsylvania County, was at the meeting, and immediately jumped at the chance to help.  Kelly discovered that Connie had been studying, documenting and propagating Hollywood’s roses for several years (see Connie’s blogs on the Hollywood roses). Talk about a fortuitous meeting!  Kelly had found an expert who already knew Hollywood’s roses as old friends, and Connie would be able to continue the work she had begun, but now she would do so in conjunction with Hollywood’s leadership.

hmm

The ‘Howe Rose’ is an unidentified Tea rose

Since that meeting, Connie has worked with Hollywood Grounds Supervisor Donald Toney to locate and identify over 100 heritage roses in the cemetery, and devise a maintenance and conservation schedule. The identification includes noting the class, growth habits and present condition of each rose. Connie very kindly took the time to identify for this post several Hollywood roses.

Larus

Connie has not yet identified the Larus Rose, but it is one of her favorites.

My next brush with Hollywood’s roses came while touring  the grounds of Tufton Farm and Monticello that fall with JRGC.  At Tufton (home to the Thomas Jefferson Center for Historic Plants), I learned the intriguing history of ‘Champneys Pink  Cluster’ Noisette. The name rang a bell, because I had come across the rose while doing the research for the updated Notable Tree and Rose Map at Hollywood.

champneys at HW

‘Champneys Pink Cluster’ rose in Hollywood Cemetery

‘Champneys Pink Cluster’ Rose is credited as the first Noisette. I had always assumed that, given its name, Noisette’s heritage was French.  Not so!   In the early 1800‘s John Champneys, president of the South Carolina Horticultural Society,  crossed the white musk cluster rose (Rosa moschata) and the ever-blooming ‘Old Blush’ China rose to produce ‘Champneys Pink Cluster’, with clusters of pale pink flowers that bloomed throughout the season.

Champneys close

‘Champneys Pink Cluster’ rose at Tufton Farm in Albemarle County

Champneys shared cuttings with Long Island nursery owner William Prince (who provided many plants to Jefferson) and with his Charleston neighbor, Pillippe Noisette.  Noisette, son of head gardener to Louis XVI (Phillipe came to America to avoid the French Revolution), produced his own seedlings, labeled them ‘Blush’ and shipped some to his gardener brother Louis Noisette in Paris.  There, Louis Noisette produced several varieties from the Champneys cross, and this class became known as Noisette.  While Mr. Champneys was not credited with the creation of a new repeat blooming cluster class of roses, he will always be lauded by rosarians for initiating the beloved Noisette class.

roses at Tufton

At Tufton farm, ‘Champneys’ is grown on these good looking, simple, rustic supports

After touring Tufton, we popped over to neighboring Monticello.  There, Peggy Cornett, director of the Thomas Jefferson Center for Historic Plants, drew our attention to Rosa moschata, or musk rose (a parent of ‘Champneys’).  In 1985, rose rustler Marie Butler discovered the musk, thought to be extinct, in Hollywood’s Crenshaw plot.  In 1998, Peggy, Douglas Seidel and Diane Lowe discovered a musk at The Recess at Bremo plantation.   The Bremo Musk has since been dated to 1815.  The musk now growing at Monticello was subsequently propagated from the Bremo Musk. Extensive research was done by many, including Cornett, Seidel and Butler (recounted in a paper published by the Southern Garden History Association), in an attempt to find a link between the Bremo Musk and the Crenshaw Rose, but no connection has been made. As Butler stated, “the discovery of the musk rose in America retains its aura of mystery.”

I apologize for this  woefully inadequate and brief attempt to summarize the complex history of these roses.  Meticulous and fascinating research has been done by Cornett, Seidel, Butler and others.  That research spans over four centuries, features Jefferson’s pursuit of the musk and follows the trail from Charlottesville to Long Island, Chesterfield, Hillsborough, Charlotte and, of course, Hollywood.  For anyone interested in a fascinating example of the intersection of American history and botanical history, I recommend that you begin your exploration with Monticello, the Heritage Rose Foundation and the Southern  Garden History Association.

Helen S Reed

James River Garden Club member Helen Scott Reed inspects the Musk Rose growing near Monticello’s portico.

Meanwhile, back at Hollywood . . .  Kelly and Connie took the next step toward restoring the historic roses to their former glory.  They held the inaugural Hollywood Rose Volunteer Workshop on a blustery day last March. Connie gave each group of 3 or 4 volunteers a list of assigned roses, a location map and instructions for specific pruning requirements for each plant.

crenshaw before

Stephen Scaniello and Anne Call pruning the legendary Crenshaw Rose

Anxious to follow up on our rose mapping project, curious to learn more about the roses, and excited to take part in such an ambitious and worthy horticultural and preservation effort, I came raring to go.  I will be forever indebted to Kelly for grabbing me and teaming me up with Peter Toms, the delightful Chairman of Friends of Hollywood, Stephen Scaniello, president of the Heritage Rose Foundation and former director of the famed Cranford Rose Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden and volunteer Anne Call.

crenshaw after

Stephen, Anne and Peter Toms admire their handiwork on the Crenshaw Rose.

And then the day got even better — Connie assigned our group the task of pruning the cemetery’s most celebrated rose.  Yes, the rose Peggy Cornett told us about at Monticello:  the Crenshaw Rose!  As reported by Peter in the Friends of Hollywood Newsletter, Stephen advised us, “think about what you are cutting and what it will look like when you do.  Take your time.  Have in mind the shape you ultimately want to achieve, and the height.  This is a cluster-flowered rose.  In fact, it is the ‘mother of all cluster-flowering roses.’”  We tamed that mother on that chilly March day!

crenshaw with stone

My visit to Hollywood in late May last year was a little early to capture the Crenshaw Rose in its peak glory.

crenshaw close at HW

Check out the abundance of buds on the Crenshaw Rose!

Hollywood is holding its second annual rose volunteer work day this Saturday, March 15.  If you love Hollywood’s history and grounds or are a passionate gardener who likes to roll up your sleeves, I highly recommend spending the day giving the historic roses some much appreciated love and care.  Contact Kelly Wilbanks, kwilbanks@hollywoodcemetery.org for more information.

rambler?

The bright red of this rose, possibly a ‘Crimson Rambler’, stands out against the soft new growth of the Boxwood.

In closing, I’ll leave you with a few pruning tips from Stephen Scaniello’s A Year of Roses:

Remove dead and diseased wood. Canes with unusual dicooration or severe looking blotches should be removed.

don't know

Remove weak, spindly canes and crossing branches from the center of the plant to allow air to circulate the plant.

close up of?

The Doswell Rose is an unidentified ‘Alba’.

Shorten remaining canes, making each cut about a quarter inch above a bud eye (the swelling red point located along the cane). These buds develop into new branches that will produce a flower. Because the new growth grows in the direction of the bud eye, be sure to make your cuts above outward facing buds.

pres circle

An ‘Old Blush’ rose by Presidents Circle thrives. Some bushes in this area have perished in recent years.