Cut me a tree

One of the last yearly harvests is that of the Christmas tree. We have a dozen or so planted on the property at different stages of growth. The spruces are outside the fence (where the deer can ignore them) and the firs on the inside (where the deer can’t eat them). Most years, like this […]

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December dormancy

Every day I look out toward the garden, I see little change. All of the plants and the grounds seem suspended in time. The growing season is over and the napping season has begun. The dominant color is brown, with the occasional sound of a dried-up leaf scraping against the patio slates, pushed by the […]

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Time to say goodbye

After nearly 15 years, it is time to hang up my trowel at Ann’s Place. It has been both a joy and privilege to work with its many clients and help design and maintain the grounds. A big shout out goes to Wilda Hayes ( @wmorgh) who trusted me initially when Ann’s Place was in […]

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Skunk alert!

Brisk temperatures seem to come later and later each year. Just last week when I was working outside, the acrid smell of skunk made its way up the hill, something you don’t expect mid-November when skunks are usually in torpor. And its deliverer, perhaps, decided to visit my house the other day as I so […]

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Great news!

I was honored to discover last week that my book, A Therapist’s Garden, was listed as a finalist for the 2023 Independent Author Network Book of the Year Awards. Even sweeter, it was chosen in two categories—general non-fiction and Health/Medicine/Fitness/Dieting. Writing A Therapist’s Garden has been such a great experience as I have been able […]

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Mutant harvest

It is slim pickings in the vegetable garden. After a few frosts we have a couple of crops left: sorrel, herbs, leeks, greens and radishes. The greens will last through Christmas, hopefully, but the radishes are fewer in number. Juana asked me to pull a couple the other day for a dish she was preparing. […]

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Autumn asparagus

One of the last things I remove from the garden in Fall are asparagus leaves. They look more like ferns but that would be to confuse them with their ornamental relative. They tower over the neighboring rhubarb and strawberry plants in one of my many perennial beds. This morning in the early sun, they glisten […]

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Late flowers

The witch hazel at @annsplaceinc looks even more spectacular than normal as its background is mostly empty of greenery. Its feathery, mid-to-late Autumn butter yellow flowers stand out in their color and unusualness. Witch hazels are an unusual example of co-evolution as they are pollinated by the winter moth, which can raise its body temperature […]

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Chinese chestnuts

Though the American chestnut tree is but a faint memory and presence, its Chinese counterpart has mostly taken its place in the landscape (for now). Working last week at McKeon farm in Ridgefield, one of my fellow commissioners sent me a picture of harvested chestnuts from a tree at the far end of its orchard. […]

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Fruits for the Fall

The first frost is expected in the next few days. With that event, more leaves will fall and the tender perennials with shrivel. But some of the plants I tend come into their own as others fade with the season. This year’s Japanese beautyberry is the most spectacular of the group as its long, pendulous […]

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