Tag Archives: garden

Gardening and Karel Capek

I have been preparing my garden for me to be away in India for several weeks. We have arranged for a housesitter and our daughter will also check in on our plants and pets (2 dogs, 2 cats, and a bird) but other than “mow-and-blow” upkeep, no actual gardening will be done. I have put down weed cloth and mulch and trimmed and tidied and hope that all is in readiness.

We have about 1/4 acre of yard and garden (including 170 feet of the Guadalupe riverbank) and all the plants and trees have just woken up for Spring. My almond trees are in full bloom, the jessamine vine flowers are just opening, the orange, apricot, and peach are in bud and I have pots and beds of daffodils and narcissus cheerfully nodding in day’s warm breeze. The weeds and stray grass are working to colonize any bare ground; snails and slugs are always with us. My garden is still recovering from the long hard frost we had last month. There are sections of bougainvillea and trumpet vine and bird of paradise which are yellow brown. I am not sure yet whether these hardest-hit plants will sprout green soon or are as dead as they look. By the time we are back, I will know.

Karel Capek is most famous for having introduced and made popular the word robot, which first appeared in his play R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots) in 1921. However, my favorite Karel Capek work is The Gardener’s Year from 1929. Here is Capek’s description of a dedicated gardener leaving on vacation:

[The amateur gardener] departs, however, with a heavy heart, full of fears and cares for his garden; and he will not go until he has found a friend or relation to whom he entrusts his garden for that time.

“Look here,” he says “there is nothing to be done now in the garden in any case; if you come and look once in three days, that will be quite enough, and if something here and there is not in order, you must write me a card, and I will come. So, I am relying on you then? As I said, five minutes will be enough, just a glance round.”

Then he leaves, having laid his garden upon the heart of an obliging fellow-creature. Next day the fellow-creature receives a letter: “I forgot to tell you that the garden must be watered every day, the best times for doing it are five in the morning and towards seven in the evening. It is practically nothing, you only fasten the hose to the hydrant and water for a few moments. Will you please water the conifers all over as they stand, and thoroughly, and the lawn as well? If you see any weeds, pull them out. That’s all.”

A day after: “It’s frightfully dry, will you give every rhododendron about two buckets of tepid water, and each conifer five buckets, and other trees about two buckets? The perennials, which are now in flower, ought to have a good deal of water — write by post what is in flower. Withered stalks must be cut off! It would be a good thing if you loosened all the beds with a hoe; the soil breathes much better then. If there are plant-lice on the roses, buy tobacco extract, and syringe them with it while the dew is on, or after a rain. Nothing else need be done at present.”

The sixth day: “I am sending you by express post a box of plants from the country…. They must go into the ground at once…. At night you ought to go into the garden with a lamp and destroy snails. It would be good to weed the paths. I hope that looking after my garden doesn’t take up much of your time, and that you are enjoying it.”

In the meantime the obliging fellow-creature, conscious of his responsibilities, waters, mows, tills, weeds, and wanders round with the box of seedlings looking where the devil he can plant them; he sweats, and is muddied all over; he notices with horror that here some damned plant is fading, and there some stalks are broken, and that the lawn has become rusty, and that the whole garden is somehow looking blasted, and he curses the moment when he took upon himself this burden, and he prays to Heaven for autumn to come.

And in the meantime the owner of the garden thinks with uneasiness of his flowers and lawns, sleeps badly, curses because the obliging fellow-creature is not sending him reports every day on the state of the garden, and he counts the days to his return, posting every other day a box of plants from the country and a letter with a dozen urgent commands. Finally he returns; still with the baggage in his hands he rushes into his garden and looks round with damp eyes —
“That laggard, that dolt, that pig,” he thinks bitterly, “he has made a mess of my garden!”
“Thank you”, he says dryly to his fellow-creature, and like a living reproach he snatches the hose to water the neglected garden. (That idiot, he thinks in the bottom of his heart, to trust him with anything! Never in my life will I be such a fool and an ass to go away for the holidays!)

While I am in the Garden City of Bangalore, I know I will enjoy being where I am (and not behave like Capek’s gardener!). I will visit the Lal Bagh Botanical Gardens and maybe bring back new gardening ideas.

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Cottage for Sale, Must Be Moved

I just finished reading Cottage for Sale, Must Be Moved:
A Woman Moves a House to Make a Home

    by Kate Whouley
    Paperback: 336 pages
    Publisher: Ballantine Books; Reprint edition (April 26, 2005)
    ISBN: 034548018X

Since my family is in the middle of moving a caboose into our backyard, I found many of Kate Whouley’s experiences entertainingly familiar. Cottage for Sale describes the year-long experiences of the author (and her cat Egypt) in purchasing, moving, and marrying a tiny 1-bedroom cottage with her small 1-bedroom house on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The author is a freelance consultant and writer who wanted a separate room for her office. Her entire house, after the cottage is added on, ends up smaller than 800 square feet, so this is a project and a book on an intimate scale.

Kate Whouley’s motivations for marrying two old houses rather than building a new addition seem partly the lower cost, partly aesthetics, and partly environmental – wanting to reuse and recycle. I share many of her values and motivations. Our own home was built around 1926 (before the land was part of San Jose) and is probably the oldest house in our area. Our neighborhood has recently been invaded by nasty new “monster houses” or “McMansions” – two storeys, 3,000 square feet or more, overwhelming their lots with big driveways, minimal yard space, massive garages, and ugly-or-at-best-boring design – replacing older 1,000 to 2,000 square foot cottages surrounded by large gardens. Check out The Not So Big House for more on the trend toward smaller, better built, spaces.

I don’t agree with all of Kate Whouley’s choices. Uncharacteristically, she put in a new mahogany wood deck rather than use Trex (recycled plastic and waste wood decking material) because, as she writes: “It is sooo ugly!”. We used Trex on a deck and a balcony several years ago and have been very happy with it. It does not burn feet in summer, does not shed splinters or need upkeep, and is already the soft grey of weathered wood. We plan to use Trex for the deck (station platform) which will go along the side of our caboose. However, Kate Whouley’s choice to reuse older windows and doors and in general to spend extra time and money to respect the original style and period of both of her small houses makes good sense to me.

Cottage for Sale documents the small sequence of choices the author made to give a meaningful and useful shape to her home. William Morris:”Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.”

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Gardening Around the Homeless

tree aloe and prickly pear cactus on Guadalupe River San Jose, June 2016

We found that there is a camp of homeless down at the edge of the Guadalupe River on our back property line. Last week, one of them came along the top of the bank carrying a lawn chair when I was pulling weeds nearby. He ignored me and walked down the bank to his waterside tent. This camp is of great concern because the water level can rise quickly and it is very dangerous for them to be so close to the waterline of a deep and fast river.

This weekend, we went down the bank to check out the (uninhabited) camp. We found that they had been digging into the embankment – not good for the structural integrity of an earthwork that keeps hundreds of homes dry – and had built a home with a brick walk, an outhouse over the river, a portable TV with battery, plus lots of bicycles, chairs, and stuff. Our neighbor recognized some of the stuff as having been taken from his property. The homeless have been getting in and out by creating a new trail along the waterline. If they walked on the top of the bank, either we or our dogs would see them.

We and our neighbors have been alternating calling the San Jose Homeless Abatement Metro Unit (which is in charge of illegal homeless camps) and “911” (which is in charge of dangerous homeless behavior and stealing by homeless) every few days for several weeks. We talked with the water company about the damage to the embankment. The police came out twice last month but no one was in the camp so they didn’t do anything. They haven’t come out lately that we know of. The Metro Unit is supposed to “tag” a camp, move them out after 3 days, then clean up the camps once a month. No action yet.

Since we had some tree and dracena trimming to do anyway, we dumped the brush onto the new riverside path in the hope of discouraging foot traffic. After this, I am going to drop all of my prickly pear cactus trimmings down the bank rather than putting them out for the weekly yard waste pickup. I feel badly that these people are homeless but I don’t want them drowning in their sleep or stealing things to furnish their home.

6/9/2016 Update: San Jose has evolved its way of managing the homeless.  The current City of San Jose webpage is called Ending Homelessness which offers a Homeless Helpline (at 408.510.7600) to express concerns for homeless persons or encampments.  Current photos of my prickly barrier:

prickly pear cactus and agave on Guadalupe River San Jose, June 2016

cactus on Guadalupe River San Jose, June 2016

Images Copyright 2016 by Katy Dickinson

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Gardening on the Guadalupe

After many months of searching, I am excited to have just placed a order with Yamagami’s Nursery for two matilija poppy plants (Romneya coulteri) and two Silk Trees (Albizia julibrissin Durazz. ‘Rosea’). Matilija poppies grow really big. At my old house, I had one that reached seven feet tall every summer. Each grey-green stalk bears large white flowers with yellow centers that look like fried eggs.

We live on the bank of San Jose’s upper Guadalupe River. Our big home improvement project last year was to replace the falling-down wooden embankment wall with a 170 x 4 foot wall made of concrete architectural blocks which look like old stones. For several weeks before Christmas, our yard was invaded by lots of energetic young men with loud radios, shovels, and Bobcat excavators. The resulting wall looks wonderful. It helps keep the Guadalupe out of our house. Better yet, the existing prickly pear cactus, broom, crape myrtles,and oleanders survived the construction.

Once The Wall was done, I had a big new area in my garden. All Spring, I have been planting prostrate rosemary, cotoneaster, various colors of ice plant, lavender, and other hardy plants that like it hot and dry on top of the bank. From the start, I wanted to focus the new plantings around matilija poppies but I had to find some first. These “back of the border” plants are very hard to grow from seed or transplant. Matilija poppies are not a popular nursery item because they require lots of space and they misbehave by sending out invasive runners. Our river embankment is the perfect place.

The silk trees are going into the planting strip between our driveway and our neighbor’s where they will provide a lovely source of shade. They should arrive next week. Hooray!

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