Non-Profit Internet Source for News, Events, History, & Culture of Northern Frederick & Carroll County Md./Southern Adams County Pa.

 

The Small Town Gardener

'Easy’ is a matter of opinion

Marianne Willburn

(3/2023) With millions of innovative gardeners on this planet, differences of opinion and horticultural hair-pulling sessions are bound to erupt. Most of us look forward to a little good-natured thrust and parry – particularly in March when we’re all getting tired of endless conversations about how this winter stacked up to the last.

There is more than one way to do most things, and I rarely take issue with what works for another gardener. But something that does set my teeth on edge is the tendency in a media-saturated world to carelessly label too many techniques and plants with "easy" in an effort to sell copy or attract clicks. Normally I breeze by them, but the winter months can make me cranky.

The target of my ire this time: A sexy little picture of a maidenhair fern (adiantum) in a natural fiber pot captioned with a quick, breezy proclamation stating that they, along with Boston ferns, were easy to grow for the indoor gardener: "read: hard to kill." An even breezier comment told the reader to try "white allium" for something even daintier.

I took a double take. When you see something definitively stated in a glossy magazine, the first thing you do is question your own knowledge and experience. The second thing you do is question why it’s bothering you so much. Then you text a greenhouse grower friend to ascertain if you, are indeed, completely insane.

If you come out of that conversation fully vindicated, you must then decide if it’s time for one of those thinly veiled "I-know-more-than-you-do" letters to the editor that begin pompously with "Dear Editor, I was concerned to read in your last issue that…," and end with an editorial intern falling asleep over your encyclopedic use of botanical terms.

Luckily in these days of social media I could simply take the low road and vent my spleen on Facebook.

Not that I don’t love the many species of adiantum. Airy, delicately cut, and sporting filament-thin black stipes that contrast strikingly with bright green foliage, they are plants that inspire lust the moment you set eyes upon them. My latest garden impulse purchase in this genus is Adiantum venustum, commonly called the Himalayan maidenhair. I’ve killed it once before, but a better placement has made all the difference.

Maidenhair ferns love high humidity, and just enough water to keep them moist but not wet (which by the way describes the watering style of a very small percentage of houseplant owners). They can be adapted to low-humidity levels inside through a process of slow acclimatization, but I don’t feel that such a process can be termed "easy" with a straight face. ‘Easy’ is a philodendron and a rubber plant that you bought at a garage sale in 1992.

"Easy!?!" ranted I, and followed up with a paragraph of low-level vitriol on how tired I am of non- and novice gardeners being led up the garden path by ‘expert’ information that will lead to them feeling like failures when things go pear-shaped.

If I had a dollar for every person I’ve ever talked to who said "Oh, I tried houseplants – I just kill them, so I don’t bother anymore." I’d be writing this column from the Amalfi Coast.

Then I waited for the backlash.

John Boggan, who blogs at DC Tropics and is a horticulturalist friend and plant breeder from Washington, lobbed the ball back in my court, saying he had found adiantum to be "quite easy" – though he did agree with me on the ridiculousness of naming "white allium" as a dainty option (the genus is so broad, and in some cases, the foliage so coarse, that this made sense to neither of us).

I pointed out he was a plant breeder with years of experience. (15-love.)

He pointed out it was okay to kill a plant. (15-all.)

I ruminated on the truth in this statement but still felt that the main point is not to put people off from the very beginning by setting them up for failure. John and I both love plants – he’s a botanist by profession, I’m a garden writer – we’re willing to try again. But there are many others who just…won’t. It was on their behalf that my righteous morning anger sprung.

Regulating humidity and dialing it back can be tricky. I use a Wardian case to "harden off" certain plants to indoor conditions over time. There are other ways to regulate humidity, but that’s the easiest for me.

Call me cynical, but I just don’t think most people think along those lines when they see a lusty little plant and are told "Easy!" Better they are given realistic expectations so they know where to start looking when the plant dies – and hopefully, try again.

In the end, I wrote that letter to the editor too. For all my raging, I’m more old school than new.

Read past editions of The Small Town Gardener

Marianne is a Master Gardener and the author of Big Dreams, Small Garden.
You can read more at www.smalltowngardener.com