March 20, 2026 Johan Martin Christian Lange, Muriel Stuart, Henrik Ibsen, A Year at Great Dixter by Christopher Lloyd, and Adriana Hoffmann
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Today’s Show Notes
Today is the vernal equinox, the moment when light and dark stand equal in a single day.
Outside, the snow still lingers at the fence line, but the sun hangs higher now.
In the garden, this is a threshold day.
Seeds still asleep.
Ideas still forming.
So much waiting, and so much potential.
Today holds what lies dormant.
And what happens when it’s finally given room to grow.
Today’s Garden History
1818 Johan Martin Christian Lange was born.
Johan devoted his life to bringing order to the plant world, not to tame it, but to understand it.
As director of the Copenhagen Botanical Garden, he helped guide the garden’s move to its present home, reimagining how plants could be gathered, studied, and shared.
Under his care, extraordinary glasshouses rose, vast structures of iron and light, modeled after London’s Crystal Palace.
They held warmth against the northern cold, and made room for plants from far beyond Denmark, living collections the public could finally walk through, see up close, and learn from.
Johan was also the final editor of Flora Danica, one of the most ambitious botanical projects ever undertaken.
Hundreds of plates.
Thousands of plants.
Each rendered with patience and precision.
It was not a book meant to impress.
It was meant to be used, so that when a plant was named, that name could be trusted.
For Johan, classification was a form of care.
A way of saying: to know a plant well is the beginning of respect.
1885 Muriel Stuart was born.
Muriel began her life as a poet, praised by Thomas Hardy, who admired her fierce, modern voice.
But over time, Muriel’s attention shifted.
From language to soil.
From public acclaim to private tending.
After the birth of her children, Muriel turned toward gardening, and toward a different kind of writing.
In books like Gardener’s Nightcap, Muriel wrote not to instruct, but to settle the reader.
She wrote:
“There is an hour just before dark, when the garden resents interference.
Its work, no less than the gardener’s, is done.
Do not meddle with the garden at that hour.
It demands, as all living creatures demand, a time of silence…”
Muriel believed the garden had moods.
Needs.
Limits.
“Do not meddle,” she advised.
Proof that even as she gardened, Muriel never lost her poet’s sense of wonder.
Nowhere is that clearer than in her writing about seeds.
Here is Muriel’s poem, The Seed Shop:
Here in a quiet and dusty room they lie,
Faded as crumbled stone or shifting sand,
Forlorn as ashes, shrivelled, scentless, dry,
Meadows and gardens running through my hand.In this brown husk a dale of hawthorn dreams;
A cedar in this narrow cell is thrust
That will drink deeply of a century’s streams;
These lilies shall make summer on my dust.Here in their safe and simple house of death,
Sealed in their shells, a million roses leap;
Here I can blow a garden with my breath,
And in my hand a forest lies asleep.
Muriel adored seeds, those small, unassuming vessels of astonishing possibility, waiting quietly in packets, drawers, and pockets, holding whole summers in their sleep.
Her reverence for gardening still holds us captive.
Unearthed Words
In today’s Unearthed Words, we hear a poem from the Norwegian playwright, Henrik Ibsen, born on this day in 1828.
Henrik lived and wrote in Norway, a country shaped by long winters, steep valleys, and short growing seasons along the North Sea coast.
He often used gardens and landscapes as moral terrain, places where ideas about freedom, beauty, and control could quietly play out.
In his poem, Wildflowers and Hothouse Plants, flowers stand in for women.
The hothouse plants are trained, contained, admired for their polish, raised to behave, to bloom on schedule, to please.
The wildflowers, by contrast, grow without permission.
They breathe open air.
They carry scent, season, and unpredictability.
By the end of the poem, Henrik leaves no doubt where his allegiance lies.
He ends it like this:
They sleep by rule and by rule they wake,
Each tendril is taught its duties;
Were I worldly-wise, yes, my choice I’d make
From our stock of average beauties.For worldly wisdom what do I care?
I am sick of its prating mummers;
She breathes of the field and the open air,
And the fragrance of sixteen summers.
Some beauty cannot live under glass.
The garden has always known this.
For Henrik Ibsen, the wild beauty wins.
Always.
Book Recommendation
A Year at Great Dixter, by Christopher Lloyd
It’s time to grow the Grow That Garden Library, with today’s book: A Year at Great Dixter, by Christopher Lloyd.
It’s British Gardens Week here on The Daily Gardener, which means all of the book recommendations for this week feature books devoted to the landscapes, writers, and gardening traditions of Britain.
Christopher walks us through a year in his garden at Great Dixter, month by month, plant by plant, failure by failure.
He believed succession planting was an art, that gardens should change constantly, never settling into obedience.
He ripped out rose gardens.
Planted tropicals where tradition said no.
Trusted his eye more than convention.
What makes this book endure is not just the instruction, but the voice.
Opinionated.
Curious.
Unapologetically alive.
Christopher reminds us that a garden is not a rulebook.
It’s a conversation, one shaped by risk, response, and return.
Botanic Spark
And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.
2022 Adriana Hoffmann died at the age of eighty-two.
Adriana was a Chilean botanist and forest defender.
She spent her life walking through deserts, forests, and mountains across Chile, along the long spine of South America’s western edge.
She learned the names and habits of plants few others noticed.
As a child, she was rarely without flowers in her hands.
Later, she crossed the country by foot and by jeep, documenting species, sketching landscapes, listening closely to the land itself.
She wrote books.
She taught.
She defended forests when few others would.
Near the end of her life, she was asked what nature had given her, after all those years.
She answered with a single word:
Love.
Final Thoughts
There are days when light and dark stand even.
Only for a moment.
Morning and evening touch hands, and then the balance begins to lean.
The light does not wait.
It keeps a little more of the day.
The afternoon opens.
The shadows shorten.
In the garden, the change is already underway.
The soil softens.
The cold loosens its hold.
What was waiting begins to stir.
This is how the season turns, not carefully, but surely.
The balance breaks toward growth.
Toward lengthening days.
Toward return.
Tomorrow, it begins.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.

