March 30, 2026 Sir Henry Wotton, Franz Wilhelm Sieber, Robert Creeley, Two Gardeners by Katharine Sergeant White and Elizabeth Lawrence, and Isabelle Bowen Henderson
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Today’s Show Notes
Late March can be a little unsettling in the garden.
You’re looking for signs, for proof that things are moving.
But most days, the beds still look unchanged.
The shrubs haven’t said a word.
And the plants you worry about most are the ones doing the least.
The lilac is quiet.
The hydrangea looks like a bundle of sticks.
And you start to wonder if your garden is behind, or if you missed something important.
This is the season where a lot is happening out of sight, where the signs are subtle, and where timing matters more than speed.
Today’s stories belong to people who paid attention in moments like this, when growth was real, but not yet visible.
Today’s Garden History
1568 Sir Henry Wotton was born.
Before Henry was known for his writing, he was known for where he went.
As ambassador to Venice, he walked Italian gardens designed not to reveal themselves all at once.
Paths that turned.
Grottos that hid.
Water that sounded before it was seen.
He paid attention.
In 1624, he gathered those observations into The Elements of Architecture, a book that treats gardens not as decoration, but as experiences, places meant to unfold, places that reward patience.
Henry believed delight came from proportion and restraint, from letting a space hold something back.
He wrote about fountains placed just out of sight.
About aviaries that felt half-wild.
About gardens that surprised you, not by scale, but by timing.
And then there was his poetry.
Streamside.
Rod in hand.
Watching the season turn.
Here are his words, written as March gives way to spring:
And now all Nature seem’d in love,
The lusty sap began to move;
New juice did stir th’embracing Vines,
And Birds had drawn their Valentines…
The Fields and Gardens were beset
With Tulip, Crocus, Violet:
And now, though late, the modest Rose
Did more than half a blush disclose.
Henry noticed the moment before things fully arrive.
The sap just beginning to move.
The rose showing up late and not feeling the need to be more than it is.
He trusted that kind of timing, nature's timing.
And he knew, in gardens and in words, that sometimes the strongest choice is to hold something back.
1789 Franz Wilhelm Sieber was born.
The Austrian plant collector wanted everything, everywhere, all at once.
Trained first as an architect in Prague, he turned to botany with a restless intensity.
He traveled constantly, through Italy, Crete, Egypt, Palestine, Australia, Mauritius, and southern Africa.
He collected relentlessly. More than twenty thousand specimens passed through his hands.
Some made their way into Europe’s great gardens and herbaria.
Some were sold more than once.
Some were promised, then replaced with weeds.
His name is tied to scandal.
He convinced patrons to fund expeditions, including a climb of Mount Triglav, and returned with little to show for it.
He published hastily.
He overpromised.
He claimed discoveries he could not prove.
And yet plants traveled because of him.
Seeds moved.
Gardens changed.
By the 1830s, the pace caught up. Franz claimed a rabies cure, demanded funds, quarreled with officials, and spent his last fourteen years confined in a Prague psychiatric hospital.
His collections were scattered.
His reputation never recovered.
What remains is uneasy.
Plants that traveled.
Names that linger.
Records that don’t quite add up.
Unearthed Words
In today’s Unearthed Words, we hear an excerpt from the American poet Robert Creeley, who died on this day in 2005.
Robert spent much of his life moving between small towns, teaching, and writing poems that held tight spaces and sharp edges.
Here is his poem, The Flower:
I think I grow tensions
like flowers
in a wood where
nobody goes.
Each wound is perfect,
encloses itself
in a tinyimperceptible blossom,
making pain.
Let those words settle in the quiet.
A flower growing where nobody goes.
Book Recommendation
Two Gardeners by Katharine Sergeant White and Elizabeth Lawrence

It’s Garden Writers Week here on The Daily Gardener, and the books this week feature gardeners who turned their lived experience, questions, and daily observations into a lifelong written conversation.
The two gardener writers in today’s book are women still known and appreciated for their love of gardening and their observant and gentle personalities.
Katharine Sergeant White wrote from coastal Maine.
Elizabeth Lawrence wrote from the heat and clay of Raleigh, North Carolina.
They met in person only once.
What followed instead was nearly twenty years of letters.
They wrote about bulbs and borders. Weather and health.
Books, doubt, aging hands, and the strange comfort of returning to the same plants year after year.
There’s no performance here.
Just two gardeners thinking aloud, and discovering, over time, how much a garden gives back.
And that’s why gardeners love this book.
Botanic Spark
And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.
2025 The Isabelle Bowen Henderson House and Garden in North Carolina’s Piedmont region opened its gates for a rare public open day.
Between 1937 and 1938, the artist Isabelle Bowen Henderson built her garden as an extension of her studio.
She treated soil like a canvas.
Color mattered.
Sequence mattered.
What bloomed beside what, and when, mattered.
She hybridized irises and daylilies by the hundreds.
She lectured on color theory.
She believed a garden should be composed, not imposed.
A year ago today, visitors walked paths shaped by Isabelle over decades of tending and creativity.
They sipped a garden-inspired mocktail and walked Isabelle's beloved Bluebell Walk.
They toasted the 100th anniversary of the Raleigh Garden Club and reflected on a home and garden, Isabelle's place, saved from erasure by Preservation NC and Friends of Oberlin Village.
Some gardens survive not because they are grand, but because someone cared, and others remembered.
Final Thoughts
Late March lingers.
In a northern garden, most things are still holding back.
The crab apples stand bare and patient, buds tight, alive but saying nothing yet.
The scilla are just beginning to gather themselves, a faint green thread at the soil line, easy to miss.
The crocus may be up, or flattened again by cold.
They’re used to setbacks.
They’ll try once more.
The lilac looks unchanged.
Gray stems.
Firm buds.
No hurry.
And the hydrangea, it sleeps in.
Right now it looks dead.
It will keep that look well into spring. Sometimes into June.
That’s not failure.
That’s how it works.
This is a season for restraint.
For trusting what you can’t see yet.
For letting the garden move at its own pace.
Some things arrive early.
Some arrive late.
Some hold everything back until they’re ready.
Late March asks us to stay.
To notice what’s quietly waking.
And to leave room for what hasn’t appeared yet.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.
