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Blog: On Health. On Writing. On Life. On Everything.

What Do A Book, Beethoven, And Bamboo Have In Common?

This morning, I listened to music while I was cleaning the house, after months of neglect. It was Ludwig van Beethoven’s string quartet op. 131. I can’t help myself but I always think about Beethoven as writing street music: A piper comes around the corner, creating excitement. A military band is heard from afar, then is coming nearer – the brass glittering in the sun, and the tune tickling the ear of little Ludwig. Coarse pub music lures with a rhythm that makes your feet stamp. A hurdy-gurdy man takes your penny and plays an ear worm that won’t leave your head for weeks to come – or never (Beethoven wrote this late in life). None of Beethoven’s music seems to show the street influence better than this quartet, if you ask me – and I am not an expert, just a listener. And then, in some passages, the street music stops, and you hear all the longing for a better life in young Ludwig’s soul. For all these reasons, I think LvB still speaks to us. At least to me. But that was not even what I wanted to talk about. Yesterday, it seems to be official now, my diabetes book (as my part as the writer is concerned) was finished, as per today I am not allowed to make any more changes. The book is supposed to come out in August – initially as a “direct mail” product from Rodale’s, my publisher. It will take a full year before they will release it as a paperback and will show up in stores. Of course, it is available at Rodale's before. I am exhausted, clearly. And elated. I have an idea for (and the first pages of) a new book, but I am not sure I still have the strength to go through with it. Give me a few days to recover – and to clean up the house! Another thing that happened today: With a friend, I spend the morning in the garden, trying to kill a bamboo that had sprung – and burst – the pot we had planted it in about two years ago. Or, I have to say, my friend worked and I talked – that’s probably the more truthful description of our endeavor. My family were in love with the bamboo at one time – until I noticed new strong shoots coming out beyond the circumference of the pot. My worst fears have come true: We followed one of the roots three yards into the lawn! Remember, I already have a beautiful wisteria that is crisscrossing my perennial bed with shoots thirty yards long (no lie!), and pachysandra that’s my bane, and wormwood that creeps deeper and deeper into my flowers. – That’s why the bamboo has to go – and don’t tell me, after you fall in love with a bamboo that I didn’t warn you! And, of course, I will plant one root in a pot on the terrace because I don't want to live without the beauty of bamboo.  Read More 
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Invasive Plants 2: List

My home state publishes a list on invasive species for Massachusetts, and also defines which criteria a plant has to meet to be labeled “invasive”: 1. It is not native to Massachusetts 2. Must have the “biologic potential for rapid and widespread dispersion and establishment” 3. Must have the “biologic potential for dispersing over spatial gaps away from the site of introduction” 4. Must have the “biologic potential for existing in high numbers” away from gardens 5. Must have been introduced to Massachusetts already The real text is a bit more cumbersome and bureaucratic – but we get the idea. There are tons of species on the lists, but here are a few from the list I would add to my list (this is arbitrary and based on my very personal experiences as a gardener at a single spot in Massachusetts – you might have a different opinion; it is worthwhile finding the list of invasive plants for your state!): 1. Japanese barberry – it stayed a single beautiful bush in my garden. But of course I can’t know to which places birds dispersed its seeds 2. Bittersweet. There are two bittersweets, with orange berries. One Celastrus scandens, the "American bittersweet" is non-invasive. The Asian or Oriental bittersweet is Celastrus orbiculatus, highly invasive. And it is the plant I called euonymus which I was familiar with from Europe. It seems, celastrus and euonymus are related species, and it is really the Celastrus orbiculatus that is so overly invasive. This vine’s berries are spread by birds, and the plant can strangle even trees. One of the worst I know – I would not plant it, and I am hacking it down wherever I meet it. 3. Purple loosestrife: Years ago, I bought a “butterfly bush” by mail order. It turned out to be purple loosestrife. As much as I try to eradicate it, it comes always up somewhere. 4. Wild rose (Rosa multiflora) is pretty while in bloom. But it flowers only once, and after flowering I always cut it of so it doesn’t set seeds. The rootstock, however – I’ll never get it out of my garden again. 5. Privet (Ligustrum vulgare) – it was in my garden when I moved in. It also might be another species as they are notoriously hard to identify. As often as I cut it back, it always pops up again. 6. Pennisetum, a vertically striped grass. Beautiful white and green. It is not invasive according to the Massachusetts definition, but like wisteria, it wants to take over my garden. There is a horizontally striped grass (Miscanthus sinensis) that might also become invasive – luckily, I never planted it. 7. White mulberry (Morus alba). Twice I planted a mulberry tree in my garden – mail orders. Twice they were not what they were advertised at: black mulberries. I wanted one in my garden desperately so that for once we can harvest our cherries before the birds do. Twice I had to hack down the tree because it grew as fast as Jack’s beanstalk – and did not deliver. Now, our alphabetical list looks like this: 1. Bamboo (more than 70 genera in the Poaceae family) 2. Bermuda grass (Cynodon dactylon, also: Panicum dactylon, Capriola dactylon) 3. Bindweed (many species from the Convolvulus or Calystegia families) 4. Bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus) 5. Blackberries (Rubus spp.) 6. Burdock (Arctium lappa, and other species of Arctium) 7. Canada thistle (Cirsium arvense) 8. Chickweed (Stellaria spp.) 9. Crab grass (Digitaria spp. ) 10. Dandelion (Taraxum officinale) 11. Ground ivy (Glechoma hederacea, also: Nepeta glechoma, Nepeta hederacea) 12. Japanese barberry (Berberis thunbergii) 13. Johnson grass (Sorghum halepense) 14. Kudzu (Pueraria lobata) 15. Miscanthus (Miscanthus sinensis) 16. Nightshade vine, bittersweet nightshade (Solanum dulcamara) 17. Pachysandra (Pachysandra terminalis) 18. Pennisetum (Pennisetum spp.) 19. Pokeweed (Phytolacca americana) 20. Privet (Ligustrum vulgare). 21. Purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) 22. Purslane (Portulaca oleracea) 23. Quackgrass, also: couch grass (Elytrigia repens, also: Triticum repens, Agropyron repens, Elymus repens) 24. Raspberries (Rubus spp. – like the blackberries) 25. White mulberry (Morus alba) 26. Wild rose (Rosa multiflora) 27. Wild wine (Vitis labrusca) 28. Wisteria (Japanese: Wisteria floribunda; Chinese: Wisteria sinensis) 29. Wormwood (Artemisia absynthium) Sorry, compiling all this, takes longer than thought. In the next installment, we will hopefully discover the medicinal value of some of these invasive plants – the idea being, if we harvest and eat them, they will be less invasive. Read More 
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The 10 Worst Garden Weeds – Really?

According to a survey of the “Mother Earth News” (“The original guide to living wisely”) the following are the ten weeds that make life for the nation’s vegetable gardeners miserable: 1. Crab grass 2. Dandelion 3. Bermuda grass 4. Bindweed 5. Chickweed 6. Ground ivy 7. Canada thistle 8. Burdock 9. Quackgrass 10. Johnson grass Add to these another ten plants that I wish I had never planted in my own Massachusetts garden – or that arrived on their own out of nowhere: 1. Wisteria 2. Wild wine 3. Raspberries 4. Blackberries 5. Wormwood 6. Pachysandra 7. Euonymus 8. Deadly nightshade 9. Purslane 10. Pokeweed I wonder why kudzu isn’t mentioned – we hear that is stealthily covers all of the South, a mile a minute. Why is kudzu not mentioned?? And bamboo?? Let’s sort them alphabetically: 1. Bamboo 2. Bermuda grass 3. Bindweed 4. Blackberries 5. Burdock 6. Canada thistle 7. Chickweed 8. Crab grass 9. Dandelion 10. Deadly nightshade 11. Euonymus 12. Ground ivy 13. Johnson grass 14. Kudzu 15. Pachysandra 16. Pokeweed 17. Purslane 18. Quackgrass 19. Raspberries 20. Wild wine 21. Wisteria 22. Wormwood But – stop right here! Putting up lists of invasive plants and policing them – that’s not good gardening and not good stewardship of the Earth. Let’s assume for a moment that these plants all serve a purpose – or as Sebastian Kneipp put it: “God lets an herb grow for every ailment we complain about.” Tomorrow, I will go through the list and try to divine the purpose behind each plant. Read More 
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