February 3, 2026 Gertrude Stein, Hilda Murrell, Rumi, The In the Garden Trilogy by Nora Roberts, and Adele Lewis Grant
Release Date: 02/03/2026
The Daily Gardener
Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes February is a month that keeps its secrets close. The garden looks quiet now. Beds lie flat. Specimens above ground chilled into behaving themselves. But nothing here is finished. Everything is waiting. Gardens are good at mysteries — with seeds hidden on purpose, roots busy underground, and plans and plants that don’t announce themselves. Today’s Garden History 1874 Gertrude Stein was born. She’s remembered for her language — for repetition, for rhythm, for meaning that circles back...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes February second is Candlemas Day — an old turning point in winter, heavy with weather lore. “If Candlemas Day be fair and bright, winter will have another flight.” In other words, don’t be fooled by a little light. The season still has something to say. Today’s stories live right there — between what has endured, and what is just beginning to stir. Today’s Garden History 1913 Franz Ludwig Späth died in Berlin. The Späth family had been cultivating trees since 1720 — six...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Late January doesn’t ask for spectacle. It asks for gratitude. We’ve made it through one of the hardest months of the year. This is a good moment to take a quiet inventory — the books we’ve returned to, the garden plans beginning to form, the plant names we can still recall, the gardeners we’ve connected with while our own gardens remain at rest. And it’s a fitting pause for stories about attention — the kind that lingers, the kind that remembers, the kind that shapes how we...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Late January doesn’t bring much drama. No big turning point. No clear signal. Instead, it gives us time. Time to look closely at what’s already been shaped — by weather, by decisions, by people who came before us. And today holds stories about distance — how far some people went for plants, and how others tried to bring nature closer to where people live. Today’s Garden History 1795 William Jack was born in Aberdeen, Scotland. He came from a scholarly family and moved quickly through...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Late January can feel like a long-held breath. Not dramatic. Just persistent. The garden is still. But it isn’t idle. It’s watching the light. Measuring the cold. Noticing — quietly — the most minute shifts in temperature and day length. And sometimes, winter leaves us a story that feels almost unbelievable. On this day in 1887, at the Coleman ranch near Fort Keogh (KEY-oh), Montana, snowflakes were reported so large they were described as “bigger than milk pans.” Some were said to...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Late January has its own kind of quiet. Not the hush of fresh snow, but the steady, unshowy silence of things holding their shape. In the garden, this is a month of endurance. Roots working without applause. Branches imperceptibly changing. The outdoor world takes in the smallest shifts in light and temperature, preparing to awaken and grow. Today’s stories carry that feeling forward: a composer who needed the country to write, a nurseryman who made abundance from stripped ground, and a...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes January has a way of making everything feel more honest. The garden is not performing. It is resting. This is the month of silhouettes — hedges reduced to outline, paths only faintly visible beneath the snow, branches writing their thin handwriting against the sky. It is a fitting day for stories like these: of people and gardens shaped by patience, of beauty made to endure, and of the quiet satisfaction that comes from bringing something living safely home. Today’s Garden History 1864...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes January is a month that strips things back. The garden shows us structure instead of spectacle. Paths without flowers. Trees without leaves. Design without distraction. That makes today’s stories especially fitting, because they are about people who believed gardens should hold meaning, even when nothing is in bloom. Today’s Garden History 1866 Peter Joseph Lenné died at the age of seventy-six. Lenné was one of the most important landscape architects of the nineteenth century, though you...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Before we step fully into today’s garden history, a brief note from the weather ledger: 1985 A deep cold wave swept through Florida, destroying nearly ninety percent of the state’s citrus crop. Years of growth, lost in a single night. It is a reminder gardeners understand well: abundance is always provisional. Today’s Garden History 1561 Francis Bacon was born. He gave us one of the most enduring garden essays ever written: Of Gardens. Bacon did not treat gardening as a pleasant aside. He...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes This is the season when gardeners live a little more in the imagination. We watch winter light move across bare branches, notice the architecture of trees, and make plans we can’t quite act on yet. So today feels right for honoring people who worked quietly — not as household names, but as steady hands who loved the natural world and served it with patience, consistency, and craft. Today’s Garden History 1846 Charles Edward Faxon was born in Massachusetts. If you’ve ever fallen in love...
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Today’s Show Notes
February is a month that keeps its secrets close. The garden looks quiet now. Beds lie flat. Specimens above ground chilled into behaving themselves.
But nothing here is finished. Everything is waiting.
Gardens are good at mysteries — with seeds hidden on purpose, roots busy underground, and plans and plants that don’t announce themselves.
Today’s Garden History
1874 Gertrude Stein was born.
She’s remembered for her language — for repetition, for rhythm, for meaning that circles back on itself.
“A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose.”
A curious phrase, suggesting that something is simply what it is.
But behind those words was a life shaped by gardens.
Later in her life, Gertrude and Alice B. Toklas spent their summers at a house in the village of Bilignin, France.
The garden there was formal. Practical. Demanding.
And it was Alice who did the work.
In her journals, Alice writes about learning the land slowly. Losing crops to frost. Arguing with farmers. Refusing their advice — at first — and then, eventually, learning why they were right.
Experience, she wrote, is never had at a bargain price.
There’s a moment where she describes clearing a neglected corner of the vegetable garden. She pokes the soil with a stick. The ground ripples. A snake’s nest.
That’s February — the sense that something alive is hiding beneath the disorder, waiting, undisturbed, until someone looks closely enough.
Gertrude once wrote:
“Grass is always the most elegant… more elegant than rocks and trees.”
Grass. Common. Persistent. Overlooked.
In her hands, it becomes a declaration — that what seems simplest in the garden may be what holds the most meaning.
1906 Hilda Murrell was born.
She was a rose grower in Shropshire, England. A designer of gardens. A scholar of old roses. A woman who trusted what careful observation could reveal.
Late in life, Hilda turned her attention to environmental dangers — particularly nuclear power and radioactive waste.
She researched patiently. She wrote plainly. She prepared to speak as an ordinary citizen.
1984 In 1984, just days before she was scheduled to present her findings at a public inquiry, she was abducted and murdered.
The case has never settled easily. Convictions were made. Questions remained.
Gardens understand this kind of uncertainty.
A perennial that never returns. A harvest lost without explanation. Something is gone that leaves no tidy ending.
We may never fully know what happened to Hilda.
But she remains — in the rose that carries her name, and in the steady regard of those who remember her work and her devotion to the living world.
Unearthed Words
In today’s Unearthed Words, we hear an excerpt from Rumi:
“And don’t think the garden loses its ecstasy in winter. It’s quiet — but the roots are down there, riotous.”
Gardeners can learn a lot from Rumi, a fellow lover of the natural world.
Quiet does not mean empty. Dormant does not mean done.
Nature’s mysteries are often wrapped in conflicting truths.
February returns us to a question first learned in January: trust what is hidden, and wait without needing proof.
Book Recommendation
The In the Garden Trilogy Box Set by Nora Roberts

This week is novels week — a celebration of cozy, garden-rooted fiction best read by the fire.
Today’s recommendation is actually three books: Blue Dahlia, Black Rose, and Red Lily.
The trilogy unfolds on an old estate nursery in Tennessee.
There are greenhouses. Propagation benches. Generations of women who have learned to work the land together.
And there is a ghost — because gardens remember what buildings alone cannot hold.
These books offer stories of love and loss, inheritance and repair — of gardens, and of gardeners.
Botanic Spark
And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.
1932 It was on this day in 1932 that a Los Angeles newspaper shared a small notice about a lecture that nearly didn’t happen.
It begins:
“Nature lovers who were forced to miss the conservation program in November — because, if not lightning, then at least raging torrents of ‘heavy dew’ — will have another chance…”
Adele Lewis Grant was coming to speak.
Adele enhanced her talks by bringing specimens with her — bird skins and plant material gathered from years of study.
It feels like a modest scene: a public meeting room, a small audience, and a woman willing to show up despite the weather and inconvenience.
Not every moment of influence announces itself.
Some arrive quietly, like a lecture rescheduled, and leave lasting roots.
Adele taught at Cornell, USC, and UCLA. She studied monkeyflowers, marine life, and birds.
She moved easily between disciplines, between fieldwork and teaching.
She helped build a fellowship for women in science — one that still carries her name.
Final Thoughts
February gardens ask us to live with what we don’t yet know.
To trust what’s happening out of sight. To accept that some answers arrive slowly — and some never fully at all.
Still, the work continues — underground, unseen, certain in its own time, even in the shortest month of the year.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.