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February 5, 2026 John Carne Bidwill, Samuel Alexander Stewart, Richardson Wright, The Forbidden Garden by Ellen Herrick, and Blackmore & Langdon

The Daily Gardener

Release Date: 02/05/2026

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February 5, 2026 John Carne Bidwill, Samuel Alexander Stewart, Richardson Wright, The Forbidden Garden by Ellen Herrick, and Blackmore & Langdon show art February 5, 2026 John Carne Bidwill, Samuel Alexander Stewart, Richardson Wright, The Forbidden Garden by Ellen Herrick, and Blackmore & Langdon

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Today’s Show Notes

Some lives move quickly through the world. Others move carefully through it. They walk. They notice. They return with their pockets full of things most people pass by.

Today’s stories belong to people who learned the garden not by standing back, but by stepping in — sometimes farther than was wise, sometimes longer than was comfortable, and often without knowing whether anyone would ever notice.

Today’s Garden History

1815 John Carne Bidwill was born in Exeter, England.

John was restless early. By seventeen, he was crossing oceans. By his twenties, he was already moving away from settled places — drawn inland, toward landscapes not yet botanically explored.

In February of 1839, John arrived at the Bay of Islands in New Zealand. He took in the harbors and the towns and decided almost immediately they were not enough.

He wanted the interior.

So he arranged passage on small vessels, gathered Māori guides and bearers, and set off through river valleys, forested hills, and volcanic terrain that shifted beneath his feet.

John kept careful notes. He watched how vegetation changed with elevation and exposure. He collected plants — especially alpine species — things few Europeans had seen, let alone gathered.

At Rotorua, he met the Reverend Thomas Chapman, who had just arrived from Taupō — the first European known to do so.

It was a fortunate meeting. Chapman helped him press on.

They crossed Lake Taupō by canoe. They climbed toward the mountains. And eventually, John faced Ngāuruhoe, the steep volcanic cone of Tongariro.

He wrote that the climb was exhausting. That, without the idea of standing where no European had stood before, he would have turned back.

From high on the slopes, John was rewarded. He saw the Blue Lake on Tongariro — a detail visible only from above.

John returned with plants. He sent specimens to London — to John Lindley, and to William Hooker at Kew.

Many waited years to be named. Some were credited to others.

John complained briefly. But then he kept working.

He brought seeds and seedlings of the bunya-bunya pine to England — a tree that would later bear his name: Araucaria bidwillii.

He returned to Australia and was briefly appointed Director of the Sydney Botanic Gardens.

But John was not a bureaucrat. While the governor expressed regret, John expressed none.

Instead, he asked for work that would take him back outdoors.

He became Commissioner of Crown Lands at Wide Bay, and wrote that he was being paid well for “doing what was only a pleasure.”

Sadly, that happiness did not last.

In 1853, while surveying a road between Wide Bay and Moreton Bay, John became separated from his party.

He was lost in the bush for eight days, cutting through scrub with a pocket hook.

He made it home — but his body never recovered.

John Carne Bidwill died on March 16, 1853, at just thirty-eight years old.

What remains are the plants — the bunya-bunya, alpine species that carry his name, and records still cited at Kew.

1826 Samuel Alexander Stewart was born in Philadelphia.

Samuel’s formal schooling ended early. His mother died young. By eleven, Samuel was working — first as an errand boy, later alongside his father in a distillery, and eventually in the family’s trunk-making shop in Belfast.

Books and learning came at night.

What Samuel had early on was a love of walking.

His sister once tossed his cap out the window so he could slip away for long walks with their father, none the wiser.

Despite that love of the outdoors, Samuel didn’t formally discover botany until midlife.

But when he did, he pursued it with gusto.

Saturday field trips with the science lecturer, Ralph Tate. Systematic observation. Careful naming. Precise locality notes.

Samuel helped found the Belfast Naturalists’ Field Club.

Over time, people began sending him specimens. They asked him to verify records. They trusted his observations without question.

Samuel insisted that the location of a plant mattered more than its name — because names could be corrected later, but places, if not recorded, were lost forever.

His greatest honor came when he was elected to the Linnean Society.

It meant everything to him.

In 1910, after a lifetime of walking hills and moors, Samuel was crossing a street in Belfast.

He slipped trying to avoid a passing dray, was struck by the horse, and died a few hours later.

Thankfully, his work remains — a flora still respected for its accuracy, with records of place that still hold.

Unearthed Words

In today’s Unearthed Words, we hear an excerpt from The Gardener’s Bed Book by Richardson Wright, published in 1929.

For this day, February fifth, Richardson wrote:

“We used to think that one was initiated into gardening by reading seed catalogues. That belief was based merely on a profound ignorance.

The last and final rite, the trying baptism, the greatest of all prolegomenon, is to ‘get’ poison ivy.

Some people are immune to this monstrous weed, and they laugh their weaker brothers to scorn. Country boys, they say, can even chew the leaves with impunity.

But the rest of us must pass through the fire.

Doctors seem to disagree on cures for it — some suggest washing with green soap and then bathing the welts with freshly-made spirits of nitre; others paint the welts with iodine; still others use the ordinary photographer’s hypo solution.

As a precaution, whenever we have been handling the pestiferous stuff, we run indoors and scrub hands and face vigorously with very hot common kitchen-sink soap-suds.”

Richardson’s book reads like a gardener’s diary — a time capsule from nearly a century ago.

Book Recommendation


The Forbidden Garden by Ellen Herrick


The Forbidden Garden by Ellen Herrick book cover

This week is novels week — a celebration of cozy, garden-rooted fiction best read by the fire.

At the center of The Forbidden Garden is a walled garden on an English estate — long neglected, long resisted.

Generations tried to restore it and failed.

Sorrel Sparrow arrives not as a decorator, but as a gardener who listens.

She reads soil and structure. She senses history — heartbreak, betrayal, ambition — woven into hedges and stone.

This is a story for gardeners who know that some places don’t simply want to be fixed — they want to be understood.

Botanic Spark

And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.

1868 Charles Frederick Langdon was born in Somerset, England.

He grew up on an estate, the son of a woodsman, surrounded by trees and long views.

He trained as a gardener, and with the encouragement — and funding — of his employer, began breeding plants seriously.

Not far away, another life was unfolding.

James Barret Blackmore, trained as an engineer, built a greenhouse at the bottom of his garden in Bath and filled it with begonias.

The two men met at the Bath Flower Show. Both exhibited. Both won prizes.

Recognition and mutual admiration did the rest.

Their friendship became a true partnership when James bought land to start a nursery.

Blackmore & Langdon became a name that came to stand for quality.

As the business grew, their families melded, with marriages uniting their households.

In the early days, plants traveled by horse and rail. Staff slept in empty vans once the plants were unloaded.

During the war, Land Girls took over the work. Greenhouses were damaged. A field of peonies was lost to bombing.

But the begonias survived. And so did the delphiniums — their signature flowers.

Four generations later, the nursery still sends plants around the world — living things carrying a century of care.

Final Thoughts

Today’s stories remind us that some lives are shaped and made extraordinary by deep attention to the natural world.

As gardeners, we are all the better for it.

Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.