February 24, 2026 Mary Eleanor Bowes, Charles Reid Barnes, Octavia E. Butler, Garden Design Master Class edited by Carl Dellatore, and Steve Jobs
Release Date: 02/24/2026
The Daily Gardener
Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Late April still has mornings that feel like waiting. Cold soil. Bare patches. Nothing moving yet. You stand at the edge of the bed with your coffee and think, not yet. And then one afternoon, you step outside and the whole garden has shifted without you. The forsythia is done. The tulips are leaning. Something you didn’t plant is blooming along the fence like it’s been there for years. Everything reaching. Open. And happening at the same time. That’s late spring. The ground does not wait...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Late April has a particular kind of energy. It’s messy. It’s muddy. It’s cold in the shade and warm in the sun. We think to ourselves, “All that rain had better be delivering those May flowers.” After all, May is right around the corner. And yes, this is the stretch when things begin to move in earnest. It’s time to turn on the sprinklers and get things going. Every time you step outside, the list grows longer—what needs dividing, what needs fixing, what needs tending now before...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Late April has a way of making the world feel rehearsed. The light arrives on time. The buds keep their promises. Even the air sounds busy. But gardens do not just bloom. They are built. They are revised. They are protected. Sometimes in public. Sometimes in plain view. Sometimes with a bandana on and dirt under the nails. Today, we are spending time in two very different gardens, both shaped by women who refused to make a small thing out of beauty. Today’s Garden History 1962 Rachel...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Look out the window. Or better yet, look at your hands. If there’s soil under your fingernails today, you’re in good company. The garden is in its becoming. Tulips holding their breath. Hostas breaking through leaf mold like small green spears. And the air. The air finally smells like possibility. April has crossed a line now. The work feels urgent. Not loud. But insistent. Today’s stories move with that feeling. From glasshouses built for wonder. To a wagon heavy with hope. From a single...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes April 22 carries a big, modern name. Earth Day. But in the garden, the earth doesn’t show up as a slogan. It shows up as weight. As dampness on your fingertips. As a scent you recognize before you can describe it. And maybe that’s the quiet gift of this date. A reminder that some of the most lasting human moments have unfolded not in lecture halls or on stages. But in gardens themselves. In places where oranges perfume the air. Where a visitor can be delayed just long enough to notice...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes If you kneel by the peonies right now, you’ll see it. The new shoots are already pushing. Red. Glossy. Tight as fists. But last year’s stems are still there. Dry. Hollow. Attached more firmly than they look. It’s tempting to grab them and pull. They seem finished. Useless. And then, the resistance. That old growth is still holding to the crown. Pull too hard and you feel it. That sickening give. The new stem coming with it. So you learn to change your grip. Not yank. Clip. One dry stalk...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes There’s an old saying that April is a promise May is bound to keep. But in the garden, promises rarely look like fulfillment. They look like mud on the hem. Cold soil worked anyway. Seeds pressed in without applause. They look like tools leaning where you left them. Like breath in cool air. Like hands that stay a little longer than comfort allows. April doesn’t give the blossom. It gives the beginning of the beginning. A swelling bud. A seam in the soil. A day that holds and does not yet...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes T.S. Eliot once wrote, “April is the cruelest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull roots with spring rain.” Gardeners have always understood that line. Mid-April asks for belief before comfort arrives. The soil is cold. The losses are still visible. And yet the garden insists. This is the moment when growth doesn’t reassure. It demands belief. Today’s stories live right there. With people who paid attention when certainty was...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Mid-April has a way of pulling us outward. The lists grow longer. The light stretches later. Everything feels like it’s asking for something at once. But today’s stories start in smaller places. With the little pieces of the garden that stop us. A seed caught where it shouldn’t be. A flower held still long enough to be drawn. A garden used not for harvest, but for thinking. And a woman, well into her eighties, still stepping off the path because there was one more plant she hoped might...
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Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Today’s Show Notes Mid-April carries a sense of momentum. The month is already half gone. The soil feels warmer now. When you press your palm into it. Daffodils nod without apology. This is the part of the season that rewards proximity. Spring belongs near the door. Where you can’t miss it as you come and go. The bulbs you waited all winter for. The flowering shrubs that greet you first. Fall color can live at the edges. In the distance. But spring wants to be close. Today we watch how leaves turn toward light....
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Today’s Show Notes
Some people tower in history.
They change what we know.
They change what we build.
And yet, when you look closely, so many of the truly influential people turn out to be gardeners.
Not always in the literal sense, but in the way they think: patiently, experimentally, always working toward a future they may never fully see.
Today’s Garden History
1749 Mary Eleanor Bowes was born.
She’s often remembered as “The Unhappy Countess,” but in her own time she was also described—famously—as “the most intelligent female botanist of the age.”
Mary was born into astonishing wealth, the sole heiress to a massive coal fortune. Unlike most women in Georgian England, she was educated seriously.
Her father, George Bowes, raised her in a world of books, teaching, and landscape ambition—gardens that were not quiet, private places, but showcases. Statements. Experiments.
At her estates—Gibside in northern England and Chelsea along the Thames in London—Mary built hothouses and collected rare plants with the focus of a scientist, not the casual interest of a fashionable hobbyist.
In 1777, she financed the explorer William Paterson to travel to the Cape of Good Hope to collect plant specimens for her.
Then came one of the most extraordinary objects in garden history: her botanical cabinet.
A mahogany piece engineered like a portable lab, it opened from the side to reveal long drawers sized for herbarium sheets—pressed plants mounted on paper. It included a fold-down writing surface for notes and labels. Its hollow legs were lead-lined and fitted with taps, suggesting liquids could be released, as if the cabinet might even have supported living specimens during study or transit. Science disguised as furniture. A garden archive built to travel.
Mary’s life was also marked by brutality.
Her second marriage, to Andrew Robinson Stoney, was violently abusive.
He used her gardens as a weapon—barring her from her own hothouses and even releasing rabbits into her flower beds to destroy her plants.
And yet she fought back.
In 1789, she reclaimed her fortune and secured a rare divorce, a landmark victory for a woman of her time.
When she died, she requested something unforgettable: to be buried in a magnificent dress, carrying a small silver trumpet so she could, as some later put it, “blow her own trumpet at the Resurrection.”
1910 Charles Reid Barnes died in Chicago.
Barnes wasn’t a household name.
But he gave gardeners one of the most important words we use to understand plant life.
In 1893, he coined the term photosynthesis—a precise name for the way plants make food from light.
Interestingly, Barnes himself preferred another word, photosyntax, but the botanical world chose photosynthesis, and the name stuck.
Before that, the process was often called assimilation—a word so vague it could mean almost anything.
Barnes wanted clarity.
Plants don’t “eat” soil. They manufacture their own food from sunlight, air, and water.
Barnes also studied mosses and other bryophytes—small, resilient plants that live in the margins and quietly hold ecosystems together.
As a professor and editor, he pushed botany forward—from naming plants to understanding how they function.
Barnes died after an accidental fall at just fifty-one, but the language he gave us still shapes how we garden.
Unearthed Words
In today’s Unearthed Words, we hear an excerpt from the American science fiction writer Octavia E. Butler, born on this day in 1947.
Octavia was living in California in the early 1990s when she began writing about climate collapse, migration, and survival. I
n her work, gardening and seed-saving are not hobbies.
They are acts of continuity.
From Parable of the Sower:
“I was weeding the back garden and thinking about the way plants seed themselves, windborne, animalborne, waterborne, far from their parent plants.
They have no ability at all to travel great distances under their own power, and yet, they do travel.
Even they don’t have to just sit in one place and wait to be wiped out.
There are islands thousands of miles from anywhere—the Hawaiian Islands, for example, and Easter Island—where plants seeded themselves and grew long before any humans arrived.
Earthseed.
I am Earthseed.
Anyone can be.
Someday, I think there will be a lot of us.
And I think we’ll have to seed ourselves farther and farther from this dying place.”
Even in a story about upheaval and uncertainty, she begins with a simple act.
Weeding.
Tending.
Paying attention to what is growing close at hand.
It’s a quiet reminder that even in the most unsettled times, the work of the garden continues.
Book Recommendation
Garden Design Master Class edited by Carl Dellatore
It’s Planning & Design Week here on The Daily Gardener, which means all of this week’s recommendations focus on imagining gardens before they’re planted—the ideas, drawings, and principles that shape great outdoor spaces.
This book gathers the voices of one hundred landscape designers in short essays that feel less like instruction and more like studio conversations.
These are people who have spent years looking carefully—at light, at borders, at rhythm, at paths and proportion. The kinds of quiet decisions that make a garden feel inevitable, as if it had always been waiting to take this shape.
If you’re longing for garden visits while winter still holds on, this book offers a way to wander without leaving home.
Botanic Spark
And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.
1955 Steve Jobs was born.
He grew up in what used to be apricot country—orchards that existed long before Silicon Valley became Silicon Valley.
Later in life, he became deeply attentive to how long living things take to mature. He once reflected that no amount of money can buy the one thing a great garden requires most: an old tree.
For his own home, he commissioned the British garden designer Penelope Hobhouse to create an English cottage garden shaped by restraint, beauty, and serious horticultural intention.
And in his final grand project, Apple Park, he pushed for a true park—not an office complex.
Thousands of trees.
Native species.
A landscape designed to function like an ecosystem.
A man who had everything kept returning to gardens—to patience, to time, to things that could not be rushed.
Final Thoughts
The garden teaches the long view.
It turns wealth into stewardship.
Imagination into survival.
Science into clarity.
And it reminds us—quietly—that just as it always has, the future is built one small, living thing at a time.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.
