A Beautiful Botany Book from Kew

This is one of my favorite gifts from my daughter, Rose. It has the most gorgeous illustrations of plants. It is also organized into plant types and explains how those plants are related.

It is a book I wonder through on cold, rainy days. I can pretend I am in the rainforest among the tall trees and hanging vines.

Or I can dream of being in a warm Orchid House among the breathtaking blooms.

This very large book also serves as a piece of art in my library. Illustrator Katie Scott and writer Kathy Willis have created a treasure for anyone who loves botany or unusual plants. Brava!

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Aged Hypertufa

When I was an artist, I made garden art out of various recipes with portland cement as the main ingredient. Planters were made with mixtures of peat, ground organic matter, portland cement, mortar mix, stone and fibers.

Hypertufa trough covered in moss.

The troughs were hand-shaped and seasoned in plastic wrap to dry slowly. The surfaces had to be brushed to a roughly smooth, natural-looking texture that mimicked stone.

I discovered that there is a fine line between a recipe that will grow moss and a recipe that falls apart. The trick is to use fibers that are made to strengthen concrete. The fibers left sticking out can be burned off using a blow torch. I also used these fibers in bird baths and benches to reinforce them, along with hardware cloth and rebar.

This trough is about thirty years old and looks exactly like it was intended. Still sturdy enough to be moved and used as a planter.

I will share other pieces of Maiden Stone Garden Art in future posts and describe how each was made. I used to teach workshops on how to make pieces. 

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Country Mouse in the City

I am working in my sister’s yard today. She needed some cleaning up and mulching before adding solar lights along her walkway.


I also removed the corners from her square shrubs that were trimmed by a professional.


I found some fungi under her piles of pine needles. They released spores that looked like cocoa powered.


City folks put their yard waste in bags by the curb.

I am not used to folks blowing the horn as they drive by. Actually, I am not used to folks driving by.

It’s nice here in the city…but a bit noisy.


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