
April 1, 2026 Lady Dorothy Fanny Nevill, George Edward Post, Sara Teasdale, Good in a Bed by Ursula Buchan, and William Jackson Hooker Lady Dorothy Fanny Nevill
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Today's Show NotesApril arrives after a long wait.
All winter, the calendar has been leaning toward this day.
April 1.
The place where spring is supposed to begin.
And often, the morning comes cold.
Gray.
Wind pressing hard, the kind that makes even standing still feel like effort.
It doesn't look like spring yet.
It doesn't feel like relief.
Still, the date shows up acting light.
As if to say, it's fine now.
But the ground hasn't agreed.
Beds stay quiet.
Branches hesitate.
The soil holds back.
Easter is close.
The light is longer.
Hope has been building.
That's what makes this day hard.
The wanting has been serious.
Earned.
April, meanwhile, arrives careless, like a surprise that asks for enthusiasm when there isn't much left.
It would be wiser to lower expectations.
But the door still gets opened.
The same spots get checked.
Breath gets held.
Because after this much waiting, it's impossible not to want something.
And that's where April begins.
Today's Garden History1826 Lady Dorothy Fanny Nevill was born.
The English horticulturist would turn gardens into laboratories, salons into engines of influence, and curiosity into a lifelong practice.
She grew up surrounded by legacy, a descendant of Horace Walpole, raised among estates, stories, and expectation.
Fluent in languages.
Traveled young.
Observant early.
And then, scandal.
In the summer of 1846, she was discovered unchaperoned with George Smythe, a rising political figure.
The fallout was immediate.
Her reputation shattered.
Court doors closed.
Her family moved quickly to contain the damage, arranging her marriage the following year to her cousin, Reginald Nevill.
What followed looked quieter from the outside.
That lesson stayed with her.
So did the garden.
Try to imagine Dorothy in those first years at Dangstein, hands in the soil, proving to herself that a woman's real story could be written in roots and glass and green rooms, not in what people say.
At Dangstein in Sussex, Lady Dorothy built a garden on a scale few private estates could match.
Seventeen conservatories.
Thirty-four gardeners.
Glass filled with orchids, nepenthes, and tropical plants gathered from across the world.
Every gardener knew Dangstein.
She experimented constantly with soil, with water systems, with herbaceous borders that would later become standard practice.
She built a pinetum.
A bamboo grove.
A rainwater system that moved first through glasshouses, then beds, then terraces.
And she delighted in the curious.
Silkworms.
Rare fish.
Storks and choughs.
Black sheep grazing through the grounds.
Whistled-tail pigeons she called her "aerial orchestra."
She traded plants with Kew.
Sent specimens to William and Joseph Hooker.
In 1861, she began corresponding with Charles Darwin, supplying him with rare orchids and insectivorous plants for his research.
One plant, Utricularia montana, helped Darwin understand how bladderworts trap their prey.
He later wrote that he had "hardly ever enjoyed a day more" than working with her specimen.
When her husband died in 1886, debts forced the sale of Dangstein.
Fifteen thousand plants went to auction.
Glasshouses dismantled.
The garden dispersed.
The work didn't end there.
Somewhere, a fern that once unfurled under glass at Dangstein ended up in another conservatory, another life.
A fragment carried forward.
Lady Dorothy did not stop.
She moved to Stillyans and created a wild garden.
She hosted political salons in London.
She helped found the Primrose League.
She collected snuffboxes and corset buttons.
In 1906, her memoir, The Reminiscences of Lady Dorothy Nevill, was published.
It sparkles with wit, resilience, and observation, the record of a woman who refused to disappear quietly.
She stayed with the work, even after the glass was gone, even after the plants scattered.
She kept gardening.
And she kept writing.
1838 George Edward Post was born.
The American botanist was an American surgeon and missionary who spent most of his life in Syria and Lebanon.
By day, he taught medicine and treated patients.
By habit, and often by exhaustion, he collected plants.
He worked long hours.
Slept briefly.
Then worked again.
He rode into mountains on horseback, leaning from the saddle to cut specimens without ever dismounting.
By the end of his life, he had collected more than twenty thousand plants.
In 1896, he published Flora of Syria, Palestine, and Sinai, the first comprehensive English-language flora of the region.
For the first time, Western gardeners, botanists, and scholars could understand the plants of the Levant clearly, by name, by place, by habit.
Irises.
Sages.
Wildflowers shaped by heat, wind, and scarcity.
Near the end of his life, weakened but knowing his work was finished, George received a visitor who placed ripe wheat into his hand.
A harvest symbol.
Seasons honored.
"To everything there is a season," the visitor said, "and a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted."
Near the end of his life, George was weak enough that others did the walking for him.
His work was finished.
The mountains were not.
Unearthed WordsIn today's Unearthed Words, we hear a poem from the American poet Sara Teasdale, born on this day in 1884.
In the spring of 1920, Sara was living in New York.
The trees were flowering.
The lawns were still thin.
And blue squills were blooming close to the ground.
Blue squills, tiny Scilla siberica bulbs that colonize lawns and woodland edges, carpeting them electric blue beneath white-flowering cherries and magnolias.
Sara saw them one spring in New York, white against blue.
Here is "Blue Squills," from her 1920 collection Flame and Shadow:
How many million Aprils came
Before I ever knew
How white a cherry bough could be,
A bed of squills, how blue!
And many a dancing April
When life is done with me,
Will lift the blue flame of the flower
And the white flame of the tree.
Oh burn me with your beauty, then,
Oh hurt me, tree and flower,
Lest in the end death try to take
Even this glistening hour.
O shaken flowers, O shimmering trees,
O sunlit white and blue,
Wound me, that I, through endless sleep,
May bear the scar of you.
Sara was thirty-six when she wrote this.
She wrote it knowing the season would pass, and that the seeing might not come again in quite the same way.
Book Recommendation
Good in a Bed by Ursula Buchan
It's Garden Writers Week here on The Daily Gardener, and today's April Fools book selection gathers years of Ursula's gardening columns, pieces shaped by observation, humor, and long acquaintance with soil and people alike.
The title comes from a nurseryman's line about the rose 'Lady Hillingdon': "Good in a bed, but better against a wall."
'Lady Hillingdon' is an apricot-tea climber with long, hanging buds, one of those roses that always looks as if it's just sighed.
Against a warm wall, it flowers more freely and shrugs off cold winds.
It's the kind of remark that only makes sense if you've spent years watching plants, knowing that many of them thrive with a little shelter nearby.
Ursula writes about failures.
About fashions that didn't last.
About the quiet satisfactions that do.
It's a book that feels like a conversation continued over years, one you can return to in any season and find something still alive.
Botanic SparkAnd finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.
1841 William Jackson Hooker began his duties at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
When William arrived at Kew, very little was certain.
Parts of the garden were already gone.
Other parts were barely holding.
He walked the grounds each morning.
Took notes.
Made small decisions without knowing which ones would last.
He once wrote,
"I feel as if I were to begin life over again."
And for a time, the garden let him.
Final ThoughtsApril is here.
The calendar says so.
The day asks for a smile.
But it can be hard to laugh when the serious business of seed starting has been thwarted again.
When trays sit waiting.
When the light isn't quite enough.
When the timing still feels off.
And it's hard not to worry when the tulips planted on a cold October day haven't emerged, when the ground stays quiet a little too long.
That's when the mind starts reaching for explanations, squirrels, rabbits, anything that might explain the delay.
April 1 arrives like that, light on the surface, uncooperative underneath.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.