
April 6, 2026 Johann Gottfried Zinn, Kurt Bluemel, Ram Dass, The Pressed Flower Handbook by Sarah Holland, and Albrecht Dürer
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Today's Show NotesEarly April brings the garden back in pieces.
Bare soil softens.
Grass greens at the edges.
Perennials push up in tight fists.
Nothing is finished.
Nothing fully formed.
Beneath the soil, bulbs are dividing without announcement.
What was planted once has been making copies of itself in the dark.
Not quickly.
Not all at once.
Just slowly widening its hold.
Some beds look awake.
Others still seem undecided.
The light lingers a little longer now, but morning carries its chill.
You bend down to check.
Maybe something is there.
Maybe not yet.
Today's Garden History1759 Johann Gottfried Zinn died.
He was thirty-one.
As a young man, Johann arrived at the University of Göttingen, brilliant, restless, and already in love with the human body.
He had fallen early for anatomy, for its precision, its rhythm, its quiet search for order.
But when he reached the university, there was no anatomy post.
The position was already filled.
Instead, he was given responsibility for the botanic garden and the chance to work under Albrecht von Haller, one of Europe's great universal minds.
He could have refused.
He could have gone home.
He didn't.
There was too much to learn.
A new language opened before him, plant vessels instead of veins, stamens instead of tendons.
He took it up with the same intensity he had brought to the human eye.
Professor Haller wrote to Carl Linnaeus, astonished at what this young man could see.
Johann dissected petals the way medical students dissected eyes.
He described.
He drew.
He reasoned.
He looked closely, as if the flower might reveal its hidden structure if only he were patient enough.
Then one day, a packet of seeds arrived from Mexico.
He planted them.
Tall, red, a little unruly, they stood out in the garden beds.
He studied them the way he studied everything, carefully, systematically, with his own eyes.
When Johann Zinn died, Linnaeus named the flower for him: Zinnia elegans.
Gardeners still sow it when the soil warms.
In the preface to his 1755 book, Johann wrote:
"I have not followed the authority of others, but have seen for myself with my own eyes."
He had been trained to open the human eye and look inside.
He turned that same gaze to a flower.
And every summer, in beds bright with red and orange, his name rises again.
1933 Kurt Bluemel was born.
The nurseryman was born in what is now the Czech Republic.
Nothing in his early life suggested grasses. No vast American meadows. No sweeping fields.
He trained instead in Swiss nurseries, hands deep in potting soil, learning how to divide, how to wait, how to begin again from cuttings.
Then, still young, he immigrated to the United States with very little.
Years later, he would laugh about trading Swiss cheese and croissants for powdered milk and margarine.
But what he carried across the ocean was steadier than comfort: conviction.
Kurt looked at ornamental grasses and did not see filler. He did not see background.
He saw structure.
Movement.
Light passing through blades.
Where others planted sparingly, he planted in numbers.
Forty where someone else might plant ten.
He let grasses lean into one another.
He let them travel across the land.
He let them catch the wind and answer it.
His nursery in Baldwin, Maryland began small, a modest list of plants, rows measured by hand.
Over time, the rows multiplied. Fields opened.
Until millions of plants moved through his nursery gates each year.
Kurt worked beside Wolfgang Oehme, and together they reshaped American landscapes, broad sweeps of coneflower and rudbeckia, alongside tall swaying grasses rising and falling like breath.
One of their largest projects was the savanna at Disney's Animal Kingdom, acres designed not for stiffness, but for motion.
Kurt returned to that idea again and again: let the plants move.
In 2014, after he died, the fields did what they had always done.
They bent.
They shimmered.
They leaned toward the light.
And somewhere in that movement, in the sound of blades brushing together, there is still the memory of a man placing one more grass into open ground.
Unearthed WordsIn today's Unearthed Words, we hear a reflection from the American spiritual teacher Ram Dass, born Richard Alpert on this day in 1931.
In the late 1960s, he stepped away from his post at Harvard and into a different kind of life, one that carried him from lecture halls to packed auditoriums where people came with questions they could not quite name.
By the 1970s, he was speaking to rooms filled with seekers, students, parents, people carrying the weight of one another.
In one such talk, he said this:
"When you go out into the woods, and you look at trees, you see all these different trees.
And some of them are bent... you sort of understand that it didn't get enough light, and so it turned that way.
And you don't get all emotional about it.
You just allow it.
The minute you get near humans, you lose all that.
And you are constantly saying 'You are too this, or I'm too this.'
That judgment mind comes in.
And so I practice turning people into trees.
Which means appreciating them just the way they are."
He spoke of forests often.
Of walking among trunks and branches without asking them to grow differently than they had.
Outside, most trees lean toward light.
Some bend around what blocked them.
Some stretch tall in open ground.
Others hold their shape in shade.
In a garden, each plant grows according to its place, its soil, its sun, its season.
And the garden goes on growing anyway.
Book RecommendationThe Pressed Flower Handbook by Sarah Holland
As we continue Pressed Flowers & Garden Crafts Week here on The Daily Gardener, this book feels like company when the garden thins and your eye begins to linger.
Sarah presses what grows nearby, poppies just loosening, forget-me-nots still tight, stems gathered before frost.
There's a small window.
Too early, they're heavy with moisture.
Too late, the color slips.
Pressed flowers bruise easily.
They ask for patience, flat paper, steady weight, time.
Sarah shows how to choose them, not always the showiest blooms, but those willing to flatten and hold.
Leaves that keep their line.
Ferns revealing lace under pressure.
Nothing exotic.
No rare shipments.
Only what grew within reach.
She walks through the process plainly, paper, placement, the quiet wait before lifting.
Handled gently, they hold more than expected, color softened, veins made visible, a small record of season.
Sarah suggests simple uses, frames, cards, unfussy arrangements, nothing that overwhelms the flower.
This book keeps steady company at the season's edge, when you walk the beds deciding what might endure.
Botanic SparkAnd finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.
1528 Albrecht Dürer died at his home in Nuremberg after years of illness.
He was fifty-six.
For decades, his hands had worked in line and color, altarpieces, self-portraits, engravings that traveled across Europe.
But twenty-five years earlier, in 1503, he knelt down close to the ground.
He lifted a small clump of turf from a nearby field and carried it back to his studio.
No grand subject.
Just earth and grass set on a table in the light.
He painted it in watercolor, about sixteen inches tall and a foot across.
He called it The Great Piece of Turf.
Not a rose.
Not a lily.
A tangle of grass.
A dandelion gone to seed.
Broad plantain leaves pressing low.
Roots exposed.
Soil still clinging.
The viewpoint is what stirs.
The eye comes down to the level of the ground.
Each blade given space.
Each leaf given time.
Nothing elevated.
Nothing diminished.
It is simply what grows.
More than five hundred years later, grass still pushes through disturbed soil.
Dandelions still lift their bright heads and scatter.
And somewhere, a small painted patch of earth holds its place, as if the artist has only just knelt beside it.
Final ThoughtsApril soil stays heavy. Last year's stems still stand.
Grass greens in uneven patches.
Perennial tips show color, and then wait.
One bed looks ready.
The next stays stubborn.
Frost rims the fence some mornings.
By afternoon, it's mud.
Boots sink.
Paths blur.
Water pools where you didn't expect it.
It isn't smooth.
It isn't symmetrical.
It isn't tidy.
It is messy.
It is April.
Unfinished.
Unsettled.
And still moving.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.