
February 27, 2026 Jacob Bigelow, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Elizabeth-Ellen Long, Dream Gardens by Tania Compton, and Peter Stuyvesant's Pear Tree
The Daily Gardener
Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart
Support The Daily GardenerPatreon
Buy Me A Coffee
Connect for FREE!The Friday Newsletter | Daily Gardener Community
Today's Show NotesLate February has a particular restraint to it.
The color is mostly gone.
What remains are the outlines—paths, trunks, and the stone walls of our memories.
This is the part of the season where gardens tell the truth about themselves.
What was built to last is still standing.
Today's Garden History1787 Jacob Bigelow was born in Salisbury, Massachusetts.
The American physician, botanist, and botanical illustrator believed a garden should offer solace, not only in bloom, but in every season that strips a place down to its bones.
He was the visionary behind Mount Auburn Cemetery, founded in 1831, America's first garden cemetery: winding paths, evergreens, and stone architecture meant to harmonize with the land.
In winter, Mount Auburn is honest. Nothing hides behind flowers.
You see the structure.
You feel the intention.
Bigelow was also a pioneering botanist.
In 1814, he published Florula Bostoniensis, the first systematic catalog of New England plants, arguing that the most meaningful botany begins right where you live.
Later, as a physician, he articulated a radical idea. He believed many conditions were self-limited, that nature often knows how to resolve itself if we allow it time. That belief followed him into the landscape.
One of his final acts was designing a massive granite sphinx at Mount Auburn, a Civil War memorial.
He placed an American water lily at its base, a flower he could no longer see, but one he had cataloged decades earlier in the muddy wetlands of New England.
By the time the monument was installed in 1872, Bigelow's eyesight was nearly gone.
He experienced the sphinx not with vision, but with his hands.
A garden built to endure, even when sight fades, even when winter comes.
1807 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born.
Longfellow was a poet, but he was also a gardener of structure.
At his Cambridge, Massachusetts home, he designed formal parterres edged in boxwood—lyre-shaped beds, symmetry he once described as a Persian rug spread across the lawn.
These were gardens made for February.
When the flowers were gone, the geometry remained.
Longfellow understood that winter reveals design.
It shows us whether a garden was thoughtfully built, or merely dressed for summer.
For Henry, the garden was a poem in two forms: the carefully composed lines of his boxwood beds, and the wild, unwritten history of the weeds at the gate.
Walking with the naturalist Louis Agassiz, he pointed out a roadside weed known as "the white man's foot"—broadleaf plantain, Plantago major.
A weed as a record.
Footsteps written in leaves.
Longfellow taught us to look closely, even at what grows uninvited.
Unearthed WordsIn today's Unearthed Words, we hear a poem from the American poet Elizabeth-Ellen Long, born on this day in 1908.
Elizabeth wrote during the mid-twentieth century, living quietly in the California hills.
She worked from a small cabin, sending her observations out like letters in a bottle to readers who, like her, found beauty in the quietest things.
She wrote for the still months. For overlooked hours. For the garden when color is no longer the point.
Here is Song of Gray Things by Elizabeth-Ellen Long:
In any weather, any day,
Much is lovely that is gray –
Driftwood smoothed to satin by
The tide's cool fingers, early sky,
Lichen stars that lightly dapple
Stone walls around an apple
Orchard, birch bark, and the thin
Warped rails of fences holding in
Reluctant meadows, kittens' fur,
Dried wild grasses sweet as myrrh,
As well as cobweb lace on eaves,
Sudden wind in willow leaves,
And pigeons proudly marching down
The slanted rooftops of a town.
Dream Gardens by Tania Compton
It's time to grow the Grow That Garden Library, with today's book: Dream Gardens, by Tania Compton.
It's Planning & Design Week here on The Daily Gardener, which means all of the book recommendations for this week feature books devoted to imagining gardens before they're planted, and to the ideas, drawings, and principles that shape great outdoor spaces.
Dream Gardens was the winner of the Sunday Times Gardening Book of the Year in 2007.
Gardeners continue to love it because it balances beauty with real usefulness.
First, it offers wide-ranging design inspiration. The book features one hundred modern and contemporary gardens, from minimalist city plots to expansive rural landscapes, making it a true sourcebook for many kinds of spaces.
Second, it delivers practical plant knowledge. Each garden is fully captioned, identifying the plants used, so the designs aren't just admired, they can be translated into real gardens.
And third, it offers designer insight. Tania explains the goals and decisions behind each landscape, helping readers understand how great gardens are structured, not just how they look.
In the introduction, she reminds us that gardening is a perpetual process, that the dream of transforming a site never truly ends, because gardens are always moving through growth, change, decay, and renewal.
It's a perfect book for the end of February, when the most important gardening is happening in the imagination.
Botanic SparkAnd finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.
1867 New York City lost its oldest living thing.
Peter Stuyvesant's pear tree, a European pear, Pyrus communis, planted around 1647, was struck and fatally damaged when two horse-drawn wagons collided at the corner of 13th Street and Third Avenue.
For more than two centuries, the tree had stood, surviving the city grid, surviving generations, bearing fruit long after the man who planted it was gone.
After it fell, pieces of the trunk were preserved like relics. A cross-section still rests at the New-York Historical Society. And the corner did not forget.
New pear trees were planted, successors, continuations, a reminder that even in the gray of February, gardens do not end.
They are simply waiting for the next hand to tend them. They are handed forward.
Final ThoughtsFebruary is not asking for flowers.
It's asking what will last.
From Jacob Bigelow's winter garden of stone, to Longfellow's boxwood geometry, to Elizabeth-Ellen Long's lichen stars, and the long memory of a fallen pear tree, this day reminds us that a garden's soul lives in what endures.
In structure.
In patience.
In quiet, winter resilience.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.