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Wildflowers Tamed
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# : |
13703 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1988 |
1,916 Words |
| Author
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Virginia Greiner Virginia Greiner writes a weekly gardening column for the
Washington Times. |
In an age that popularizes health foods, handcrafts, and ecology, wildflowers are a natural whose time has come. These sturdy natives, often mistaken for fragile domestic beauties, are surfacing in home landscape designs after thriving in fields and forests for centuries.
Maybe they are raising their lovely heads in captivity because gardeners have discovered their abundant qualities: They need little maintenance or water; they lure hummingbirds, butterflies, and other helpful birds and insects into the garden; they have an innocent, untouched beauty; they can replace lawns. And who can resist these easy bloomers with such unforgettable names as Skunk Cabbage, Mad Dog Skullcap, Turkeybeard, Spiderwort, and Fly Poison?
But it has not always been easy to find out how to grow and propagate these horticultural treasures. Americans have traditionally copied European garden designs, with the emphasis on mowed lawns, clipped shrubs, and formal flower beds filled with plants originating in other lands. Our native wildflowers have been wallflowers in American gardens.
Former First Lady, Lady Bird Johnson, who recently received a congressional gold medal from President Reagan for her interest in beautifying the country, has been nettled by this neglect for some time. So in 1982, on her seventieth birthday, she donated sixty acres of land on the Colorado River just outside Austin and $125,000 to found the national Wildflower Research Center.
The center aims to learn as much as possible about wildflower propagation and to share the information with
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