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Tough Plants for Tough Times
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# : |
17872 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
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3 / 1990 |
1,490 Words |
| Author
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Jacqueline Heriteau Jacqueline Heriteau, author of several books on gardening and
cooking, edited The Good Housekeeping Illustrated Encyclopedia
of Gardening. Her most recent book is The National Arboretum
Book of Outstanding Garden Plants (Simon & Schuster, 1990). |
It used to be that the gardeners of our planet, third from the sun, the one with the flowers, thought our love of plants an impractical but pure passion. But now, in an age of environmental crisis - of changing climates, polluted water supplies, critical problems in solid waster disposal, buildup of carbon dioxide, loss of fertile topsoil and of the very air we breathe - we're discovering that gardening is essential to human life.
H. Mark Cathey, director of the U.S. National Arboretum in Washington, D.C., has responded to these hard environmental times by calling for a "new American gardening ethic." That ethic, says Cathey, requires that individuals accept their responsibility "to meet and begin to solve the environmental crisis. We must plant 'tough plants' for tough times."
Cathey is optimistic about tough plants. "Research under way not will renew and dramatically improve the gardens and farms of the twenty-first century," he says. Through genetic engineering, hybridizing, and selection, new plants in the twenty first century will be more beautiful, more fruitful, and better equipped to resist pests, diseases, and stress, including water shortages and air pollution.
"The ultimate goal of current horticultural research is gardens satisfying in all seasons, needing little help from the gardener or chemicals," says Cathey. This isn't just pie in the sky, he adds. Even now, by spreading the use of tough plants, the home gardener can join scientists and breeders in keeping the environment healthy.
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