Showing posts with label Joe Allen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Allen. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Bloom Day September 2010

From In the Garden
Bloom Day this month is much welcomed because the weather has cooled and I can work in the garden-finally! The above 'bottle blooms' are part of a HUGE new project in my garden involving TONS of soil. This is just a sneak peek. When it is all done I will post about the new gardens. If you look just past the bottles you'll see some great sedums blooming. These are wonderful butterfly magnets in my garden and are only now coming into bloom.

From In the Garden
Here is another about to bloom flower with a small skipper perched upon it. I wanted to show this red valerian that I started from seed. Catherine of A Gardener In Progress sent me the seeds for this valerian, great blue lobelia, and 'Lilac Fantasy' veronica. All seedlings are growing great and are finally being set out in the garden. I am ever so excited to see these bloom in a nursery bed in my vegetable garden as there are tons of these flowers all in this state in one bed.

From In the Garden
Lantana 'Miss Huff' is a REAL winner in my garden. I winter over cuttings of this lantana. I have about 10 started already but noticing how special these plants are in spite of the drought makes me want to start about a dozen more. They are easy to winter over and root from cuttings. These cuttings from last year are now about 3'x'3 and a big draw for the butterflies.

From In the Garden
Indigofera amblyantha or Chinese Indigo is a winner. It has been blooming non-stop since May. I just noticed a few seedlings underneath the mother plant and am excited about these. A few garden friends have voiced that they would like a start of it so I plan to spread them around.

From In the Garden
Here we have zinnias, cosmos, and Verbena bonarienis growing in the vegetable garden among a foundation of bricks. I don't know what it is about bricks but these self seeders love the brick and have done well all summer growing through the bricks.

From In the Garden
Phlox 'Flame White' and impatiens growing in the Sunny Perennial Border. 'Flame White' is a dwarf phlox (only about 12"-24" tall) and is a rebloomer. It is stunning!

From In the Garden

Lastly we have 'Sunny Border Blue' veronica. I love the veronicas and have made a big effort at spreading them around my garden. This veronica blooms all season long. And just look at the bumble bee. See all that pollen on its legs? It is a happy bee!

Also blooming not pictured: buddleia, 'Tangerine Beauty' crossvine, hyacinth bean vine, sweet autumn clematis, milkweed, 'Chocolate' eupatorium, melampodium, catmint, bouncing bets, woodland phlox, perennial ageratum, 'Limelight' hydrangeas, ornamental grasses, 'Knockout' roses, mums, cleome, some unknown 'wildflowers', pot begonias, and turtlehead....

in the garden....

On a sad note, Joe Allen, a fellow nature lover, who was a longtime writer here locally and had a book published by APSU passed away recently. I did a post very early in my blogging days (nearly three years ago) about Joe and wanted to let these original commenters and a few other bloggers know about his passing. If you'd like to read the post about Joe you can find it here. He was a very kind and gentle person who truly loved all things nature.


Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team,

In the Garden

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Nature About Us....



This post is about a person who has spent two of my lifetimes loving nature. Not only has he loved nature, but he has written and shared his love of nature with countless fans. His name is Joe D. Allen.

On my initial meeting with the editors of the Leaf Chronicle, Mr. Stevens spoke of Joe Allen. He said he used to write nature articles for the paper, but that his health had deteriorated and he was no longer able to write. What a sad loss for us all. It made me think of other writers who wrote articles for the paper and who no longer write. Jim Monday currently writes an interesting weekly article, as does Rusty Evans. I will miss them both when one day they stop writing. But I won't forget the writers. Just like I haven't forgotten Joe Allen.

I do not know Joe Allen, but I religiously read his articles each week. He taught me much about nature. My friend Ursula, personally knows Joe. She has never forgotten his kindness when he came to her home and shared his knowledge of nature with her. Joe now resides in Grace Nursing Home at 111 Ussery Road (formerly known as General Care Convalescent Center) here in Clarksville. Ursula visits Joe frequently. She prepared the posters of the birds Joe loves so much that now decorate his wall at the nursing home. Ursula and I are hopeful Joe will one day soon get a window bed, where he can look at the birds outside his window eating at the birdfeeder firsthand.

Ursula and I visited with Joe Allen yesterday. He was happy to see us and enjoyed our visit very much. Ursula is a kind friend who shows her care in all she does. She brought him some food; which he loved very much. I told Joe I also write about nature, though my focus is more on gardening than the wildlife, and that I would like to honor him on here and in the Leaf Chronicle as a wonderful writer, fellow nature lover, and a super person who shared so much with so many others. He agreed.


Knowing how much Joe loved birds I asked him which was his favorite. Can you readers of his weekly column and book remember which bird he loved most? Hint: It is the first bird he ever wrote about and the subject of the initial essay Stan Gower, then editor of the Leaf Chronicle in 1956, published. It is the Cardinal!


Joe was an integral figure in the establishment of the local chapter of the National Audubon Society, the Warioto Audubon Society. This chapter is still active today as I often read of it in the newspaper.


Do you know of Alan Jackson's song "Small Town Southern Man"? When I hear this song I always think of Joe. He learned about nature from observing wildlife on his family's farm here in Clarksville. He says in his book, Enjoying Nature About Us, that "birds do not consider a man on a tractor to be such an enemy as a man walking, so I could often pass very close by them." The cover picture of this very same book shows Joe sitting on his John Deere tractor. Joe is truly a good patron of nature and life and we need more like him in this world.


While Joe has always been a protector and lover of nature, his passion for writing is what has enabled the rest of us to truly appreciate nature and to gain an understanding of how everything in life is connected. He says, "From the beginning it was my aim to encourage others to understand, appreciate, enjoy, and conserve the wonderful work of nature around us." Joe, you have truly done this and touched my life, as well as countless others.


For all of you readers and friends out there, and I know there are many, a visit to Joe to talk about the nature we all love would truly lift his spirits. I hope everyone can find the time to visit loved ones (friends and family) members in nursing homes as it does so much to lift their spirits-and yours too! After all, we all may one day be in such a position where we can no longer write or do the things we love to do. It is a sad fact of life.


in the garden....Enjoying Nature About Us.