Growing Foxgloves

Hybrid Dalmation Purple

Digitalis, better known as foxgloves, are among the most impressive of the tall perennials in any garden setting. Cottage gardens especially owe much of their charm to these statuesque, bumblebee-friendly flowers. (Foxes have nothing to do with them other than inspiring their whimsical name.)

Despite their charm, foxgloves have a reputation for being difficult to cultivate. They grow easily but can be tricky to sustain if you’re unfamiliar with their quirky lifecycle. Fortunately foxgloves can be managed successfully if you know what you’re dealing with. I’ll try to dispel some of the mystery here, and provide a few tips.

Lovage: An Under-utilized Perennial Herb

A clouded sulphur butterfly with lovage umbels and coneflowers

If you’ve never tasted the herb lovage, it’s time to remedy that situation. But you won’t find it on the spice shelf at the supermarket; you’ll have to grow it yourself. Or, find a friend who does. Fortunately, lovage is a big, easy-care perennial herb that will produce armfuls of leaves and seeds for your table with almost no work from you.

Better known in Europe for its culinary value than here, lovage has been in continual cultivation since Roman times and was part of every medieval kitchen garden. It’s popular in broths, soups, salads, pickles, seafood dishes and more. In Ukraine it was once considered an aphrodisiac and even used as a hair rinse! Time to try it for yourself, especially if you like to cook.

The True Lilies

By “true” lily, I mean the big, showy types that arise from bulbs in the Lilium family, having either trumpet-shaped blooms or recurved petals like the Turks-cap lily. Many are very fragrant as well.

Distinguishing true lilies from masquerading look-alikes can be confusing. Dozens of plants have “lily” in their common name, but aren’t really lilies at all. They’re so-named because their flowers and foliage resemble that of true lilies. Misnomers include daylilies, water lilies, toad lilies, lily of the valley, foxtail lily, calla lily, peace lily, and on and on. None of these are true lilies!

So what exactly are true lilies?