WILD-FLOWER GARDEN
A wild-flower garden has a most attractive sound. One thinks of long tramps in the woods, collecting
material, and then of the fun in fixing up a real for sure wild garden.
Many people say they have no luck at all with such a garden. It is not a question of luck, but a question of
understanding, for wild flowers are like people and each has its personality. What a plant has been accustomed to
in Nature it desires always. In fact, when removed from its own sort of living conditions, it sickens and dies.
That is enough to tell us that we should copy Nature herself. Suppose you are hunting wild flowers. As you choose
certain flowers from the woods, notice the soil they are in, the place, conditions, the surroundings, and the
neighbours.
Suppose you find dog-tooth violets and wind-flowers growing near together. Then place them so in your own new
garden. Suppose you find a certain violet enjoying an open situation; then it should always have the same. You see
the point, do you not? If you wish wild flowers to grow in a tame garden make them feel at home. Cheat them into
almost believing that they are still in their native haunts.
Wild flowers ought to be transplanted after blossoming time is over. Take a trowel and a basket into the woods
with you. As you take up a few, a columbine, or a hepatica, be sure to take with the roots some of the plant's own
soil, which must be packed about it when replanted.
The bed into which these plants are to go should be prepared carefully before this trip of yours. Surely you do
not wish to bring those plants back to wait over a day or night before planting. They should go into new quarters
at once. The bed needs soil from the woods, deep and rich and full of leaf mold. The under drainage system should
be excellent. Then plants are not to go into water-logged ground. Some people think that all wood plants should
have a soil saturated with water. But the woods themselves are not water-logged. It may be that you will need to
dig your garden up very deeply and put some stone in the bottom. Over this the top soil should go. And on top,
where the top soil once was, put a new layer of the rich soil you brought from the woods.
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