article image - Notes from Northern Gardener
Transcription
article image - Notes from Northern Gardener
A GARDENER’S LEGACY Back Left to Right: Margaret, Elizabeth, Mary, Katherine, and Barbara. Front Left to Right: John, Mildred, and Joe, Jr. A Gardener’s Legacy is the abbreviated telling of a woman’s life-long passion for gardening and how this passion sparked a love for gardening in each of her seven children. Story by Elizabeth Wieners Canavati Photos supplied by family Mildred Hiniker Wieners was born, raised and lived most of her 100+ years in Hastings, MN. She learned to love gardening at an early age as her parents grew vegetables, fruits, and flowers. In fact, when she was 8 or 9 she was put in charge of the vegetable gardenplanting seeds and watering. Her mother was a great cook and baker. She taught Mildred how to use all the produce economically. Her older sisters loved flowers and the borders around their home were gorgeous! Throughout the growing seasons, the flowers in bloom-the variety of colors, shapes, and sizes were like a magazine cover but without the advantage of photoshop. Those borders left a lasting impression on some of the nieces in the family. Subsequently, many of those perennials were shared with Mildred and live on in her second and third generations’ own gardens. Mildred married her grade school admirer, Joseph Wieners, after World War II. They had seven children in ten years. Although Mil and Joe were financially secure when they first married, supporting a family of nine was costly. So they purchased two city lots and put a vegetable garden with some raspberries and a few fruit trees on the second lot. The children can remember watching their parents work in the garden until dark all summer long and wondered how they could enjoy doing so much hard work. Author between Hiniker Flower Borders-1957 Top: Margaret’s soil before amendments. Bottom: Borders after amendments Joe and Mildred on their 55th Anniversary-2000 The soil on the lots Mil and Joe purchased was heavy clay and needed a lot of amending. Mildred and Joe started several compost piles, where vegetable and fruit scraps were disposed of and clippings from flowers and occasionally grass were added. In the fall, the leaves were raked up and spread over the vegetable garden and worked into the soil. In the early years, this was a back breaking job done with a shovel and garden fork as tillers weren’t readily available. Over the course of many years, the garden developed very rich, loose soil. They successfully grew just about anything that would survive Minnesota winters. All Mildred’s children saw the benefit of composting and have their own bin (or two). Her daughter, Margaret, has worked to enhance her soil most zealously. She is fortunate to live in Arlington, VA where she has a higher hardiness zone and can grow a wider variety of plants. Marge has two mulching bins behind her tool shed, where she collects kitchen waste, plant matter, and grass clippings. She spreads the composted material in the spring prior to planting. In addition, her county has free leaf mulch that she takes advantage of each year. After 30 years, her clay soil is now less compacted and her gardens are thriving beautifully. Mildred frequently told her young children that “gardening was a good hobby”. We were often given some gardening chores, such as digging out weeds, dead heading flowers, hoeing between the rows of vegetables, harvesting vegetables or picking fruit. I don’t think that any of us especially enjoy these jobs. We would much rather play on the dirt but we were expected to help. Our mom patiently showed us how to plant seeds in a straight row by using two sticks and twine. She taught us how to thin vegetables and stressed the need to rotate the vegetable plants each year. August and September were incredibly busy times for Mildred as the produce was harvested. She got busy canning as much as she could to supplement the family diet throughout the winter months. In fact, one year she canned over 100 quarts of tomatoes. The kitchen was quite small and the heat and steam from the water bath made the temperature in there extremely hot. We can remember sitting at the kitchen table peeling and/or slicing tomatoes and stuffing them into canning jars. Mildred never let us near the stove where the hot water was boiling, however. A similar scenario occurred when it was time to bottle applesauce, sliced apples, plums, or peaches. Mildred would process the fruit for pie or make jams and jellies. We had Concord grapes growing behind our garage and she would make grape juice or jelly. The elderberries grew at the far end of the garden and mom would make syrup, which we put on pancakes or ice cream. Above: Isa’s vegetable garden Below: Fresh vegetables and fruit, Elizabeth’s handiwork and Mildred’s cookbook, her other legacy. Most of Mildred’s children process some of their produce. Her daughter Elizabeth, who lives in Fort Wayne, IN, has reluctantly continued the canning legacy as her husband, Isa, has become passionate about gardening. Even though they have a vegetable garden about one third the size that Mildred and Joe had, Elizabeth is busy every August canning tomatoes, pasta sauce, ratatouille, salsa, and pickling beets. When she fills her quart or pint jars full of something, she marvels at how her mother did it in her small, steamy hot kitchen. Elizabeth just wouldn’t “can” without air conditioning! Isa has recently put in a fruit orchard. So this year she learned how to process sliced peaches and make peach compote. Fortunately, her husband has a colleague at work that makes jams and jellies. They give her the fruit and she provides them with some of the finished product. To think that Mildred use to do it all herself with a bunch of little ones running around! The vegetables and fruits became a necessity for Mildred’s family, but the flowers were a labor of love. Mildred’s sons, Joe in Kasson, MN and John in Ogden, UT, have taken to vegetable gardening without much interest in the flowers. They both are great cooks and can make some amazing dishes with home grown vegetables. Although Joe does some canning, they both prefer the freezer for preserving their garden bounty. Flowers As far back as her children can remember, there were two beautiful red climbing rose bushes spread across a trellis that spanned the entire kitchen wall. Anyone entering the back door could smell their fragrant perfume and admire their deep red color. They bloomed almost all summer long. Mildred particularly loved the roses and she proceeded to plant them all along the east side of the house. All her daughters have a rose bush or six! In addition, she has two large flower borders. One runs east-west and the other runs north-south in almost an L shape along the property line. She had obtained many plants from her mother’s home to get started with her flower borders. The garden was carefully planned with taller plants in the back, medium plants in the middle and smaller plants in front. They were planted in such a way that the colors were complementary and several plants were in bloom from spring to fall. She would use annuals to fill in during times when perennials weren’t blooming much. Over the years, she added a second north-south border, where she put all her bearded irises as they like it dry and she had acquired so many of them. Mildred maintains several large “charts” to indicate where all the plants are located in each border. She didn’t want to accidentally dig up a dormant or late growing perennial or bulbs when moving plants to a different location or dividing large clumps of perennials. She also referred to her charts when she needed to figure out where a new plant might fit in nicely as she was looking through plant catalogues during the winter months indoors. The bearded iris bed had its own chart, where the names/colors were listed along with how tall they would grow. Every year, she would select flowers to dig up and divide. Joe Sr. was a great help in that process as day lily or iris clumps could be very large and needing a strong back and heavy foot. She was always looking for new homes for all her extra plants. Mildred is a charter member of the Hastings Garden Club. The club and their annual plant sale became a great way for her to share her plants with many people. She always enjoyed having people come look at her gardens and answer any questions they might have about growing flowers or vegetables. Mil also enjoyed sharing tried and true recipes using garden produce. As her children completed their educations, got married, and settled into their own homes, Mildred was there to help them start their gardens. She would give them advice on where to plant the Top: East-West Border; Mildred near Iris Border; and Wildflower Garden perennials, how much sun or water they might require, and what plants look good together. For daughters that lived too far away to assist with the division process, she would send them a “care package” of plants with names and instructions on where and what to do. Elizabeth remembers getting a box where the plants were all mixed up. She was able to find out from Mildred what they were by describing the leaf shape. Her oldest daughter, Kate, lives in Mendota Heights, MN. She attributes her flower gardening style to Mildred’s fine example and the beautiful borders she remembers as a child at her grandma’s house. Kate’s goal is to have flowers and bulbs blooming from early spring until hard frost. Kate also uses the winter months to peruse gardening catalogs and make plans for spring revisions to her borders. She likes to experiment with new cultivars each year. She is now sharing her love of gardening with her sons at their homes. Below: Kate’s borders Mary, Mildred’s second daughter, lives in Coleraine, MN. She never thought she would like to garden as an adult. Initially, she felt Mildred was a little pushy with her extra perennials but took a few to make her mom happy. Over the years, Mary has received many perennials and more than a dozen different iris rhizomes. Now she “pushes” plants onto her own children. After 37 years of gardening, Mary admits to being addicted and unable to go to a local nursery without purchasing at least one new plant. She recently got her husband involved by encouraging him to make her a pergola and a block wall so that she could enjoy the advantages of having raised beds. Below: Mary’s arbor and raised beds As Mildred and Joe got older, the various plantings in the extra lot were reduced to accommodate what they could physically handle. Half the vegetable garden was converted into a wild flower bed. As fruit trees died, they weren’t replaced, and two rows of red raspberries became one. Eventually, even that was too much work so more of the lot became grass. Mildred’s youngest daughter, Barb, probably benefited the most from all of Mildred’s gardening knowledge as she settled and raised her family in Hastings. Since she was in town, she became the keeper of the seedlings growing under lights in Mildred’s basement in March and April or out in the cold frame, while Mil and Joe were off vacationing somewhere. Barb couldn’t understand how Mildred could spend so many hours caring for the little seedlings but managed to keep them growing in Mildred’s absence. Ten years ago, Barb purchased Mil and Joe’s extra lot and built her home there. She has continued to help Mildred with her borders while she develops and plants her own. Barb has adopted to the cottage garden style and had a 9’ window box made for a great view of flowers just outside her kitchen window. A few years ago, Barb purchased a grow light system. Last spring, she started about 300 seeds and the plants were taking over her basement. Barb was happy to get them outside just like her mother 20 years before. Now Barb shares her small plants with Mildred and her family. Barb’s back entry and window box Although Mildred is still living in her own home, she can no longer maintain her borders. It now becomes the task of whatever child or grandchild is visiting to complete the “jobs” that Mildred desires done when they arrive for a visit. Mildred still has her charts and likes to sit in the sun and admire her flowers. Her love of gardening is truly a family legacy. Her children agree, “Gardening is a good hobby!” Barb’s seedlings under the lights-2013