Toronto Star

Gardeners’ work grows in value

All that digging, planting and pruning results in beauty, food and biodiversi­ty

- Mark Cullen

Not all gardeners are created equal. My late father would have called me a “plantsman.”

My interest in gardening springs from a keen interest in plants and how we use them. I think this is the result of being raised in the retail gardening trade.

I recall a sign that had been featured at our family stores that read, “Weall and Cullen Nurseries. Where the Evergreen is KING!” illustrate­d with a cartoonish spruce with a crown on its head. Dad had a sense of humour.

I find it interestin­g that the very place where that sign once hung at his Woodbridge store is now occupied by a bank. The currency of one business (evergreens) replaced by the currency of another (cash). True value In Washington, D.C., on a cold winter morning at a subway station, a man played a violin. Six pieces of classical music in 45 minutes. Just over 1,000 people walked by, most of them on their way to work. About four minutes into his performanc­e the first dollar was dropped into his violin case.

Ten minutes later, a small boy tugged at his mother’s sleeve, encouragin­g her to slow down and take in the music. The mother hurried him along on their way. This happened a few times during the performanc­e: children trying to slow down their adult, and listen.

During the performanc­e, six people stopped to listen for a short while and, in total, the violinist collected $32. When he packed up, no one noticed he had stopped playing. No one applauded.

Two nights earlier the same musician, Joshua Bell, had played to a sold-out crowd in Boston, where the average seat sold for more than $100. He played on a violin valued at more than $3.5 million. Bell is acclaimed as one of the most talented classical musicians of our time.

The Washington Post had created this social experiment about perception, taste and people’s priorities: In a commonplac­e environmen­t, at an inappropri­ate hour, do we perceive beauty? Keen beauty

My keenest sense of beauty during the gardening season is early in the morning, when the birds are singing and the smell of fresh earth is rising. All my senses are on alert. I feel alive as I experience a symphony of sensations.

I hold those images and feelings in my mind for times like this, when the snow is heavy on the ground and frost is on the window pane.

The closest I come to that feeling this time of year is when listening to music like that of Joshua Bell. I close my eyes to imagine images of life in my garden as I know them in the growing season. The value of gardeners’ work?

It is hard to say what the value of our work is.

If you walk past a beautiful frontyard garden in full bloom while on your way to work, chances are you won’t see much. However, on a weekend morning on your way to the playground with your 3-year-old in hand, you may see it differentl­y. Especially if your kid tugs at you and pulls you down to look at a butterfly on a flowering shrub.

What do you see then? Through the filter of a pair of young, fresh eyes, you suddenly see the wonder of it all. You see hope.

To answer the question, “What is the value of a gardener’s work?” we need to ask another, bigger question: “What is the value of nature?”

There was a time when gardeners saw themselves as warriors, determined to slay the aggression of the wilderness. We strived to take control. That is why gardeners, just a couple of generation­s ago, embraced the use of pesticides such as 2,4-D, malathion, Cygon 2E and Brush Killer D — the only product on the retail market that would kill poison ivy.

We still do our share of controllin­g. We cut the grass, trim the hedge, hack back the aggressive growth of the evergreens in the yard.

Yet there are great changes afoot in the Canadian garden. We are planting record numbers of native plants.

The word “biodiversi­ty” has entered our lexicon. Many gardeners are making special efforts to attract bees, butterflie­s, song birds and hummingbir­ds to create a more biological­ly diverse environmen­t right in their own yards.

We are conducting a social experiment of our own every time one of us signs up to produce food in a local community garden.

In the ever-changing world of gardening, where our work is never finished because Mother Nature is forever changing it, I believe there is more value in being a gardener today than at any other time in our history. And I am very glad to be a plantsman. Mark Cullen is an expert gardener, Order of Canada recipient, author and broadcaste­r. Get his free monthly newsletter at markcullen.com. Look for his new bestseller, The New Canadian Garden, published by Dundurn Press. Follow him on Twitter @MarkCullen­4 and on Facebook.

 ?? DREAMSTIME PHOTOS ?? Gardening expert Mark Cullen says his keenest sense of beauty during the gardening season is in the early morning when all his senses are on alert.
DREAMSTIME PHOTOS Gardening expert Mark Cullen says his keenest sense of beauty during the gardening season is in the early morning when all his senses are on alert.
 ??  ?? Through a child’s eyes, we may see the wonder that resides in a garden.
Through a child’s eyes, we may see the wonder that resides in a garden.
 ??  ?? A gardener’s work is never complete, because Mother Nature is always changing it. Canadians are planting record numbers of native plants.
A gardener’s work is never complete, because Mother Nature is always changing it. Canadians are planting record numbers of native plants.
 ??  ?? Many gardeners are trying to attract song birds to their gardens in an effort to foster biodiversi­ty.
Many gardeners are trying to attract song birds to their gardens in an effort to foster biodiversi­ty.
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