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Helen Chesnut: Plants in procreative overdrive

There鈥檚 been much comment this spring on the earliness and unusually prolific bloom on fruiting and ornamental trees and shrubs.
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A redvein Enkianthus, whose branches are arranged in an attractively tiered fashion, has been crowded with clusters of pendant flowers.

There鈥檚 been much comment this spring on the earliness and unusually prolific bloom on fruiting and ornamental trees and shrubs. In my garden, it鈥檚 been most noticeable on the apple trees, blueberries, rhododendrons, an Enkianthus and a Choisya called Aztec Pearl. It鈥檚 almost as though last summer鈥檚 drought propelled the plants into procreative overdrive. May the fruit crops be as prolific as the flowers, and may we have a moderate and comfortable summer.

Innovative books. Several garden books that have come to my attention this spring have taken commonly treated topics and viewed them in new and useful ways.

Steve Solomon鈥檚 latest (2015) edition of Growing Vegetables West of the Cascades (Sasquatch Books) takes certain long-accepted gardening practices, questions them and supports his reasoning with scientific evidence. He challenges commonly held views on optimal use of compost and on preferred types of lime. And in his A to Z directory to growing vegetables he includes a note for each one on 鈥渄ry gardening鈥 that gives tips on reducing the planting鈥檚 need for watering.

The book carries forward the theme of a previous Solomon publication 鈥 The Intelligent Gardener: Growing Nutrient-Dense Food (New Society Publishers) 鈥攊n its emphasis on re-mineralizing garden soils for an optimal balance of nutrients, which, in food gardens, translates into enhanced human health.

Along with nutrient density in foods comes flavour intensity. The more vivid the flavours in a vegetable or fruit, the higher its nutritional value is likely to be. Now, a newly published title further explores this theme in lively, entertaining fashion.

Grow for Flavor: Tips and Tricks to听Supercharge the Flavor of听Homegrown Harvests

By James Wong

Firefly Books, 224 pp, $29.95

This colourful and absorbing book is loaded on every page with unusual methods most of us will not have heard before, because many challenge traditional practices, particularly those related to watering, fertilizing and racing for high yields, that tend to water down flavours and nutrients.

The author, a Kew-trained botanist and science writer based in London, has personally trialled his growing systems, with further trials conducted at the Royal Horticultural Society garden in Wisely. The book bears the RHS logo.

He cites trials that demonstrate how cutting back on water at critical times helps to concentrate flavours and nutrients.

鈥淪ome Californian growers of premium tomatoes will stop irrigation altogether after the plants are established.鈥 Known as 鈥渄ry farming,鈥 the method creates smaller plants and yields, along with 鈥渟ky-rocketing鈥 flavours. Even in beets and carrots, 鈥渓ower听irrigation can cause sugar content to rise, with nutritious polyphenols increasing by up to 86听per cent.鈥

Wong points out the importance of picking berries fully ripe, at their peak of fragrance and flavour. This may seem obvious, yet several times I鈥檝e met gardeners who, for some mysterious reason, pick well ahead of full ripening.

The author recommends the use of seaweed fertilizer as a rich source of minerals and trace nutrients. Radicchio is considered a 鈥渇antastically healthy choice鈥 for its concentration of phytonutrients. Several pages are devoted to the growing of sweet potatoes, including that crucial step of post-harvest curing for successful storage and full flavour.

Included in this attractive and captivating book is mushroom cultivation, a guide to salad greens, reasons for becoming a 鈥渟eedling whisperer,鈥 a visual guide to edible weeds, and unusual recipes that include a spiced pumpkin and carrot jam, baked zucchini chips, floral jams, and 鈥淎nthocyanin-Packed Blueberry pie.鈥

GARDEN EVENTS

Art in Bloom. The Mid Island Floral Art Club is staging a show titled Art in Bloom: A Kaleidoscope of Petals and Paint, Tuesday through Saturday, May 28, at The Old School House in Qualicum Beach, with an opening on Wednesday at 2 p.m. theoldschoolhouse.org.

Plant Identification and Culture. The next session in this monthly course is on Saturday, May 21, 1 to 4 p.m. Each session introduces 25 new plants, with their descriptions, preferred growing conditions, landscape uses and maintenance. This session will take the form of a Finnerty Gardens Field Trip. Information and registration at 250-479-6162. Cost to members per session is $35, others $45. Cost for 12听sessions: members $350, others $450. hcp.ca.