Copernican Revolutions / Peas, Kant, and Growing Minds
I am still having a hard time taking off running with the blog since Christmas, but with the ground wet and nothing but ice and snow for a month, I couldn’t run if I wanted to. Normally at this time I would be out prepping beds, putting up trellises for my peas, and digging trenches for my potatoes. Instead I have been trapped inside by the weather and the year I hoped to be a quick return to the garden after the rains of last summer is anything but. Instead, I am in the midst of a writing binge on the new app similar to the one I was on last summer when I started writing our 1st app. For a gardener with a philosophy degree this is about as challenging to your sense of reality as your first introduction to Kant’s Epistemology.
For those of you who aren’t familiar with Kant, the basic principle is that the meaning or reality of the things you encounter is not found in the things themselves, but is determined by the filters through which you perceive them. Put simply, the meaning of an object is relative to the person assigning the meaning; not intrinsically embedded in the object being perceived. In Philosophy circles this principle is commonly known as “The Copernican Revolution”. To self-centered beings who perceive the world in how it relates to themselves, it only seems logical that other beings meaning would be centered in the being itself. In Kant’s day this was as big of a change to most people as Copernicus’ claim that the world was round.
Many people don’t realize that Copernicus’ shift to viewing the world as round was Earth shaking enough to cause the start of the crusades and a complete reversal in the interpretation of the view of the Bible to being the “word” as in story to “Word” as in literal. Hundreds years later, Kant’s view has unknowingly been adopted in countless ways, and is viewed as the ethical foundation for capitalism, partisan politics, some religions and even some science. This is actualized in the view that there is no man made global warming because man is nature. In some cases it is even taken to the level that our self-centric role in the world is even divinely destined so anything done against another must be justified or forgiven.
Every spring I reach this point of reflection and introspection, and it seems to be directly related to the impending rush to make that first planting deadline of the pea. The pea of course has similar significance in that it is the first plant ever scientifically bred and led to the proof and eventual discovery of the gene. Little did Mendel know that his discovery and notion of genetic adaptation would lead to the concept of evolution generations later. Hundreds of years later, those first discoveries made by a monk and his peas have led to an entire industry and way of life in which nature is now viewed by more people thorough an agricultural or horticultural lens than one seeking nature itself. Nature is viewed by many as a means to an end for personal need and it’s meaning is derived more in how it relates to them, than the meaning it might have in itself. Somehow, through the evolution of our thought, we have managed to take the nature out of nature.
I love Kant. Maybe because in college Father Brady used to insist we called him CAN’T, and my love was out of spite. Brady’s insistence was not because his shift of reality was away from an intrinsic selves to one self, but because if he was going to make a shift he should have made it toward God. You could say father Brady was an “Old School” Jesuit…from the days when they carried swords instead of pens. Regardless of my love for Kant, it doesn’t mean he was entirely right. In fact my love is from where he made me realize that something was wrong. He was right in seeing the relativeness, but wrong for denying the other selves, and in turn relationships between them. I don’t think any of us are always right, because as beings with conscience and free will we have to be capable of wrong. That is why we have to give up our righteousness and strive for good. After all, the meaning of Philosophy is the love of knowledge, not Knowledge by itself.
The thing with Kant’s Copernican Revolutions is that in determining which side of reality holds the meaning, we by default recognize meaning is intrinsic to both sides. As I watch the world turn in my mind, and I plant my peas one seed at a time, I will undoubtedly be thinking of all the Copernican Revolutions happening right now. The shift to organic gardening, the hopeful return to more localized markets, the return of our economy to making real goods instead of fake money, our roles as citizens in our country and as citizens of the world are all shifts as big as those caused by four little peas planted by a monk hundreds of years ago. Our view back to nature having nature may even be as big as realizing the world isn’t flat. Not to ramble, but these are the musings that made an old friend coin the lyric “In the garden growing different kind of mind”.
Regardless of what you see as important, the one thing these transformations all have in common is the recognition that our view of reality is changing once again. As the forces of nature respond to our treatment of it, and people respond the polarizing views of each other, we are starting to realize that everything and everyone does have an intrinsic meaning and they responding to each others’ self-centered views of them. As I watch the bloggers here, people in the gardening industry and in the social networks on line, I see the same things. I see people trying to find their way in thought as well as their careers. I see my friends in print finding the same uncertainty as those in real estate, and I see a widening gap between the masses of those struggling to choose the “right” side to follow even though both sides are lost and suffering.
Through all this I still see those finding a new way, like that next generation of pea sprouting from a seed. I see those using technology to enhance the use of their writing instead of to compete with their writing. I see people using both to bring people together to educate and solve problems. Amongst all those struggling to use these new tools to shout the loudest and most often, as though there is something to win, I am starting to see new species emerge with a steady sturdy growth. These people aren’t trying to win a battle of the fittest. They are growing and creating their own Copernican Revolution in which the meaning isn’t in who or which, but in how: how we move forward together, how we effect each other, and how we can bring out the meaning in each other to embrace the meaning of us all.
This is a new generation not founded in who’s reality is right, but what is the best way forward. The new reality requires finding the meaning in each other, embracing the symbiotic relationships intrinsic to our nature, throwing away the notion of right, and trying to do what is good. That little pea that seemingly sprouts out of nowhere in March and grows ever so slowly until it explodes with abundance and sweetness in June isn’t moving slowly because the lettuce is better. It is taking it’s time and giving some nitrogen to the soil on it’s way. It is letting the bees take as much pollen as they can. In return the bees are pollinating even more, and if we don’t treat that mildew on the leaves the bees will pollinate a bumper crop because we didn’t kill them with chemicals. If we look for the meaning in relationships with each other instead of in ourselves we will see that this revolution won’t require wars, because the great change will be ending the wars we create with one another and against the world we live in. What is right will become seeking good, and that’s not so bad.
Now, if you are not under ten inches of snow get our there and grow some mind.









Castanaea dentata (American Chestnut): This tree is one of the most known stories of eco-catastrophe in our countries history. The Chestnut was the most coveted of all lumbers in the early part of the 1900’s. As a result was the clear-cutting of almost all of the Southern Appalachians. The practices were horrid, and reminiscent of a scene from a slaughter house, but of trees. Lumber that wasn’t seen as fit to mill was left in place leaving entire mountains looking like salvage yards. Stumps were left in place, and all of the ground vegetation was smothered under the debris. Erosion was rampant, and as a result these wastelands became a breeding ground for what would become the Chestnut blight. Species such as the black bear were almost completely lost, deer populations dissipated, and without the nuts to forage or forest to find protection from hunters Elk eventually disappeared.
Ulmus americana (American Elm): In the first half of the 1900’s this tree was the most common street tree in the United States. It’s arching branches formed cathedral ceilings over almost every street in every city. It become an icon of American urbanism and the America Beautiful movement. It fell victim not to greed of harvesting, or destruction of its environment, because this tree grew anywhere. Rather it fell victim to careless breeding and commercialization that weakened the species. While Chinese and European varieties were being imported for breeding to create fancy bark or brighter fall color, no one realized that they were weakening the species and importing a deadly disease that would bring the native species to its knees.
Pinus palustris (Longleaf Pine / Southern Yellow Pine): The Longleaf pine was on of the signature trees of Southeast coastal regions. This tree is very unique in that for the first eight years of its life it grows like a fireproof grass with no trunk elongation. Then it shoots up and it sensitive to burns, but once it reaches about 10′ it becomes fire proof again and soars to heights of up to 100′. This burning process is crucial to its reproduction and the culling of healthy forests. The lush wild look this process creates was the image that was burned into the minds of explorers when the new world was being discovered. The unique habit created by the juvenile plants provide habitat to all sorts of foul and wildlife and as their habitat has become endangered so have some of them. Red-cockaded woodpeckers and indigo snakes are most at risk, but tourtouses are in line right behind them.
Quercus virginiana (Southern Live Oak): Yes, this tree is the one we have embedded in our heads from movies like Gone With the Wind, and every other great southern movie or novel. As we see them in all the urban settings and plantation gardens you would not think something this majestic could be in any sort of danger. The Spanish soss and fern growing on its branches make it look as thought this species is drooping from the weight or its virility. However, in its native habitat it is almost gone. The boggy soil and forests of the deltas where it thrived have mostly been drained for drilling, sugar cane, and development. These trees made up the buffers that used to protect New Orleans from the onslaught of hurricanes. There ability to be uprooted and fall apart but continue to grow in the loamy soil that was once its home was the constant stability that held the delta together. Now their native habitat is down to a few remaining national and state controlled forests. Of course other species have been impacted, but the most famous impact was the damage from Katrina that was exasperated without the natural buffers these trees created to protect it.
Tsuga hetrophylla (Western Hemlock) & Tsuga caroliniana (Carolina Hemlock): Both of these trees have suffered similar fates. Both are the victims of over logging. Unfortunately both were thought to be invincible as they grew like the Red Cedars of the Midwest on either coast. In the East the Carolina Hemlock was hardly ever used for lumber, They were usually casualties of careless Chestnut and Oak harvest and turned into pulp or used for fuel. By the time the species was decimated people had realized it was a beautiful lumber and turned to the bountiful west coast for the Western Hemlock in its place. Neither were able to come back as fast as they were being harvested and as a result the faster growing Tsuga canadensis (Canadian Hemlock) and various Pines have taken their respective places.
Picea sitchensis(Sitka Spruce): Another victim of logging, this species is also succumbing to the woolly adelgid. One of the more tragic consequences of this parable is that this tree is the home to the endangered Spotted Owl. When the fight over protecting the owl versus the right to harvest came to a head the harvest rate increased dramatically as it turned into a race to see how much people could harvest as while they still could. As timber containing adelgid infested lumber moves up and down the highways it just spreads it even more. In the end both the owl and the loggers are losing out as they are losing the tree they both covet so much.
Thuja plicata Western Red Cedar: This tree has been devastated in its native habitat due to logging for pulp. However, it is thriving and making a surge in cultivation. As the Hemlocks and Junipers used in landscapes have become more problematic and disease prone, this tree grows with relative ease. It struggles to outpace the pines that are moving into the native habitat because the Pines grow larger and shade them out. While in the landscape people are finding this to be a great native alternative to give the feel of a Canadian Hemlock without the adelgids or chemicals to keep the bugs at bay. However do to massive logging its natural disbursement patterns have been disrupted permanently and it may never be able to reestablish itself against the more aggressive species taking it’s place.
Betula (Birch): Betula nigra (River Birch) is probably the most common. There are several varieties of the species including ‘heritage’. All have the indicative papery tan exfoliating bark. They also are usually multi-trunked with a few large leaders reaching for the warmth of the sun and small horizontal branches wisping out from the sides . The vertical structure of the trunk makes it move in the wind and provides a nice contrast to the broad, heavy and horizontal branching of Spruce and Pine. My favorite Birch is actually Betula populfolia ‘Whitespire” (Japanese Whitespire Birch). It is a white or “paper” barked variety that has proven to be borer resistant. The parent plant is now almost seventy-years old and remains borer free.
Cornus sericea (Red Twig Dogwood): This is one of the few shrubs with colorful bark in the winter. It is also native to much of the United States. This plant has a bright red twig in winter that can be seen from a distance but isn’t overpowering. The vertical branching habit makes it feel more like a grass or thicket plant than a shrub, but the fullness makes it work well for a border or foundation plant. The plants are a lush green in summer with a nice white flower and prolific white berries birds love. Along with this you must include Cornus alba (Variegated Red Twig Dogwood). It is very similar to Conus sericea, except it has a variegated leaf. This species can be prone to anthracnose but the variety Cornus alba “Ivory Halo” seems to be disease resistant, and keeps a more compact form than other varieties.
Hydrangea quercifolia (Oakleaf Hydrangea), and Hydrangea anomala var. petiolaris (Climbing Hydrangea): Both of these plants have a birch like bark that is exquisite in winter. The Oakleaf Hydrangea looks great against evergreens or lawns, and another interesting feature is that if you leave the flowers on they will dry in place all winter. This almost makes it look like it is in bloom. Climbing Hydrangea is wonderful on a fence, and especially brick walls. The bark really pops out against brick. It also has a very fibrous attaching root that give it an almost Gothic feel compared to other vines. It is also a self attaching vine with makes it even nicer.
Physocarpus opulifolius (Ninebark): There are two predominate varieties of this plant ‘Diablo’, a purple leaved variety, and ‘Dart’s Gold’a yellowish leaved variety. Both have a Birch like texture in winter. If left alone they grow very vertical and develop a thick trunk like structure. They seem to max out around six feet in height and four feet in width. This makes them great to tuck behind low growing evergreens and if left natural will look almost like a very small Birch. Ninebarks are extremely hardy, fairly fast growing, and drought tolerant.
Acer palmatum ‘Sangu Kaku’ (Coral Bark Maple): This plant his a vivid pinkish coral bark in winter. It can almost take on an orangish tone. The tree itself is very delicate and rarely exceeds twelve feet in height. It has a ferny maple leaf and wispy texture. It does not develop the distinguished branching habit that other Japanese Maples do, so it does look good as a stand alone specimen. However, it is fantastic tucked into evergreens or against a foundation. The only downfall to this plant is that it is prone to winter kill. Winter watering will cut down on this, but expect it to develop some dead wood in winter that will need to be removed in the spring.
Lagerstoemia indica (Crepe Myrtle): There are dozens of varieties of this plant in production. It comes in all sorts of colors and sizes. The trunks are usually clumped and have a blotchy exfoliating bark, rather than papery bark like a birch. Many people think of them as trashy because they drop flowers and seed pods constantly and sucker which makes them require pruning to keep nice trunks. Regardless, with all of that, it sure looks good most of the time and especially with its late summer bloom and winter bark. Both features shine at times when other plants are lackluster. On top of that it can survive the abuse of just about any parking lot in the south.
Acer griseum (Paper Bark Maple): This is a very underused and overlooked tree. It averages about 25-30 feet in height, so it can be used for shade on a patio, a specimen in the lawn without killing out the grass, or as an ornamental in a foundation planting. It is not overly showy. It doesn’t have an amazing flower or incredible fall color, but it is classy. The fall color is nice, and the foliage is very clean and green in the summer, but this plant is sought for the bark. It is a favorite of collectors. Sometimes I compare plant collectors to book collectors. If I were to compare it to a book you just had to have on your shelf it would be Catcher in The Rye. It is not a huge tree, but does she rextremely well written, reliable as a recommendation, full of inspiration and bound to create memories.
Platanus x acerifolia (London Plane Tree) and Platanus occidentalis (American Sycamore): These are two of the great majestic trees of urban parks everywhere. They are messy, and drop limbs, leaves, and seeds all of the time, but the mess is worth it. They are extremely hardy, pollution and drought tolerant, and capable of living in swamps. There is not much this plant can’t take, but what it gives is irreplaceable. The bark of the London Planetree exfoliates on the lower portions of the trunk. The American Sycamore is reversed and exfoliates on the upper trunk and branches. Both create very tall and open canopies making them ideal for street trees. As their branches cross the road they create the feeling of a nave. Given the space of a park, where they can be 100 feet from the next tree, they can form a cathedral unto themselves with branches hanging all the way to the ground 60-80′ wide. When it comes to habit, they can rival the grandest of any Oak, but what makes them stand our is that glorious white of the bark exploding in winter.
Such a big word sustainability is. Everyone is trying to define it. Everyone says they can provide it, and most think it is something you create or buy rather than something that you do indefinitely. For the last five years I worked in sustainable development. I raced everyday to repair the forest’s edge and to get the wild flowers to grow before some salesman decided “sustainability” didn’t sell. I fought for the budgets and screamed on behalf of the trees and the workers who protected and cared for them. Well for something to be sustainable it cannot be a race, or a competition it has to be a collaborative effort from the bottom up. To use a dirty word, it is community organizing with nature as a full fledged participant. Sustain is a verb and you can’t turn it into a noun by claiming to give it ability and using it as something to be sold or proffited from. It is an effort, behavior, and way of life that for it to be successful requires participation of everone involved and recognition of everything involved. It has to be adaptable and evolutionary just like nature, because if any part of the system changes it impacts the whole.
I have always said that the difference between a garden and a landscape is that the garden requires a gardener. A landscape may not require a gardener, but it does require a steward. This is the paradox of the sustainable landscape. Once nature is disrupted it can no longer be sustainable (self-sustaining) in the truest sense. It has to be sustained unless it can be returned to the natural state. Once you have destroyed the natural cycles, nature can never completely return to what it was. All we can do is create a new eco-system, and help it get to where it can thrive on its own. Hopefully we can do it in a way that won’t disrupt the lifecycle of surrounding ecosystems and set it in another wrong course. The bottom line in all of this is once we have broken it we own it. We suddenly have to maintain it or repair it in a way that it can maintian itself. Suddenly sustainability is no longer about sustaining the beauty around us, but rather a race to stop the damage we have done. Once the decision is made and the damage is done all of the sudden sustainability or more precise, sustaining starts and the cycle set in motion may never end.
Burning Bush / Euonymous alatus This is one of the most popular fall color shrubs in production. It’s vivid red fall color gives it the name. It is tolerant of drought, ignorant pruning with gas shears extreme cold and keeps on growing. As a result it has become a favorite in commercial landscapes and roadside plantings. In zones 6 and up, the little red berry it gets is extremely viable and is spread by the birds that eat it. Typically a simple hedge planting in the wrong location can spread to a radius of one mile within ten years. The native plants they displace include Mountain Laurel, Rhododendron, and Hydrangea. Which would you rather have?
Bradford Pear / Pyrus calleryana I can remember when this plant came out in the 80’s and was marketed as “America’s Most Poplular Tree” for the fall color, spring flower, nice tight shape, hardiness, and its fruitlessness. Besides being prone to ice and wind damage due to that “desireable” branching habit, this tree turned out to be anything but fruitless. The small crabapple sized berries are a favorite of birds and so is its branching habit. As a result these can now be found in pastures and waterways throughout zones 6 and up. Even worse in waterways they are replacing canopy producing trees and raising water temperatures which hurts species such as the Southern Appalachian Brook Trout.
Japanese Wisteria / Wisteria floribunda Introduced as a favorite for Japanese gardens, its agreesive vining habit will take over anywhere zone 5 and below if left unattended. It can reproduce by rooting if the brances touch the ground, and in zones 7 and up has vibable seeds. It is commonly found in Eastern forests along the Blue Ridge Parkway at elevations between 2500 and 4000 feet. The populations are highest around cities and especially the Biltmore Estate. While the flowers are beautiful with the Dogwoods they can girdle and kill any tree they wrap around. There is a native variety that is finally making it into production.![spbua23[1] spbua23[1]](http://www.botanybuddy.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/spbua231-300x201.jpg)
Japanese Barberry / Berberis thunbergii This plant is most commonly planted at your local McDonalds due to its attractiveness with the golden arches. It is just an invasive as the chain in zones five and up and is as bad for the environment as their food is for you. The plant aesthetically is probably as numbing to your palet as their food is to your culinary sophistication. The beautiful red berry entices the birds like a toy in a Happy Meal entices my child. The red leaves hypnotize the plant’s buyers from a distance like the arches that can be seen from a mile away. As a result this plant litters our forests like McDonalds’ wrappers do our cities.
Empress Tree / Paulownia tomentosa This plant is not commony found in nurseries, but it is pushed by many major seed catalogs for its ability to grow ten feet a year. I would think that would tell you something in itself, but people want instant results and that pretty purple flower in May and June. The tree has nice leaves and a habit like a Catalpa, but most of the year its appearance is cluttered by the seed pods that will spread anywhere they can find soil and light. This is one of the few invasive trees that wasn’t brought here for planting. Instead, before there were packing peanuts there were Paulownia! Before there was styrofoam the seed pods of this plant were used in wooded crates from Asia as packing peanuts, and the trees can now be found along all of the railways throughout the United States. Unfortunately one of the first places those rails went was our national parks.
English Ivy/ Hedera helix What would a formal garden be without it? It would be a lot more interesting and a lot more sustainable. It is defnitely time to give this plant a rest. It should really only be used in the concrete jungle and even then limited. There are many more intersting alternatives live Pachysandra or an all out perennial bed. This vine spreads by root and can climb in the forest greatly weakending larger trees if not contained. When allowed to reach heights of 20 and 30 feet it will often start to seed and spread even more. I haven’t used this plant in over five years, and to be honest with you, my designs, clients, and environment are far better off for it.
Butterfly Bush / Buddleia davidii This plant is finally starting to make people’s radar as an invasive. It is one of those that has exploded in variety and popularity over the last fifteen years. It is still new enough the effects are just starting to take root. However, in all zones, if these seed falls into a wetland or moist area and gets temperatures above seventy degrees for over a couple weeks, it will germiante and spread. It is most commonly a problem in warmer mountain and piedmont areas thought the US where moisture running off the mountains provides just this environment. The seed is a favorite of finches so they move the seed form the plant to summer wilflower patches that share ideal growing conditions.
Scotch Broom / Cytisus scoparius This plant is to the West and coastal areas what Japanese Spirea is to the rest of the country. It has naturalized throughout most of the West Coast. The low growing bushy habit takes out everything in its way, and it has beautiful flowers and evergreen foliage to boot! This makes it a favorite of growers. There are hundreds of varieties in production, and the tollerance to drought and long bloom time make it a favorite of retailers. As for all those little California and coastal wildflowers look out! This one is eating them all up.
Norway Maple / Acer platanoides This is probably the most planted invasive tree, but most unknown to be invasive. This plant had been quietly taking over Poplar forests for the last hundred years. Poplar being fast growing, straight and light is now the most popular trim lumber. It is often selectively harvested leaving just enough light for the seeds of the Norway Maple to germinate and establish quickly. With yellow fall color like a Poplar’s, from a distance youwould never know the forest had changed, but the natural progression of the forest has. As the Poplars get older, weaker ones are supposed to fall and thin over time allowing room for grand Oaks to establish along with the legacy surviors. However, the fast wide growing maples stunt the forest progression making 100 year old forests look like they are only thirty years old.
As I watched the recent news of someone suing their college for the cost of tuition because they haven’t gotten a job, I cannot express how glad I am I went to college to get and education and not a job. Not that a Philosophy Degree is the most marketable piece of paper, in the first place. However, without my liberal arts education, I have know doubt I would not be able to do what I am doing today or the things that gotten me here. This is a driving and omnipresent force behind the co-founders of Botany Buddy.


