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Merry May 30, 2022 Meeting

Once again the Hort Zooms onto your computer - click here from 7pm on on Monday May 30 2022 to see, hear, and participate in our meeting. Reminder - to see the full Bulletin, click "View this email in your Browser" above.

Plant Sale reminder

10am-4pm at the Roncy Flea Market; we may close early if plants are all sold. Suggestion: come before noon if you can.

On sale a choice selection of herbs, annuals, perennials, and sunflower seeds to support Ukraine relief. 

Rain or Shine!

 Merry May Meeting 

You get a chance to highlight your favourite plants or garden designs. Send photos to us, newsletter@parkdaletorontohort.com by Friday May 27. Please don't send video files - they're way too big. If you want to show us a video, please upload it somewhere like Youtube, and send the link to it to us as above. Video pointers: no longer than 5 minutes, please so we can accommodate everyone. Make sure you give the public permission to see your video or we can't show it!

What you show doesn't have to be from your garden or balcony. For example, Mari Lise Stonehouse will show us gardens from her recent spring visit to England.

Sorry, we can only features photos and videos from paid-up Hort members.

Articles

Memories of home remedies


Reading in the March newsletter about Dr. Beresford-Kroeger and folk lore:

"As a university student a few years later, (she) put those teachings to the scientific test and discovered with a start that they were true."

I remember about 1960, a pregnant cousin said that a new discovery said raspberry leaf tea helped in childbirth. My mother looked at her “We have always used that”!

I have a wonderful book “Grandmother’s Secrets”,  A French Victorian book full of herbal remedies. One looked useful. I offered to make Feverfew (Matricaria) sandwiches for a friend with severe migraines. He refused but The Lancet claimed this as a new discovery a few months later.

Tansy tea worked for pinworms but a revoting taste and could have side effects.

We need to keep our biodiversity!

Anna Leggat

editor's note: Jean Palaiseul, the author of "
Nos grands-mères savaient. Petit dictionnaire des plantes qui guérissent", was born in 1912 and became a journalist and editor for Editions Havas. The earliest publication date I can find is post WWII. Is there another "Grandmother's Secrets" I may have confused this with? I suspect that "Grandmother's Secrets - The Ancient Rituals and Healing Power of Belly Dancing" by Rosina-Fawzia al-Rawi is not the one Anna refers to.

The Palaiseul book has had many editions in both French and English and is still available. Palaiseul wrote several other books on traditional healing methods.

 
 

TORONTO ISLAND GARDEN TOUR 2022 Sunday June 5th - 11am to 5 pm 

Tickets are $10 in advance via etransfer to Toronto Island Garden Fundannekotyk@yahoo.caEnjoy touring artists’ and plant lovers’ private gardens.

The Meadoway - Anna Leggatt

The Meadoway.

            I frequently drive up Bermondsey Road (on the East York, North York border). Five years ago, I noticed the ground in the Hydro corridor was being ploughed up. This continued for the next two or three years with signs saying “Naturalization Project”. This sounded good, but I did not have high hopes.

            Then last summer - “Wow!” The area was full of colour with yellow daisies of several kinds, white Queen Anne’s Lace, pink milkweed and touches of mauve and blue from Bergamot and Vervaine. Butterflies were flitting around.

            I Googled and discovered this was the 200 hectare Meadoway, costing $85 million. It will, when completed in 2025, be 16 km of linear green space, linking the Don Valley Ravine with the Rouge Urban National Park. It passes through 34 neighbourhoods, 15 parks and 7 ravines. The areas were mostly seeded in 2020. It will be home for over 1000 species of flora and fauna, providing scientific research possibilities. These include possible techniques for invasive species eradication, use of cover crops and the role played in adding grass species. It also has 10 agricultural gardens.

            The path beside the Hydro lines is open to cyclists and pedestrians, but not to motorised vehicles. This path is almost complete - driving along, we cannot yet see a link from the Don Valley. A new bridge will link the eastern end to the Rouge. It will then be possible to cycle from Downtown Toronto to the Rouge on a mid town route without travelling on a street (only crossing them!) It will be the largest linear park in Canada and has won a 2021 Design Award. In mid July, we drove east through Scarborough, trying to keep close to the Hydro lines, stopping when a street crossed the corridor. There was colour all the way along, but with different combinations. Some had more Bergamot.

            I stopped again to take photos in early October. The yellows then were Evening Primrose and Goldenrods, with blueish accents from Fall Asters. Brown spikes of seed heads from earlier Evening Primroses and Mullein were prominent. The picture was softened by tawny grasses, undulating in the breeze. I saw a late monarch floating around and a few other butterflies. I was excited by the almost deafening twitter of small birds. I could see Goldfinches and House Sparrows and I thought many others. We have several species of Hawks in this area so we expect they will be hunting rodents and birds.

            Now in April, some areas look untidy with bent over stems and some garbage.

            Go and visit, spring, summer, fall and winter for a walk or bike rides. Watch how the biodiversity is, we hope, increasing.

            The Meadoway is led by Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) and the Toronto and Region Conservation Foundation in partnership with the City of Toronto and Hydro One. It is made possible through the generous support of the Weston Family Foundation.      

themeadoway.ca

 

Healing Gardens - Mari Lise Stonehouse

"Healing Gardens" hosted by expert horticulturalist, landscape designer and host of The Garden Show, Charlie Dobbin, premieres Monday, May 23 at 9pm ET.
visiontv.ca/shows/healing-gardens


 

London in April - Mari Lise Stonehouse

Hi Clement,
I went to London last week. The weather was wonderful. I took photos of the Chelsea Physic Garden and St. James’s Park.

editor's note: we hope Mari Lise will show more of her pictures at the May Meeting

Contact Information for the Hort

The 2022 Board members are:
  • President - Ron Charlemagne, president@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Past President - Barbara Japp
  • Vice President - Clement Kent, newsletter@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Treasurer - Emieke Geldof, treasurer@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Secretary - Helen Vorster, secretary@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Projects - Judy Whelan, projects@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Members at Large - Annelies Groen, Sarah Michelle Rafols
Other email:
  • Maria Nunes - Volunteer Coordinator, volunteers@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Membership, membership@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Dues payments and membership information, www.parkdaletorontohort.com/join-us/
  • Clement Kent, Bulletin/Newsletter editor - newsletter@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Plant Fair Team, plantfair@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • Education & Outreach,  educationandoutreach@parkdaletorontohort.com
  • General information, info@parkdaletorontohort.com
Email sent to board@parkdaletorontohort.com reaches all board members.
Website: www.parkdaletorontohort.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/parkdaletorontohort
Post: The Horticultural Societies of Parkdale & Toronto
P.O. Box 30023, 1938 Bloor Street West
Toronto, Ontario M6P 4J2

and, to finish the Bulletin off, President Ron Charlemagne has created a QR code link to our Youtube channel of past speakers:

 
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Horticultural Societies of Parkdale & Toronto · 1938 Bloor St West, PO Box 30023 · Toronto, On M6P 4J2 · Canada

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