As
children, my three sisters and I had a pinto pony named Tony. I
think we may have ridden him twice during his time with us. I
was the youngest and just a little kid, but I loved to climb up
on the fence and pet his soft nose, and for some strange reason,
I liked how he smelled. I suspect the only reason my mother
consented to having the horse was because of the manure that she
could use in her gardens.
Mother loved to
garden, and she, like me, had limited sun because of the huge
trees in our yard. But she prevailed with her roses, shrubs,
and annuals, and Tony the Pony's gifts to her.
I can only recall
one nursery that we went to each spring and that was on Olive in
University City. The owners of the nursery knew my mother by
name, as did the firemen in our community. Each fall when we
raked up all those leaves into piles for burning (do you
remember when we could burn leaves?), inevitably my mother would
set the garage (really a barn for the chickens and Tony) on
fire, and she'd have to call the fire department for help. "We
were expecting your call Mrs. Murphey."
Today, as a gardener, I don't have the soil
amendments that my mother did. But I have learned through
the education I receive as a volunteer at the Missouri Botanical
Garden, horticulture classes at Meramec Junior College, and my
coworkers and mentors at Sugar Creek Gardens how important it is
to prepare the soil for successful gardening.
Karen's garden

My coworker, friend, and mentor Mary Reedy
sometimes refers to Sugar Creek as the "Chick Nursery."
Well, I'm the "Old Hen" of the nursery. When discussing
with my good friend, good neighbor, mentor, and now coworker
Tina Paletta what I was going to do with my life after working
for a lawyer for 37 years, she suggested I come to Sugar Creek
Gardens. I am forever grateful to her, and to Ann Lapides,
the owner of Sugar Creek, for hiring me. I have been
privileged
to
work here for the past five years, and if my body and mind hold
up, I plan on being associated with Sugar Creek until they roll
me out on one of the carts with some beautiful flowers and, of
course, some Cotton Burr Compost. There isn't a day that
goes by that I don't learn something new about horticulture that
I can utilize personally and pass on to our customers and
friends and find enjoyment being with everyone associated with
Sugar Creek Gardens.
The good stuff
Favorite annual: There are too many to
have a particular favorite. I love the nemesias, verbenas,
petunias, angelonias, coleus, all the Thrillers (rubrums, etc.),
Million Bells, flowering vincas, on and on...
Favorite perennial: I have many
beautiful hosta, thalictrum, astilbe, daylilies, phlox,
geranium, iris, heucheras, penstemon, coneflower, rudbeckia,
plumbago, just so many and all of them are favorites.
Favorite tree and shrub: I have two
Japanese maple trees, 'Crimson Queen,' a beautiful Foster Holly
that provides red berries for the birds during the winter, and
several crab apple, dogwood, and redbud trees. I love my
hydrangea macrophylla 'Nikko Blue' and my oakleaf hydrangeas.
People constantly stop in front of my house and compliment them.
The coloration of the Nikkos throughout their bloom
time
is wonderful -- pink, lime green, soft violet, then blue, and
the coloration of the oakleaf's foliage during autumn is
spectacular. In the fall I cut off the blooms and foliage
when they attain the coloration I want and bring them inside and
place in vases and baskets throughout my house. The colors
stay true for about a year. Therefore I have year-round
hydrangeas inside and outside my house. One plant that has
provided me with great pleasure is the Knockout Rose.
Several years ago I planted five Nearly Wild Roses in a new bed
I created streetside of my yard. Of course I had to keep
adding perennials to this bed, and in
doing
so, the roses were becoming secondary. My quandary was
whether to eliminate the roses or enhance them. I decided
to enhance by adding five Knockout Roses. Now the bed is
fabulous with the almost constant blooming of the roses and the
perennial and annual plants. I have strived to incorporate
into my garden beds elements of winter interest, too. To
this end, I have many azaleas for color during the spring and a
number of boxwood; both of these plants are evergreen.
Number of years at Sugar Creek: I
started working at Sugar Creek in 2002.
Biggest Gardening Goof: Of becoming
enamored with the heart-shaped leaves of yellow, green, bronze,
and scarlet red of Houttuynia, Chameleon, and planting it in
several beds throughout my gardens. I thought it was such
a beautiful little plant. It attempted to take over these
beds and choked out several plants. The roots extend
deeply into the soil, and it has taken me almost four years to
almost rid my gardens of this invasive plant. It
may be wonderful for some as groundcover, but it is not my
friend.
Greatest gardening accomplishment:
Almost eradicating my Houttuynia.
Advice to beginners: Take classes
within the horticulture program at Meramec Junior College.
If you don't want to be burdened with tests and exams, audit the
classes. Become a volunteer at Missouri Botanical Garden
and take classes offered by the garden. Become a volunteer
within Forest Park Forever. Attend free seminars at Sugar
Creek Gardens. Amend your soil!
Advice to professionals: Not from me --
I'm still learning!