By Alan Ilagan

Every gardener has a heroic plant story ~ a tale of
some green trooper that survived humble beginnings or ill treatment to become a
prized specimen in the garden. They are our unlikely survivors ~ plants that
should have been killed by winter weather, unexpected storms, simple neglect or
downright abuse, but instead rally and rebound in the face of adversity. In
their weathering of obstacles they somehow become more than mere landscape
ornaments. Their endurance and perseverance lends them a well-deserved
veteran-like status, a decorated soldier that has been to war and won.
I
have a certain fondness for these fighters, the bold and brazen beauts who have
grappled with the odds and overcome them. A certain respect must be given to the
lone bulb that blooms out of hundreds that have long-since died out, a choice
peony which returns year after year without any fertilization, or the patch of
thyme that withstands foot traffic, drought, and an out-of-control lawnmower.
Each
year I grant one plant in my garden an imaginary award for Best Comeback ~ given
out to the individual who has shown a remarkable turnaround in growth and
appearance, or has simply put on a grand show without any sort of special
treatment. These become the unexpected joys of the garden, and such pleasant
surprises are one of the main draws of gardening that keeps me coming back for
more. This vague hope in the back of my mind is what propels my hands into the
soil, my feet down upon a shovel, and my heart hardening at the loss of a
delicate delphinium stalk. No matter how traumatic a plant’s passing is, I am
reminded by the sight of past leafy generals to keep me pressing onward.
One of these is a clump of golden bearded iris that once again
bloomed its head off this past year. I purchased the original plant (and a
daylily) at a Supermarket during my early gardening days. The following year the
daylily flowered and multiplied, but my bearded iris did nothing but send up a
few small silver swords. Undaunted, I moved it to a sunnier, drier location,
exposing its small rhizomes and sprinkling some bone meal around it, sure of my
reward the next year.
Alas,
during the next year the plant seemed no happier, the same measly fan of leaves
erect but without flower buds. When it came time to re-arrange the border, I
found myself at a loss for space, and so discarded the poorly-performing iris
over the bank behind the house, its root-ball rolling to a stop near the bottom
of a pile of grass-clippings. Sure of its eventual demise, I forgot about the
plant until the next summer.
At
that time I was puttering around the backyard when something dramatic caught my
eye ~ the architectural spears of a bearded iris, bravely poking through the
rubbish behind the house. Without mulch or winter protection or even proper
planting, the iris had fought back hard and won, determined to survive, no
matter what the location. Such strength won me over, and I returned it to the
border. The next year it became the prize perennial, three spires of beautiful
golden blooms burgeoning skyward without staking.
A similar tale of survival is told by the less traumatic journey
of my Variegated Solomon’s seal. Planted lovingly in the woodland garden in a
rich mixture of loamy, humusy soil, certainly the plant would reward me with
grand arching sprays of fragrant bell-like flowers and sumptuous foliage. In its
partially shaded location, it was to be the focal point of the woodland garden,
but that first year it steadfastly refused to rise to the occasion, content to
remain hidden behind the evergreen foliage of a Christmas fern. I watered it
generously, hoping to anchor it with deep, strong roots from which more than one
variegated frond would rise next year. And the next year all I got was the same
little frond, with a total of two miniscule flowers.
Newly impervious, I kept it where it was, having gained a
modicum of patience since the bearded iris resurrection. Another year passed,
and then another, and still the Solomon’s seal refused to yield more than one
spindly stalk. Having learned to deal with such disappointments, I simply
changed the focus of the woodland garden, relegating the Solomon’s seal to the
background, where I promptly forgot about it for a while. At one point I almost
pulled it up, wondering how it came to be there in the first place.
Somehow it sensed its brush with death, for the next year (its
fifth in the garden) it sent up five majestic stalks ~ each tall and proud and
bearing rows of sweetly-smelling flowers, undulating in the wind, and the
variegated foliage brightening its dim corner in all its glory. Of course it
stole the show that year, much to the chagrin of the foxgloves I had planted
during its slow-growing seasons. It is now a gorgeously grand stand, fighting
off encroaching lily-of-the-valley with seemingly no effort.
Such
comebacks are not limited to the wilderness of the outdoors. Many a gardener
houses a number of cherished chlorophyll troops indoors ~ a scarred cactus that
has lasted through three moves, the ponytail palm that almost succumbed to the
family cat, or a dusty orchid that suddenly decides to send up an obscenely
beautiful magenta bloom in the midst of an extra punishing winter.
I know two such houseplants ~ a pair of simple spider plants
whose brilliance does not in the least betray the punishment they received
during an upstate New York winter. Their owner had gone to Florida for a week,
leaving the house under the care of a neglectful friend, who had visited only
once, and then briefly enough not to notice the twenty-eight degree temperature
of the interior. The furnace had shut down, and for at least two days the house
was as cold as the outside air of February. All the plants inside turned brown
and wilted, before giving up completely
.