Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2014

Garden Programming on TV, YouTube, and Beyond

In the depths of winter or sometimes just during my lunchbreak, I'll go online and watch videos to get my garden fix.  Here are some of my favorites, past and present:

The Victorian Kitchen Garden, BBC2 1987 13 part series
Hosted by horticultural lecturer Peter Thoday and master gardener Harry Dodson, the series follows the daily upkeep of an authentic Victorian era kitchen garden, broken into monthly episodes.  If you can get past the poor quality of the film back then, you are in for a real educational treat.  Filmed at the Chilton Foliat estate in Wiltshire, England, the show covers tools, techniques, plants, and the latest scientific advancements at the time. And it's all done by two fine British chaps in three piece suits, who aren't exactly... young.

Edwardian Farm, BBC2 2010 12 part series
A gorgeous little Edwardian Farm in pastoral Devon, England is put back into service, Edwardian style, in this month-by-month program.  Historian Ruth Goodman and archaeologists Alex Langlands and Peter Ginn spend a year working the authentic farm as is would have been in the first decade of 20th century Britain. The cast is charming, the scenery to die for (if rolling green landscapes are your thing), and the topics covered are numerous: gardening, cooking, construction, hedging, housework, and animal rearing are all touched upon.  If you like the series, there are several other BBC2 productions along the same lines and with some repeat cast members.

The Edible Garden, BBC 2010 6 part series
Gardener Alys Fowler turns her small urban garden into an intensively planted edible garden in this series. Her goal is to grow all of the fresh produce her family will consume that year.  We watch as she judiciously makes room for more edibles, plans to maintain her garden's cottage feel, and introduces chickens into her scheme.  All the while, her cute little dog parades around and accompanies her on various excursions.  This is the kind of programming that offers inspiring creative projects and realistic goals for any home gardener.

The Victory Garden, PBS 1975-2009 many, many episodes
How could I not mention what is probably the longest running and most influential gardening program ever produced?  It all started back in 1975 with host James Underwood Crockett, a former director of the American Horticultural Society, and ended in 2009 with Jamie Durie, an Australian TV personality and former Chippendale dancer!  I enjoyed watching the final seasons, set in perpetually sunny LA, packed with visits to lush private gardens, usually filled with the most fantastic cacti, yucca, and succulents one could imagine.  I never knew Durie's exciting past, as he was excellent in rattling off the scientific names of almost everything he encountered on the show.

Growing a Greener World, 2010-today, weekly episodes on PBS stations around the country
This is my new weekend garden program for when I'm loafing on the sofa with coffee and a donut.  Although there are many episodes about the home garden, host and producer Joe Lamp'l also tackles larger issues like sustainability, environmental education, and community activism with an emphasis on gardening.  If you like the idea of organic, green, environmentally friendly gardening and landscaping practices, this is the show for you.  Bonus: at the end of each episode, there's a goofy cooking segment that usually leaves me smiling.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Spring

After an action packed weekend with sunshine and pleasant weather and back-to-back activities totally unrelated to gardening, I find myself behind on this year's gardening season. Last year the lettuce and radishes were sown by this point. I haven't even restrung the trellis or pulled out 2010's pepper and tomato carcases. My soil has not been amended. My seed order was never placed.

As many of you know, I'm hoping that my gardening situation will improve this year. We've been contemplating a small move (same general locale) to an apartment or house with a little outdoor space. The possibility of uprooting ourselves mid-season has been a little detrimental to the gardening plans. I have renewed my plot membership and I have drawn up a planting scheme but I have not begun.

While all this sorts itself out, I'll be watching episodes of
The Horticultural Channel and Victory Garden and dreaming about my own personal green acres.