January makes tree bark readable. The leaves are gone, the herbaceous border has collapsed into stems and seed heads, and the garden has stopped distracting us with flowers. What remains is quieter but not empty: twigs, buds, bark plates, old pruning cuts, and pale islands of green, gray, yellow, and blue-green spreading across trunks like weather maps. Those patches are…
In January, a flowering shrub can feel almost unreasonable. The garden is mostly structure: bark, seed heads, mulch, stone, the green insistence of evergreens. Then witch hazel opens on bare wood. Its flowers do not arrive as soft spring cups or summer trumpets. They arrive as thin ribbons, yellow or copper or red, curling and uncurling in the cold like…
In January, a deciduous shrub can look as if it has been reduced to punctuation: lines, dots, scars, angles, and small brown commas at the tips of twigs. The leaves are gone. The flowers are months away. The garden seems to have removed every clue except shape. Look closer. A bare twig is not empty. It is labeled. Every bud…
On the last day of the year, a garden can look as if it has been reduced to essentials. Soil, bark, seed heads, paths, the quiet architecture of shrubs. Then a stand of red-twig dogwood catches the low light and refuses to behave like background. The stems are leafless, but they are not dull. They burn red against snow, frost,…
By mid-December, a garden can vanish in the night. Paths soften, beds lose their edges, and the seed heads that looked architectural in November become little dark punctuation marks above a white page. Snow seems to simplify everything. It hides the unfinished jobs, the uncut stems, the fallen leaves that escaped the rake, and the soil you meant to mulch…
In December, a garden becomes very honest. The flowers have stopped covering weak structure. Herbaceous stems have collapsed or turned to seed. Deciduous trees have taken their color down to bark, bud, and branch. Then the evergreens begin to look almost improbable: pine, spruce, yew, holly, boxwood, rhododendron, juniper. They stand in the cold with leaves still attached, as if…
A November garden can look settled after the first hard frosts. The stems have gone quiet. Leaves are pressed flat by rain. The soil darkens, firms, and seems to have closed the season. Then, one morning, a perennial appears to be sitting too high, its crown pushed above the bed as if the ground has exhaled underneath it. This is…
By November, most deciduous trees have become honest silhouettes. The maple has emptied itself. The serviceberry is bare. The birch has given its leaves to the path. Then, at the woodland edge or in a young hedge, a beech or oak still stands with dry copper leaves clinging to every twig, rattling softly whenever the wind moves through. It can…
A black walnut makes itself known in October. The leaves yellow and fall in long, feathery pieces. The nuts drop with a weight you can feel through the soles of your shoes. Their green husks darken, bruise, and stain almost anything that touches them. Under the tree, the ground becomes a small map of influence: shade, roots, shells, leaflets, squirrels,…
By late October, the garden begins to receive its own mail. Leaves arrive one by one, then by the basketful, sliding from maples, oaks, birches, cherries, serviceberries, and every tree that has decided the season is finished. They collect in corners, gather under shrubs, drift across paths, and make the lawn look as if it has been quietly written over.…

