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Cultivating Place: Welcome to the Shrub Club: Shrouded in Light with Kevin Philips Williams & Michael Guidi

All photos courtesy of Kevin Philip Williams and Michael Guidi. All rights reserved.
Scott Dressel-Martin
/
Denver Botanic Gardens
All photos courtesy of Kevin Philip Williams and Michael Guidi. All rights reserved.

Late July, August, and September (the dog days of summer with the constellation Sirius high in the night sky) are perhaps the stretch of the year in most climates of the Northern Hemisphere that really show you what your garden and plants are made of (for better or worse) after months of them producing and growing under long hours of sun, high heat, and either humidity or drought. Or smoke.

All photos courtesy of Kevin Philip Williams and Michael Guidi. All rights reserved.
All photos courtesy of Kevin Philip Williams and Michael Guidi. All rights reserved.

It’s also the season when many of our most durable and prismatic shrubs are showing off to great advantage in rounded forms, seed, fruit, and foliage colors, certainly in our wildlands. And possibly in our gardens?

This is where Kevin Philip Williams and Michael Guidi of the Denver Botanic Gardens come in. Their new book Shrouded in Light: Naturalistic Planting Inspired by Wild Shrublands celebrates the great diversity, incredible beauty, and many gifts and lessons that the wild shrublands of our world have to offer our gardens and cultivated landscapes—environmentally and aesthetically—no matter where you garden.

I want to echo Kevin and Michael’s email greeting when I invited them to be guests on Cultivating Place: Welcome to the Shrub Club! Enjoy.

Cultivating Place now has a donate button! We thank you so much for listening over the years and we hope you'll support Cultivating Place.

We can't thank you enough for making it possible for this young program to grow even more of these types of conversations.

The show is available as a podcast on SoundCloud, iTunes, and Google Podcast. To read more and for many more photos, please visit cultivatingplace.com.

Artemisia, Snowberry, and Serviceberry shrubland on Steens Mountain, Oregon. All photos courtesy of Kevin Philip Williams and Michael Guidi. All rights reserved.
Artemisia, Snowberry, and Serviceberry shrubland on Steens Mountain, Oregon. All photos courtesy of Kevin Philip Williams and Michael Guidi. All rights reserved.

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Jennifer Jewell is the creator and host of the national award-winning, weekly public radio program and podcast, Cultivating Place: Conversations on Natural History & the Human Impulse to Garden, Jennifer Jewell is a gardener, garden writer, and gardening educator and advocate. Particularly interested in the intersections between gardens, the native plant environments around them, and human culture, she is the daughter of garden and floral designing mother and a wildlife biologist father.
Matt Fidler is a producer and sound designer with over 15 years’ experience producing nationally distributed public radio programs. He has worked for shows such as Freakonomics Radio, Selected Shorts, Studio 360, The New Yorker Radio Hour and The Takeaway. In 2017, Matt launched the language podcast Very Bad Words, hitting the #28 spot in the iTunes podcast charts.