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To Eat: A Country Life

Joe Eck and Wayne Winterrowd shared over 40 years together, most of it at a home they called North Hill in Readsboro, Vermont.  This is a long time for any couple, but especially noteworthy for gay men.  Their garden inspired many books, written by each singly or by both.  The Miller Library has eight of their titles on subjects that include annuals, tender perennials, roses, and garden design.   Winterrowd’s “Annuals for Connoisseurs” (1992) is one of my personal favorites.

Eck and Winterrowd met in a gay nightclub in Boston during the late 1960s.  Often such encounters are brief, but they spent much of the night talking together and walking the Boston Common.  They never parted.  Eager for a rural life, they found their Vermont home a few years later, initially making their living as school teachers before transitioning to full-time garden designers and authors.

Most of their books celebrate the many aspects of their life together at North Hill, including raising a son.  Their final book, “To Eat: A Country Life” was started jointly in 2010, but after Winterrowd died suddenly that fall, Eck was left to finish it alone.  The book was published in 2013.  The men shared many passions, but eating had “always been central.”

Bobbi Angell, a noted botanical artist who lived near North Hill, provided the illustrations for “To Eat.”  She also has an essay in the book about a lunch with the couple shortly before Winterrowd’s death.  In a conversation musing about their place in rural Vermont, she concludes: “Wayne and Joe’s life–their plants, their friends, their stories–came from around the world, city and country alike.”

Excerpted from Brian Thompson’s article in the Fall 2022 issue of the Arboretum Bulletin

The New Rules Of The Roost: Organic Care & Feeding for the Family

Robert and Hannah Litt of Portland wrote A Chicken in Every Yard, published in 2011.  They regard their chickens as pets to pamper and keep safe – they only eat their eggs.  This book will tell you how to do the same.

On a visit to the island of Kauai in Hawai’i, the Litt family discovered that chickens have naturalized and do quite well looking after themselves.  This led to a new book, The New Rules of the Roost (2018) that incorporates some of this avian independence.  Now the setting for their home flock is “more dynamic, so that our chickens can safely forage for food and scratch around, but when and where we want them to.”

How does all this work with the garden?  Very well, if you consider the hens as part of the family – it just takes a lot of compromise and ingenuity.

 

Published in Garden Notes: Northwest Horticultural Society, Fall 2018