a 501c3 non-profit organization founded by
UPCOMING
NEWS/EVENTS

  • Have you heard our groundbreaking series "Evolutionaries"? Check it out and hear the life stories of the people who changed food forever.
  • The next Finger on the Pulse BBQ Blowout will feature Dale Talde & MC Todd on June 11th! More info coming soon.
  • We can't wait for the Lobster Roll Rumble on June 6th! Hear some of our pre-festival coverage here.
  • More News...
    << Prev || Next >>
    SCHEDULE

    SUNDAY
    12:00-12:45 - The Main Course
    1:00-1:30 - What Doesn't Kill You
    2:00-2:30 - The Mike & Judy Show
    3:00-4:00 - The Morning After

    MONDAY
    12:00-12:30 - Feeding the Future
    1:00-1:30 - Eat Your Words
    2:00-3:00 - Snacky Tunes
    3:30-4:00 - Hot Grease
    5:00-5:30 - How to Behave
    6:00-6:45 - No Chef's Allowed
    7:00-7:30 - Fuhmentaboudit!

    TUESDAY
    11:00-11:30 - Wild Game Domain
    12:00-12:40 - Cooking Issues
    3:00-3:30 - The Food Seen
    4:00-4:30 - Greenhorn Radio
    5:00-5:45 - Beer Sessions Radio (TM)
    6:30-7:00 - Let's Get Real

    WEDNESDAY
    10:00-10:30 - In The Drink
    11:00-11:30 - Taste Matters
    12:00-12:45 - Chef's Story
    1:00-1:25 - Evolutionaries
    4:00-4:30 - The Speakeasy
    5:00-5:30 - the business of The Business

    THURSDAY
    11:00-11:30 - After the Jump
    12:00-12:30 - A Taste of the Past
    1:00-1:30 - The Farm Report
    6:00-6:30 - U Look Hungry
    7:30-9:00 - Gunwash
    9:30-10:30 - Full Service Radio

    FRIDAY
    4:00-4:30 - Cutting the Curd

    SPECIAL PROGRAMS
    HRN Prime

    HRN Community Sessions

    Wholesome Wave Presents: It's More Than Food

    My Welcome Table by Jessica B. Harris

    GrowNYC Market Update

    Rooftop Farming Update with Ben Flanner

    Listennow
    HRN Community Sessions
    LIVE 5:15 - 5:45pm EST
    Hrn-community-sessions
    First Aired - 02/16/2012 02:00PM
    Download MP3 (Full Episode)

    Hosted By
    Garden
    Sponsored by
    Untitled
    This week on We Dig Plants tune in for a transatlantic conversation with renown garden historian Andrea Wulf. Calling from across the pond Ms. Wulfe gives us an in-depth history lesson of the plants of the revolutionary times based upon her recent book, The Founding Gardeners. From the seeds that Benjamin Franklin sent over from England right before the Declaration of Independence to the gardens at Monticello, learn about the fascinating way in which America came into its own true horticultural identity and even how the choice of gardens at George Washington's Mount Vernon estate, with it's all native plants, mirrors the revolution itself. This episode is sponsored by White Oak Pastures

    "Jefferson and Adams went on a garden tour in 1786 [in England] . . and they go into several gardens and what they see, what was very fashionable in England at that time, they see so-called 'ornamental farms'. So these are gardens that combine elements of working land with elements of a pleasure grant. . . and it was this combination of beautiful and useful that appeal to them . . so when they returned to America later they incorporated these elements because it very much chimed with their vision of America as a country of vast lands that would feed the nation but also of sublime beauty."

    "And on the brink of the war Washington writes a letter to his estate manager in Mount Vernon and advises him to on plant native American species,so he's telling him go to my forest and pick up these plants and shrubs and plant them in my garden. It is almost as if this is his horticultural declaration of independence."

    "Until then American gardeners tried to recreate the Old World in their gardens and there [Washington] is ripping them out [at Mount Vernon] and replacing them with native species. He is creating what I would call the very first truly American garden. He uses his garden almost like a canvas to make this political statement."

    "Washington's idea behind a national university is that we have these 13 states together now but we really have to mature from being a war alliance to being a truly united nation. . and he believed if you would bring these young men together at a young age, studying together, learning together, they would become one and they would believe in America's destiny as a united country. And the national botanical garden should belong to the university because if they would see all these trees from all 13 states growing together in horticultural union again that would give them the sense of 'we are one country'."

    --Andrea Wulf on We Dig Plants

    Jump to Segment:


    blog comments powered by Disqus
    Sign up for our Newsletter!




    OUR SPONSORS: