GARDEN AROMATICS
Some Good, Some Not So Good
One of gardening’s pleasures — for me, at least — is that it makes scents. Ha, ha. But seriously, wave after wave of scent has wafted across my terrace since the garden awakened in early spring. Back then, the most prominent aromas were from daffodil blossoms, followed by those of plum, clove currant, Koreanspice viburnum, and then dame’s rocket.
Olfactory pleasures, like the other sensual pleasures that flowers afford us, are incidental to the flowers. Evolutionarily speaking, we don’t return the favor with anything more than the carbon dioxide that we — and other animals — exhale.
Rather than smelling pretty for us, flowers do so to attract pollinators. Read more