Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Teachers - Part II - The Famous Gladys Jackson Meyer - My Mother

Gladys Parker - 1930 - 17 years old.
Yesterday was Teachers' Day, so I decided to write another post about my mother, the teacher.

She began by going to Normal, Illinois, where the teachers' college was. Apparently the town was named after the school, since teachers' schools were given that name. That led to a hilarious newspaper headline about a Normal girl being engaged to an Oblong man.

Growing up on a farm where electricity came to them and changed their lives, my mother was always interested in science. Her father earned an agricultural degree at the U. of Illinois but lost the farm during FDR's imperial rule in the Great Depression.

Gladys Parker - 1931 - Co-ed, probably at Normal.

A teacher's education meant one year at Normal and teaching in one-room country schools, with all ages packed together. My mother took great pride in her experience in those basic schoolrooms. She was sorry to see consolidation take over.

Mom graduated from Augustana in 1930.

As I recall, it took her 10 years to complete her bachelor's at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois. My wife, sister-in-law, and I also attended Augustana. Apparently that allowed her to get a job in the Moline system, and the picture below seems to indicate she bought the family home before meeting my father.

This is our home on 18th Street A, which my mother thought would be great
painted red. From that time on I could direct people to our house as
across from Wharton Field House, the red one.


We were just four blocks from Garfield Elementary, so Mom went back to teaching once my little brother was in Kindergarten there. We were surrounded by teachers and education. I was often in the school early, sometimes parked in the school library, and frequently at PTA meetings or teachers' meeting at our home.

Our bedroom wall was papered with maps we could study at our leisure. Guy Johnson, who came over many times, thought the map wall was very cool.

We had books galore in the house. My mother subscribed to several books series for us, and I read them all. In the basement we had some very exotic story books, and she read stories to us at bedtime.

We had quite a few pets: cats, dogs, rats from the schoolroom, two possums, and a skunk named Hilda. Watching feline labor on the kitchen floor is quite an education. Our rats had babies, too, but that was not so dramatic.

The rats proved their cleverness by escaping and retrieving food. I saw Mr. and Mrs. Rat bringing an apple down the stairs together, one above to push, Mr. Rat below to catch, step by step. Another time a hardened slice of bread was carried across the kitchen floor, lifted up and set down, click, click, click. Scandalously, one rat slid out of the cereal box when my brother poured it into his bowl. We called it Rat Krispies, The Only Cereal That Goes Snap, Crackle, and Squeak!

People would ask us if we really had (fill in the animal) living at our house. Some stories were especially fun to tell, depending on the animal and the audience.

Like many teachers at Garfield, my mother was so influential that my friends still talk about her today, roughly 55 years after having her as a teacher in sixth grade. She loved children and loved to teach them. Long after she retired, people in Phoenix would tell me how she was teaching children on her walks.

She read voraciously about:
  1. South America.
  2. Strange theories, which were sometimes verified later.
  3. Velikovski.
  4. Detective stories.
  5. Nature and animals. Beneficial bugs, wild flowers, butterflies, moths.
  6. Rocks and minerals.
  7. All areas of science.
  8. The formation of the English language.
When I inherited her books, every single one had a review from the Chicago Tribune, taped carefully into the front.

When I had to write about the Civil War for a school project, she said, "Try these files." She had an enormous collection, which I used to get an A++ for my two-volume (notebooks) effort. Needless to say, she was always promoting education over sports. She even had one class build a float showing the girls leaving the football star for the scholar.

She published about school projects in educational magazines, about moths in a photography magazine. She wrote books on phonetic reading and spelling skills, just as it was fading away in schools but being picked up in Christian schools.

My mother got to be a great-grandmother,
holding Josephine, wearing a photo button of her.

Some Anecdotes
Some teachers went to the principal and said, "Gladys is taking a nap in the nurse's office each day!" He responded, "If you came as early as she does every day and stayed as late as she does every day, I would arrange a cot in the nurse's office for each one of you." She repeated that story with great relish.

My mother graded quickly, thoroughly, whenever homework was there to be done. She graded at school and graded at home.

Like the other teachers, she decorated her room for each season. Everything was in packets and in order. She had Thanksgiving, Christmas, and patriotic displays. The other Garfield teachers were equally creative and dedicated. And the same women taught Sunday School at their churches - happy to do it, too.

The son of another teacher was not going to go to the principal's office, and he resisted with all his strength. That was a mistake to resist a teacher who once tossed hay bales on the farm. She dragged him bodily into the principal's office, a spectacle I watched. Mr. T would say, "I pity the fool." My mother swore me to secrecy.

No student got the best of my mother in school, so she was often entrusted with those who were difficult to teach, before alternative schools were started. She said, as a teacher at Coolidge Junior High, "Only if I get permission to hit the kids." The principal almost fainted. "You have to get written permission." She did, and she whacked them when needed.

This is the Panama project that created an engineer.

One student who got the rock ring treatment more than once talked about it at the last reunion. I said, "My wife is wearing it." He went over and said, "Hit me with the ring, for old time's sake." She did, and he laughed about how my mother straightened him out and got him involved in engineering from a sixth grade class project on the Panama Canal. He later visited the Panama Canal as an engineer, and told us, "That school project got me interested in engineering. And our project worked exactly like the real thing."

My mother often used the knuckles on the head treatment. That hurt for a time, as I experienced, but was seldom needed after that. It was not the physical punishment that mattered as much as the resolute will behind it.

Although I threw erasers and gum packets at a few college students, I never touched one and never needed to. They soon learned. I heard from college students that I was the only one to enforce discipline in the classroom when someone was disruptive or playing with digital toys. Somehow I got that reputation at four institutions.

I got the spit treatment once. I spit at someone and my mother made me spit into her hand, again and again. Then she rubbed my spit all over my face. That ended the spitting temptation. A friend at a reunion told me about X getting the spit treatment after he spat at another student. Shortly after that, not knowing about the story told me, the spitter said, "You should write a book about your mother. She was a remarkable woman."

I thought that was quite a testimony from someone who could have whined about being mistreated. In those days, parents stood up for teachers. Like my parents, if it was a choice between me and the system, always bet on the system.

Liz Copeland attended her mother's retirement party.
Coach of the year is in the top row - Lawrence Eyre,
cited in Sports Illustrated for his tennis teams.

He also taught English.

My benefit was just happening to get the best teachers all the way through the system. The only one I missed was Mrs. Copeland, who was loved as much as my mother was at Garfield. To this day I enjoy hearing daily from her daughter Liz, who was two years behind my class.

Garfield is closed now, but...


Preview of May 9, 2016 Christian News. Reading CN So You Don't Have To.
Harrison Must Go! and Be Replaced by Another UOJist


Matthew Harrison has grown (a new chin) in office.
The LCMS began with a major syphilis and adultery scandal,
but no one learns that from the myth-makers,
Harrison and Otten included.

I found the place to unlimber some opinions about presidential politics in the US. A president, whether the US president or a synod president, is not going to make much of a difference by himself - or herself. This notion is quite destructive, because the people who think they have a new savior relax and defend the person, therefore the errors. The horror-struck losers think all is lost until their candidate is elected.

Christian News has wasted 50 years of newsprint promoting men rather than the Word of God, Luther's works, and the Book of Concord. It really is a disgrace.

Kurt Marquart's works are being published. Yee hah. He did not teach justification by faith, so the Halle Pietists must add his statue to their Pantheon:

  1. Walther, but not Stephan his UOJ teacher,
  2. Pieper, 
  3. Stockhardt, and 
  4. Various other nitwits who could not grasp Luther or the Confessions, favoring their own man-made traditions over the Scriptures.


Spener was treated as a god in the 19th century by all the Lutherans in America. He could not be criticized. One can find the reference among the Muhlenberg tradition leaders and a similar effect in Walther. CFW would criticize other Pietists but not Spener. In Servant of the Word, Walther allowed that Stephan was "a bit of a Pietist," distancing himself from the Pietism Walther clung to and associated himself with. That is how the Stephan crew came to America, as cult followers of an abusive Pietistic leader, devotees of Stephan's cell groups and overlooking the guru's young girlfriends.

A bit of a Pietist? That is like Elizabeth Eaton looking down on a woman as "a bit of a feminist."

Is this a New Haven grandchild confronting Harrison?
I don't know where I found this graphic.

Otten is on his Harrison Must Go campaign, which follows his Kieschnick Must Go campaign, which followed his Bohlmann Must Go campaign. Barry was spared by an untimely death.

Unspoken - if Harrison serenaded Herman with his Ballad of Herman Otten, then was Otten a tacit supporter for that first election? Tis funny to run that news as a negative now - "Don't vote for Harrison, because he covertly banjoed me into quiet cooperation! He is evil."

Are any of the "conservative" Lutheran Synod Presidents theologians?
No, they are all Thrivent insurance salesmen with very big commissions.
Harrison gets about $60 million a year for making Thrivent
the LCMS insurance and investment company.

A better argument would be to replace Harrison and his stealth campaign manager Paul McCain, the "scholarly" plagiarist who fooled everyone in Lutherdom except me. Some of you really must learn to use Google for more than looking up sports scores.

The trouble with using McCain's support against Harrison is Otten's own secretive use of McCain when Barry was first running for president.

Writing about LCMS elections is like reading South American history. Every revolution looks like the previous one, until it provokes a new revolution to end the corruption of the current one. One South American leader looked at a new machine at an American exhibit. He said, "We have more revolutions per minute than that machine."

Thus LCMS history makes us all numb. Missouri has had a Lutheran component, people who love Luther's sermons and the Book of Concord, but the Walther-Pieper cult has squeezed that out of the leadership. UOJ is the third rail of LCMS-WELS-ELS politics, so every possible perversion of doctrine and life is promoted or excused or tolerated - all three methods having the same result over time.

St. Marvin Schwan proved that you can buy love,
not to mention absolution from three synods at once.
The Bishop Stephan influence runs deep in the LCMS-ELS-WELS,
don't it?

Exploring Faith and Stuff - ELCA/WELS Cross-over



Pastor,

Practically upon reading your recent Ichabod posts re. Glende and Skorzewski, I received this e-mail from Wartburg Seminary.  How apropos!  Scroll down, and check out the Exploring Faith Course taught by Dr. Patricia Young.  Perhaps The Sausage Factory should/would consider making Dr. Young part of its adjunct faculty?  :)

GJ - And Jar Jar Webber could teach UOJ for ELCA.

From: Wartburg Theological Seminary <communication@wartburgseminary.edu>
Date: May 4, 2016 12:02:58 PM CDT
Subject: Wartburg Seminary Upcoming Learning Opportunities




Come explore your faith with us!
In the Name of Jesus: Baptized and Called, Fed and Sent
June 5-8

A Learning for Life Event: Open to ALL!
This inspirational event offers participants, both clergy and lay persons, who are serving their neighbors in Jesus' name, time for
  • personal renewal
  • spiritual practices and discernment
  • high quality education and Bible study
  • Spirited worship

Feed your faith, think more deeply about following Jesus, and meet people who share the Christian journey. Be renewed in your commitment to discipleship and experience the Risen Christ!

Speakers include Former Presiding Bishop of the ELCA Mark Hanson, Ginger Anderson-Larson, Dr. Diane Jacobson, Dr. Winston Persaud, and the ELCA Revival Team's Rev. CeCee Mills.

The themes of this event-worship, Bible study, catechism instruction, and spiritual practices-support the efforts of the emerging Life of Faith Initiative and furthers the commitments of the ELCA's

When faith is connected to life, congregations will experience renewal in purpose and vitality.

View website here.  

And ILT's Pastor Becky Hand

Exploring Faith Courses
June 6-July 31
Online and intensive courses open to everyone.
Would you like to strengthen your understanding of Scripture, theology, or ministry? Check out our entry level courses for those who are new to theological education, and our advanced level courses for those who may be in ministry and have studied theology before.
Entry level courses (June 6-July 31):
Paso a Paso: Una Historia de la Iglesia en Español (course taught in Spanish)
Dr. Javier Goitia
El curso explorara los tiempos y eventos mas significativos de la historia de la Iglesia desde las primeras comunidades cristianas, los primeros siglos de la era común, la Edad Media, la llegada de la modernidad y hasta nuestro dias. Se enfatizarán  los sucesos relacionados a la Reforma Luterana en la tardía Edad Media y la historia de la Iglesia en Centro y Sur América, el Caribe y las comunidades hispanas en EUA.
Faith & Good Sex: A Holistic Approach to Sexuality    
Dr. Patricia Young

The purpose of this course is to explore the ways Christian faith calls for the nurture and proper formation of our sexual desires and relationships. Many topics will be frankly discussed: pornography and cybersex, loving sexual relationships outside of marriage, healthy sexual boundaries for all, lay and ordained, in positions of leadership in the church, variations in gender and same sex relationships, to name a few. All the sources of moral wisdom available to the community of faith - the Bible, traditional church teachings and practices, insights from scientific disciplines and our own experiences of the Spirit's work among us as people of faith -will be woven into our consideration of what makes for sexual health, integrity and holiness.
Re-Visioning Rural Mission: Leadership in Multi-Point Parishes    
Dr. Mark Yackel-Juleen
This course studies the changing patterns of Small Town and Rural (STaR) ministry and the formation of multi-point parishes. In many regions, STaR congregations cooperating with other congregations in various types of configurations is the norm rather than the exception. The area parish, a configuration of multiple congregations with a staff of pastors is a cutting edge and growing model for STaR mission.  This course addresses the challenges, the art, and the opportunities for ministry in these settings. Development, leadership, administration, and planning aspects of this type of ministry will be explored  

Advanced level courses (June 6-July 10):

Church History for the Practice of Ministry
Rev. Philip Forness
This course offers an overview of the history of Christianity from the apostolic age to the twenty-first century. Two central emphases will link the Christian communities surveyed. First, we will discuss and evaluate how churches have responded to broader societal shifts, including responses to different religious traditions, political realities, understandings of gender and sexuality, and globalization. Second, students will be asked to consider what role narratives of the history of Christianity play in contemporary conversations within the church. Students will read, analyze, discuss, and interpret primary readings each week in relation to these two emphases. Recorded lectures, online course modules, and a brief survey of Christian history will provide the overarching narrative. Assignments will include an essay analyzing one or more primary sources, a group project that evaluates the role that narratives of Christianity assume in the church today, and a creative project that presents the history of Christianity to a general audience.
Church Management & Human Resources
Ms. Mary Kay DuChene
The functions of management and Human Resources in the church are dissimilar from the corporate world.  Organizational complexity and the dynamics of human nature add a layer of complexity to the church environment.  This 5-week course will explore techniques and best practices of management and HR in the church.  Some topics include: supervising people, hiring and firing (whether employee or volunteer!), setting expectations (for employees or volunteers!), governance for today's church.  
Visit the website for more information and registration. 


Where Are the Booze Brothers Now?
Update on the St. Peter, Freedom Scandals


The coffee house "ministry" turned out to be a bar ministry,
and The CORE was not a mission but just another
service for St. Peters at various locations,
finally ending up with the purchase of a bankrupt bar.
Read the attached story, from an attorney,about how an abusive pastor is treated with kid gloves and protected by the Jeske Mob, including the SP,so Ski can have his fourth call in his fourth district.
MariQueen measures the man -
widebody.

***

GJ - This linked story from 2014 is a good indication how WELS is managed by the "reformer" Mark Schroeder, aka Jeske's right-hand man.

Schroeder does not hesitate to kick out a faithful pastor and the congregation, under the UOJ guidance of Jon Buchholz and Jar Jar Webber. Nor does Schroeder waste a moment to bail out Ski, whose pastoral methods including suing the husband of a former staff for telling the truth about his bullying behavior and sexual harassment - both enough to precipitate an escorted removal from most institutions. But not WELS. Oh no.

Drinking on the job? No problem. VP Zack, soon to be DP Zack, made sure Ski slipped away - breaking the WELS rules - before anyone knew it. And Kudu Don Patterson, new DP of the AA District, got him a call while getting rid of the competition in wealthy Round Rock. Patterson has designs on the white suburb, so he can leave his Mexican location behind.

"Let us gather with the Babtists, the Babtists,
the Ba-a-babtists.
Let us gather at the Babtists,
and drink their wisdom in."

Andover Newton - A Merged School - Will Merge With Yale Divinity,
Which Merged with an Episcopal Divinity School.
Merging Mergers Are a Sign of Financial Failure

Great Yale scholars like Nils Dahl
have been replaced with mainline apostates.
Mergers are a sign of financial failure -
ask DMLC-NWC veterans of WELS.

Andover Newton to partner with Yale, shutter Mass. campus


http://religionnews.com/2016/05/02/andover-newton-to-partner-with-yale-shutter-mass-campus/

(RNS) The nation’s oldest graduate school of theology is planning to relocate from Newton, Mass., to New Haven, Conn., where a small remnant of the faculty will teach on the campus of Yale Divinity School.
On Monday (May 2), Martin Copenhaver, president of Andover Newton Theological School, said he and the dean of the Yale Divinity School have forged a partnership that, if finalized, will phase out the Massachusetts campus and phase in a presence at Yale with a 2018 launch date.
In its new location, Andover Newton will function as a school within a school, to be known as “Andover Newton at Yale.” The school will shrink to a fraction of its current size as students take most of their courses with Yale professors.


The planned affiliation comes as mainline Protestant seminaries, squeezed by the economics of denominational decline, seek new lifelines in partnerships. Over the past 10 years, more than 10 independent theological schools have sought financial stability by teaming up with larger educational institutions, according to Daniel Aleshire, executive director of the Association of Theological Schools.
As part of the partnership, 29 of Andover Newton’s 32 teaching positions, including tenured and short-term faculty, visiting professors and adjuncts, will be phased out. Andover Newton at Yale expects to employ four administrators, two professors and one temporary faculty member whose appointment will expire within four years.
“We would be getting smaller in any case because frankly, the demand is less,” Copenhaver said. “We have to be more focused … not just because of the finances, but more focused in order to fulfill our founding mission.”


The move to Yale clears a path for Andover Newton to complete the sale of its coveted hilltop campus, which is assessed at $43 million. The school is selling the campus for an undisclosed amount that will retire its debt and allow Andover Newton at Yale to operate on endowment income, Copenhaver said.
Money from the sale will also help Yale Divinity School reach a 2022 goal of offering tuition-free education to all students who qualify, which is more than 90 percent of the student body, according to Dean Gregory Sterling. Yale aims to raise $40 million in endowment funds to create the tuition-support program.
The seminaries are responding to changes in the U.S. religious scene in which fewer Americans attend mainline churches. As congregations shrink, they can no longer afford to hire full-time pastors. That means prospective seminarians don’t dare take on debt by enrolling, according to Aleshire. Enrollments have dropped nearly 24 percent over the past decade at mainline seminaries, and lower tuition revenue can’t cover rising costs for building maintenance and personnel.


Founded in 1807 by Congregationalists who feared a theologically liberal drift in ministerial training at Harvard, Andover Theological Seminary has occupied campuses in Andover, Cambridge and Newton over its 209-year history. Over the centuries, it evolved away from its conservative theological roots. Both Andover Newton and Yale are known today for embracing social justice causes while preparing students for ministry and activism, among other vocations.
“The ethos and the culture is much the same” at the two schools, Sterling said.
For Yale, the Andover Newton deal builds on a similar partnership with Berkeley Divinity School at Yale, a training ground for Episcopal priests since 1971.
With a mission to train students for ministry in congregational church traditions, such as the United Church of Christ, American Baptist Churches USA and Unitarian Universalism, Andover Newton will deliver what Sterling calls “an ecumenical complement” to Berkeley’s formation of Episcopal priests.
Andover Newton is expected to bring resources to enhance specialized programming at Yale. Meanwhile, Sterling hopes more cash-strapped, freestanding seminaries will explore the prospects of joining with universities.
“One of the things I hope this can do is be a model for others to think about,” Sterling said. “How could they affiliate with another institution to make themselves stronger?”
(G. Jeffrey MacDonald is an RNS correspondent based in Boston)

Gardening Projects - Enjoying the Best KnockOut and Hybrid Tea Roses.


Wherever we go, people talk about having KnockOut roses. Our helper said, "Everyone has KnockOuts, but you know how to take care of them."

The KnockOut roses, developed for being disease free and easy care, were the second ones in the main rose garden. The first were eight roses from a QVC special - $8 each. The red KnockOut roses in the peak of their growth, budding, and flowering, are impressive. Their flowers, unlike those of previous easy care roses, are small versions of hybrid tea roses.

Trimming the fading blooms from this
KnockOut rose hedge would intensify the color
and create new buds.


The Jackson Rose Farm Difference
Pruning was the first activity this spring. KnockOuts grow and bloom fast, producing a wealth of color. But that growth is also their doom if they are left alone. They need aggressive pruning to match their growth.

We pruned the entire garden first so all roses would be relieved of dead wood, blooms going to seed, and crossed branches. The KnockOuts lost about 50% of their total growth. Pruning is counter-intuitive for beginning gardeners but matches John 15 precisely.

John 15 I am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman.
Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit.

The difference in the actions in John 15 is the removal of the unfruitful from the Kingdom of God versus the cleansing - justification by faith - among the believers, the fruitful. The comparison with growing grapes or roses is exact because the Words come from the Creating Word. Meanwhile, gardeners with good intentions but bad information think otherwise. They think pruning hurts the plant when those actions actually benefit the rose, energize its growth, and make it beautiful.

A KnockOut rose bush is going to have at least 50 buds and flowers - so much for the good. There is no easy care rose that displays so much color at once. However, the downside is having 50 fading, drying, drooping roses on each bush. A very heavy rain can have the same effect - too much water for the spongy plant.

I told our physician - "The hospital KnockOuts look so bad, I am embarrassed for them." He was having the same problem at home and asked for advice.

  1. After a torrential rain (once they have dried out), KnockOuts need to be pruned by about 50%. 
  2. Once their blooms have peaked, they need all the flowers removed at once.

Both actions will eliminate the color for a time but bring in back by the truckload. At times I feel like Dr. House on House MD, with the staff yelling, "No! That will kill the patient! Are you sure we should go ahead with this?" So I reassure the entire staff (one person) while hacking away at the roses.

Like John 15, the branches cut away are removed and thrown in the garbage. Otherwise the cuttings have a chance to spread disease.

Pink Peace blooms in abundance with very large flowers -
not a florist shop flower.


Hybrid Tea Roses and the Grandiflora Queen Elizabeth
The rest of the roses grow more slowly and bloom with extravagantly large flowers. Mrs. Ichabod is completely spoiled by them now. When I have to buy some roses at Walmart or at a florist, the difference is remarkable - the flowers are grown in a greenhouse, are already partially dried out,  and have generic blooms rather than spectacular ones.

I prune the hybrid tea and grandiflora Queen Elizabeth roses by giving away flowers, right and left. The pruning is great for the bush itself and fun for the appreciation elicited. Once I tossed a bunch of the cut flowers on the lawn as I searched for the best ones on the altar. Our helper came by, as I wrote once before, and said, "What are these? I am taking them home!" He had a bouquet for his wife, who loves having fresh roses. We had a bouquet already on the altar.

In cutting flowers I also spot troublesome areas, so I cut them away at the same time.

Creationist Dr. Walter Lammerts
was not known for his fashion sense,
but he is a legend in rose development -
Queen E. and the Chrysler Imperial.


More NICU Visits at the Main Garden and Fence Garden
If a newly planted rose is behind the others, I give it generous amounts of rain water (or stored water) and do a bit of pruning. A fresh rose bed is a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. The bare root roses have to establish their new roots, pump water into the canes, and start to get energy from the newly sprouting leaves.

Meanwhile, the spring winds rush through the plants and dry out the canes.

I look for new roses that have not popped out their leaves. I use the wheelbarrow to haul rainwater in a waste basket and pour some all over the canes and into the ground. I also prune bits of cane that seem to be drying out. Those sections will never grow so they are best trimmed away. A truly asleep rose may need green canes trimmed to wake it up.

The Queen Elizabeth bud
produces an enchanting flower.


Beneficial Sunflowers Planted in Wide Rows
Our helper raked open wide rows for planting sunflowers in the back. Although the area is a bit shaded, the flowers will attain some height, flower, and host a collection of beneficial insects. Sunflowers are especially early with EFN - extra floral nectar - that attracts and supports beneficial insects. That is also why I resist cutting the clover short, since it is flowering, providing nectar and pollen early in the season.

Hosta La Vista
Mr. Gardener had some extra hosta plants, so he gave me a clump. As he was digging along our fence, he said, "Earthworms everywhere!" I said, "You are living off my earthworm investment." He agreed.

I took his clump of hosta and soaked it in rainwater in the wheelbarrow, a favorite place to start plants.

The clay fell off the plants to the point where I could turn one clump into five starts in the shade amid the wild strawberry plants. There the hosta will get plenty of water and grow into clumps I can transplant into the Wild Garden.

Peace may remain a favorite forever;
it is often the first rose mentioned by gardeners.