I’ve bought a lot of plants just to learn them or to see how they compare with other, similar plants. So it is beyond frustrating when I lose the labels and can’t remember what they are. Is it Echinacea Sombrero something or Adobe something? Hibiscus ‘Hoy Malloy,’ ‘Holy Grail,’ or something else completely? And what the hell is that fern? They all look alike when you don’t know them. And none of this is helped by a bad memory. So it is indeed frustrating. And it’s embarrassing. When a visitor asks what something is and I can’t tell them, I feel stupid. As a professional, I’m supposed to know these things and even though I could just make something up and they would never know it, and it would never effect the trajectory of the world’s future in any way, for some reason I have too much integrity to do that. Dumb.
In the past, I tried different things—various word files, spreadsheets, folders filled with dirty plant tags, and more. But none of these worked. They depended on following up after a day in the garden, or keeping tags or notes in some kind of order. File under “Never Had a Chance.” Finally, I came up with something that works, and it only requires the phone I’ve always got in my pocket and a little time downloading and naming photos.
Each time I plant something new, I take at least two pictures of it. The first is a photo of the tag in the garden where it is sited. This is a wide-angle shot, which includes long standing identifiable features (like trees or rocks or buildings). And then I take a picture of the tag itself, just in case it can’t be read in the wide-angle photo.
From my phone, the photos I take go immediately to Google Photos, so they live in the cloud. Not good enough. This makes it too hard to label and too hard to search if you take a lot of photos. You’ll have to scroll and scroll and scroll. So the next step is an important one. I download these photos and name them. I name them like this: Scilla litardierei @Home 101023. So that’s the Latin name (genus and species) and the cultivar name when there is one, where the plant is located, and the date (MMDDYY). Another example could be: Carpinus caroliniana @Longwood 072219.
Once downloaded, you can simply copy and paste these photos into a folder marked, “Plant Location Photos,” or something like that, and maybe that’s all you need. No need to subdivide further. But I have many thousands of plant photos, both at home and from other places, so I’ve organized my photos in a way that works pretty well for me.
Maybe this system or some variation of it will make life easier for you in some way. If you have suggestions on how I can improve it, I’m all ears.
Wonderful! A spreadsheet does work pretty well in my size garden, but I love the idea of putting little tags in for future projects — Move me, divide me, etc. I’ll have to pick up some tags soon. Don’t be so mean to yourself, though, Scott. The garden is the last place you need to remind yourself to lose weight! You are getting exercise and your hands are too dirty to eat anything, anyway… Happy Holidays!
I envy those who have the discipline to keep a spreadsheet up to date. Maybe I will be able to do that some day, when I have more time. And discipline.
About being mean to myself. I have to. It’s so easy. And I’ve found that if I make mean comments about myself, it sort of preempts Marianne from doing it.
Easy?????
I might have made it sound more difficult than it is. Two steps. Step one: Take two photos of the plant tag and the planting site. Step Two: Download the files into whatever folder system works best for you.
I’ve been using Notion to catalog my plants – you can easily categorize the data in any way you want, and also share that with others. See my examples here: https://codedude.notion.site/codedude/4ec4b4f85cdc46d6b2fb3683fb162511?v=876a61e4f579456f88354314eab79bda
Looks interesting. And promising. I’m going to investigate this further. Thanks!
I love the idea of taking that distance orientation photo with tag-marks-the-spot for hidden plants. And the marked tags for to-remembers. Thank you. I’m lazy and have no professional requirements so just shove tags into a small photo journal, flagged by year, with an annotation on the tag or a sticky note saying where i planted. I looked at Notions but have sworn off of 3rd party apps since too many have disappeared on me over time. I like using yymmdd form dates for sorting purposes.
The plant sorting/ID photo scheme seems to be a good approach for you. Not sure I’d have the discipline or be consistent enough for it to work for me.
What really appeals, though, are the short term markers. Yes, move this! Divide that! Plant whatever here. That is an idea I will apply. If I remember it, come spring!
Yes. The idea of marking plants to divide, move, etc. came to me last year and it’s really helped. I also bought a big bag of wooden golf tees of different colors and mulling over a system of using them in some kind of marking system. For now, I’m just using them to mark places where I’ve sown seed, but I know the potential for more is there.
Thanks, Scott. I have tried so many systems (all the way back to the ‘real slides’) that I have almost given up! Creating Power Point presentations have really helped me; but, I really like your organization of your photos.
I appreciate how you share your wisdom! ( And, I agree with Kathleen Rochester that the garden is the last place to leave signs to beat yourself up. We beat you up enough on your FB and Instagram posts – LOL!)
Thanks Jennifer. You all keep me humble, that’s for sure, but sometimes it feels like I need to prime the pump.
Too many steps for me. I am opposed o technology on the grounds that I cannot keep up with all the new tricks. Howeer, if this works for you, fine. I swill hve o rely on my old ae memory, whih has a built in excuse for NOT remembering.
Built in excuses are good.
It’s always a struggle when you grow so many plants to remember who is who especially when there are so many that look similar. I like your tags reminding you to do things. Your article is quite timely though as my husband and I are currently going through the hundreds of photos stored on my laptop. Always a struggle to find the exact one I want. I tried something new with my many lilies this summer. I recorded myself talking about the variety name, where it came from and where in the garden it is. This way when I go through my photos over the winter and can’t remember the name I can check back through the recordings. So far so good.
Photographing plant markers is critical if your dogs collect the markers like Easter eggs!
Dogs. It’s like they have minds of their own. Minds that are different. And kind of crazy.
I was with you up to the point of your file system. I couldn’t quite get it. Is there a folder for every single plant? It seems very complicated. But I agree, some system is needed. I’d also love a way to search in multiple ways, like Latin name, conventional name, year planted, location, sun/shade needs. That way I could search the file, not my memory, when I open a catalog or visit a nursery. Come to think of it, my desired system would be even more complicated! Ah, the dreams of gardeners…
Love the idea of leaving notes in the spots that need attention. I do have a garden helper twice a month and it would be a great way for her to just take care of some of the little things that I never seem to remember to tell her about.
I keep file cards for each of my beds. i. e. circle bed, west property bed etc. When I am working in those beds I take the cards into the garden with me and make the notes as I move along…sometimes remembering where I left the cards is a bit humbling at the end of the day!
I have two systems. I have an expanding file folder for every general area of my garden (Woodland, Kitchen Bed, Front yard, etc.). Every (cleaned) new tag goes loose into the folder where it was planted. Every once in a while, I go through the folders and pull things that are with me no longer. Sometimes I move the tag into the “Gone” folder, in case I want to look up the plant, otherwise I toss them. I like the visual reference, even though I also keep a spreadsheet of all the native plants I’ve put in.
New here, this is a great article and so funny ( bio included)! I’m implementing the long distance plant photo/ close up label photo. Great plan. The computer list filing is just a level of frustration I don’t want to bring into my garden joy. Can’t wait to read more of your articles.
Thanks for another great article on Garden Rant!
My online garden site enables me to combine my 3 hobbies: gardening, photography and computing! Most (but not all) of it is bilingual, French-English. You can browse the totality of its +200 taxons by name (Latin/French/English), or do an Advanced Search for a particular group of characteristics or by browsing the garden plan. I wish a happy virtual visit to visitors of this Garden Rant site!