A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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ties . Today , the tradition of cut-flower beds as part of the backyard garden c ontinues in many parts of the world , especially Europe . In American gardens , however , the practice of planting or sowing a flower bed specifically for harve sting stems is still a scarcity . Yet there is a demand for cut flowers : Witnes s the success of market gardeners and farmers who sell them at farmers ' markets . Flowers for cutting are grown in the same enriched garden soil that suits har d-working vegetable varieties : plenty of organic matter , a neutral pH ranging from 6.5 to 7.5 , good drainage and a tilled or dug depth of six to eight inches . A boost of organic fertilizer before seeds are sown or seedlings planted is a lways a good idea . The cut-flower garden , like the vegetable garden , will req uire periodic applications of the same fertilizer , when plants are 2 to 3 weeks old , again one month later and finally in early September . I prefer organic f ertilizers because they don't cause excessive foliage growth at the expense of f lower production . A formula containing nitrogen , phosphorus and potassium ( N- P-K ) within a couple of numbers of each other ( 5-4-2 or 8-6-4 , for example ) is good . And there is a wonderful forgiving quality about organic fertilizers : The concentrations don't have to be precise . Cut-flower gardens are less flexi ble when it comes to sunlight . The sunnier the better . They will still flower in partial shade but full shade will be a bust . This doesn't mean you have to g ive over the choicest sunny spot in the garden to them many blooms will fit into a small area , say , four feet square . Also , they can be planted within or ar ound the vegetable garden or in an existing border . The flowers themselves can be a combination of annuals and perennials or all annuals . The goal is to have a variety of flowers blooming at all times . It can take years of trial and erro r and of effort and patience to achieve this in a perennial garden ; but with an nuals , which bloom continuously all summer , getting a good selection for indoo r bouquets is nearly instantaneous , once plants are established . In selecting flowers , consider what you want , whether it is ease of care , height , scent , color or flower form . The availability of plants in garden centers also will i nfluence what will go into the cut-flower garden , although many excellent annua ls can be sown from seed now and still produce a spectacular show by midsummer . Plants that grow tall are more versatile as cut flowers than dwarf or miniature varieties . Flower stems on tall varieties are generally longer than on small o nes and the foliage itself can contribute to dramatic arrangements . In this reg ard , cosmos stands out as one of the most desirable and useful of the cutting f lowers . Easily grown from seed , this rugged annual belies the delicacy of its bloom and foliage . Cosmos comes in a range of colors and even styles . There ar e two distinct strains , one producing sunny yellow , gold and orange ruffled bl ooms and the other sporting fragile-looking daisy-faced blossoms in shades of de ep red , pink , purple , lilac and white . Today 's varieties include scalloped , ruffled , single and double flowers . All make stunning cut flowers , either a lone or in combination with others . Depending on the variety , cosmos ranges in height from two to five feet , and the taller and most commonly available ones will need support , either against a wall or trellis or with caging . For scent , nicotiana is a good choice . This aromatic member of the tobacco family produc es a profusion of slightly trumpeted , open-faced blooms , varieties ranging in color from deep red to white , with pinks in between . There is a dwarf version , which gets up to about two feet tall ; the traditional form grows to three or sometimes four feet . Other scented annuals that lend themselves to cutting incl ude stock , sweet peas and nasturtium . For sheer endurance , one of the most re liable annuals is the zinnia . For some reason there seem to be fewer choices of this trusty variety than there once were ; I can remember when catalogs routine ly devoted two or three pages to the zinnia . Cut and Come Again is perhaps the most durable of the zinnias , yielding an abundance of brilliant , multicolored blooms between two and three inches across , borne atop stiff stems throughout t he summer . Their name reflects reality the more you cut them , the more they 'l l bloom . Generally , this rule applies to all annual flowers . The cut-flower g arden is primarily a harvesting garden , handled the same way as tomatoes or str awberries . If flowers are left to mature into seed pods , plants will tend to s top blooming . In addition , virtually all the annuals withstand and even benefi t from severe pruning of the sort that accompanies harvesting for bouquets folia ge and all . Cutting flowers that can be sown from seed now include cosmos , zin nia , nasturtium , honesty and sunflowers . Dahlia tubers also can be planted ; be sure to add plenty of decomposed organic matter , such as old leaves . Flower s to put in as plants include gerbera , dahlia , dianthus , cockscomb , statice and daisies . Drying for winter arrangements takes special techniques , but a gr oup known as everlastings dry naturally . They include honesty , pearly everlast ing , globe amaranth , strawflower and statice . Stock up on beetle traps now if you had problems with Japanese beetles last yea r . In mid-June traps should be put in place , well away from prized plants . Tr aps put too close to plants will result in much-greater damage from beetles than if no controls are used . The following editorial appeared in Monday 's Washington Post : Having taken a week off , Congress returns to the subject of health-care reform with none of th e problems having become any easier or gone away . There continue to be two cont radictory goals to expand the health-care system while containing its cost . The president has wrapped himself in the first of these . He wants universal covera ge , from which he and his aides believe all else will follow . Politically that may be the best way to proceed . You order the lunch and only then discuss the price . But this is the wrong way around . Congress , following the president 's lead , has tended to put the question of cost containment aside for the moment . Yet health-care costs are eating up every budget in the country , crowding out much else . That 's as true for businesses and too many families as it is for t he federal and state governments . Without cost containment , the country can't afford even the health-care system it has , much less an expanded one . Here is a Congress nervous about imposing either employer mandates or new taxes , but no t wanting to discuss serious cost containment , either . How else does it propos e to raise the large amount of money that expanded coverage will cost ? Cost con tainment means saying no , at some point , to someone . There are only so many w ays to do it , and each has its detractors . The president would rely in the fir st instance on a system of regulated competition health plans competing for busi ness in large pools on the bases of quality and price . As a backup he would loo k to premium caps limits on the amount that insurance premiums could go up each year . The effect would be to limit the funds available to the health-care syste m and thereby total health-care spending . Critics oppose such premium caps on g rounds they would amount to either government rationing or government price cont rols , take your pick . The so-called single-payer system is likewise denounced on grounds that it would give too large a role to government . The alternative i s said to be managed competition , which relies much more on market forces . But it , too , is denounced on grounds that it would end up giving too much power t o the insurance companies that are busily transforming themselves into managed-c are providers . Congress has thus far finessed the issue . The debate there has mainly been about constructing a benefit system : Who should be guaranteed what , and who should pay ? Those indeed are difficult questions , but Congress has c reated benefit systems before ; it knows how to answer them . Not so with regard to cost containment ; that 's new territory and will be the great test as Congr ess tries between now and October to write a bill . Health care today consumes a seventh of all the dollars Americans have to spend , and the figure is said to be rising toward a fifth . That 's too large a share . A bill to broaden the hea lth-care system without at the same time containing its cost would end up doing the country more harm than good . BURBANK , Calif. Renate Leuschner handles hair the way a grocer handles fresh e ndive , the way a haberdasher fingers Italian silk . Each time her supplier rece ives a new shipment of human hair , in cropped bundles , she hurries down to pic k through the lot . `` The best hair comes from poor countries where the women s till wear it long and will sell it , '' Leuschner says . `` These women get paid almost nothing . '' Some strands are too thick and difficult to weave . Dark ha ir must be chemically treated , bleached and dyed , making it stiff . Only fine brown and blond locks from Eastern Europe suffice . This stock ends up , sorted by length and color , in clear plastic containers that line the shelves of Leusc hner 's Burbank studio . And this is where well-known actors come when they need a wig to make them look curly or sexy or prim , when they need a wig to look li ke they were born on a different continent or in a different era . In this tiny workshop down the driveway , through the back yard and above a three-car garage Hollywood 's fantasies are reduced to the stuff of their facades . Sharon Stone amounts to nothing more than a pile of brown and blond bundles . Robin Williams is a dummy 's head , carefully measured , made of gray cloth and featureless . ` ` And big , '' Leuschner says . `` Robin , even for a man , has a big head . '' Theater and wigs share a long history . Greek characters marked themselves by th e color of their coif : black for the tyrant , blond for the hero and red for th e comic servant . Modern actors don wigs to protect their natural hair from stag e lights and to avoid the damage of continual cutting , styling and coloring wit h each new role . The hairpieces they purchase from Leuschner are custom-fitted and hand-sewn , strand by strand , at a price of $ 3,000 . On a recent morning , the wig-maker and her two young assistants , Natascha and Hildegard , hurried t o finish an order of seven wigs for a fashion show . The girls were sewing while their mentor brushed and clipped a completed piece . There was very little talk , all of it in thick accents , while insistent Chopin played from a stereo in t he corner . Scissors and combs lay scattered about the place , along with gray h ead forms . In addition to the Williams facsimile , used for his `` Mrs. Doubtfi re '' curls , there were faceless likenesses of Bette Midler , Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise , who needed a wig for `` Interview With a Vampire . '' Demi Moore w as there in form too . `` Tiny head , '' she says . `` You can hardly mistake he r for anyone else . '' The names of actors mark many of the containers on the sh elves : Ann-Margret , Melanie Griffith , Carol Burnett . Other containers are no ted by color : `` Light blond to medium light blond . '' Each wig that Leuschner makes begins with a fitting session , during which she measures the actor 's he ad and takes note of his or her facial features . Perfectly even hairlines are g ood . Wide foreheads are bad . Oval faces , yes . Round faces , no . Cher , it s eems , was put on this earth to wear a wig . Next comes a form-fitting lace cap , the edges of which can be blended into skin with makeup . Hair is sewn into th is cap in much the same way a rug is hooked , one strand at a time in front and several at a time in back . ( Begin optional trim ) To look real , a wig must in clude strands of various shades and the roots must be darker than the ends . A b rown wig , for example , will contain a quantity of brown hair as a base , with darker and lighter strands to provide the highlights . But before the sewing beg ins , a sample of the hair must be screen-tested . Bright lights and camera filt ers can alter hue . When Bette Midler was cast as a witch in the 1993 film `` Ho cus Pocus , '' she ordered a red wig from Leuschner . Midler 's scenes were shot in dim lighting to simulate night and a truly red wig would have shown up purpl e on film . Renate used strands that were dyed fire-engine red and orange . Once the color is perfected , the hair is sewn onto its lace cap . This can take a w eek or more and is often performed by the assistants . `` I like hair , '' Hilde gard says . Then Leuschner must return to the movie set to fine-tune the styling . For `` Mrs. Doubtfire , '' the fine-tuning required numerous visits . `` We h ad to adjust certain things to make him look feminine and not like a drag queen , '' she says . `` Honestly , it wasn't easy . '' ( End optional trim ) Trained as a stylist in her native Germany , she came to Hollywood and grabbed the only job she could find , in a wig shop . In 1972 , she was hired to work on `` The S onny and Cher Comedy Hour '' which , short of garnering an exclusive contract wi th Dolly Parton , was pretty much the Valhalla of wig-making . `` I 've made 100 , maybe 120 wigs for Cher over the years , '' Leuschner explains . `` She has a lways been my major client . And when I was doing that show , everyone wanted to look like Cher , so that 's how my business got started . '' HOLLYWOOD James Garner does not go to the movies . `` Ohhh , I don't like to si t there too long , '' he explains in a perfect Jim Rockford-esque grumble of a d rawl . `` I don't like the crowds , I don't like to get out of the house if I do n't have to . Parking. It 's such a chore . '' Yet , here he sits in the Hotel B el Air dining room , cheerfully saying you 're going to want to do all those thi ngs to see his new movie , `` Maverick . '' `` It 's going to be a kick , '' he says . `` We did have a ball making it . I asked ( director ) Dick Donner the se cond week , ` We 're having so much fun , are we laughing ourselves into trouble here ? ' ' ' It has been 37 years since Warner Bros. officials called over to J apan where Marlon Brando was filming `` Sayonara '' and asked the producers to h urry up and send home a young contract actor , James Garner , to play Bret Maver ick in their new television series . By the time Garner was finished with `` Mav erick , '' the tongue-in-cheek Western had supplanted most others and Garner was on his way to being a star . `` Well , we just killed Westerns , '' Garner says chuckling . When a character once declared `` He went that-a-way , '' Maverick looked at him and deadpanned , `` And you know a shortcut , right ? '' In fact , `` Maverick '' established two seminal things about Garner . One was that he is brazen enough to stand up to a studio in a legal battle . ( Long before his fam ous 1980s suit against Universal , he successfully sued Warners for laying him o ff his 52-week contract during a writers ' strike . ) The second was that he is the master of the wry , bemused everyman character . In the four decades of his career , Garner has proved to be one of the most enduring and endearing actors i n the business , accessible enough for television , commanding enough for movies , unpretentious enough for commercials . He has done things you 've probably fo rgotten `` The Americanization of Emily '' and `` Victor/Victoria , '' both with Julie Andrews and things he 'd rather forget about . ( `` A Man Called Sledge ' ' is what he regularly offers up when asked for his biggest stinker . ) And alon g the way there were films like `` Support Your Local Sheriff , '' `` Grand Prix '' ( he loved that because he got to drive race cars ) , `` The Children 's Hou r '' and `` The Great Escape . '' But it has been television that let him distin guish himself from the pack , first with his charming gambler-adventurer , Bret Maverick , and then later with the witty , beleaguered private detective , Jim R ockford , of `` The Rockford Files . '' In 1993 , he starred in HBO 's Emmy-winn ing version of `` Barbarians at the Gate , '' but for most TV fans , Maverick an d Rockford were the quintessential Garner roles . In many ways , Rockford was a 1970s reincarnation of Bret Maverick and had a similar skewering effect on TV pr ivate eyes . `` We kept sticking our tongue in our cheek , and that ruined a lot of detective shows , '' says Garner . `` People would get to thinking , ` What would Rockford have done ? He wouldn't have gotten a gun and gone chasing him. ' ' ' Bret Maverick has never been quite out of circulation , living on in fans ' fond memories and getting resuscitated in a short-lived 1981 series that Garner says never made him particularly happy . But now , there 's a big screen rebirt h , and Garner is passing on the torch to Mel Gibson , who plays the glib gamble r in Richard Donner 's movie `` Maverick , '' which also stars Jodie Foster and Garner . Here , the actor says , he 's content to sit by at the poker table and on the stagecoach playing straight lawman Zane Cooper to Gibson 's wisecracking Maverick . Garner says his Maverick days are over . `` That was a long time ago , '' he says . `` I don't own it . It 's wonderful to see Mel play it . He has s uch charm and wit . I 've said before I don't know anybody who could play it lik e Mel could . '' At 66 , Garner is a veteran of bypass surgery who no longer smo kes ( well , he sneaks one now and then ) and drinks only wine . ( Begin optiona l trim ) `` I had 'em working nights trying to make enough whiskey for me to dri nk , '' he recalls of his hard-liquor-drinking days that ended , he says , when he was 27 . He allows himself about six ounces of beef a week and this from a gu y once famous for beef commercials . `` I got letters from people : ` I hope you die eating beef . ' All these vegetarians . '' He 's aging about as well as , o h , say , Warren Beatty ( Garner is older ) , which is to say quite well . Tall and broad shouldered , Garner is dressed in a black sweater and black slacks , a black leather jacket tossed across the seat . The face is ruddy pink , thicker and not as chiseled as in his Rockford days . ( End optional trim ) It was only nine years ago that his performance in `` Murphy 's Romance '' as the pharmacist who falls slowly in love with Sally Field won him an Oscar nomination for best actor . It 's one of his favorite roles and he plays Murphy as an unapologetic e ccentric , comfortable with his life and his thickening waist , even sexy . `` C areful , girl , '' he says when this observation is made . He says he has never tried to project himself as a sexually alluring figure . `` I just don't see mys elf like that . '' ( Begin optional trim ) He thinks movies are too violent toda y and laments the loss of the understated picture. ` ` ` Murphy 's Romance ' was a good example , '' he says . `` It has no violence , no sex as we 've come to know it in movies . And it was a charming film . ` Driving Miss Daisy ' is anoth er example . But they don't make many of those . They want to make the ones wher e they kill everybody . '' ( End optional trim ) Garner is in some ways an old-f ashioned Hollywood story . He never made it through 10th grade , leaving Norman , Okla. , where he 'd been a high school athlete , for Hollywood , where his fat her had relocated and was working as a carpet layer . He briefly enrolled in Hol lywood High School , earned some money doing swimsuit modeling and then shipped out with the merchant marine . Later , he spent 21 months in the Korean War wher e he earned two Purple Hearts . When he returned to Hollywood after his stint in the Army , he considered himself qualified for nothing . So he went off to see an agent friend who had once told him he ought to be in pictures . The agent sig ned him that day , and Garner has never wanted for work since . He 's married to his first and only wife , Lois , whom he met at an Adlai Stevenson rally 37 yea rs ago . With the exception of a two-year separation more than a decade ago , th ey 've been together ever since . ANNAPOLIS ROYAL , Nova Scotia One of the longest Main Streets in Canada runs al most 200 miles , from Yarmouth clear to the outskirts of Halifax . It seems to r oll halfway across the world , from France and Scotland to colonial America . To oling along its two-lane blacktop , you 'll pass Gargantuan wooden churches buil t by faithful French settlers , stockaded fortresses almost 400 years old , past oral valleys stippled with fruit-heavy trees , mile after mile of rugged and roc ky seacoast , bays packed with fishing boats , and villages that put even the pr ettiest of postcards to shame . They call it the Evangeline Trail , a route name d for the tragic heroine of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 's epic poem about the ex pulsion of the first European settlers of Nova Scotia , the French . The settler s were driven from their adopted homeland in 1755 , victims of the long struggle between France and England for mastery of the New World . Nova Scotia 's French settlers scattered throughout British colonies from Massachusetts to Louisiana , where an isolated group of French-speaking Americans came to be known as the C ajuns . Cajun came from l' Acadie , or Acadia , as the French called their stret ch of Nova Scotia coastline . It was a place of rural peace , a pastoral paradis e . And as increasing numbers of visitors are discovering , it still is . The hi storic heart of old Acadia is Annapolis Royal , the cradle of Canada . For Canad ians , it 's Jamestown , Plymouth Rock and Philadelphia rolled into one . Ironic ally , the town looks as if it might have been transplanted from New England 's rocky soil . In a sense it was . Yankee loyalists fleeing the American Revolutio n flocked to Nova Scotia , and many settled in the area around the Annapolis Riv er . More settled around the rim of the Annapolis Basin , a handsome estuary lin ked to the Bay of Fundy by Digby Gut ( a channel , not a local intestinal diseas e ) . Anyway , Annapolis Royal has more than its share of historic landmarks . N earby there 's Port Royal National Historic Park , marked by a faithful replica of Canada 's first settlement the stockaded trading post founded by French adven turers Samuel de Champlain and Sieur de Monts in 1605 . The post-and-beam extrav aganza , reconstructed by the last of the region 's old-time shipwrights , is a wonder of craftsmanship . In town , the Fort Anne National Historic Site belongs to a later era . This is the fourth fort built to defend the town , which seesa wed between the French and the English during 100 years of struggle for control of the region . The first fort was built in 1643 , when the French-ruled town wa s known as Port Royal . When the English finally assumed dominion in 1710 , they Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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