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In the Garden

For a Ukrainian Gardener, Flowers Offer a Way Forward

When war came to her country, Alla Olkhovska had been planning to open a rare-plants nursery. Now her Clematis seeds have an international following.

Alla Olkhovska, wearing a flowered kerchief and a blue sweatshirt, holds a bouquet of red and pink flowers.
“It’s very important for me to have some fresh flowers, and I do it despite everything,” said Alla Olkhovska, a Ukrainian gardener, about the bouquets she brings home from the garden. “Even when it’s really hard, because it helps — it helps to cope with the problems.”Credit...“Gardening in a War Zone”

The Clematis that delight Alla Olkhovska the most among the 120 or so types she grows are not the familiar, large-flowered hybrids, as extravagantly beautiful as they are. It’s the small, less frequently grown species — the ones whose common names often include the phrase “leather flower,” many of them native to the Southeastern United States — that have stolen her heart.

Their scaled-down charm makes them ethereal subjects for photography, another passion of Ms. Olkhovska’s. But what really impresses her is how well the tiny, bell-shaped blooms with their thick petals stand up to the increasingly hot, dry summers her garden is experiencing.

The whiteleaf leather flower (C. glaucophylla) and scarlet leather flower (C. texensis), for example, can really take the heat, and just keep blooming and blooming, adapting to challenging environmental circumstances.

Two years ago this month, a more sudden call to adapt was sounded — this one to the gardener herself, along with her fellow Ukrainian citizens. In Kharkiv, where she lives, and around the nation, war had arrived.

Ms. Olkhovska, who is now 38, had been building up her plant collection in preparation for starting a small rare-plants nursery. But with war came a new assignment: to find a way, in the face of it, to support her family.

Image
Blue Eryngium flowers and bits of Hydrangea and Astrantia consort with white-flowered Clematis Pamela and larger-flowered Maria Cornelia — with seed heads added for good measure — in an arrangement that Ms. Olkhovska created.Credit...Alla Olkhovska

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