Monday 17 September 2018

Book Review: The Plant Messiah


Pic of Purple water lily flower against lily pad

Most botanical biographies seem to be about the great plant hunters of the past. The Plant Messiah is the story of Kew’s modern-day botanical horticulturist, Carlos Magdalena. Rather than collecting exotic species, he’s out to save them.

Early Beginnings
A Spanish journalist called Carlos ‘The Plant Messiah’. The name stuck. The seeds were sown in childhood. Carlos learnt how to grow and graft plants at a young age. His propagation skills and sheer determination earned him a place on Kew’s prestigious horticultural diploma. His story opens a window on the extraordinary conservation work taking place at Kew and across the world.

Perseverance
As you turn each page, you will each endangered species to survive. Carlos’s perseverance despite repeated failures is remarkable. My heart sank as he reported a failure. He does not seem to dwell on the failures. Years seem to pass trying different methods to no avail. Thankfully, there are success stories too.

Adventures
This Spanish-born plant messiah travels the world. His adventures are worthy of the historical plant hunters. A human ladder in Mauritius, a crocodile watch in Australia and plant theft are just a few of the anecdotes.

It’s not just about saving plants personally. Wherever he goes, Carlos teaches the local people his propagation skills. This even finds him teaching after midnight in Bolivia.

Water Lily Obsession
The water lily tales stand out. The importance of international cooperation between the world’s botanical gardens is underlined by Carlos’ success with Nymphaea thermarum. An exchange of seeds with Bonn sees him try to grow the species beyond germination into maturity. The Plant Messiah succeeds thanks to a combination of  obsessional persistence and a ‘tortellini moment’. Only after his success does he hear that he had been working with the last five seeds in existence. A rat ate the last plant in Germany.

PIc of giant water lily pads
In the Water Lily House at Kew Gardens

Publisher
The Plant Messiah has Penguin Books as its publisher. It is unusual for a botanical subject to have such a mainstream publisher. I hope that Penguin will be inspired to take on more botanical subjects and authors at this critical time for endangered species. This inspirational book has been well-ghostwritten and edited for an enthralling read.

What Next?
The book ends with The Plant Messiah returning to Kew with ‘a new waterlily species to show the world’. It doesn’t feel like the end of his story. There simply has to be another instalment. The epilogue ends with a prayer, urging everyone to be a plant messiah. You don’t have to travel as far as Carlos to help plant diversity and conservation.

‘We have been given one earth and we are not managing it properly.
We don’t deserve another.
Instead, let’s turn things around and garden our way out of this apocalypse,
green up the world and plant our future.’

Amen.



Magdalena, Carlos:
The Plant Messiah. Adventures in Search of the World's Rarest Species
Publisher: Penguin Books (2017)

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