Daffodil affair raises questions
Letter to the Editor
Felder Rushing
Issue date: 2/19/08 Section: Opinion
Felder Rushing is a newspaper columnist, radio host for Mississippi Public Radio and retired MSU Extension Horticulturist. He can be contacted at felder@felderrush
ing.net.
I have gotten quite a lot of e-mails about daffodils being killed on Mississippi State University's main campus, including e-mails from students, faculty, graduates and employees afraid to speak publicly because of job security concerns. The relatively minor hubbub would be comical if it weren't indicative of a deeper issue.
This isn't about flowers. It's about a short-term administrator's inability to control whimsical personal urges and his attempt to "bunker down" when his orders are questioned.
No one is questioning the right of MSU President Robert H. "Doc" Foglesong, a former four-star general, to make aesthetic decisions related to the beautification of his university or his outstanding leadership and contributions to MSU and our state's citizens.
However, a number of people have rightfully questioned his horticultural judgment, and his underlings are falling on their own swords to cover for him in this silly, unnecessary debacle.
How many football fans would tolerate his calling plays for Coach Croom?
I have personally noted how decades of careful horticultural training and effort were recently wasted when dozens of healthy, statuesque crape myrtles around Polk-Dement Stadium at Dudy Noble Field were lopped back severely (against all good horticultural advice).
Now, even in the face of hundreds of protests, an untimely destruction has commenced, silencing thousands of flowering bulbs that were carefully planted over many years to bring decades of spring color and cheer.
He is claiming that there is merely "a long term process of relocating and redefining where our flower beds are located ... that's why we are saving the bulbs."
If that is the case, why not wait a few weeks until the flowers have faded and formed next year's buds? No horticulturist would have recommended otherwise. It is true that as daffodils come and go from fall to spring, they have their ups and downs. But MSU's beautiful campus - my alma mater, home to nationally-recognized schools of horticulture and landscape architecture - has room for a little naturalistic ebb and flow. And in the short term, other flowers can easily be interplanted with existing daffodils.
The president was off base and combative when he suggested publicly that this writer has "another agenda." I really don't care about micromanaging MSU's flowerbed design. I am simply agreeing with a large number of people that there is a compromise available, that the "lilies of the field" be spared this spring and concerned folks be allowed to relocate the most egregious offenders - a few weeks after they bloom - to a safe harbor.
As a proud veteran whose family has served honorably in American military service since the 1700s, I am aware that few generals without oversight take counsel well, much less admit missteps. So I am not surprised that this one man's whimsy and intractability is laying waste so much goodwill over something this easy to correct.
ing.net.
I have gotten quite a lot of e-mails about daffodils being killed on Mississippi State University's main campus, including e-mails from students, faculty, graduates and employees afraid to speak publicly because of job security concerns. The relatively minor hubbub would be comical if it weren't indicative of a deeper issue.
This isn't about flowers. It's about a short-term administrator's inability to control whimsical personal urges and his attempt to "bunker down" when his orders are questioned.
No one is questioning the right of MSU President Robert H. "Doc" Foglesong, a former four-star general, to make aesthetic decisions related to the beautification of his university or his outstanding leadership and contributions to MSU and our state's citizens.
However, a number of people have rightfully questioned his horticultural judgment, and his underlings are falling on their own swords to cover for him in this silly, unnecessary debacle.
How many football fans would tolerate his calling plays for Coach Croom?
I have personally noted how decades of careful horticultural training and effort were recently wasted when dozens of healthy, statuesque crape myrtles around Polk-Dement Stadium at Dudy Noble Field were lopped back severely (against all good horticultural advice).
Now, even in the face of hundreds of protests, an untimely destruction has commenced, silencing thousands of flowering bulbs that were carefully planted over many years to bring decades of spring color and cheer.
He is claiming that there is merely "a long term process of relocating and redefining where our flower beds are located ... that's why we are saving the bulbs."
If that is the case, why not wait a few weeks until the flowers have faded and formed next year's buds? No horticulturist would have recommended otherwise. It is true that as daffodils come and go from fall to spring, they have their ups and downs. But MSU's beautiful campus - my alma mater, home to nationally-recognized schools of horticulture and landscape architecture - has room for a little naturalistic ebb and flow. And in the short term, other flowers can easily be interplanted with existing daffodils.
The president was off base and combative when he suggested publicly that this writer has "another agenda." I really don't care about micromanaging MSU's flowerbed design. I am simply agreeing with a large number of people that there is a compromise available, that the "lilies of the field" be spared this spring and concerned folks be allowed to relocate the most egregious offenders - a few weeks after they bloom - to a safe harbor.
As a proud veteran whose family has served honorably in American military service since the 1700s, I am aware that few generals without oversight take counsel well, much less admit missteps. So I am not surprised that this one man's whimsy and intractability is laying waste so much goodwill over something this easy to correct.
Spring Break
Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 53
Andy Chapman
posted 2/19/08 @ 2:01 PM CST
I think Felder hits the nail on the head. No organization can withstand such micro-managing at the University level. It's beyond the flowers at this point. (Continued…)
another alum
posted 2/19/08 @ 2:27 PM CST
i didn't care too much about the flowers but the murdering of the crape myrtles put me over the top. they were a vital part of our beautiful baseball stadium. (Continued…)
Don Mouledoux
posted 2/19/08 @ 3:46 PM CST
The campus has never looked better than it looks now. Doc is not micro-managing. He is getting into the micro-details. Any good leader gets into the micro-details. (Continued…)
Recent Alum
posted 2/19/08 @ 3:49 PM CST
Silencing thousands of flowering bulbs? The murdering of the crape myrtles? Please tell me this is satire.
Jim Cooley
posted 2/19/08 @ 5:27 PM CST
Keep up the good work Doc!!! If Felder Rushing's yard is an indication of "naturalistic ebb and flow", I don't want it near MSU's beautiful campus. Do we really want to take aesthetic advice from a man whose yard could at best be described as unkempt? Felder, while well qualified to comment on matters of the plant variety, has a very different view of what is visually pleasing than do 90% of the rest of us (go take a look at his yard. (Continued…)
Alum
posted 2/19/08 @ 6:09 PM CST
It sure is pretty. Too bad it's not worth a shit.
Seriously, how about some substance to this University? It's never going to be pretty like Ole Miss, or like the Ivy League Schools. (Continued…)
Doctor Daffodil
posted 2/19/08 @ 10:14 PM CST
Congratulations to all of Doc and all of his cheerleaders. It's wonderfully informed, insightful individuals like yourself that allow us to have such great freedom of thought and expression. (Continued…)
Ken Williams
posted 2/20/08 @ 4:56 AM CST
Wow ! How did I get here. I was reading the MSU Sports page in the Clarion Ledger and I ended up here. This is pretty interesting and makes my morning sports page reading much more interesting. (Continued…)
Dennis Ellingburg
posted 2/20/08 @ 6:23 AM CST
Do we not have more important issues to discuss than flowers? I mean seriously. There are no issues that the students can rally behind that actually make a difference? They are flowers and plants! Are we really this fat, happy, and dumbed down in our society that this is all we can. (Continued…)
Ash
posted 2/20/08 @ 9:34 AM CST
OK, who replaced half of our MSU base with these kooky, tinfoil-hat wearing tulip tip-toers?
You sheeple have got to come to your senses.
Payed for by the "It's about time somebody started taking charge around here" campaign. (Continued…)
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