By Emily How
While cleaning out a cabinet at my house, I stumbled across an old newspaper from the 1990s. I love finding things like this because it shows a glimpse of what was happening in the community at the time. As I paged through this paper, I found a Hortiscope column written by Ronald Smith, a former NDSU horticulturist. Seeing the contrast between then and now is one of the most interesting things about looking back at those old columns.
In the early 1990s, a submitted question like “I sent you this leaf with weird dots — what is it?” would be a one-on-one diagnostic. The value lives entirely with the person who mailed in the leaf. Without a photo archive, searchable database or instant image sharing, that exchange could not easily help anyone else who was facing similar problems. Today, that same interaction would look completely different. A single photo could be shared online, tagged and reused by thousands of gardeners dealing with identical symptoms. What used to be a private answer has become a public, reusable reference.
By contrast, questions like “How do I get rid of creeping jenny in my tree row?” have aged much better. The question describes a recurring problem rather than a single mystery leaf. The answer depends on things that still matter now — the tree species, the age of the planting, soil disturbance, herbicide tolerance, mulch, mowing and how much labor someone can invest. Those kinds of questions do not go stale because they’re really about management decisions, not just identification.