The Botanist Who Shut an HOA Gate Over 43 Protected Wildflowers-Ginny

The first time Sloan Harrington walked into my meadow, she did not look like a woman trespassing.

She looked like a woman arranging scenery.

She had one hand on her hip, one hand around an iPhone, and a bridal party planted in the middle of a patch of smooth coneflower like the flowers were props rented by the hour.

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The bride’s white hem brushed against the stems.

The photographer crouched low with a Canon R5 and used two more plants as a foreground blur.

A drone whined overhead, too bright and mechanical against the insects and June wind.

I stood there with a clipboard on my left arm and a GPS marker on my belt, and for a few seconds I did not speak.

I was counting Echinacea laevigata, the federally threatened smooth coneflower, the same species my brother Paxton and I had counted every June since 1996.

Paxton had died of pancreatic cancer in March of 2021.

His last clear conversation with me had not been about money, fear, or even our childhood.

It had been about the meadow.

He took both my hands and said, “Emmett, do not let anyone touch the coneflowers.”

So when I saw Sloan Harrington smiling in that grass, something old and cold settled inside me.

My name is Emmett Redmond, and I have spent more than three decades learning 162 acres of Appalachian grassland by heart.

The Redmond family has held that land in Grayson County, Virginia, since 1884, when my great-great-grandfather Ezra traded a Civil War cavalry mule and $90 in scrip for burned-over pasture.

My father, Thaddeus, added the east parcel in 1962 and cut a gravel farm road through our property for hay balers, milk trucks, and family use.

He never recorded an easement because there was no subdivision there.

There was only grass, ridge, barn, wind, and the old farmhouse where Eileen and I later raised our children.

The meadow was the heart of the place.

It had never been plowed in 142 years.

Little bluestem and native fescue ran through it like a woven floor, and in June the forbs rose through that grass with the kind of abundance people mistake for accident.

Orange butterfly weed.

Wild bergamot.

Prairie coneflower.

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