
51视频-Dearborn is known for maize and blue鈥nd also a little bit of green. That鈥檚 the color of the John Deere gator Jeanette Whiting has driven around campus for years.
With her work buckets and gardening tools in the back and dragon wings on the side, the advanced master gardener helped beautify campus 鈥 always with a friendly wave, hello or laugh 鈥 for 35 years. On Oct, 7, she parked her gator in the Grounds Building for the last time.
鈥淎ll good things must come to an end,鈥 she said, walking out of the building鈥檚 massive garage doors. 鈥51视频-Dearborn has been an important part of my life. I hope I left a mark here and will be remembered with a good story and a smile.鈥
Reporter staff had the chance to talk with Jeanette (and ride in the gator!) on her last day at 51视频-Dearborn. She shared a few funny and entertaining stories 鈥 her specialty 鈥 along with sweet nostalgic ones reflecting on the U-M career she鈥檇 had since 1987.
Her family inspired the career she loved.
Jeanette grew up in Dearborn. Her parents鈥 home was near the intersection of Greenfield and Ford roads 鈥 just a block from where legendary automaker Henry Ford grew up. But, even as a child, Jeanette wasn鈥檛 much interested in her family house itself. Instead, she noticed the yard and how her parents cultivated it. There was a pear tree they鈥檇 pick from and a crab apple tree with fruit so large that they鈥檇 can the apples.
Her mother liked flowers and, in particular, roses. Her father went a more eccentric route. 鈥淗e liked unusual things 鈥 things no one else had at the time. Because of dad, we had hibiscus, hardy geraniums and a catalpa tree with leaves so big that I could use them as an umbrella,鈥 she said. 鈥淒ad died when I was 13, but his interest in unique plants left an impression on me.鈥
Today, she鈥檚 an Advanced Master Gardener, a renowned horticulturist certification. In her personal garden, Jeanette continues that tradition. For example, she has plants with a flower that looks like a bat face (bat-faced cuphea) and a bush with oil that smells like buttered popcorn (Senna didymobotrya), among others.
鈥淚 like the trivia behind a plant 鈥 why it is the way it is and how it functions. Studies show that nature uses what it has and doesn鈥檛 waste anything. Everything is in that certain arrangement for a reason. But nature also reminds us that even with so much order, it鈥檚 ok to be a little weird,鈥 she said. 鈥淥f course, I also just enjoy them too. Plants sparkle in the sun, they attract different pollinators, they have unique fragrances and a variety in their colors. It鈥檚 like nature knew we鈥檇 need plants as therapy.鈥
When it comes to supporting campus growth, she thinks beyond plants.
Jeanette has a knack for understanding how things work in the plant kingdom. Knowing this, people often stop to ask her questions. 鈥淪ometimes I get really interesting ones 鈥 sometimes there are doozies. One lady asked for advice on keeping her marigolds alive. I asked how often she watered them. She didn鈥檛,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 thought she was kidding. She wasn鈥檛. So I told her to start there.鈥
Asking Jeanette why she鈥檇 take time to interact with people when it wasn鈥檛 an essential part of her job, she uses a plant analogy. 鈥淧ay attention to what plants need and they will thrive. Mums need daylight. There are two ways to get Christmas cactus to bloom 鈥 light exposure and cold temperatures. And if you take a plant that鈥檚 short-lived like a perennial and keep it from going to seed, it will live.鈥
After a pause in thought, she continues, 鈥淔or many of our students, it鈥檚 their first time in the outside world. What we do is more than landscape work. It鈥檚 listening to help. It's showing students that people on campus are approachable and friendly. It鈥檚 being an example for these students who are our future.鈥
Jeanette said you never know what someone鈥檚 home life looks like and what they are going through 鈥 and it doesn鈥檛 take much effort to be kind.
鈥淚f we want a future with people who have a good work ethic and are friendly to each other, we need to show them what that looks like,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not saying that people need to radiate sunshine all day, but give a wave and a hello. That goes a long way.鈥
There were some memorable experiences along the way.
Campus left an impression on her starting with day No. 1. Jeanette recalls her interview for the 51视频-Dearborn grounds job. Not sure what to wear since it was an outdoor gig, she went for business casual. She showed up in a nice shirt and slacks. And the then Grounds Director Fred Brenner handed her a steel rake.
鈥淗e said I needed to take the steel rake and go rake up grass clippings. Well, it was me and Gene Wackro, who also applied for a grounds job at that time. Anyone with sense knows that steel rakes are for leaves, but we did it. Found out later that Fred was testing us to see if we鈥檇 come back. We both did,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o I learned right away that you gotta be nuts to work here, and to work here you gotta be nuts.鈥
In another recollection, she said the circus came to town and she saw an elephant going into the Fieldhouse through the loading doors. Jeanette didn鈥檛 watch the show, but she did pull up a wheelbarrow to the dumpster when the circus left.
鈥淓lephant poop makes great fertilizer 鈥 so the grounds crew headed out to the dumpster and took advantage of that. It wasn鈥檛 entirely pleasant at the time, but it makes for a good story afterwards. And I enjoy a good story. The people I鈥檝e met and the memories we鈥檝e made is why I stayed for 35 years.鈥
She looks forward to traveling during retirement, but hopes people stay in touch.
Jeanette plans to spend retirement gardening and traveling. She and husband Larry 鈥 they鈥檝e been together 40 years 鈥 will continue visiting the nation鈥檚 state parks and botanical gardens. She also plans to spend time in Alaska, where their daughter Jamie lives. 鈥淪he has moose in her front yard,鈥 Jeanette marvels. "Isn鈥檛 that something?鈥
Jeanette said there are a lot of changes happening in her life this year. Jamie just got married at the Detroit Zoo. Breaking Jeanette鈥檚 traditional outfit of jeans and her 51视频-Dearborn branded shirt, she wore a dress and makeup to her daughter鈥檚 wedding. 鈥淚 never wear makeup,鈥 she said. "My kid said I looked nice, but I thought I looked like the funeral director just got done with me.鈥
With retirement here, Jeanette said she鈥檚 not going to miss the shirts. Or the green gator (well, maybe just a little). It鈥檚 the people who make leaving bittersweet. She said the campus was her domain, and the people in it, family:
鈥淣ow go out there, wave, smile and interact. Continue the tradition.
Always your eccentric gardener,
Jeanette Whiting鈥
Article by Sarah Tuxbury.