A Berry Good Activity for Kids

(Via washingtonpost.com - A Cook's Garden by Barbara Damrosch)

Posted by admin to A, Activity, Berry, Good, Kids, for on 2007-10-24, 20:00:00

An emerging tribe of hunter-gatherers colonized our farm this week. Look out the window and you'll see them creeping down the rows of crops, nibbling as they go, or reaching into low tree branches for apples. They are the grandchildren, and they know, with a primitive wisdom, how food should best be eaten. Send a grown-up out to pick raspberries for supper and he'll come back promptly with a quart. Send a young child forth with an empty yogurt container hanging from her neck by a string and she'll come back with a berry mustache, the container as empty as before.

Learning how to use your new gardening tool: The Web

(Via Gardening Tips 'n' Ideas)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-10-24, 15:18:26

gardening-tool-web.jpg
Remember when gardening was only ever about getting your hands dirty? The tools you used were kept in the shed and most of your advice and gardening tips came from over the fence. Oh...they were the good 'ol days, weren't they?

Well the 21st century has opened up a whole new realm of possibilities for the home gardener. Where once we accepted big-box, uniformed, flowering annuals and swapped anecdotes with our neighbours, these days we're much fussier. Gardeners today have far more knowledge than their predecessors and if they're struggling for a solution to their gardening problems they are less likely to source the answer from friends, neighbours or relatives.

They're more likely to turn to the Web - the most important gardening tool for this generation. So how do you use this clunky thing and make sense of it all? Stick around and we should be able to discover a few new tricks.

  1. Search
    This is probably where most gardeners start. Flick open Google, Yahoo! or MSN (the 3 biggies) and type in a few keywords and hopefully one of the results will point you in the right direction.

    If you find yourself swapping between the three to find useful results then you might want to consider using Dogpile. This search engine compiles all three.

    However, if you want to ask a question rather than typing a few related keywords then Ask (previously Ask Jeeves) might respond better to your query.

    Other search options may be even more helpful when they are created from Google's Custom Search Engines. One example of this is my Garden Blog Directory search engine which compiles information from every gardening blog that is a member of the directory. This is the new online 'neighbours fence'.


  2. Wiki
    Wiki is a name that is used to differentiate normal web content with material that has been compiled and edited by a community to produce helpful information. Wikipedia is the best example of this and is fast growing a reputation as a brilliant online encyclopedia.

    However, for the home gardener wikiHow may have some answers to your gardening questions.


  3. Answers
    If you haven't found any joy from the search engines or wiki helps then your next 'port of call' might be to interact with a real person, or at least a community of unknown individuals who may or may not be capable of answering your questions.

    Yahoo! Answers may be a good place to start - Google also had a similar offering but has now retired it. With Yahoo! Answers you can ask the question and then wait for other users to answer it for you. Some answers will be helpful - others you may want to leave.


  4. Forums
    If you're after dependable answers, as opposed to those given by a 16-year old wanna-be, then joining some of the more reputable forums may be worthwhile.

    Both GardenWeb's Forum and Dave's Garden's Gardening Talk attract the most gardeners who have a wealth of experience to lend. (Note: Most of Dave's Gardens will require a paid subscription).


  5. Alerts
    If finding information for your specific problem is really hard going then setting up a Google Alert may be the next option. Alerts can be set up as email or RSS reminders that dispatch information to you based on your keywords. The more specific the keyword phrase then the better quality information you will receive.

    Where once this information was predominantly news based, Google now offers findings from blogs, video and even images and you can receive them based on your frequency settings.


  6. RSS
    One of the greatest tools to help gardeners has been the RSS (Really Simple Syndication) reader. Again, Google offers a very useful reader service where you can subscribe to blogs, websites, alerts - basically any online presence that offers a RSS feed.

    Bloglines is another aggregator that can manage your feeds and updates regularly.

    Subscribing to blogs and news sources through RSS enables you to quickly decipher information much faster than visiting each blog separately.


  7. Newsletters
    While newsletters are becoming a little dated there may still be some gardeners who offer useful advice through this format. Doug Green produces one newsletter that is worth reading and it's free to subscribe.

  8. Ebooks
    Ebooks are another almost outdated from of information but there are still a few worthwhile efforts. Kenny Point's Gardening Secrets is a good one and Doug Green also offers a few different titles.

  9. Social Bookmarking
    The most interesting area yet to become useful for gardeners is the area of social bookmarking sites. This is where gardeners will be able to collaboratively build content, interact and add value to gardeners needing help (which is most of us).

    Stay tuned for the update of the Garden Blog Directory as it will start to answer this area.


San Diego Fire, October 24, 2007

(Via grow this)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-10-24, 10:15:00

Local news copters were in the air yesterday (Tuesday 10/23) showing us pictures of smoke and fire, but frequently without captions to identify the location or time. If nothing else, this fire will give us fire file footage for the ages. Monday, the winds were too strong to permit either water tankers or news copters from flying. The helicopter in the TV news picture taken Monday night is actually a tiny toy controlled by Kareem to buzz the hapless cat.

The local television station coverage of the fires has changed. Like a lawyer chasing an ambulance, some of the big network anchors have appeared in town, wearing paper face masks and broadcasting in front of the same blackened chimney stumps on a block that burned Sunday night in Rancho Bernardo. There are also plenty of photo ops for officials at the Q (local nickname for Qualcom Stadium, the largest evacuation center) telling everyone how high their spirits are. Apparently, it’s newsworthy to mention that costumed clowns are roaming the stands to cheer up evacuees, and they don’t mean journalists. Michael Chertoff and the duck tape guy from FEMA were at the DES (SD County Department of Emergency Services) operations center saying with straight faces what a heck of a job they’re all doing coordinating things. Arnold hovers in the background in a short sleeve shirt that shows us how hard he’s working; and hometown Presidential hopeful Duncan Hunter shows up periodically at news stations to tell us how he’s harrying the Washington bureaucrats to help us.

The headline crawl at the bottom of the TV alternates between Spanish and English. Fuego Nuevo sounds much more ominous than new fire. We’re unable to confirm whether K&J’s house in Arrowhead Villa is safe, because the news from there is much more sporadic. Every region is focusing on their own fires. We did learn however, that the whole mountain has been evacuated, giving them some comfort that if not burned, their home may be somewhat safer from roaming bands of looters. Meanwhile, yesterday the gang drove up to Scripps Ranch and took a reprise of the 2003 photo: Kareem in front of the still-standing house.

Back to the TV coverage: This morning, the sincere and exhausted local news talking heads are warning us that rattlesnakes disturbed by the fire are dangerous, and that panicked wildlife from the undeveloped areas might be roaming our streets. Who knew? To be fair, many suburban dwellers, motivated by a need to help, might otherwise try to offer food to the wildlife and could end up being harmed.

Wednesday morning, the winds were beginning to change. The sunlight in our back yard is filtering through a white haze that covers the canyon so thickly the houses on the far side are mere shapes. The Harris fire which caused the evacuation of nearby Spring Valley and which is closest to our house, threatened to cross Highway 94 from the south. Last night, the voluntary evacuation area included neighborhoods in Rancho San Diego within blocks of our house, which is about 2 miles north of 94. While the fire still burns, we don’t appear to be in any serious danger today.

The air quality at our house is worse Wednesday morning than any time so far. The winds at our house, which determine the direction of the Harris fire, are SW at 3 mph. In the north of SD County, much of the smoke from the Witch fire now burning Camp Pendleton is blowing out to sea, and when it meets the onshore flow it moves right back in, but further north. Once the weather predictions come true however, most of the smoke that’s now out at sea will begin to blow back into San Diego. As of now – after years of complaining that LA smog is messing up San Diego – a glance at the satellite map shows that Orange County and LA are getting much of the smoke from San Diego’s fires.

Fall Watering

(Via EnjoyGardening)

Posted by admin to Jim Hole's Enjoy Gardening Videos on 2007-10-24, 06:00:13


Often what causes winter kill isn’t the cold…it’s the lack of moisture. Jim gives a few quick tips on watering your evergreens to help get them through the winter.Quicktime
WMV

Backyard Poetry

(Via gardenauthor)

Posted by admin to Backyard Poetry on 2007-10-24, 05:25:00



































"Backyard Poetry"
By Deb Lambert

In my one hundredth year,
were I to persist that long,
the stuff of poetry
the raw materials
the very inspiration
would still be there
for the taking,
just beyond my window
and deep within my being.

I will leave others,
with deeper minds than mine,
to fuss with the formalities
of verse and to employ
iambic pentameter
at the drop of a beret.

Although I may flirt
with symbolism
and embrace metaphors,
I am loath to restrict
the movement of my poetry
as it strides forth to greet the world
hanging from a framework of its
own splendid bones.

Barricaded behind a window screen,
on a hot, silent night
watching the moon slip across
a star-strewn sky,
I am one with the rhythm of nature
as I drift into the realm of dreams,
settling into this natural
cadence of the night.

Tomorrow will arrive soon enough,
filled with birdsong and fragrant bloom.
With sunlit promises and shaded meanings,
emerging from earnest conversation.
Rendering me unfit for all other activity,
inspiration will lure me, once more,
to the unsullied page
where, again,
shall I try my hand at backyard poetry.

©Deb Lambert 2007

Photos courtesy... ©2007 S.R. Calef