Main Types of Hydroponic Systems

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-12-13, 11:28:36

A few centuries ago, the only way you could grow a plant without a soilless base was to suspend it over a pool of water mixed with nutrients, that would act as the feeding grounds replacing the earth's diet. Nowadays, we have wick systems, ebb and flows, drips, aeroponics, the nutrient film technique and many more, which only shows how far in this field we have gone. And because the offer is often so varied, it's confusing for the newcomer hydroponic gardener.

Holiday decorations from the garden

(Via OregonLive.com: Dig in with Kym)

Posted by admin to Cool ideas on 2007-12-13, 09:56:21

How easy is this? Vases filled with simple fruits and nuts and a swag of bay leaves. (Sorry about the arm; you don't need to include that!) I always try to simplify at Christmas, but it never works. Which puts...

Fear of Food Contamination Leads Amateur Gardeners To Purchase Greenhouses

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-12-13, 09:32:52

With the recent news of contaminated fruits, vegetables, meats and pet foods, more and more famillies are taking action and growing their own vegetables. Garden greenhouses offer the perfect growing environment for cultivating your own produce.

Winterizing Your Misting System

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-12-13, 09:32:00

Do you own a misting system? Thinking of purchasing one? Use this guide to learn how to properly winterize your system.

Flower Arrangements Tips

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-12-13, 09:04:11

This article may be useful for people who are interested in arranging flowers for interior decorating. Proper flower arrangement is not only make your room looks fresh and make your self active, but also really brighten up a home and improve the interior decorating. There is actually no secrets or fix styles of how to arrange flowers in your house properly, it is actually depends on your own idea and how well you can apply arranging format to fit individual needs and there are hundreds of flowers to choose from and you can either create an arrangement yourself or choose a professional florist to do it for you.

Organic Gardening For The Homeowner - Do You Have An Empty Container?

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-12-13, 09:01:07

Yes! Excellent, all you need now is the desire to eat and live a more healthy lifestyle for yourself and your family. Organic gardening can easily be done using containers.

E. A. Bowles

(Via An Iowa Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2007-12-13, 08:15:00

The weather has gone from grim to grimmer, as a new layer of hoar frost is forming on the already ice-encased trees, with temperatures set to decline to January levels over the weekend. It's time to dig out the old garden classics from my library. This is not an entirely sedentary diversion, as retrieving the books always entails some minor gymnastics... "my" den seems to always be the favored repository for everything that Liz can't find a spot for elsewhere, to the point of partially burying the bookshelves that run all along one side of the room. The den now has a piano in it, several pieces of cast-off furniture, folding chairs, a vacuum sweeper, and assorted boxes of who-knows-what. I'm thinking of retreating to a corner in the garage attic, but I suspect all of this stuff would follow me, clunk-clunking up the stairs to stake out their new spot.
At any rate, after some effort, I've been able to lay my hands on E. A. Bowles' well-known book, My Garden In Spring . Mr. Bowles was one of the giants of early flower bulb gardening, his name still being attached to many little bulbs like Crocus chrysanthus 'E.A. Bowles'; to this day one of the finest yellow crocuses in the garden.
This particular book was written in 1914, when the Victorian age was transitioning to our modern era, and Bowles' writing is a fascinating amalgam of these two worlds: it is basically a very readable book, but it is strewn with occasional rambles of florid prose and with the obscure Greek and Roman mythological references that seemed to be such a mandatory fixture of 19th century English literature... it's rather as if you're walking along a pleasant, flat pathway that is strewn with large rocks that you keep tripping over.
Here is the opening to chapter Five:
For me, starting this chapter, there are great searchings of heart, compared with which those of the divisions of Reuben were as nothing. If but one of them possessed a flat object with diverse and recognisable sides to it they might toss up and decide whether to go and help smash up Sisera or stay and listen to the music of their baa-lambs...
Well, you know, I was just thinking that same thing as I started writing this piece. Yet, Mr. Bowles starts chapter Ten with this lovely and evocative prose:
What a blessed time it is for garden and gardener when the wind goes round to the south-west and warm April showers begin to fall. The real thing, of course, not the chilly, wind-driven sorts compounded of sleet, hail, or ice-cold rain that come from the north with slight variation to east, and seem arranged on purpose to destroy the Plum blossoms. They leave the air several degrees colder, and if followed by a clear sky after sunset are the forerunners of a killing frost... After a week or more of blizzards and squalls, and just when everybody has decided that it is the most curious and disagreeable season they can remember, round goes the wind, hands can be taken out of pockets, and yet no longer turn blue and numb, the dove-coloured flush on the trees of the woodland turns to a varied shimmer of tender greyish yellows and greens, even the oaks show raw sienna specklings, somebody hears the cuckoo, it rains for twenty minutes and the sun then hurries out and makes a rainbow on the retreating clouds, every plant glistens with sunlit raindrops, and the air smells all the sweeter and feels all the warmer for the shower.


All and all, in spite of the occasional Victorian mustiness, Mr. Bowles is a fine companion to walk a garden with; especially if that garden happens to be just to the north of London, on the bank of the New River, and that garden was first begun five hundred years ago. I just need to go back to the den and somehow find my copy of Graves' book, The Greek Myths , and brush up on the gods and goddesses of the back lawn.


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Fire and Ice

(Via Snappy's Gardens Blog)

Posted by admin to Frost,, Primula, fire, ice on 2007-12-13, 04:22:00


The first Frost I have seen in over a year on my plants! The Winter Primula seems to have taken a battering from the Icy frosts. The rough leaves were highlighted in glimmering crystals.
The Viburnum and Camelia had wet leaves, but escaped the overnight freeze.
Maybe the Primulas are closer to the ground so get frosted more easily.
I love the yellow colours on the flowers, with streaks of orange war paint, and pheasents eye in the centre.
I have been reading other blogs last night, trying to see what people write about in December.The cold and the dark drives us back indoors to read seed/flower books and other blogs!
To borrow Blackswamp girl's words the photo is a study in Contrasts, between metaphorical fire and real ice!