Finding And Using Hedge & Grass Shears

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-01-18, 12:28:40

Starting off as an amateur gardener the first tool you need is hedge and grass shears. These convenient tools will help you to trim and prune the hedges of your garden. They help is keeping everything looking pristine and perfect.

Victory of a Prudent Gardener

(Via grow this)

Posted by admin to Alcaito's Book of Emblems, hibernation on 2008-01-18, 11:40:00

“That ignorance must be banished
What monster is that?
It is the Sphinx.
Why does it have the bright face of a virgin, the feathers of a bird, and the limbs of a lion?
Ignorance of things has taken on this appearance: which is to say that the root cause of so much evil is threefold. Some men are made ignorant by levity of mind, some by seductive pleasure, and some by arrogance of spirit. But they who know the power of the Delphic message slit the relentless monster's terrible throat. For man himself is also a two-footed, three-footed, four-footed thing, and the first victory of the prudent man is to know what man is.”
Emblem 188, Alcatio's Book of Emblems

Back in the pre-internet days, men remembered things. Emblems were ways to encode an entire story in a single picture. Often the story was a lesson or some spiritual guidance. One early book that compiled a bunch of these emblems in Latin is “a collection of 212 Latin emblem poems, each consisting of a motto (a proverb or other short enigmatic expression), a picture, and an epigrammatic text. Alciato's book was first published in 1531…” Check out Alciato's Book of Emblems for more. The emblem above signifies that “ignorance must be banished”, and instructs on the threefold evils that cause ignorance: Levity of Mind; Seductive Pleasure; or Arrogance of Spirit. The mythical monster, seen above attacking my garden in winter, combines them all.

Contemplating the “threefold causes” is an exercise in deciding whether one form of ignorance is better or worse than another. For me, no question that the last is the worst kind of ignorance. Having a sense of humor, or a sense of pleasure, might be a sufficient reward to remain ignorant. At least you’d have a good time before you were banished, or before some gay priestess slit your throat. The arrogant ignorant (Insert your own contemporary example here) seem to cause the most harm these days, perhaps because such harm is so avoidable.

I’m feeling a strong seasonal pull, the subliminal tug on the arm into the dark ying of the year. Where I live, the night sky is never clearer than winter. Orion strides across the Southern sky earlier each evening. A clarity of sky leads to a clarity of mind in some of those short but dark nights of the soul. And such thoughts lead me, inevitably, to foggy ignorance. Darkness can also be a metaphor for unenlightened minds, blighted by ignorance as sure as some of my tender plants were murdered one recent night by Jack Frost.

Ignorant people don’t grow, just like my garden these days. Seeing my once-vibrant yard reduced to silence makes me feel ignorant of Nature. Just at the point where I thought I had learned some stuff, the weather still surprises.

The promise of soothing soft rain for days on end – made earlier in this young year – has already been broken. Things look dry; even the air is dry because all the moisture escapes into the universe on cold nights if it’s not tucked cozily beneath a layer of cloud covers. The air in the morning is chilly and bumpy without the softening scents carried aloft on dewy morning breezes.

Winter is our rainy season, and I depend on winter rains not only to nourish the trees, but to wash away many of my unspeakable garden mistakes and crimes. I have not been spared this cleansing forgiveness so far this year. I can still see where I should have done something different and avoided harm. Bodies of bulbs remain unburied. Frost damaged dead tips have not been trimmed – correctly it turns out, because cutting back the dead branch will only coax it to grow; it would be sending the unborn buds to a premature death like their predecessors. But even if not cutting frost damage the right thing to do, it looks like a lot of bodies strewn on a battlefield long after the battle has ended.

Here is a picture of a jumble of rocks across the canyon in somebody else’s back yard. You can see a cleared space at the bottom – somebody clearly lives inside, even if it isn’t a hibernating bear.

As I turn the page on the calendar to 2008 something hibernating in the most primitive cave of my brain begins to stir. I can already feel the days getting longer. Soon, it will be time for me to banish ignorance and slay the mythical symbol of ignorance before it does my garden more harm. Then again, as a prudent gardener, I should probably wait until March before concluding there will be no more frost. I’ll settle in to wait two more months before I plant those nifty seeds calling to me from their storage cupboard. Winter is what it is.

Heronswood Voice

(Via The Blogging Nurseryman - The Art of Running a Small Garden Center or Nursery)

Posted by admin to Blogging, Controversy, The Big Boys on 2008-01-18, 11:38:26

It would seem that we are starting to see more heads of larger concerns starting blogs. One notable example is Greg Wittstock owner of Aquascapes, the number one supplier of pond equipment. We talked about it here. Unfortunately Greg had to start, or started his blog because his company got into some financial problems. Doesn’t matter, because at least now he is out their trying to explain his reasoning for doing what he has done. Greg had to lay off some employees recently, and I bet there are times when Greg wishes he had turned off the comment function at his blog. Some of the ex-employees visit the blog and give Greg a piece of their mind. It makes for great reading for those of us interested in how business works.

Another new blog, at least for me, is also from the world of horticulture. Its Heronswood Voice, written by George Ball. I ended up there after George said some nice things about my blog. George Ball, if you didn’t know owns Burpee Seed as well as Heronswood, the much discussed nursery founded by plantsman Dan Hinkley and architect Robert Jones in 1987. There are passionate feeling about the subject and no mincing of words when it comes to some peoples feeling about Burpee and George. I never really got into the situation at Heronswood since until just a couple of years ago I hadn’t even heard of it. Yes its true, I had little knowledge of Dan Hinkley or Heronswood until the fuss over the sale. Most of my knowledge of the place was gathered at Garden Rant where there have been numerous discussions of the subject and the comments have been generally negative of George and Burpee.

Whatever you think of the Heronswood situation, it’s good to see George out there talking. After all, I have been harping about how important a blog is to a business, especially a large one where people often feel a disconnect with the ownership of the business. Scotts CEO Jim Hagedorn would be well advised to start one about now. I think the disconnect that a lot of people are feeling with Scotts could be discussed through a blog, but back to George and his blog. I wanted to leave a comment, but there is no comment feature. I like having the comment feature turned “on” because thats what starts a “conversation”. Of course I don’t run a multi-million dollar enterprise, despite what Stuart thinks. If I did it might just be too much to deal with all the comments. The solution is to allow trackbacks at the end of each post. One of the most popular bloggers around, Seth Godin, does not allow comments at his blog but does have the trackback feature. That way if you want to comment on something he has said you can, on your own blog, and it will show up as a trackback. This is another way to have a “conversation” without having to answer the comments, yet allowing people to have their say.

Welcome to the blogroll George. Come on over anytime, and feel free to participate.

 

How To Set Up Lighting For Your Garden Fountain

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-01-18, 11:25:58

You are able to make a fountain shine, light up an entire pond from inside, highlighting an attractive statue, or raise the expression of a particularly gorgeous tree. You can install garden fountain lights inside or outside lighting. You need to know that all should be connected to a GFI for your own protection, Before you start shopping for garden fountain lights, try out different effects with a strong flashlight or a spotlight on an extension cord.

Planting for the Birds - Providing Cover

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-01-18, 07:56:05

Essential to creating an Eden to which many species of birds are attracted is cover, places where birds can hide when startled. Birds will want to check out your feeders and baths from safe havens nearby. Shrubs and trees can fill this function. Likewise, rock walls or brick piles or stacks of wood provide cover and nesting places.

Calendar Confusion

(Via EnjoyGardening)

Posted by admin to Current Articles on 2008-01-18, 07:04:45

first published January 10, 2008

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Now before you start thinking that I’m a tad slow out of the starting blocks, I realize that Christmas 2007 has come and gone and that we’re better than a week into 2008. But here in the greenhouse business, a calendar year is a bit of a mirage. In fact, as far as time is concerned, the greenhouse is a virtual Bermuda Triangle, with entire chunks of years disappearing before they even exist. You see, around here, Christmas 2007 started back in December 2006, disappeared for a few months during the spring, only to reappear in all its wintery glory and then vanish last month just as we were putting the final touches on the poinsettia order for Christmas 2008. It’s definitely an exercise in controlled chaos and not just at poinsettia time. The bedding plant varieties you’ll see for sale in spring and summer 2008 were ordered in June of 2007, and some of our perennial varieties were booked back in 2006. Fortunately, my sister-in-law, Valerie, is an expert at making method out of this madness because on more than one occasion I’ve had to stop and think…what year is it again? So if you’ve spent the last week grumbling because writing the date on a check took two tries, welcome along for the ride—please keep your arms and legs inside the vehicle at all times.

In all seriousness, working a year in advance is just the reality of the gardening business. Take, for example, what it takes to grow a specific variety of geraniums. By June of 2007, the number of each geranium variety we need must be ordered so that the propagators have enough time to ensure there are enough ‘mother’ stock plants for spring of 2008. If I were to phone up a propagator in January of this year and order cuttings for this spring, he or she would probably laugh and hang up or ask if I had fallen in the punch bowl on New Year’s Eve. And that’s just the tip of the Bermuda Triangle.

As if getting the plant order right isn’t daunting enough, complicating matters is that we need to sync those plant orders with our company’s publishing deadlines so that we have a year to trial new plants before we recommend them in our magazine. That means that the premier issue of Enjoy Gardening 2008 had to be planned, written, photographed and put to bed by the end of December 2007. Daytimer, anyone? So while we’re juggling the here and now of the daily greenhouse grind, our experts are stealing away to greenhouse conventions and tradeshows in Toronto, Vancouver and Europe to discover the newest plants and trends so we can write and research the articles, plan and photograph the how-to projects, test recipes, and select the all-stars for my 100 Favourite Plants article so that you can have an insider’s look at what’s new in gardening.

The danger, of course, of working in an industry that’s always a year ahead of the calendar is that one runs the risk of…say…writing about the exemplary attributes of a new plant variety, only to discover that the particular featured plant has succumbed to some devastating disease and isn’t available anywhere in the world. Of course, that has never happened to me, but it did happen to a “close friend” of mine last year.

Good or bad, there’s a glimpse of how I navigate my year. In all honesty, the whole process is really quite addictive…kind of like some twisted version of gambling. So if all of the stars align, by the time you see the Spring issue of Enjoy Gardening on the newsstands early February, all of the plants I’ve written about will be available, and gardeners nationwide will be able to enjoy them. Of course, it’s always possible that one of our suppliers could have a crop failure, but I suppose if that happens, we’ll just do what all gardeners do when Mother Nature imposes her own plan: lick our wounds and start dreaming about next year…whenever that is.

Friday Morning

(Via Snappy's Gardens Blog)

Posted by admin to robin on 2008-01-18, 00:05:00

Am back on those dreaded nights again. This is the quick morning post. Yesterday I saw two robins in the garden. My usual one and a skinnier raggedy Robin. The healthy one (fat from all the bird food he has eaten) chased off the ragedy one.
I will have to see if the second robin comes back again... He will keep an eye on the garden for me as I sleep.