Choosing The Best Variety Of Sago Palm Trees

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-15, 11:23:19

This article talks about how Sago Palms can decorate the interior as well as exterior of your homes. It says that proper Sago Palm care is necessary for a stunning looking plant. It talks about reproduction and seeds of palm.

Letter To The Editor

(Via Heronswood Voice)

Posted by admin to Original Posts on 2008-02-15, 11:01:40

February 15, 2008

Mr. Paul Lagasse
Columbia University Press
136 S. Broadway
Irvington, NY 10533-2599

Dear Mr. Lagasse:

I very much enjoy and admire The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition.  The writing and editing is absolutely fantastic.  There are to my knowledge only two related errors I wish to point out.  Also, I offer a few suggestions which I hope you find useful.

First, the interesting descriptions of the landscape architects A. J. Downing and Calvert Vaux contain an inconsistency that is probably just a typo.  On page 2969, the Vaux entry states, “He emigrated (1857) to the United States with A. J. Downing, with whom he was first associated.”  On page 822, the Downing entry lists him as deceased in 1852.  Also, I’m not certain of it, but I don’t think that Downing spent such a significant time in England during his relatively short life to have emigrated from it, particularly when, as you state, he was born in Newburgh, New York.

On a purely subjective level, I request the inclusion of the novelist Bruce Chatwin, psychologist and author Irving Janis (who coined the term “group think”), musician and composer Frank Zappa, painter Wifredo Lam, anthropologists and authors Edmund Snow Carpenter, Edward T. Hall (who coined the term “polychronic” which is now called “multitasking”) and John Greenway, author and editor George Plimpton, inventor and pioneer photographer Marc Ferrez, philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin, classics scholar and author Edith Hamilton, poet Else Lasker Schueler (Heine’s successor as Germany’s greatest romantic poet), and art critic Mario Praz.  They were all highly influential and in some cases popular contributors to their respective fields.

The founder of our company, W. Atlee Burpee, pioneered American vegetables by selectively breeding Northern European and English cultivars to become adapted to the US climate.  He introduced the first yellow sweet corn (before then sweet corn was white), and the first iceberg lettuce—thereby making salad a year round rather than an exclusively seasonal dish.  His many breeding breakthroughs included Black Beauty, the first large and uniform eggplant (extremely popular in the middle east), the first stringless green bean, the Fordhook lima bean, as well as Big Boy, the world’s most popular tomato.  As a geneticist  rather than a large landowner, he formed the first modern scientific seed company, based primarily on research rather than on harvest-based production methods, and land-holding advantages.  He was a cousin of Luther Burbank and collaborated with him and Thomas Edison on developing industrial products such as rubber from native wildflowers.  He also did much to help developing countries. 

Also, his daughter-in-law, Lois Burpee, co-founded Welcome House with Pearl Buck, to which you refer in the latter’s entry.  Both grew up as daughters of missionary fathers in China.  When they met as neighbors in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, they became close friends and developed together the idea to provide adoptions and other assistance to Amerasian war orphans.

Also, Doylestown, Pennsylvania, is the seat of Bucks County and has a population of about 25,000.  Its omission is odd to me because you list my hometown of Glen Ellyn, Illinois, a Chicago suburb and bedroom community of about 25,000.  Yet in addition to the courthouse, Doylestown has several important museums, including the Henry Mercer Museum, the James Michener Museum, the Moravian Pottery Works, Fonthill Castle (one of the first poured concrete buildings in the US), Fordhook Farm (of Burpee fame), and Delaware Valley College (DVC), one of the few small (1,600 students) agricultural colleges left in the nation, and regularly scoring at the top of small college rankings (#25 at USA Today 2007 Report).

In addition, DVC has a fascinating history.  It was founded by Rabbi Jacob Krauskopf in 1897.  He was a German immigrant who led an urban congregation (Keseneth Israel) in Philadelphia that was experiencing a large influx of impoverished Russian immigrants.  On a sabbatical to Europe, he visited Russia to consult people who might advise him about his struggle.  He was profoundly inspired by a long meeting with Tolstoy, during which the great novelist, mystic and farmer suggested that he start a Jewish agricultural college—an unheard of idea at the time.  Krauskopf returned home, obtained funds from members of the Philadelphia-area Jewish community and bought several adjacent farms 30 miles north of the city in order to create the National Farm School, the world’s first Jewish agricultural college.  (It is now called Delaware Valley College.)  Many of America’s kosher dairy, chicken and egg farms were started by the college’s early graduates.  After the founding of Israel, many students as well as faculty moved there to work in the new agricultural projects, including the Vulcani Institute, Israel’s first and in some areas most important agricultural research institute.  Krauskopf also wrote several books, including Evolution and Judaism, considered by scholars to be one of the finest such studies of the time.  An excellent biography, Apostle of Reason, is by William Blood.  Quite a story.

Last but not least, you omit the large Mexican city of Culiacan, the capital of the state of Sinaloa.  It has a large population (approximately 500,000).  Also, it is older than most cities in the region.  It is considered the center of tomato production and processing in North America.

Thanks again for your fine work and consideration of my suggestions.

Sincerely,
George Ball

Backyard Market Gardening

(Via Aaron’s Home and Garden)

Posted by admin to Backyard Market Gardening, books on 2008-02-15, 08:40:20

Backyard Market Gardening is the entrepreneurs guide to selling what you grow, allowing the reader to get the best price with minimum effort, buy/build tools to make work faster and more fulfilling, as well as how to improve soil for greater yields.

Making food available locally means fresher food. If everyone made their own produce in the backyard, or in community gardens, there would be a LOT more choices and at far cheaper prices than what we pay for from the country farmer.

The CO2 emissions alone that are created daily in the transportation of one of this nations most valuable resources, fresh foods, is incredible, but by taking our backyards to market for the local neighborhood, we not only are doing a community service, but we are offsetting our CO2 emissions by helping the environment indirectly, eliminating a few eco-miles off the yearly toll on the ozone layer.

Building your own backyard market garden, or a community market garden, is not only going to do something for the environmental air quality around your home and neighborhood, it is going to provide your household and your neighbors with a quality source of fresh foods that fully pays for all the hard work and stimulates community awareness about sustainable practices.

Entrepreneurs that would like to show what stewardship of the Earth can mean in an urban setting, will most certainly find this little manual has the most relevant, need to know information, all in one place.

This 352-page paperback, written by Andrew W. Lee and Pat Foreman, published by Good Earth Publications in August of 1992, measures 8.8 x x 1.1 and ships at 1.2 pounds.

Making a profit from the fruits, flowers, herbs, vegetables and perhaps even small livestock in the backyard, is not only possible, it is done, and Backyard Market Gardening will show the novice everything s/he is looking for to do it right the first time through, for a more self-reliant planet that takes care of the needs of the future, today.

Free Fertilizer - Using Urine In The Garden

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-15, 08:33:29

Stop wasting free fertilizer! Learn how to save money and the environment while still achieving bumper crops by using urine to add fertility to your garden.

Container Compost

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-15, 08:06:17

Most people need to keep container gardens because they don't have the room, backyard or dirt space for full-fledged gardens. Because of that, many people also don't have the luxury of keeping a full-size compost bin for creating the best potting and compost mixes for their plants or flowers. A container compost bin or bucket is just the answer to those with space problems.

Feeding Your Container Garden Plants

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-15, 08:05:54

Every type of plant needs a basic amount of nutritious ingredients, much like the human body, in order to function and grow. It doesn't matter if you plant in the spring, summer or fall; plants need a continuous flow of nutrients to keep them healthy and strong. Some of the most vital elements to healthy plants of all types are nitrogen, which helps stimulate growth, and phosphorus, which helps plants to form healthy, strong roots and potassium to help develop bloom and foliage.

Successful Grafting Conditions

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-15, 08:05:33

The tissues of both the stock and scion plants must be placed in contact with each other for successful grafting to take place. Both tissues must be kept alive till the graft has taken, which takes a few weeks. Many graft joints are often weakened because the tissues of the two distinct plants, such as wood may not fuse. Budding is also a process that consists of in-grafting the bud of a plant into another plant.

A Mile in My Shoes

(Via EnjoyGardening)

Posted by admin to Current Articles on 2008-02-15, 08:03:33

First published February 7, 2008

A weekly ritual of mine is to ‘walk the crop’ with the growers in our greenhouses. Actually…walking, bending, picking up plants and sticking my face into the flowers and foliage is probably a more apt description, but it’s hard to find something that rhymes with that.

In all seriousness though, an up-close-and-personal inspection is the only way to determine if plants are experiencing stress—especially the kind caused by insect pests that hide within plant canopies. I know I’ve made the classic mistake of giving the thumbs-up to a perfunctory visual sweep of a crop, only to learn there was a serious bug problem lurking beneath waves of foliage. Had I bent over for a closer inspection, I’d likely have found the clandestine pests and devised a plan for giving them the boot.

Although pest discovery is an important reason for walking the crop, it certainly isn’t the only one. By walking and inspecting you can detect a multitude of problems, and early detection is the key to keeping problems from escalating.

Of course, when you’re growing thousands of plant varieties, 100 per cent success is a pipedream, but fortunately, there’s always something to learn from the misses. So with that in mind, I thought it might be interesting to invite you to join me for the walk every few months so that you can see some of the hits and inevitable misses that are all part of growing plants. Here we go!

Monday afternoon, 1 p.m.
I join four growers and we begin the walk, starting with an inspection of the high-intensity lamps that flood our ornamental grasses with light. Even in a greenhouse, mid-winter light levels are too low to keep many plants growing happily. When I attempt to measure the light with my handy-dandy light meter, I also manage to flip over a flat of grasses with my size 13 shoe. Judging by the looks in the eyes of the growers, I get the distinct feeling that I might be just another greenhouse pest and move on silently with my tail between my legs.

Next stop: a sprawling aisle of new succulent varieties. Most of them look great, but one has developed some bronze-coloured dead patches on its leaf blades. Everyone looks to me for the answer, and I find myself wishing for a Star Trek-like tricorder that provides instant diagnoses. Since I don’t, I deduce that the damage is likely the result of chilling injury and decide to blanket them to bring up the heat. Hopefully it’ll solve the problem.

On the walk through the Easter lilies, we all comment on the huge variability in crop height. Most customers like an Easter lily in the 40-cm-tall range, so we decide to split the crop into tall and short specimens so that we can better regulate the height and still have them bloom at the right time. Easter lilies are always a bit of a nail biter. Grow them cool, and they stay short but might not bloom on time. Grow them warm, and they bloom on time but might get too tall.

In Greenhouse 10, we notice that the azaleas that we trained into heart shapes for Valentine’s Day are a little too exuberant, so we give them the ‘cold shower’ by sticking them in our 8C coldframe for a week or so. Talk about killing the mood. The hydrangeas, primula and cineraria, on the other hand, appear right on track, so we give them the nod and move along.

Last stop: the fuchsia cuttings. They’re a tad slow to root, so we add some high-intensity lights to the propagation area, remembering the rough rule of thumb that for every one per cent increase in light, there is a one per cent increase in growth. With that, we call it a walk and conclude that our concerns are relatively minor and are far outnumbered by the hits.

As we get closer to the time of the year when plants move from the greenhouse to their new homes in gardeners’ yards, I hope that the walk-the-crop principle will also make the change of address. If it does, I guarantee you, too, will have more hits than misses to report. After all, a miss usually owes its existence to a missed opportunity to observe the beginning of a problem…Of course, it could also be due to a size 13 shoe.

Easy Year-Round Indoor Gardening with Aeroponic Growing Technology

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-15, 07:55:09

When it comes to growing plants indoors, many people usually think of their experiences with common houseplants growing in the potting soil that the local supermarket always have sitting out front all summer long. But that's old school. These days, it's quite possible to grow almost any plant indoors, at any time of the year, with modern no-soil-required growing technology.

Gifts From the Garden

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-15, 07:09:54

Nothing works best and gives more pleasure than creating specialized gifts for friends and relatives on Christmas. The personal touch that you give adds to the value of the gift that money cannot add.