Gardening Question of the Day for Tuesday, March 18, 2008

(Via Gardening Question of the Day (from the Old Farmer's Almanac))

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-17, 19:00:00

In late winter/early spring, I am going to prune a large burning bush. I want to prune it to about half its size. Is that too much? (answer).

From The Old Farmer's Almanac.

Birthday Suprise

(Via Snappy's Gardens Blog)

Posted by admin to David Austin, Lady Emma Hamilton Rose, cold frame, seedling, weather on 2008-03-17, 16:08:00


The David Austin rose Lady Emma Hamilton from Harlow Carr last year.I was woken up on Monday morning by the door being brayed loudly. I stumbled out of bed after my last night shift to find a Royal Mail delivery of a large David Austin marked brown bag, about three foot tall.
Inside was a gorgeous bare root Lady Emma Hamilton rose bush. Ready to be planted in the garden when I work out where to put it.
A late birthday present from Cat, that had taken a few weeks to be delivered.It was supplied with a muddy recipt, and muddy roots.I can imagine the Guys digging out bare root roses from the ground, brushing the soil off the roots, ready to be packaged.They describe the rose as being the colour of Apricot and Copper. The scent was divine when I sniffed the Harlow Carr roses.
Its freezing outside now, down to minus four degrees centigrade. March is an odd month where the warmth and sunshine gives way to pouring rain and howling winds.The weathermen have predicted a late winter chill.
I refilled my cold frames paraffin heater, and took two tealight lanterns. One is in the greenhouse heating the air up, and one is in the cold frame on the opposite side from the paraffin heater. My strawberry plants and cabbages are looking healthy in the coldframe. The baby carrots and parsley have grown on.
The beetroot seedlings have darkened their stem colour after being exposed to light. I replanted my Bletilla Striata, the surviving bulb from last years failed attempt. The chilli plants have developed flower buds now, small but perfectly formed. They have overwintered well and should produce Chillies earlier than any plants started from seed now.
In the morning I will go upto the Allotment to try and dig two more beds. I want to buy a bin though for depositing weeds and grasses. I have no where to store them at the moment. I need to find a compost bin, or make one from wood when the weather improves. I think turning the cleared plants, weeds, and grasses back into rich organic compost is a good idea. It will all go back into the ground once it has been transformed into black gold.
I have two days off now, since I slept through Monday..Zzzz.I will need my muscles and energys in the morning to take on the wild side of Nature.

Katsura tree acts as bookends to seasons

(Via Dig in with Kym - The Oregonian - OregonLive.com)

Posted by admin to musings on 2008-03-17, 15:45:12

My seasonal signal: a big katsura tree (Cercidiphyllum japonicum). The pretty, heart-shaped foliage of katsura. I haven't been home on a weekend in four weeks. Although I've had fun (except on a long plane ride sitting in the middle seat...

Celebrate the Season

(Via grow this)

Posted by admin to Joe Walsh, Rimbaud, Swallows Return to Capistrano, Swedish Meatballs on 2008-03-17, 15:03:00

"It is found again.
What? Eternity.
It is the sea
Gone with the sun."
Arthur Rimbaud, from 'L'Éternite', 1872

"Thunder! Lightning! Swedish meatballs!"
Anne Dillard, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek

"I keep my fingernails long
So they click when I play the piano
And I’ll keep them that way
Until the swallows come back to Capistrano."
Joe Walsh

Ever get the feeling your family would love you more if you didn’t insist on decorating the house for every goofball occasion which every manic greeting card writer ever imagined? Go with that feeling.

St Patrick’s day is the one day of the year we celebrate happy drunks: the rest of the year apparently conceded silently to mean and nasty drunks without so much as a wink or a nudge. Today, shamrocks cut from shiny green cellophane adorn hundred of household hutches housing Hummel figurines. This, I submit in support of my argument that we over-decorate for seasonal observances. The net effect of these desperate decorations is often to confer an unfortunate and forlorn mood rather than the celebratory feel you were maybe shooting for.

On deck in the batter’s box, the Easter decorations are rubbing their tiny pastel chickadee claws together in anticipation of their turn next to adorn the sorry-ass hutch. As soon as the clovers are stowed away, the eggs and bunnies come out. What’s next? National Swedish Meatball Day? The International Festival Honoring Hairless Laboratory Mice? Wait, let me answer that. Next is March 19, the Feast of Saint Joseph, the day when the swallows return to Capistrano. Swallow nests look like small upside-down anthills, mud cones, hanging beneath every ledge of every pre-cast concrete building in the industrial parks surrounding the Mission San Juan Capistrano, an hour or two north of my town.

You retain free will. Give up the hutches and their “collectible” contents, and most of all their pathetic holiday decorations. Establish an account on e-Bay. Somebody out there will surely buy the dozens of small ceramic buildings with ceramic snow on their ceramic slate roofs and ceramic Xmas decorations in their tiny ceramic windows. If not, you may at least claim to provide occupational therapy for wounded vets and brain damaged crack heads who would otherwise not have a sheltered workshop to work in, or acres of shelves of free-cycled fake Hummel figurines to dust at the resale shops on decaying main streets of small towns across America.

Do I need to get outside more, or what?

It pays to ask

(Via Gardening Tips 'n' Ideas)

Posted by admin to Gardening on 2008-03-17, 14:12:47

silver-torch-cactus.jpg As I mentioned yesterday, one of our night's away had been paid for by some friends. Their rationale for such a blessing was because I had helped them landscape their garden and given them some tips regarding plant choices. Like that was hard!

As a quick disclaimer, this is not my type of garden. However, I'm realising over the years, that not everybody prefers my type of garden. Our friends aren't overly-enthusiastic gardeners, yet they were keen to explore something a little different than the usual flax, cordylines and lilli-pilli hedges that abound with new homes.

They wanted to highlight this red wall at the very front of the house so I suggested that they invest in some Silver Torch cactus, Cleistocactus strausii, a Bolivian native. The problem was sourcing cacti that were of a decent size worthy of making an immediate impact. Silver Torches can be bought at some local nurseries but they are so small they would have hardly made an appearance over the rim of the container, plus they want $20+ for each one.

So you can imagine that sourcing three of these beauties at a worthwhile size was not going to be cheap. And not surprisingly as they're not the fastest growers. While they can get up to 3m high it will probably take a few decades - depending on conditions - to get there.

Fortunately, I had driven past a house a few weeks earlier and noticed that they had a few clumps of Silver Thorns in their ramshackle front garden. So I mentioned this to my friends who then went and knocked on the door and graciously asked begged for some divisions, if possible.

To their amazement the owner was happy to dig them up and repot them and only charged them $30 for all three. In fact, this gardener was ecstatic that someone had found something in her garden that was worthwhile and was more than happy to oblige. It was a win-win for both parties and all because my friends had risked to ask the question.

Six months later all three of them are doing fine, albeit one of them has a kink. But apart from that, there's no holding these beautiful cacti back. They will complement this colour scheme even if it fades or peels over the years.

It just goes to show that it does pay to ask. If my friends had sourced these from a nursery at this size they could have been paying hundreds of dollars. Yet because they asked they saved a packet.

Starting A Vegetable Garden

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-17, 10:35:16

Fresh lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers and radishes, this is what you get by starting a vegetable garden. When you can't find fresh vegetables locally, try growing your own, starting small and planting what you like to eat is the first step. Make sure that all your plants need the same growing requirements and not needing more time and attention that you can give them.

Creating an Indoor Oasis

(Via gardenauthor)

Posted by admin to houseplants, indoor gardening, indoor oasis on 2008-03-17, 10:32:00

Norfolk Island Pine -  Photo/©CBI 2007

"Creating an Indoor Oasis"
There comes a time, after the holiday decorations have been 
dismantled and stored away, when the home's interior seems 
a little bleak and austere.  There comes a second time, near 
the end of bleak and austere winter, when we pine for all things 
green and growing, when we are almost convinced that spring 
has no intention of dancing attendance on our gardens... 
when we long to water, feed, prune, cultivate, propagate, repot 
and otherwise care for plants.  Here, then, is a solution...
By Deb Lambert

While the world beyond the windowpanes remains gray and cold, rain persists and snow is disinclined to leave, lose not your faith in spring's inevitable return.  Your indoor environs can be as green and lush, as your outdoor environs will be, come spring.  There's nothing like an oasis, filled with green, living plants to add warmth and charm to our indoor spaces.

The benefits of cultivating indoor plants exceed the obvious aesthetic value.  Indoor landscaping serves a dual purpose, as does the landscaping surrounding your home, namely, beautification and air purification.  

Exchanging the carbon dioxide we emit for the oxygen we require, a plant-filled environment can be healthy, as well as pleasing.  Many plants, such as Pothos and Spider plants, are very efficient at cleansing the air of chemical compounds, found in carpets, drapes, etc.  Because the air inside can hover at an unhealthful, dry level (and the colder it is outside, the dryer it is inside), the grouping together of plants will necessarily raise the humidity to a healthier level - good for the plants - good for the humans, who tend them.  Also, because we strive to keep the air more humid through the use of humidifiers and humidity trays, we further increase the humidity for ourselves. 

With many folks "staying put" longer within their residences, they're making home improvements, including the addition of small greenhouses, solariums and sunrooms.  Such areas are ideal for the creation of an indoor oasis.  The traditionally high ceilings, which usually include windows overhead, are ideal for the cultivation of the larger, more spectacular foliage specimens.  

Norfolk Island Pine, Schefflera, (Umbrella Tree), Palm, Dracena cultivars, False Aralia and Yucca are all ideal for such a situation.  One of the most impressive indoor subjects is a "standard" Ficus, with 'benjamina' or 'nitida' being two outstanding varieties.  A "standard" is any plant which has been grown on, with constant pruning and training, until it reaches tree form and proportions.  In the case of these naturally tall-growing Ficus, a heavy, smooth-barked trunk develops.  The effect thus created is that of a fruit tree, growing right within your indoor living space.  

Palms offer a lush tropical look, with compound leaves borne on long, arching branches.  Date Palms give large-scale interest.  Their airy, open foliage emerges from a trunk covered with rough, scaly bark.  While there are compact, dwarf varieties, the traditional Umbrella Tree (Schefflera) is another large-scale beauty, with huge, shiny leaves.

If space permits, such an oasis can be rounded out with medium-scale foliage plants.  Schefflera arbicola, Spathiphyllum, Chinese Evergreen (Aglaonema), Dieffenbachia, and fern varieties are just some of the suitable subjects in this mid-size range.  Ivies offer a wide choice of leaf shape and color. Being naturals at climbing or trailing, they lend themselves to hanging planters, as "fillers" planted around the base of larger plants, cascading from shelves or window boxes or trained on any variety of topiary frames.  

The finishing touch for your interior landscape could well be hanging plants, such as ferns, Swedish Ivy, spider plants, Pothos and Fittonia.  Small fountains and water gardens add motion and sound to your oasis, while increasing humidity levels for your specimen plants.  For the very small oasis, table-top fountains are readily available.  

Now, if space and light permit, consider adding a touch of color, with the bold blooms of Hibiscus sinensis, the pastels or strong hues of African violets, the many faces of our beloved Begonias ('Angel Wing', 'Richmond', 'Charm', etc.), Orchids, Bougainvillea, Mandevilla, 'Martha Washington'  or scented Geraniums, Episcia, Streptocarpus, Gloxinia or some of the other flowering specimens, too numerous to mention.  Best bet for more unusual flowering plants, is a smallish, local greenhouse where you can ask questions and poke around to your heart's content - not a bad way to spend a cold, rainy, pre-spring morning.  For the serious plant collector, there's always Logee's Tropical Plants in Connecticut.  I receive their catalog and can only dream of having the space to create such a colorful oasis.

The good news is that you don't need a solarium, although it would be nice, wouldn't it?  A living room, bedroom or home office can be the perfect setting for an oasis.  Yes, indoor gardening can be as simple or involved as you like, but it's the best way I know to survive the long, wet, cold, dreary winter... or the long, wet, cold, dreary nearly-spring season, in which we are, at present, firmly entrenched.  Take your backyard gardening to a whole new dimension with your indoor oasis!               

©Deb Lambert 2008  

Tips For Better Lawn Garden Care

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-17, 08:46:48

If you want to be sure that the landscape around your home is beautiful and in the best possible condition, then you will want to be sure that you properly take care of the lawn garden portions of your landscape design. It is very important that correct maintenance of the lawn is carried out so that they not only stay attractive but also healthy. In most cases, the lawns are the most expansive and first noticed areas of the overall landscape.

Snowdrop Double Doubles

(Via An Iowa Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-17, 07:59:00

Here are two double snowdrops blooming today: double doubles, I guess you'd say. For reasons that I can understand, double snowdrops get mixed reviews by fanatical snowdrop lovers (galanthophiles). The main knock on the doubles is that they are not graceful, like the single snowdrops. However, to me it depends on how you look at them; looking from above, or maybe even from the side, flore pleno does look a little... boxy. Actually from above they sort of look like little lobster claws to me; indeed not exactly graceful. Now when you get down and look at them from below (no easy task with a plant all of four inches tall) they give quite a different impression, and are very pretty; kind of like wee hoop skirts with petticoats with upside down heart markings along the hemline... quite sweet. I've taken to planting them on little hillocks in the garden to facilitate being able to see under them better, but even so when I'm seen walking around with muddy knees in early spring it's a pretty good bet I've been out looking at the snowies. I saw a picture of a Brit galanthophile out in his garden who walks about with a mirror which he sets down below each snowdrop so he can see it better... guess he doesn't like getting his pants muddy. The other snow drop fanciers who read his post about the mirror, oohed over how clever he was. Being or being described as "clever" seems to be a uniquely British trait, as in "He's such a clever boy!" Here in the States, I know I've never heard anybody call me clever... even though I feel like over the years I've given them plenty of opportunities to do so. Now maybe they were thinking it, but just didn't want to seem overly flattering. That could be.
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Snowdrop Double Doubles

(Via An Iowa Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-17, 07:59:00

Here are two double snowdrops blooming today: double doubles, I guess you'd say. For reasons that I can understand, double snowdrops get mixed reviews by fanatical snowdrop lovers (galanthophiles). The main knock on the doubles is that they are not graceful, like the single snowdrops. However, to me it depends on how you look at them; looking from above, or maybe even from the side, flore pleno does look a little... boxy. Actually from above they sort of look like little lobster claws to me; indeed not exactly graceful. Now when you get down and look at them from below (no easy task with a plant all of four inches tall) they give quite a different impression, and are very pretty; kind of like wee hoop skirts with petticoats with upside down heart markings along the hemline... quite sweet. I've taken to planting them on little hillocks in the garden to facilitate being able to see under them better, but even so when I'm seen walking around with muddy knees in early spring it's a pretty good bet I've been out looking at the snowies. I saw a picture of a Brit galanthophile out in his garden who walks about with a mirror which he sets down below each snowdrop so he can see it better... guess he doesn't like getting his pants muddy. The other snow drop fanciers who read his post about the mirror, oohed over how clever he was. Being or being described as "clever" seems to be a uniquely British trait, as in "He's such a clever boy!" Here in the States, I know I've never heard anybody call me clever... even though I feel like over the years I've given them plenty of opportunities to do so. Now maybe they were thinking it, but just didn't want to seem overly flattering. That could be.
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