Gardening Question of the Day for Tuesday, March 25, 2008

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-24, 19:00:00

I read the term pleaching in a gardening book and couldn't figure out what they meant. What is it? (answer).

From The Old Farmer's Almanac.

Comment on Another sunny spring day by anne and bart

(Via Comments for Anne's Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-24, 16:48:36

Update, I found another apple tree today!!!!

Comment on Another sunny spring day by Assertagirl

(Via Comments for Anne's Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-24, 16:45:43

Hi Anne, I just came across your blog and wanted to tell you that it, and your garden, are beautiful! I’m looking forward to seeing more of it this season (from way out here in Ontario).

American Coot

(Via gardenauthor)

Posted by admin to American Coot, Coots in a swamp on 2008-03-24, 14:32:00

What a nice surprise awaited me tonight, as I headed down the garden steps. Frenzied activity on the hillside, just on the other side of the fence and bird feeders... a sudden whirring of wings, accompanied by a croaking call - kuk-kuk-kuk - and I watched as four American Coots flew down to Lily Pond and disappeared in the pond-side brush. The mallards sometimes land on this banking, looking for cracked corn and spilled seed, but this is the first time I've seen Coots here. They occasionally frequent a nearby fresh water pond, but not our sizable swamp.

Photo: Courtesy www.weforanimals.com

For more information on this waterbird, go to 'All About Birds' at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. The flock of resident Mallards wasn't thrilled with their guests. Last I heard, they were waxing vocal, quacking loudly at these unusual visitors. I will be on the lookout for a repeat performance... maybe they'll visit again, soon. Indeed, this is what makes swatting mosquitoes from the swamp, all summer, well worthwhile.

©Deb Lambert 2008

Correa ‘Dusky Bells’: Hanging Flower Baskets II

(Via Gardening Tips 'n' Ideas)

Posted by admin to Gardening on 2008-03-24, 14:23:35

correa-dusky-bells.jpg Whenever we see pictures of hanging flower baskets you can almost always note that they are a combination of violas, pansies, petunias, heartsease or a myriad of other flowering annuals. The reason they're so popular is basically because they're easy to grow, flower abundantly and can simply be replaced once they've finished their performance.

Well, as promised in my recent post; How to make Hanging Flower Baskets I would introduce a few more alternatives for you to consider. While you won't end up with the classic suspended flowering ball, you will create some interest that is possibly a little more different to what everyone else is doing.

I want to introduce you to my Correa 'Dusky Bells'. It resides in one of my garden beds but I have been debating the notion to move it into a hanging basket. The reason is quite simple.

Firstly, while it is not classed as a groundcover it fails to exceed more than 40cm in height. It spreads to between 80cm - 1m wide and sports such spectacular evergreen foliage all year round that makes it an attractive shrub.

But, the real reason for its possible move to a hanging basket are its proficient flowers. However, while it blooms is head off for nearly six months of the year (through the winter months here in Oz), unless you're a pygmy you will very rarely spot them. In fact, I only found them yesterday while I was raking leaves and had to lift one of its branches to get underneath it. Lo and behold it was packed with these gorgeous pink bells dangling under the foliage.

So, while this correa sucks as a garden specimen, it could be an awesome standout in a flowering hanging basket viewed from beneath. Looking up into its foliage would far exceed the view from above because you wouldn't miss any of these awesome little bells.

Herein lies the secret to our first part of producing hanging flower baskets - bells! They mainly all droop downwards and are best viewed from under the foliage than above it. So, the question becomes which plants are small enough to keep in a hanging basket and yet produce bell profusions?

Here's a quick list;

  • Correas
  • Darwinias
  • Hellebores
  • Campanulas - especially C. cochleariifolia
  • and obviously, fuschias

There's a couple to start you off. The next part of the Hanging Flower Baskets series will look at some of the trailers - though they may not all be bloomers.

Correa ‘Dusky Bells’: Hanging Flower Baskets II

(Via Gardening Tips 'n' Ideas)

Posted by admin to Gardening on 2008-03-24, 14:23:35

correa-dusky-bells.jpg Whenever we see pictures of hanging flower baskets you can almost always note that they are a combination of violas, pansies, petunias, heartsease or a myriad of other flowering annuals. The reason they're so popular is basically because they're easy to grow, flower abundantly and can simply be replaced once they've finished their performance.

Well, as promised in my recent post; How to make Hanging Flower Baskets I would introduce a few more alternatives for you to consider. While you won't end up with the classic suspended flowering ball, you will create some interest that is possibly a little more different to what everyone else is doing.

I want to introduce you to my Correa 'Dusky Bells'. It resides in one of my garden beds but I have been debating the notion to move it into a hanging basket. The reason is quite simple.

Firstly, while it is not classed as a groundcover it fails to exceed more than 40cm in height. It spreads to between 80cm - 1m wide and sports such spectacular evergreen foliage all year round that makes it an attractive shrub.

But, the real reason for its possible move to a hanging basket are its proficient flowers. However, while it blooms is head off for nearly six months of the year (through the winter months here in Oz), unless you're a pygmy you will very rarely spot them. In fact, I only found them yesterday while I was raking leaves and had to lift one of its branches to get underneath it. Lo and behold it was packed with these gorgeous pink bells dangling under the foliage.

So, while this correa sucks as a garden specimen, it could be an awesome standout in a flowering hanging basket viewed from beneath. Looking up into its foliage would far exceed the view from above because you wouldn't miss any of these awesome little bells.

Herein lies the secret to our first part of producing hanging flower baskets - bells! They mainly all droop downwards and are best viewed from under the foliage than above it. So, the question becomes which plants are small enough to keep in a hanging basket and yet produce bell profusions?

Here's a quick list;

  • Correas
  • Darwinias
  • Hellebores
  • Campanulas - especially C. cochleariifolia
  • and obviously, fuschias

There's a couple to start you off. The next part of the Hanging Flower Baskets series will look at some of the trailers - though they may not all be bloomers.

Artificial Light for Starting Seeds and Indoor Growing

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-24, 12:36:37

In starting seeds indoors and growing house plants, light, along with temperature and humidity, can be controlled and thus become a tool for producing luxuriant healthy growth. With fluorescent light you can give plants just the illumination they need all the time, no matter what the weather outside.

Easy To Use Home Gardening Tips That Are As Simple As 1-2-3

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-24, 11:28:58

Thousands of individuals ranging in all different age groups are enjoying the satisfaction and the accomplishments that can be found in home gardening. It can be both relaxing, as well as being very rewarding, when you make the selection of choosing home gardening as your favorite hobby of interest.

Seeing the Blues - Bluebird Houses

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-24, 10:40:20

Hanging a bluebird house has been a popular backyard birding activity for years. Bluebirds are adored for their beautiful blue coloring, their gentle temperament and their pleasing song. Attracting bluebirds is a wonderful way to invite nature into your yard.

The Day Before Spring Flower

(Via An Iowa Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-03-24, 10:26:00


Yesterday was improbably cold and bitter, with a thin blanket of new snow in the morning, stinging sleet driven by swirling winds in the afternoon, and a high temperature barely above freezing... not the most propitious day to take the camera out to the garden to find what's in bloom. However, this little flower, Shibateranthis pinnatifida, has been out for a week, shyly and bravely just poking through the brown leaf litter. In its native land of Japan its common name is Setsubun-so, meaning literally day before spring-flower ; an apt name if ever there was one. On the ancient Japanese lunar calendar (in use until 1873, when Japan adopted our modern, solar-based Julian calendar), Setsubun was the third day of the second lunar month, and was recognized as the end of winter; the holiday was kept when the Julian calendar came in, but Setsubun was re-set as the day before solar spring and "so" means flower or plant; hence Setsubun-so became the day before spring-flower .
The delicate appearance of this little Japanese alpine is deceiving, because in fact it blooms in nature (and in our garden) just at the edge of the receding snow. The leaves ring the base of the flower and seem almost an afterthought, looking far too small and frail to sustain the plant, being just a finely cut little collarette of bronze-green which wilts and disappears at the first puff of early summer's hot winds.
The genus shibateranthis was split off from eranthis, with the seven Asian species being placed in the new genus (Shibateranthis pinnatifida, stellata, siberica, keiskei, uncinata, albiflora and longistipitata), leaving the two European species in the original eranthis genus (hyemalis and cilicica... the winter aconites). In our garden we do grow S. stellata, which is just starting to bloom, and we grow both of the winter aconites, which I need to start looking for amongst the dead leaves.
Seen closely, the tiny flowers of pinnatifida are quite fascinating; the white "petals" are actually sepals, while the little yellow protuberances are in fact structurally petals. The anthers are bright metallic blue and break open to release sticky white pollen granules, as you can see on the left side of the flower above. The stigmas in the center are light grape in color.
These miniature flowers will never be used in a spring bouquet; they are not going to be a cover subject for any gardening magazine; you'll not see them featured in garden catalogs... but they do wonders for the spirit on a gray and wintry day in Iowa.

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