Watching The Glacier…

(Via An Iowa Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-14, 22:36:00

Gardening Question of the Day for Monday, December 15, 2008

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-14, 20:00:00

Should I mulch my perennials for the winter? (answer).

From The Old Farmer's Almanac.

A Garden Center Christmas

(Via GardenAuthor)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-14, 08:40:00

Pictures In A Crowded Closet

(Via An Iowa Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-13, 23:29:00

Gardening Question of the Day for Sunday, December 14, 2008

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-13, 20:00:00

What is the best way to get rid of thistles? (answer).

From The Old Farmer's Almanac.

Christmas list for the beginning gardener

(Via Idaho Gardener)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-13, 12:03:05

Making your list and checking it twice? Here’s my ultimate dream package for a beginning gardener. Get them growing in the right direction with this collection of tools, books and gear. On my must have list:

1. The phone number of the local extension office, in Boise, it is 208-377-1017. This costs nothing and gives the newbie access to the latest local growing information. Click here for the link to all the Idaho Extension offices.

2. A hori-hori knife: outstanding garden tool, exceptional tool for the amount of leverage you get with little effort. Great for weeding, planting, and hacking up scary bugs.

3. A good small scoop shovel. My current fave is the Fiskars long handled digging shovel, #9668, about $40. I like the scoop to be shield shaped, and the not more than 8-9 inches across in width.

4. A copy of the latest edition (8th)of Sunset Western Garden book. Although written primarily for the western states, this is a great all-round garden book. Easy to read, over 8000 plants are included in this handbook of garden information. I have at least four editions in my library.

5. A copy of Michael Dirr’s Hardy Trees and Shrubs: An Illustrated Encyclopedia. Pricey, but you should not buy a tree without consulting this manual. If you ever looked under the counter at a top notch nursery, you would find a beat-up-dog-eared copy of Dirr’s book. It is considered a gardening bible by those who should know. Find it on Amazon for about $45.

6. The Well Tended Perennial Garden, Expanded Edition, 2006, by Tracy DiSabato-Aust, $24, also at Amazon. A gifted gardener, scientist and author, Tracy has taken the guess work out of tending perennial gardens. She has designed, planted, pruned and nurtured gardens with a discerning eye. In this book, she shares all her tried and true methods for growing exceptional perennials. I wouldn’t be without it.

7. A pair of Felco Number 2 hand pruners. The Cadillac of hand pruners, sharp and sharper, with a comfortable grip, replaceable Swiss blades and vinyl coating on the handles. Every professional gardener has a pair of these strapped to their belt. They even wear them to parties. Pricey, yes, at $38, but remember, you can sharpen them and replace the blade when the time comes. Nothing says “I love you” to a gardener better than a pair of Felco No. 2’s.

8. A half dozen pairs of Atlas Nitrile gloves, the thinnest most comfortable gardening gloves around. You can find these for as little as $4.75 a pair. They come in a rainbow of colors, are washable, good for gripping, yet thin enough to feel your way around the garden.

9. Not at all glamorous, but wonderfully utilitarian, washable, sturdy, multi-purpose item: the tool organizer five-gallon bucket, available everywhere.

10.If you are feeling generous, and really want to impress your favorite gardener, here’s a show stopping gift: the Gardener’s Supply Poly-Tough cart. At $169, it’s a spendy little gift, but it may be one of the coolest, most durable, easy to use garden tools I have ever had the pleasure of owning. In fact, the under gardener (husband) and I have been known to fight over who gets to use it.

11. After all this digging, planting, reading, and playing in the dirt, a $5 tin of Watkins lavender hand and cuticle salve is the perfect thing for restoring your hands. Absolutely wonderful smell, all natural and healing. I have a stash of 3 or 4 tins on hand at all times.

12. Just in case you haven’t yet met the beginning gardener’s every need with all these fantastic gifts, go for the green and get them a big ole’ gift certificate from the best local nursery in town. Come planting time, they can find seeds, flowers, compost, hoes, trees and pottery for their new garden. What a glorious way to start the new gardening season!

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Christmas list for the beginning gardener

Bush weakens protections for endangered species

(Via hort.net top stories)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-13, 05:53:22

Just six weeks before President-elect Barack Obama takes office, the Bush administration issued revised endangered species regulations Thursday to reduce the input of federal scientists and to block the law from being used to fight global warming. The changes, which will go into effect in about 30 days, were completed in just four months. But they could take Obama much longer to reverse. They will eliminate some of the mandatory, independent reviews that government scientists have performed for 35 years on dams, power plants, timber sales and other projects, a step that developers and other federal agencies have blamed for delays and cost increases.

Gardening Catalog Winter Re-Run

(Via An Iowa Garden)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-12, 21:31:00

Gardening Question of the Day for Saturday, December 13, 2008

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-12, 20:00:00

What causes the yellowing leaves on my rubber plant? (answer).

From The Old Farmer's Almanac.

Astounding Facts on Weeds

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

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-12-12, 14:08:11

Being an avid gardener, you can learn a lot of surprising facts about weeds. If your parents and grandparents are avid gardeners as well then you will learn even more. First, let's define a weed because weeds are everything that isn't pretty and that we don't have a use for.