Gardenig in Mexico. Tips & Guides

Common Ornamental Invasive Grass Types To Avoid - gardeningknowhow.com - Mexico - state California
gardeningknowhow.com
17.08.2023

Common Ornamental Invasive Grass Types To Avoid

Ornamental grasses have become exceedingly popular with home gardeners and landscapers, and for good reason. There are over 10,000 species that add movement and drama, all while giving a naturalized look to the landscape. Most grasses will stay self contained, but there are some species that are quite invasive. While ornamental grasses are highly sought after, you do want to avoid invasive ornamental grass varieties. So which ornamental grasses are invasive?

More of Enrique and Christian’s Garden - finegardening.com - Mexico - city Chicago - state Illinois - county Park
finegardening.com
10.08.2023

More of Enrique and Christian’s Garden

Today we’re back in the Forest Park, Illinois, garden of Enrique Zuniga and Christian Altman, a space they transformed from a blank piece of turfgrass into a beautiful garden that attracts pollinators and is enjoyed by them, their three dogs, and their friends alike. We saw some of the garden yesterday and are back to enjoy more of it today.

36 Beautiful Mexican Flowers You Must Grow - balconygardenweb.com - Mexico
balconygardenweb.com
08.08.2023

36 Beautiful Mexican Flowers You Must Grow

Explore the rich floral tapestry of this enchanting country with some of the most stunning Mexican Flowers that you must include in your collection!

Biennials you can sow this summer - theenglishgarden.co.uk - Mexico
theenglishgarden.co.uk
01.08.2023

Biennials you can sow this summer

Biennials are plants that have a two-year life cycle. In the first year, they grow leaves and in the second they flower, before setting seed and dying. June and July are the ideal months to sow their seed. You’ll have young plants ready to go in the ground where you’d like them to flower by early autumn. Then, next spring or summer (depending on which biennial you’ve grown) they’ll produce their flowers.

Growing African and French Marigolds - gardenerstips.co.uk - France - Mexico
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023

Growing African and French Marigolds

A favorite annual is the Marigold or Tagetes. Bold colours in Yellows, Oranges, Lemons Reds and Creams are a feature of these plants that flower from July to the first frost. Despite the names they all originate from Mexico.

Avocado – Root and Branch Review - gardenerstips.co.uk - Mexico - Guatemala - state California - county Park
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023

Avocado – Root and Branch Review

Credits Avocadoes Camknows CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 “avocadoes by Elsa4Sound CC BY-NC 2.0

Cactus Dahlias Flowering Until November - gardenerstips.co.uk - Mexico
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023

Cactus Dahlias Flowering Until November

Dahlias are having a good year due to the summer rain. Slugs permitting my Cactus Dahlias will have given one of the best shows for several years by November when they get cut down and stored. As I expect the flower power will still be present until the first frosts in November I am going to give them a foutnightly tonic of liquid fertiliser and a further mulch.

18 Amazing Cactus with Arms - balconygardenweb.com - Usa - Mexico - state California - state Arizona
balconygardenweb.com
28.07.2023

18 Amazing Cactus with Arms

Experience the charm of Cactus with Arms, where nature takes on an unexpected twist. These captivating plants bring you the rugged beauty of cacti with arms, showcasing nature’s creativity at its finest.

21 Types of Bell Pepper Varieties - balconygardenweb.com - Italy - Mexico
balconygardenweb.com
27.07.2023

21 Types of Bell Pepper Varieties

From sweet and mild to spicy and tangy, bell peppers come in a variety of colors and flavors that can add a unique twist to your favorite recipes. Let’s take a closer look at some of the most popular Types of Bell Pepper Varieties and discover what makes them so special.

The dahlia varieties you need in your garden this year | House & Garden - houseandgarden.co.uk - Spain - Mexico
houseandgarden.co.uk
26.07.2023

The dahlia varieties you need in your garden this year | House & Garden

Native to Mexico and Central America, the dahlia (Family asteraceae) is a bushy and beautiful flowering perennial. The dahlia is Mexico's national flower, and its tuberous roots were eaten by Aztecs before the Spanish Conquest. Following Central America's colonisation, the dahlia was exported to European nations, where it thrived even in countries with harsh or cold winters. Since the 18th century, botanists, taxonomists and gardeners have held a certain fascination for the flower, identifying over 850 different species each with unique petal or stem structures (this number includes the plant's hybrids, too). Since dahlias are extraordinarily varied in appearance, they also tend to be categorised by the shape of the flower, with 10 categories that include anemone, peony, pompom, ball, decorative, cactus, single and waterlily.

Does Firebush Attract Hummingbirds to the Garden? - balconygardenweb.com - Usa - Mexico
balconygardenweb.com
25.07.2023

Does Firebush Attract Hummingbirds to the Garden?

Does Firebush Attract Hummingbirds? – If you have this question in your mind, then this article will clear all your doubts!

Should You Be Buying More Shrimp Right Now? - bhg.com - Italy - Mexico
bhg.com
25.07.2023

Should You Be Buying More Shrimp Right Now?

Pass the cocktail sauce, because when it comes to trendy seafood, shrimp is leading the charge. While this shellfish has been a family favorite for decades as the most consumed seafood in the U.S., more and more restaurants—including many popular chains—are highlighting this protein as an affordable luxury. What’s all the hype about? Is this inexpensive shrimp as wholesome as it seems, or are there other factors you should be aware of before making plans to hit up the peel-and-eat buffet?

Poinsettia Care - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - Mexico
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Poinsettia Care

Poinsettias are a classic holiday plant used to decorate homes from November to December. When South Carolinian Joel Poinsett, the first U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, introduced the poinsettia to the United States in 1825, it is doubtful he had any idea how popular this plant would become.

Healthy Tips – Squash - hgic.clemson.edu - Mexico
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Healthy Tips – Squash

Squash is native to the Americas; remains have been found in Central America and Mexico dating back as far as 7000 BC.

Healthy Tip – Avocados - hgic.clemson.edu - Mexico
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Healthy Tip – Avocados

Did you Avocados are one of those nutrient dense foods that provide nearly 20 vitamins and minerals with relatively few calories. Archaeologists have found evidence of avocado consumption going back almost 10,000 years in central Mexico. Researchers believe that humans began cultivating avocados about 5,000 years ago. Mesoamerican tribes like the Inca, the Olmec and the Maya grew domesticated avocado trees. AvoSeedo wedsite

Caring for Your Poinsettia during the Holidays - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - Mexico - state California - state Pennsylvania - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Caring for Your Poinsettia during the Holidays

Nothing says Christmas more than a poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima). Did you know that December 12th is known as National Poinsettia Day? Plant breeders have developed a wide range of colors in hues of white, purple, orange, and pink, but red poinsettias continue to be the most traditional color of the holiday season.

November Week 5 Garden Photos - hgic.clemson.edu - Mexico - state Texas - state Arizona - state South Carolina - state New Mexico - county Garden
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

November Week 5 Garden Photos

Can’t travel right now to see the Chihuahuan Desert in Mexico, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona? Come for a visit to the South Carolina Botanical Garden to see selection of the interesting native plants at the Chihuahuan Desert Garden Display.

‘Mystic Spires Blue’ Salvia - hgic.clemson.edu - Mexico - state California - state Indiana
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

‘Mystic Spires Blue’ Salvia

If sibling rivalry were found among plants, it probably would be among the salvias in the large mint family (the Lamiaceae). In my opinion, ‘Mystic Spires’ wins the competition, hands down.

SCBG Plant Sale 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu - Mexico - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SCBG Plant Sale 2021

Pyrus calleryana ‘Bradford’ was once touted as the perfect, sterile garden or landscape tree. It has now bred prolifically with other pear species and spread so extensively that it is now on South Carolina’s invasive plant list. Now is an excellent time to replace these pest trees with something more ecologically sound. We have several options to choose from at the South Carolina Plant Sale or visit your local nursery to find alternatives. The SCBG plant sale is online again this spring; details are here: https://www.clemson.edu/public/scbg/plant-sale/index.html

The Monarch Highway - hgic.clemson.edu - Mexico - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

The Monarch Highway

The Monarch Highway is busy this time of year. So, keep an eye out while you are driving or outdoors. First, you may only see one, but keep watching, and eventually, you will see them fluttering by in masses. Monarch butterflies are probably the most recognizable and beloved butterflies in the world. Monarchs are currently making one of the most magnificent migrations of any animal in the world. Some travel close to 3,000 miles to their wintering grounds in Mexico. The Upstate of South Carolina along the Blue Ridge Mountains is one of their prime migration corridors and fueling stops on their journey south. This migration is unique because, unlike whales or other large mammals, who have previous generations to learn from and guide them, the monarchs making this migration have no help and are making this trip for the very first time. They are making the same journey that their great-great-grandparents made the previous fall. This ‘super generation’ of monarchs will make this journey south only once in their life. Next fall, it will be their great-great grandchildren’s turn.

Cupheas - hgic.clemson.edu - Mexico - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Cupheas

Are you tired of planting the same summer annuals over and over? Want to spice up your containers with something different that will attract hummingbirds, butterflies, bees, and other pollinating insects? Then look no further. Cupheas (Cuphea species) love our hot South Carolina summers and will bloom continuously from spring until the first frost. They are native to Central America. Another bonus is the flowers don’t need deadheading as they are self-cleaning. However, you may need to pinch back the stems if the plant gets too leggy. Also, they are insect, disease, and deer resistant.

Hummingbird Favorite: Salvia - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - Mexico - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Hummingbird Favorite: Salvia

Like most South Carolina nature lovers, I look forward to the return of Ruby-throated hummingbirds every spring. I enjoy seeing them in my garden, visiting flower after flower chirping along the way. Salvias are one genus of flowers I have noticed they love to visit.

90 Best Desert Plants | Best Desert Plants for Landscaping - balconygardenweb.com - Usa - Mexico - region Mediterranean
balconygardenweb.com
24.07.2023

90 Best Desert Plants | Best Desert Plants for Landscaping

Check out our list of the Best Desert Plants that will add a ravishing appeal to your home with little upkeep.

How to Grow and Care for Organ Pipe Cactus - gardenerspath.com - Usa - Mexico
gardenerspath.com
22.07.2023

How to Grow and Care for Organ Pipe Cactus

Icon of the southwest, organ pipe cactus (Stenocereus thurberi) is one of the best known species of cacti in the United States.Reaching up to 26 feet in height and 12 feet wide, this slow

Will the real oregano please stand up? - awaytogarden.com - France - Greece - Italy - Mexico - Cuba
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Will the real oregano please stand up?

Called “the mystery plant of the herb world” by The Rodale Herb Book, “oregano” is the common name for a small multitude of plants that are mostly useless in the kitchen. Among them are many true oreganos, in the genus Origanum, and also many plants that aren’t. Mexican oregano (Lippia graveolens) is a relative of lemon verbena, not oregano. Cuban oregano (Coleus amboinicus) is a succulent that tastes and smells somewhat like oregano and makes a good houseplant. It is used like oregano in Cuban cuisine. Italian oregano thyme, a member of the genus Thymus, also has the familiar oregano scent.Among the true oreganos there are choices for great beauty, like O. vulgare ‘Aureum,’ a golden-leaved form. (My sorry plant was probably just plain O. vulgare—not even pretty like the golden kind.) Sweet marjoram, a kind of oregano known as O. majorana, is more the stuff of French cuisine, and an excellent culinary herb. Pot marjoram, O. onites, is also savory-flavored.But if you want to cook with the classic oregano taste, you want to try Greek oregano, O. heracleoticum, which is a pungent

Precarious time for monarchs and their migration - awaytogarden.com - Mexico - state California - state Minnesota
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Precarious time for monarchs and their migration

“Last year [2012] at the overwintering sites, the area occupied was at only 60 percent of its previous low,” she says. “It had been declining, but that was astonishingly low.”The migration-monitoring program Journey North also reported lower stats in 2013’s cold spring. And though the numbers were only preliminary when we spoke that fall, University of Minnesota’s Monarch Larva Monitoring Program seems to indicate that “we’re at about 20 to 30 percent of our average,” Oberhauser says, acknowledging that these drastically lower numbers might be a “new normal.” But she’s not sounding defeated, by any means.A big positive: A lot of people are interested in monarchs. “Though it will be difficult to make up for all the habitat we’ve lost, we can make that ‘new normal’ as good as we can.”  (Ways to help are father down this page.)what going wrong for monarchs?MONARCH

Food fest 5: some kernels about corn - awaytogarden.com - Mexico
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Food fest 5: some kernels about corn

It Ain’t What It Used to Be Though corn is rightly labeled native to the Americas, the original plant from which today’s corn derives, called Teosinte (technically in the genus Zea), had a long and winding journey from its roots in Southern Mexico.  Talk about the domestication of a wild thing!The original grass had far fewer, tiny kernels, and not in anything so orderly an arrangement as today’s tightly packed heads that we call ears of corn. Have a look at these images (especially the macro ones) to see how heroic a job has been accomplished.Starting more than 7,000 years ago, careful cultivation and selection by native peoples of the Americas and much more recently by farmers in wider reaches have yielded corn for

Beloved conifer: the concolor fir - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Mexico - state California - state Colorado - state New Mexico
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Beloved conifer: the concolor fir

I have two other Abies concolor here (I know, there’s evidence of my former“everything in threes” insanity again), the other two grown naturally, unshorn, and therefore quite different-looking. I won’t tell you what I paid for the big guy, all thick and a perfect pyramid and already near 10 feet tall when he came to me to live on my hillside of a backyard, among the crabapples and a giant island of ornamental grasses. The others were scrawny little things, maybe 3 feet high, though each is more than 15 tall now.The white, or concolor fir, a Western American native species ranging from Colorado to Southern California, New Mexico and into Mexico, can grow to 100 feet in the wild, apparently, but in a garden setting you are more likely to see it get to 30 or maybe 50 feet in time, and half as wide.Its long needles, which are particularly silvery-blue in the cultivar ‘Candicans,’ curve outward

Chasmanthium, a native grass for shade - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Mexico
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Chasmanthium, a native grass for shade

Northern (also called upland, or inland) sea oats is native to Eastern North America, says the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, specifically “from PA south to n. FL, west as far as s. IL, e. KS, and central TX,” and into northern Mexico. It’s easy to grow, and some birds enjoy its seeds, as do small mammals. Me, too.Chasmanthium likes a semi-shady to shady spot where the soil is moist, and it can even take poor drainage. This is a low-maintenance plant suited to that hardest of spots–a shady slope—because sea oats forms strong, widening clumps, and also reseeds (some gardeners in certain locations say it does t

Birdnote q&a: what do ‘our’ birds do in winter? - awaytogarden.com - Mexico - Brazil - Bolivia - state Texas - state Oregon
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Birdnote q&a: what do ‘our’ birds do in winter?

In the Q&A that follows, Ellen’s answers contain green links to audio files from BirdNote’s archive that you won’t want to miss. A recap of earlier stories in our ongoing series is at the bottom of the page, along with information on how to hear BirdNote daily. Easiest of all: browse all the BirdNote series stories at this link.winter bird q&a with ellen blackstoneQ. How far south do migratory birds go for the winter? A. They cover a very wide range of distances, but here’s a hint at some of the impressive extremes:Our humble barn swallow is a true long-distance migrant, and may winter as far south as southern South America, often returning to the same area year after year. Imagine: the sprightly bird that nested in the eav

Birdnote q&a: your questions answered on hummingbird migration, and flying in formation - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Mexico - county Pacific
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Birdnote q&a: your questions answered on hummingbird migration, and flying in formation

Remember the BirdNote backstory from last week: In 2002, the then-executive director of Seattle Audubon heard a short public-radio show called StarDate. “We could do that with birds,” she thought. In 2005 the idea became a two-minute, seven-day-a-week public-radio “interstitial” (as short programs are called) that recently caught my ear.  I asked BirdNote to help me answer all the recent bird questions you had asked me. (In case you missed it last week, for installment Number 1, we tackled this subject: How do birds make themselves at home—even in winter?)Parts of Ellen’s answers below are in the 2-minute clips you can stream (all in the green links–or you can read the transcripts of each episode at those links if you prefer). Here we go:how do hummingbirds do it?Q. The miracle of hummingbird migration amazes all of us. How do they manage to migrate from the northern United States all the way to Mexico and beyon

Cardinal climber and its cousins, annual vines that are hummingbird favorites - awaytogarden.com - Mexico - city Chicago
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Cardinal climber and its cousins, annual vines that are hummingbird favorites

Sigh.I have to say I was a little relieved to see that the Chicago-based blogger who calls himself Mr. Brown Thumb, Ramon Gonzalez, has been similarly frustrated (misery loves company and all that). And also pleased to see that Ramon’s and my common affection for the cypress vine was shared by Thomas Jefferson, who grew it at Monticello.Whichever of these hummingbird favorites you grow, treat them like other morning glories: For a headstart (especially in short-season Northern garden areas like mine) sow indoors and grow under lights, sowing 4-6 weeks before final frost. Soak the seed in warm water for a few

Margaret on wnyc radio: making 'tomato junk,' a 'last chance food' - awaytogarden.com - India - Mexico - city New York
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023

Margaret on wnyc radio: making 'tomato junk,' a 'last chance food'

LISTEN IN to my chat with WNYC’s Amy Eddings, on their “Last Chance Foods” segment that aired today. Their whole season of “Last Chance Foods,” part of WNYC’s version of “All Things Considered,” is archived here.tomato junk recipeingredients:olive oil garlic onion 1 teaspoon to 1 ton anything edible left in your garden or at the farmer’s market, including herbs such as parsley and basil tomatoes, equal to at least one-third the total volume of ingredients water salt and pepper to taste Especially good vegetable choices include: summer squash such as zucchini; green beans; brassicas such as kale or broccoli; chard.Trickier choices: cabbage, or beet or mustard greens, and other distinctive-tasting vegetables, including roots such as turnip; hot peppers; or eggplant, that might overtake the flavor or texture of the Junk.Celery and carrots work well in batches that will become soup. Include spicier peppers

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