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Plants for a purpose: Late summer colour - gardenersworld.com - South Africa
gardenersworld.com
24.07.2023 / 16:43

Plants for a purpose: Late summer colour

If you want your garden to keep looking good throughout the months ahead, then these fabulous plants are sure to bring a boost of colour throughout late summer and autumn. There are options to suit every colour scheme, and plants that will thrive in pots as well as your borders. Our choices include recommendations from the Gardeners’ World team and familiar faces from across the gardening industry.

Interesting Summer Annuals - hgic.clemson.edu - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:33

Interesting Summer Annuals

Tired of planting the same old marigolds, petunias, and begonias? Try some different annuals in your garden this year. Many provide pollen and nectar for pollinating insects and attract hummingbirds. Here are a few of my favorites that I always incorporate into my landscape. They will perform well in South Carolina’s hot, humid summers, and with proper care, these annuals will continually bloom until frost.

Caladiums for Summer Color - hgic.clemson.edu - Brazil - Peru - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:31

Caladiums for Summer Color

Want to brighten up a shady spot in your summer annual containers? Caladiums are an excellent choice. Due to their insignificant flowers, caladiums are grown for their colorful foliage. The leaf colors range in a wide variety of red, pink, white, and green combinations with contrasting leaf margins.

Fall and Winter Vegetables - hgic.clemson.edu - Switzerland
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:07

Fall and Winter Vegetables

Gardening in the winter is somewhat challenging but doable. Many of the greens, some of the root vegetables, and herbs can be planted in the fall and will grow through the winter months. The saying is that greens are better after a frost.

13 Gifts Expert Party Planners Always Bring to Summer Parties - thespruce.com
thespruce.com
22.07.2023 / 14:05

13 Gifts Expert Party Planners Always Bring to Summer Parties

You know by now that it's always good manners to show up to an event with a little trinket for the host in tow. But if you're feeling stumped about what to bring with you to the next summer get together that's on your calendar, we're here to provide you with a whole new list of ideas that are sure to be well received.

3d annual ‘summer fest’ starts wednesday - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:05

3d annual ‘summer fest’ starts wednesday

THE 2010 SCHEDULE:Each Wednesday for the rest of the summer and probably longer, a group of blogging friends including Todd and Diane at White on Rice Couple; Shauna Ahern the Gluten-Free Girl, and Food2 will swap our recipes and tips about the following harvest-fresh ingredients. You’ll love meeting this year’s participants (a full list with links will accompany my post Wednesday and every week). The schedule:7/28: cukesnzukes 8/4: corn 8/11: herbs, greens, and beans 8/18: stone fruit 8/25 tomatoes more to come if we all want it — stay tuned! We each post something and then link to one another, so that you can travel around the combined effort, gathering the goodies.HOW YOU CAN JOIN IN SUMMER FEST:Giving back

Summer fest: a vintage look at fresh corn - awaytogarden.com - Usa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:04

Summer fest: a vintage look at fresh corn

First, a word about Summer Fest, which I co-founded in 2008: It’s a giant round-robin of sharing themed to a single garden-fresh ingredient each week. Get all the details and latest links below, just before the comments, and stock up on delicious ideas from around the web—or add your own.I READ UP ON CREAMED CORN this week (as did many of my Summer Fest colleagues—see the links below), and found a lot of variations included cornstarch or flour as thickeners, sugar, and even Parmesan cheese or bacon or any manner of extras. Once I shucked the fresh-picked corn from down the road, I thought: I can’t do that to this beautiful stuff, and went the ultra-simple route. Even adding cream seemed like gilding the lily. But I did.Corn in Historical ImageryMY VINTAGE PITCHER GOT ME THINKING how much a part of our heritage corn has been,

Making friends with late-summer caterpillars - awaytogarden.com - state Wisconsin
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:37

Making friends with late-summer caterpillars

Lately I have a lot of little fuzzy black and white creatures eating the leaves of my cannas (above), which is what got me started wondering who’s who. Turns out that’s the larval form of a hickory tussock moth, I think, whose usual diet is ash, elm, oak, hickory, maple, willow, and other trees.Though he looks velvety, look but don’t touch, apparently: The long “lashes” of the hickory tussock moth, Lophocampa caryae, are hollow tubes connected to poison glands, and can give susceptible people a stinging nettle-like rash or other reaction. The rest of the bristles, or setae, may also be irritating.This extensive University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee article offers a full portrait of the life of the hickory tussock moth, which apparently will spend the winter in a silk cocoon under tree bark or on the ground, then eventually works its way gradually n

Weeds to target late summer and fall - awaytogarden.com - Japan
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:33

Weeds to target late summer and fall

No matter what weed you are facing, if it’s flowering or setting seed now, be sure to behead it: mow it down, harvest the blooms for bouquets, or otherwise prevent a successful sexual reproduction cycle.teri dunn chace’s basic weed strategyFIRST A FAST REVIEW of Teri’s basic strategic weed-fighting plan, since simply pinpointing specific things this time of year isn’t the whole story.  Her plan, she admits: mostly practical and straight-forward.“Although it’s common sense, it’s things we sometimes don’t do,” says Teri, “but if we did it would make a big difference.” Don’t let things get to where you want to turn to the store to buy some chemical to erase your weed woes. Follow her

Lawn fertilizer, overgrown vegetable gardens, late transplanting, urban balconies: q&a with ken druse - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:17

Lawn fertilizer, overgrown vegetable gardens, late transplanting, urban balconies: q&a with ken druse

Helping me answer, as he does each month, is my friend and longtime garden writer and photographer, Ken Druse of Ken Druse dot com, author of “The New Shade Garden” and “Making More Plants” and many other favorite garden books.Read along as you listen to the Nov. 13, 2017 edition of my public-radio show and podcast using the player below. You can subscribe to all future editions on iTunes or Stitcher (and browse my archive of podcasts here). If you have a question for a future show, post it in comments on this website, or on Ken’s website, or use our contact forms to email us, or ask us at Facebook.com/awaytogarden.the november q&a with ken druseQ. We’re at mid-November. How much frost have you had, and what zone ar

Summerween Is Here to Add a Splash of Spookiness to the Summer Season - bhg.com
bhg.com
20.07.2023 / 16:21

Summerween Is Here to Add a Splash of Spookiness to the Summer Season

Candle-lit rooms, scary movies, pumpkin-spiced everything—that’s what… summer is made of? It is now: Thanks to #Summerween trending on TikTok and Instagram and racking up hundreds of thousands of views, a new unofficial holiday is being added to many calendars this year as people lean into the thrill of celebrating a holiday outside its traditional season. (There’s a reason we celebrate Christmas in July year after year.)

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