As the country begins taking stock of the damage caused by hurricane Ophelia and works to restore power to much of Scotland and Northern England, gardeners throughout the country are lamenting the destruction of their gardens.
21.07.2023 - 22:18 / awaytogarden.com
JOIN Margaret Roach of A Way to Garden and ecologists Conrad and Claudia Vispo of Hawthorne Valley Farmscape Ecology Program on Saturday September 15, 2018, for a hands-on exploration of the wild nature present in gardens, a workshop-style event to benefit the ecology program.We’ll encourage you to feed your curiosity and indulge in snooping for easily overlooked garden plants and animals during a joyful ramble through the “classroom” of Margaret’s garden and the natural areas at its perimeter, with both formally landscaped patches (featuring mostly exotic “collector” plants) and wilder areas managed for natives.
See Margaret’s various experiments with making a mini-meadow, creating “snags” or wildlife trees and “unmowing” some new areas to discover what happens–and we’ll get Conrad and Claudia’s insights on how to fine-tune and enhance them with a more expert eye.
Led by what we observe and the questions you bring up, we’ll touch on themes such as:
How much wildness do you want in your backyard? What is your garden’s place in the ecology of the larger landscape? What is native to your garden and is ‘nativeness’ important? How can you encourage native plants and help wildlife? What references–online, and also field guides and more–can help inform your own explorations?No one gardener (or biologist!) can see it all, but we’ll give you a general introduction to the cast of characters, meet some of them in person, and share our secrets for finding and identifying many of your garden’s residents.
Come prepared with your questions.
This program will be held in Copake Falls, NY, and ticket-holders will be emailed with directions and other details.
Claudia Knab-Vispo is the field botanist of the Hawthorne Valley Farmscape Ecology
As the country begins taking stock of the damage caused by hurricane Ophelia and works to restore power to much of Scotland and Northern England, gardeners throughout the country are lamenting the destruction of their gardens.
Birds make a great addition to your garden, they’re great to look at and they’re useful as well. For instance, they will eat slugs, snails, aphids, insects and other well-known troublemakers.
The growing season might be in full swing, but there are still ways to upgrade your garden game. From keeping out unwanted pests (or pets) to building your own customized trellising and irrigation—it’s time to make your beds work smarter, not harder. We’ve got five ways to customize your planters this summer that will not only make things look fantastic, but will take your growing capabilities to the next level. Whether you choose to tackle them all or just add one to your list of weekend to-dos, I promise it will be a noticeable refresh with rewarding results.
Some Tips for Encouraging wildlife into your garden:
Sometimes as gardeners, we place all the emphasis on plants. However, a few well positioned ornaments and focal points can heighten the interest and drama within a garden.
Autumn may seem a strange time to start a gardening business but it is the time to focus on what you want to do. Get all your ducks (or seedlings) in a row and ensure you have the detail sorted and with that I include enough cash to see you through and chosen customer groups. How to Start Your Own Gardening Business An Insider Guide to Setting Yourself Up as a Professional Gardener is a useful tutorial if you want to set up a gardening business. I recommend you consider your aspirations and limitations carefully and either set up a ‘Life Style business’ or consider becoming a qualified, professional career gardener.
As gardeners mature they enter a purple patch in their life and potentially in the garden. Some of the best plants with purple or coppery coloured leaves take several years to mature like the notional gardener. Amongst the favourites must be the copper beech and the many Acers with reddish leaves.
A stroll through a boutique garden store might lead you to believe that filling a garden with happy, healthy plants is only for the well-heeled. But those very plants that have soaring price tags in the store might be yours for free if you are willing to be a little creative. If you are wondering how to get free plants, you’ve come to the right place. Read on for five tried-and-true paths that lead you to free garden plants.
This heirloom grain, together with the skilled knowledge and forced labor of West Africans and their descendants, made South Carolina very, very rich. From 1720 to the outbreak of the Civil War, rice was the most economically valuable crop for this state. White landowners, who thought rice would do well in the low country, themselves lacked practical knowledge of rice cultivation. Instead, they paid a premium to slave traders to capture and transport laborers from the well-established rice region of West Africa to Carolina. During the 18th century, many enslaved people brought into Charleston came from this rice-growing area. These people and their descendants created the Gullah-Geechee culture in the low country.
Are you looking at plants in your garden and wondering why they aren’t flowering?
Since the book “Planting in a Post-Wild World” came out in 2015, co-authored by Claudia West with Thomas Rainer, I’ve been gradually studying their ideas and starting to have some light bulbs go off, on how to be inspired to put plants together in the ways that nature does, in layered communities.Claudia joined me on the July 17, 2017 edition of my public-radio show and podcast to about some of the practical, tactical aspects of plant community-inspired designs that we can app
Now before you go thinking dirty thoughts about my wood frog friends up in the top photo, who by the way quack like ducks to my ear, know this:They are simply engaged in amplexus (doesn’t that sound tame and scientific?), in which the male (in this species the smaller frog) clasps the larger female around the back. This goes on for some time, and they don’t seem to be one bit shy. The embrace began right out at poolside, where 15 other frogs were sunning themselves, including the few in the background of the photo below. Eventually the