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10 Flowering Bushes With The Most Beautiful Blooms - gardeningknowhow.com - Usa
gardeningknowhow.com
04.08.2023 / 23:29

10 Flowering Bushes With The Most Beautiful Blooms

Flowering shrubs can grace your garden, adding color, interest and sometimes fragrance to the home landscape. For the biggest, showiest flowers, you’ll also need to take into account the sun exposure of the garden site. But never fear, there are flowering shrubs for landscaping that like sun and others that like shade.

Fungi Out Walking - gardenerstips.co.uk - Usa
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:31

Fungi Out Walking

2020 has been a year of walking and observing nature in the raw. As autumn approaches the mushrooms and toadstools or fungi will be out in force. This will provide you with new observation opportunities on your nature walks. This week I spotted this gigantic fungi over 2 feet in diameter growing in a local graveyard.

Fothergilla – The Best of the Natives - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - Britain - Washington - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:35

Fothergilla – The Best of the Natives

No other plant native to South Carolina has such fragrant and beautiful spring blooms and stunning fall color as the witch-alders. Fothergilla was named after Dr. John Fothergill, an English physician and gardener who funded the travels of John Bartram through the Carolinas in the 1700’s. These beautiful shrubs have been planted in both American and English gardens for over 200 years, including gardens of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.

Preventing Food Waste with Veggie Fritters - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:08

Preventing Food Waste with Veggie Fritters

Have you looked in your fridge lately? What food items do you discard most often? Do you have any vegetables or herbs that might be a little past their prime? In the United States, nearly half of all food produced is never eaten; about half of that comes from households, consists of fruits and vegetables, and adds up to about $150 a month wasted. Just because a fruit or vegetable isn’t perfect or might be riper than we prefer, that doesn’t mean it’s unsafe or inedible. Often, our first thought is to discard it into the garbage, but are there other options?

Holiday Decorating with Orange Pomanders - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:06

Holiday Decorating with Orange Pomanders

Start a new holiday tradition with your family this year by making orange pomander balls. They can be hung on your Christmas tree as ornaments, attached to garlands, or used in a holiday centerpiece with live greenery. These delicious-smelling, clove-studded oranges will fill your home with a festive spicy fragrance.

‘plants are the mulch’ and other nature-based design wisdoms, with claudia west - awaytogarden.com - Usa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:10

‘plants are the mulch’ and other nature-based design wisdoms, with claudia west

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

Growing native fruit trees: pawpaws and persimmons, with lee reich - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state Maryland
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:07

Growing native fruit trees: pawpaws and persimmons, with lee reich

Lee’s tips for growing pawpaw or American persimmon couldn’t make it sound more appealing, or simple:“Plant it, water it, and keep weeds and deer away for a couple of years, and then do nothing,” he says. No fancy pruning (like those apples crave), no particular pests–and a big, juicy harvest. More details on how to choose which variety to grow are included in the highlights from the April 29, 2013 edition of my public-radio show and podcast, transcribed below. To hear the entire interview, use the streaming player below. You can subscribe to all future editions on iTunes or Stitcher (and browse my archive of podcasts here).growing ame

The latest on backyard tick research, with dr. neeta connally - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state Connecticut
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:56

The latest on backyard tick research, with dr. neeta connally

In the fall of 2016, Dr. Connally won a $1.6 million grant from the Centers for Disease Control to fund a four-year study, in coordination with the University of Rhode Island, to gauge the effectiveness of various tick control methods in the areas around people’s homes. She’ll tell us more about the angles being pursued, and also about self-care topics, from treated clothing to the use of topical repellents and more.Read along as you listen to the Dec. 11, 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).backyard tick research, with dr. neeta connallyQ. A little context first: You’re in the Northeast, where a lot of the cases of Lyme in the United States occur, but there are multiple tick species around the nation. You

Galls, leaf mines and other tracks and signs of insects (win a field guide!) - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state Vermont
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:55

Galls, leaf mines and other tracks and signs of insects (win a field guide!)

Charley Eiseman and Noah Charney’s 2010 book is full of photos of all the oddball things you see outside (if you stop long enough to notice!): egg cases and cocoons and all kinds of webs; folded and curled-up leaves as if something’s hidden inside (it is!); and all manner of bumps, lumps, notches, and holes in foliage, bark, you name it. Even tiny previously unexplained pattern in the sand…and soil…a.k.a. tracks and signs of insects.“I’ve always been interested in everything around me,” says Charley, whose Master’s degree is from the University of Vermont’s field naturalist program. “Then someone gave me a digital camera right after I graduated from college, so I started paying closer attention to the little things.  And then I started wishing I had a field guide to tell me what all these signs left by insects and other invertebrates were—but it just didn’t seem to exist.”Charley and Noah took it upon themselves to create that guide, in “Tracks and Sign of Insect

The mixed blessing of the asian lady beetle - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Japan - New York - state Oregon - state Louisiana
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:49

The mixed blessing of the asian lady beetle

These non-native “ladybugs,” introduced by the Department of Agriculture to help combat certain agricultural pests, have made themselves right at home in America—and in my house, too. In fall, the south-facing side of the exterior can be teeming with patches of them, as they look for places to tuck into and overwinter. The USDA imported lady beetles from Japan as early as 1916 as a beneficial insect, to gobble up unwanted pests on forest and orchard trees, but it was probably later releases, in the late 1970s and early 80s in the Southeast, that took hold. Today, multicolored Asian lady beetles have made themselves completely at home around the United States, easily adapting to regions as diverse as Louisiana, Oregon, and mine in New York State.

Look what just blew in: the power of the wind - awaytogarden.com - Usa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:46

Look what just blew in: the power of the wind

Wind, which most simply described is the motion of air molecules—the air in motion—bring us more than just extra leaves to contend with.  It is a powerful pollinator, for example.The US Forest Service says that about 12 percent of the world’s flowering plants are pollinated by wind, along with most conifers and many other trees.Grasses and cereal crops are the most common types among the flowering plants. Since they don’t need to attract

Redbuds, mahonia and more, with j.c. raulston arboretum’s mark weathington - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state North Carolina
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:41

Redbuds, mahonia and more, with j.c. raulston arboretum’s mark weathington

On my public-radio show, Arboretum director Mark Weathington took me through the years-long process of “discovering” new plants. Plus, Mark highlighted some Arboretum specialties that may belong in your garden, including standout redbuds and mahonias, and the lesser-known evergreen shrub Illicium, and even showy native dogwoods selected to withstand increasingly saline soils in tricky coastal areas.What’s now called the J.C. Raulston Arboretum at North Carolina State University is where I met my first Cephalotaxus–a near-lookalike to our common evergreen yews but excitingly deer-resistant. And then a moment later I met another one–this time a columnar form–an

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