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How to Help Birds Survive in Winter - finegardening.com - Usa
finegardening.com
09.08.2023 / 13:41

How to Help Birds Survive in Winter

Our gardens can be valuable habitats for birds, providing nutritious food, nesting sites, and life-saving shelter, especially during the coldest months when overwintering birds are challenged. If we are mindful of these basic needs as we design our beds and borders, we will be rewarded with a landscape rich in birds. Here are some things you can do to help our feathered friends when times are lean.

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.

Does Firebush Attract Hummingbirds to the Garden? - balconygardenweb.com - Usa - Mexico
balconygardenweb.com
25.07.2023 / 13:45

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!

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?

Caterpillars for the Birds - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 11:49

Caterpillars for the Birds

Spring is here! All the signs are evident, including walking into caterpillars hanging from trees by slender threads (which happened to me last week). These danglers are often members of the Geometridae family, also known as inchworms or loopers. I love that their Latin name means “measures the earth.” The distinctive gait of these caterpillars makes it seem like they are taking their measuring duties very seriously. First, they deploy their front feet, and then, unlike other caterpillars with intermediate appendages, they pull forward their rear feet. This causes them to arch their bodies in that characteristic manner. Unsurprisingly, this onset of caterpillars coincides with the first flush of spring leaves, a buffet for these newly hatched critters.

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

Japanese maples and other choice acer, with adam wheeler of broken arrow - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Japan
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:53

Japanese maples and other choice acer, with adam wheeler of broken arrow

Adam and I talked about not just the Japanese types, but also other garden-sized maples for adding interest in every season and garden situation–in pots or the high shade of woodland gardens, to full-sun locations.my maple q&a with adam wheelerQ. When I was at Broken Arrow recently, there were many choice things to look at—but I kept noticing the maples you offer, particularly. How many do you grow?A. In the collection at the nursery, I suspect we have 150 or 200 different maples, and really that’s the tip of the iceberg with this genus.Q. There are a lot of native A

Links i liked: from bird song, to gmo food perils - awaytogarden.com - Usa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:47

Links i liked: from bird song, to gmo food perils

I first heard about “Bird Songs Bible: The Complete, Illustrated Reference for North American Birds,” edited by Les Beletsky, featuring sound from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and published by Chronicle Books, in this NPR segment last month. One caveat: The book-cum-boombox (birdbox?) ain’t cheap (cheep?) at $125.‘Millions Against Monsanto’ CampaignIWON’T ELABORATE OR START SHOUTING, but rather leave it at this: One of the things that scares me most is GMO crops, whether in the field or in our food. The Organic Consumers Union offers education, and also an advocacy program (aimed squarely at Monsanto, of course, whom they label “the biotech bully”) to make it easy for us all to add our names to the fight.

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

Antique apples with dan bussey of seed savers exchange - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state Iowa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:39

Antique apples with dan bussey of seed savers exchange

Let me admit: I have a soft spot for old apples, and the massive, century-plus-old trees I’m blessed to cohabitate with deliver loads of imperfect but delicious fruit with the occasional soft spot—or at least various marks of character.The venerable trees have taught me an appreciation of botanical history, more than some modern idea of perfection. That lesson was underscored in 1999, when I visited Seed Savers in Decorah, Iowa, where about 10 years earlier founder Kent Whealy had begun the orchard, each tree bearing a name, and a backstory, I’d never heard before. Apples such as the ones up top (clockwise, from top left): ‘Franklin,’ ‘May Queen,’ ‘Woodard,’ and ‘Blue Pearmain.’Dan Bu

Bee balm: make room for monarda, with mt. cuba’s george coombs - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Cuba - state Delaware
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:37

Bee balm: make room for monarda, with mt. cuba’s george coombs

Read along as you listen to the June 26, 2107 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).evaluating monarda with george coombs of mt. cubaQ. We’ve talked before on the show about your past trials of other native plants like Baptisia and Heuchera—and native plants are the mission of Mt. Cuba, which is both a garden for visiting and a research center, right?A. Mt. Cuba Center is actually a former du Pont family estate, the Copeland family estate, and they left their estate to become a public garden. What kind of sets us apart from others in the area is that we focus on native plants. We broadly define our nativity region as the Eastern United States.We do a lot of work promoting plants in a display capacity in the gardens itself, and then we also do research like what I do, trying to help

Birdnote q&a: what birds eat - awaytogarden.com - Usa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:33

Birdnote q&a: what birds eat

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 get BirdNote daily–and if you want to give thanks to nonprofit BirdNote for all their wonderful avian “aha’s,” you can do so at this link.Q. I’ve read that flamingoes’ plumage may be more or less colorful depending on their diet, but is this true of other bird species, too?A. What on earth does the lowly house finch have in common with the elegant, long-legged flamingo? They are what they eat. In color, that is. The carotenoids in their diets affect what color they are.  Carotenoids are the same pigments that give oranges and carrots–and brine shrimp–their color

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