bamboo
plants
Tags: bamboo plants
The website greengrove.cc is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.
How To Care For Caladiums - getbusygardening.com
getbusygardening.com
08.08.2023 / 18:11

How To Care For Caladiums

Caladiums are not as difficult to care for as many people think, and they make a beautiful addition to any home or garden.

How To Make Mustard Pickles (Recipe) - getbusygardening.com
getbusygardening.com
03.08.2023 / 16:51

How To Make Mustard Pickles (Recipe)

Mustard pickles are a yummy treat. This recipe is quick and easy to make – and it’s oh, so, delicious.

Rachel Platt: Her Vision for our Tatton Show Garden - jparkers.co.uk
jparkers.co.uk
03.08.2023 / 15:05

Rachel Platt: Her Vision for our Tatton Show Garden

Rachel Platt in the 'Chained to Tech' Tatton Garden. Image Source: Julie Skelton Photography. 

How To Propagate Wandering Jew (Tradescantia) In Water Or Soil - getbusygardening.com
getbusygardening.com
01.08.2023 / 19:29

How To Propagate Wandering Jew (Tradescantia) In Water Or Soil

Propagating wandering jew plants is very easy and makes a cost-effective way to expand your collection.

How to Save Marigold Seeds - gardengatemagazine.com
gardengatemagazine.com
28.07.2023 / 15:35

How to Save Marigold Seeds

Marigolds are super easy to grow and the perfect care-free bedding plant for containers, borders and mass plantings. If you need a lot of plants, you can save seed from spent flowers and grow them yourself next year to save money. Since marigolds reseed in the garden easily all by themselves, leave a few dried flowers to drop seed. Keep in mind t

30 Best Long Lasting Flowers for Yard & Garden - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
24.07.2023 / 13:37

30 Best Long Lasting Flowers for Yard & Garden

Discover the Most Long-Lasting Flowers for Yard and Garden! From perennials to stunning annuals, let’s explore the perfect floral choices to transform your yard and garden into a beautiful long lasting oasis.

30 Best Long Lasting Flowers for Yard and Garden - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
24.07.2023 / 11:43

30 Best Long Lasting Flowers for Yard and Garden

Here are the Best Long Lasting Flowers for Yard and Garden! From perennials to stunning annuals, let’s explore the perfect floral choices to transform your yard and garden into a beautiful long lasting oasis.

Taking a long look at lespedeza thunbergii - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:13

Taking a long look at lespedeza thunbergii

A rescue mission a few years back landed it in the sun again, and that’s what the bush clover wanted.Lespedeza thunbergii, a legume or pea relative as the shape of its flowers and foliage quickly gives away, is hardy in Zones 4-9. Give it sun, and not much else—well, except a very large space to grow into, as the arching stems of a mature bush clover will reach 6 feet across or wider, and stands nearly 6 feet high. My resurrected, relocated ‘Gibraltar’ is closing in on 8 feet across today.Various white forms, like ‘Albiflora’ or ‘White Fountain,’ are another possibility (I like the gaudier purple) and because he must always outdo us, plantsman Tony Avent offers the 4-by-6-foot ‘Spilt Milk,’ with purple flowers but wildly variegated foliage as its name implie

Long-weekend rant: do you like to mow? (part 2) - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:09

Long-weekend rant: do you like to mow? (part 2)

I HAVE A LOVE-HATE THING GOING WITH MOWING: I always feel it’s a time-waster, but I am also always relieved there’s “mowing to be done” since that means legitimate escape from things like writing the book I have due. Mowing has immediate, tangible results; you cut grass blades, and they look cut. You try to write and, well, sometimes you don’t get any words. So tell me, do you li

Recalling a long-ago june birthday - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:59

Recalling a long-ago june birthday

LIKE A GRADUATING SENIOR in that pointless last week of school, I have lost all ability to concentrate. I hadn’t been sure, until I sat down to write this, exactly what was on my mind, but it is full, so very annoyingly full that I awaken every morning when it is still dark to the tape playing in my head. It is a droning, relentless list, with lots of static punctuating entry after entry of musts, to-do’s, and did-I-remember-to’s.Probably it is partly the disease of gardening that does this to a person come June. At this time of year in my neighborhood, prime planting season is dwindling down to a precious few days, the only ones left before the relentless summer wilts all but the most vigorous transplant, and the most vigorous planter.This is my gardening prime, I suppose, as I toil away alone, pea

Giveaway: vines q&a with brushwood’s dan long - awaytogarden.com - state Pennsylvania - state Delaware
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:59

Giveaway: vines q&a with brushwood’s dan long

Brushwood Nursery, aka gardenvines [dot] com, was founded in 1998 in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, out of a Lord and Burnham greenhouse Dan rented for $5 a year plus upkeep. (Such a deal!) Dan, a University of Delaware horticulture graduate, used to teach at nearby Longwood Gardens and worked with Conard-Pyle, where he got fluent in the propagation of Clematis, which most nurseries call “a nuisance crop,” he says, with their particular trimming schedules and rambunctious intertwining tendencies.Enter a business opportunity: a high dollar-per-square-foot greenhouse crop, and one that not everyone is good at–enter Brushwood. He started selling vines over eBay, eventually launching his own website, and recently outgrew the climate and space in Pennsylvania and moved to Athens, Georgia.The Brushwood collection now numbers more than 500 climbers, with Clematis as the main event—including ‘Omoshiro,’ top photo, which may be the first large-flowered one I ever buy (it’s more than 7 inches across, and fragrant). There are climbing roses, jasmines, passionflowers and more–but let Dan tell

Estimating viability: how long do seeds last? - awaytogarden.com - state Virginia - state Iowa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:49

Estimating viability: how long do seeds last?

Most seed will last a couple to several years—but there are disclaimers to even that general a statement. As living things, seeds are perishable, particularly if not kept cool and dry (such as in a tightly sealed jar in the refrigerator or freezer). Humidity, in particular, is death to seeds.Treated and pelletized seed will also have a different shelf life from seed in its natural state. The condition of the original crop the seed was harvested from will also, of course, affect its perishability.The years of viability in my chart above, then (citing Fedco and Johnny’s Selected Seed catalogs, and the Iowa State and Virginia Tech extensions) are averages, not guarantees—and all presume responsible storage tactics (not that you

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
DMCA