Kristina HicksHamblin
plants
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Kristina HicksHamblin
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How to Grow Plumeria from Cuttings? - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
03.08.2023 / 11:01

How to Grow Plumeria from Cuttings?

This step-by-step How to Grow Plumeria from Cuttings guide will empower you with the knowledge and techniques needed to propagate this remarkable flower successfully!

‘The fresh air is good for the head’: The joy and community to be found in city allotments - irishtimes.com
irishtimes.com
29.07.2023 / 04:03

‘The fresh air is good for the head’: The joy and community to be found in city allotments

It’s a glorious July Saturday. The sun is showering this corner of the world with warmth and optimism. The earth’s bounty and human toil, and some craic, surrounds us, and you can hear the stream nearby and the birds in the trees. There is abundance and productivity and nature and community and generosity.

How to Grow Dieffenbachia from Cuttings | Propagating Dumb Cane Plant - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
24.07.2023 / 12:37

How to Grow Dieffenbachia from Cuttings | Propagating Dumb Cane Plant

If you love the large variegated foliage of the dumb cane plant, then learn How to Grow Dieffenbachia from Cuttings and propagate its clones easily!

The Cilantro-Coriander Connection - hgic.clemson.edu - Britain - Italy - Spain
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:10

The Cilantro-Coriander Connection

Want to know how to get two distinct flavors from one plant? Well, the plant known as Coriandrum sativum can provide just that. C. sativum is commonly cultivated as a low growing, vegetative herb known as cilantro that adds a savory flavor to many foods and dishes. However, not everyone knows that the seed produced by C. sativum is commonly referred to as coriander. Coriander is used whole or often ground as a spice to provide delectable flavor to many traditional and newer fusion-type meals. The herb and the spice come from the same plant, just different parts. For this reason, C. sativum is referred to with two different common names.

Growing Gold in the Winter Landscape - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:04

Growing Gold in the Winter Landscape

I’ve made it clear in this blog that Winter is my least favorite season. Therefore, I always seek winter-blooming flowers to raise my spirits. However, before the yellow-flowered daffodils bloom to give me hope that Spring is coming, I rely on the soft-textured drooping gold threadlike leaves of golden threadleaf sawara cypress (Chamaecyparis pisifera ‘Filifera Aurea’).

Doodle by andre: in the still of the night - awaytogarden.com - Britain - Jordan
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:12

Doodle by andre: in the still of the night

No, I have still not met Andre, though we’ve been in contact for more than a year. But we grow a little closer every week when the latest stash of doodles-in-progress arrives, and I get glimmers into the thought process that is behind them, just like I did when I read his memoir, “Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now.” (There is no better book to give your shrink; it should be on the curriculum of psychoanalytic institutes and departments of psychiatry in teaching hospitals and schools of social work, I swear. Insurance companies should mail it out to all patients using mental-health coverage, so they know they are not alone.) Some week

‘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

Andy brand’s passions: from rare epimedium to butterfly-sustaining weeds - awaytogarden.com - state Connecticut
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:50

Andy brand’s passions: from rare epimedium to butterfly-sustaining weeds

Andy is nursery manager of Broken Arrow in Hamden CT, a destination nursery with an extensive retail operation plus a giant mail-order catalog of unusual things. His 25-year-old personal Epimedium collection includes more than 150 kinds, with other shade treasures such as Solomon’s seal, or Polygonatum, and some lookalikes also on his radar.Broken Arrow, where he has worked for 25 years, is known for unusual things: “Especially if it’s variegated, dwarf, or has contorted branches, or there’s something that’s not quite looking right about the plant”–in the very best way, of course–Andy says you’ll find it there. Plants with an irresistible twist

Doodle by andre: never heard from again - awaytogarden.com - Jordan
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:40

Doodle by andre: never heard from again

WELL, THIS SOLVED ONE OF LIFE’S GREAT MYSTERIES, at least for me.

Seed libraries in the headlines: some grounding perspective, from ken greene - awaytogarden.com - state Pennsylvania - county Hudson - county Valley
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:25

Seed libraries in the headlines: some grounding perspective, from ken greene

Apparently letting people check out seed, then deposit new seed from their subsequent harvest, would violate Pennsylvania’s Seed Act of 2004. Words like “agri-terrorism” were uttered. I asked veteran seed-library insider Ken Greene of Hudson Valley Seed Library, who founded the first seed library in a public town library in the nation, to lend some perspective.Our conversation helped me understand more about what happened; about what a seed library is, anyhow, and the challenges it can face–and why such regulations are in force, anyhow. My questions after I read that original Sentinel story, and Ken Greene’s answers:Q. So let’s start with what happened, Ken. A. A few months back I was forwarded an email from

Quick stocks and other tips from deborah madison - awaytogarden.com - state New Mexico
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:23

Quick stocks and other tips from deborah madison

Last time we spoke, Deborah’s high-desert garden had been suffering without rain. “It’s the same this year, sadly: severe drought,” she said. “I do have some things up, though. My sorrel plant is up, and lovage, tarragon, salad burnet and chives—the little green things that you’re so grateful for.”The latest edition, updating 1997’s bestselling, award-winning “Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone,” has more than 150 new recipes, among an impressive 1,600 in a massive volume. Expect to take many delicious detours—even when the subject is something as seemingly simple as barley (five variations are offered) or mashed potatoes. Whip them up plain (Deborah includes a p

Choicest magnolias and how to prune them, with andrew bunting - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:23

Choicest magnolias and how to prune them, with andrew bunting

FULL SUN (or light shade in hotter zones), and well-drained soil that’s high in organic matter is the basic regimen (though the sweetbay magnolia, M. virginiana, can also take a wet spot). Give the others those requirements, plus a light layer of aged organic mulch, and they generally will thrive. Fertilizing isn’t needed, says Andrew. (At Scott they only mulch the circles of trees in lawn areas, using a combination of leaf compost and one-year-old composted wood chips.)Magnolias are not the easiest to plant under, however, because of their fleshy, moisture-hogging root systems.  “Some plants that can take dry shade will make a go of it,” he says, suggesting Epimedium, or Asarum, or Christmas fern. Among bulbs, try Scilla, or Chionodoxa, or even toadlilies (Tricyrtis), he recommends.Magnolia grandiflora, the so-called Southern magnol

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