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Create the ultimate urban garden - theenglishgarden.co.uk
theenglishgarden.co.uk
28.07.2023 / 12:21

Create the ultimate urban garden

“A very common issue with urban gardens is the lack of space. We suggest that people approach this as an opportunity rather than an issue. Like The Shifting Garden that we presented at Chelsea Flower Show, containers can be the allies to create a lush and inviting outdoor space. We can play with different textures, sizes and colours to fit any space. The downsize of using containers is that they drain fairly quicky and the plants need more attention, but an irrigation system is the best solution. If the floorspace is small, consider the vertical elements of the space: walls, trellises, staggered pots.”

How to Make the Most of Gray Water to Reduce Your Water Consumption - bhg.com
bhg.com
25.07.2023 / 13:01

How to Make the Most of Gray Water to Reduce Your Water Consumption

We’re all used to recycling the cardboard and soda cans that come through our homes, but did you know you can recycle your home’s used water, too? (Don’t worry; we’re not talking about the really dirty stuff!)

“Carolina Gold” Rice Growing in the Hanover House Garden - hgic.clemson.edu - state South Carolina - county Garden
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 11:55

“Carolina Gold” Rice Growing in the Hanover House Garden

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.

Have you browsed my garden slideshows? - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:10

Have you browsed my garden slideshows?

I KNOW, SOME OF YOU ARE ON TO THIS ALREADY, but in case you’re not: By clicking this link (equivalent to clicking the word “slideshows” in the “Topics” in the far-left column  of every page on the blog) you can browse through all the slideshows I’ve posted in two-plus years of blogging. King of fun, huh (especially if you’re someone who likes show-don’t-tell)? I love posting my photos taken in the yard here this way; what fun it has been for me.

In bloom now: the first march garden arrivals - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:04

In bloom now: the first march garden arrivals

GARDEN CLEANUP HAS ITS REWARDS. There you are poking around with a pruning shears or a rake, cutting some things back and uncovering others, and suddenly you find them: the first brave souls to bloom.  From snowdrops (above) to the bravest shrub of all, a quick rundown of the first heat out of the gate:Helleborus niger, the so-called Christmas rose, is always extra-early.

Radio podcast: the 365-day garden - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:52

Radio podcast: the 365-day garden

I know it can feel about now as if someone sucked the life out of things…but maybe a few of the thoughts we discussed in these two recent podcasts will help make you a believer, too?Part 1: The 365-Day Garden (beginning at the 9:10 minute mark, after a discussion of night-blooming cereus, which radio host Jill Goodman was wondering how to overwinter) Part 2: Don’t Forget the Conifers (podcast about some of

The art of garden-making, with dan benarcik - awaytogarden.com - city Seattle - state Pennsylvania - state New York - county Garden - state Delaware
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:47

The art of garden-making, with dan benarcik

THE FLYER PIQUED MY INTEREST: Dan Benarcik, part of the creative team at Chanticleer Garden in Wayne, Pennsylvania (a must visit!), would be lecturing nearby about “The Art & Craft of the Garden,” and how to personalize a garden using artistic elements, found artifacts, and ornamental containers. I quickly got a ticket—you can, too, for the June 16 event, including garden tours and a garden market, in Spencertown, New York—but also asked Dan to share some of his ideas and images (including the bromeliad-artemisia- urn-and-melianthus moment at Chanticleer, above) with us, no matter whether we can attend. A Q&A with this enormously talented plantsman and garden artist.

The unholy holey garden: tackling slugs - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:41

The unholy holey garden: tackling slugs

I WAS ALMOST RELIEVED TO HEAR FROM a longtime reader that his Geranium macrorrhizum looked like some kind of lace–“shot through with tiny holes,” and that “this has never happened before.” Me too, and me either. Hostas, yes, and so many other things–but the trouble-free, aromatic, tough-as-nails bigroot geranium? All I can say is: 2012 is host to some fierce breed of slugs–and thanks to another reader, I have also found cabbage looper caterpillars‘ excrement (ahem!) in the geraniums, alongside the slime trails.

What the hail brought: garden reflections - awaytogarden.com - state Oklahoma - county Garden
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:38

What the hail brought: garden reflections

Each day in the garden reminds me that I am blessed, even when it is raining ping-ping balls of ice from on high, as in the video clip above. (Try watching it full screen by clicking the Vimeo logo; for perspective, it’s shot through a window and the pond in the distance is more than 25 feet from where I was standing, in awe.)BEFORE FIVE concurrent weather warnings converged overhead that afternoon to form the hailstones and, eerily, a small tornado, I had been thinking about Oklahomans, including the Shawnee garden club I’d lectured to in 1999. It was the first time I’d ever seen the formidable red clay up close—I think I actually said, “Is that soil?” before I got hold of myself and my manners. Also on my mind was Dee Nash, the “Red Dirt Ramblings” garden writer who always has a smile and a kind word. Even this last week; even among her tears.“After tornadoes

Missed the workshop? container-garden 101 - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:38

Missed the workshop? container-garden 101

TWO CLASS SESSIONS FULL OF YOU visited one recent May to talk about container gardening, but for those who didn’t take the workshop in person, a recap seemed in order since it’s that time: everything into the pots!top container tips THOSE ARE MY WHEELBARROWS of some possible pot subjects, along with some full and empty pots, some tuteurs (metal towers), houseplants just dragged out, and more. It’s what one reader and attendee at the workshop calls the “Dance of a Thousand Plants” right now…wheeling or carrying things you bought or had around, looking for where they go, and scurrying to get them under cover if a cold night interrupts the planning.

Links: politics of the food supply, garden movie history, tarragon oil and more - awaytogarden.com - Usa - New York - state California
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:34

Links: politics of the food supply, garden movie history, tarragon oil and more

“Vote for the Dinner Party,” the headline on Pollan’s story reads, says, and then the subhed: “Is this the year that the food movement finally enters politics?” It’s pegged to the looming vote on Prop 37, the California Ballot Initiative on the labeling of genetically modified food (which as Pollan points out is not some new invention, but something Americans have been eating for 18 years).  But it goes much farther, because as he says:“What is at stake this time around is not just the fate of genetically modified crops but the public’s confidence in the industrial food chain.” A must read (which will appear in print in the Sunday Times magazine).more on prop 37, with an infographicWANT TO READ MORE about Prop 37, and particularly about what companies support labeling and don’t–a shocking list, if you haven’t s

Feed the bees: plants for pollinators, with the xerces society - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:25

Feed the bees: plants for pollinators, with the xerces society

It begins with a dedication that includes these words:“…to everyone who tears up their front yard to plant big chaotic wildflower gardens, to farmers who think hedgerows and wildflower field borders are just as important as crops, to urban planners and landscapers wh

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