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Japanese Maple – Root and Branch Review - gardenerstips.co.uk - Usa - Netherlands - Japan - city Boston
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 15:05

Japanese Maple – Root and Branch Review

Ornamental Japanese Maples are widely available for planting in your garden. The autumn colouring makes these trees spectacular when planted en mass in a woodland or Japanese garden setting.

Poppy Companion Planting with Vegetables - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 15:03

Poppy Companion Planting with Vegetables

Think before you allow poppies to proliferate. Poppies rob a lot of goodness from your soil.

Growing Anthemis a Grand Yellow Daisy - gardenerstips.co.uk - city Boston
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:47

Growing Anthemis a Grand Yellow Daisy

If you like daisy flowers then you will love Anthemis. A couple of varieties, to grow, are shown above and detailed below.

Georg Adalbert Arends Old German Plantsman - gardenerstips.co.uk - Germany
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:40

Georg Adalbert Arends Old German Plantsman

Georg Arends was a German nurseryman who bred many perennial plants. His business was successful until the second world war and has been regenerated to be one of the oldest in Europe. It still remains within the Arends family.

Banana Republic and Musa Review - gardenerstips.co.uk - Britain
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:38

Banana Republic and Musa Review

I have just finished eating a Fyffes banana grown in Costa Rica. They were certified by the Rainforest Alliance and were sold as ‘Ripe, snack size bananas’ and a very appropriate  name it was. In our fruit bowl we also have ‘organic Fairtrade bananas fro the Dominican Republic cutesy of the EEC at least until brexit by which time they will be well overripe.

Greening Public Spaces Peel Park Bradford - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:34

Greening Public Spaces Peel Park Bradford

Early crocus amongst leaf litter, the only good litter feeding the soil Wet weather reflects on the tree roots There is still colour to be found not least on these Rowan berries Sorbus hupehensis Listers Mill in the afternoon light with a ring of trees on the horizon and in the foreground.

The Best Plants For Hanging Baskets - southernliving.com - city Boston
southernliving.com
25.07.2023 / 22:41

The Best Plants For Hanging Baskets

Hanging baskets bring gardens up to eye level, making a garden feel fuller and more complete. On the porch they create an immediate sense of welcome, while plants hanging outside windows create a connection between the indoor and outdoor worlds. Use them to dress up walls or decorate tree branches. The best plants for hanging baskets take advantage of their heightened locations, with trailing stems that cascade over a container’s edges. They also stand up to the challenging conditions of container life. Container plants need consistent moisture. Locate hanging baskets close to a water source and consider attaching a watering wand to the hose to extend your reach. Drip irrigation also works well for containers. Hanging baskets will likely need watering every day in the heat of summer. Try combining several varieties with similar needs, and experiment to find the best mix for your porch or patio.

3 links worth a busy gardener’s browsing time - awaytogarden.com - Washington - Norway - city Boston
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:09

3 links worth a busy gardener’s browsing time

BASIL DISASTER? I always enjoy Adrian Higgins’s pieces in The Washington Post, though I suppose enjoy isn’t the right word for a story about how a fungal disease is making basil harder to cultivate successfully. Downy mildew—not a new affliction in greenhouses and gardens, but newish to basil in particular—is on the march. Get the details in this great story.A WEED BY ANY OTHER NAME? A couple of weeks ago, esteemed senior research scientist Peter Del Tredici of the Arnold Arboretum was interviewed in The Boston Globe, and shared his view

A rose by any other name is stone fruit, & dessert - awaytogarden.com - city Boston - state Indiana
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:55

A rose by any other name is stone fruit, & dessert

WHAT WE CALL STONE FRUITS all grow on trees in the genus Prunus, and have a hard, stony pit inside them (their seed), with fleshy fruit around it—unlike so-called pome fruits (see below).Apricots, cherries, nectarines, plums (and therefore prunes), and some interspecies hybrids of the above, like plumcots and pluots, are all stone fruits. So are peaches (like the ones in the 1940 harvesting photo by Lee Russell, in the Library of Congress archive, top, or just above in the print from Boston Public Library’s).And then there’s the trick-question one, the stone fruit you think of as a nut. What’s that?Almond, of course: Prunus dulcis.What’s a Pome Fruit?I KNOW, IT’S STONE FRUIT WEEK, but hey,

May 20 container workshop: win a ticket! - awaytogarden.com - city Boston - state New York - county Hudson - county Valley
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:50

May 20 container workshop: win a ticket!

We’ll cover everything from what makes a good potting medium and how to read the labels of those bags at the garden centers, to why not just annuals but also perennials and even trees and shrubs belong in outdoors pots (a philosophy I call, “Hosta pot? Why not?”). Also on the agenda: overwintering tactics for “investment plants” so you can learn to extend your palette without breaking your budget. (Those are some examples in the photo shot by Bob, below, of Phormium and succulent pots in his garden. Want more pot ideas? All my container-garden stories can be browsed at this link.)And, of course, design and staging of pots in the landscape—speaking of which, the workshop includes a garden walk-through at my place. Featured plants–really special things from Landcraft Environments–will be available for purchase as well, so that registrants can get the raw materials for their own home creations.‘Contained Exuberance’ Details

The seed library buzz on attracting good bugs - awaytogarden.com - Iran - Germany - county Hudson - county Valley
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:44

The seed library buzz on attracting good bugs

Technically speaking, a “good bug bloom” would be one whose individual flowers are small (even if they’re massed in a big flowerhead, as dill or fennel are), and whose pollen and nectar are exposed for easy access.  They’d attract beneficial insect pollinators and predators—lacewings, for instance, or ladybugs, or ground beetles or beneficial wasps—creatures who spread pollen and/or feed on insect pests.A succession of beneficial blooms—not just one species or variety—will yield season-long appeal to a range of desired insects in all their life phases. Co-founder Ken Greene of Hudson Valley Seed Library says their Good Bug Blooms mix was formulated with that (and also eye-appeal to humans) in mind.Their current mix includes sulphur Cosmos, annual Gaillardia, ‘Lilliput Mix’ zinnia,

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