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Fresh-start artist may sarton - awaytogarden.com - New York
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:15

Fresh-start artist may sarton

Sarton, who today is sometimes mentioned in the same breath as phrases like “women’s literature,” or covered in women’s studies curriculums, wrote more than 50 books. She actually came to my attention thanks to two men, at different times in my life. I might have missed her altogether if not for a one-two punch by Sydney Schanberg, an ex-New York Times colleague who thirty-odd years ago offhandedly said, “You would like May Sarton,” and then years later my therapist (who gave me “Journal of a Solitude”).It wasn’t her emerging influence on feminism that provoked their decades-ago recommendations. They knew that the natural world, and specifically the garden, called to me, as it did Sarton.“A garden is always a series of losses set against a few triumphs, like life itself,” she wrote.SARTON, A PROLIFIC POET and author of fiction, also wrote memoir

What did you say your favorite hosta was? - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:15

What did you say your favorite hosta was?

WE TALKED HOSTAS MONTHS AGO, in the dead of winter, when they were just twinkles in a gardener’s eye, or images pulled from color catalogs and memory.

A less-common autumn clematis, c. tangutica - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Japan
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:59

A less-common autumn clematis, c. tangutica

That’s not to say that C. tangutica cultivars aren’t beasts of a vine, too. As with C. terniflora, I cut these back hard in early spring, to less than a foot above the ground. They nevertheless produces a rampant amount of growth, to more than 10 feet tall, and around mid- to late August start to open up an increasing number of charming yellow bells: lemons with their peels unfurled in quarters. (If I didn’t hack it in spring, but simply clean out the dead stuff a little, it starts blooming for me in June.)I know I’m being imprecise, but frankly I cannot tell several of the good tangutica cultivars apart. I think mine’s‘Gravetye Variety,’ with deepest maroon anthers, and other good cultivars to look for include ‘Bill MacKenzie’ and ‘Golden Harvest.’ My tangutica type doesn’t cover itself in the sweet-scented froth of flowers of C. terniflora, a Japanese native that’s got a reputation as a terrible thug, or like its native American, far b

Garden open day and pot workshop: you coming? - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:52

Garden open day and pot workshop: you coming?

Sunday May 23 is Garden Conservancy Open Day from 10-4 (you can get details and directions at the Conservancy website, here). The $5 donation goes to their work to help preserve and promote gardens in America.Then Saturday May 29th, 11-1, my friend Bob Hyland of Loomis Creek and I do an encore of our most popular workshop of 2009: “Contained Exub

You say potato: growing sweet and white - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:48

You say potato: growing sweet and white

WHATEVER POTATO YOU SAY, SWEET OR WHITE, and however you pronounce it, the important thing is this: Are you making plans to grow these two cooperative, prolific crops in your home garden this year? The process begins now with starting or ordering slips (for sweet potatoes) and ordering seed potatoes (for white ones). My instructions for raising and storing a year of white potatoes, and a year of sweets.

Book giveaway: fresh-start artist may sarton - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:47

Book giveaway: fresh-start artist may sarton

NELSON, NH, THE SIGNPOST SAID, pointing off to the right of my backroads route to a recent bookstore event. I knew it led to the former home of a favorite author, May Sarton, but there was no time to detour, at least not then.

Clematis: sexy seedheads, but where’s the seed? - awaytogarden.com - Britain
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:46

Clematis: sexy seedheads, but where’s the seed?

The British Clematis Society’s seedhead page makes it all very clear, should the thought of propagating vines from seed–or just a deeper desire to understand what is going on outdoors, which is what always gets to me–cross your mind. Follow each of those feathery tails (the strands of silky stuff) down to the base of the puffball, and you’ll usually find the beginning of a seed. Those in the picture aren’t ripe yet, in case you’re wondering. Still too shiny.(*Or maybe you’re just wondering what a wig-hat is? Don’t ask me; I learned the phrase from Tommy Tucker’s much-covered 1964 Number 1 single. It’s apparently something you wear with “High-Heel Sneakers,” as the tune was titled. My Clematis didn’t read the enti

Wishing you soaring joy: the camera man’s gifts - awaytogarden.com - city Chicago - city Boston
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:40

Wishing you soaring joy: the camera man’s gifts

I DIDN’T KNOW WHAT TO GIVE YOU for the holidays, and so I went window-shopping up and down the aisles of the internet, where suddenly I found just the right thing: the uplifting images by “the camera man” Leslie Jones, from the Boston Public Library’s massive collection. Consider this slideshow my holiday card to you.

5 things you must read while i savage my garden - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:38

5 things you must read while i savage my garden

WHY WOULD ANY SANE PERSON hack her front yard down to stubble and mulch? Because many early performers—including some of the most popular euphorbias, like polychroma; some perennial geraniums such as macrorrhizum and phaeum; catmints and pulmonarias and some salvias (‘May Night,’ for instance) and much, much more will truly look like hell in a little while if you don’t spare them the descent into that state with a stern haircut. My brutal tactics.Bulbs Gone ByYES, YOU CAN FINALLY CUT BACK the faded foliage of your spring bulbs, provided they have started to pale toward tan. If not yet, it will be any week now (I usually mow my big drifts around July 4; sometimes they ripen sooner). My Bulb FAQ includes this and other care, like what to do with bulbs that didn’t bloom well.Plant More VegetablesIKNOW, YOU HAVEN’T even eaten a green bean

Dear gayla: how resilient are you feeling? - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:31

Dear gayla: how resilient are you feeling?

Frankly, I am now officially almost ready to surrender! Each wheelbarrow load pushed to the compost heap brings me closer to that goal. The wisdom I always refer to when I am pondering the season’s scorecard—as I always do at cleanup time–is the late author (and gardener) May Sarton’s:‘A garden is always a series of losses set against a few triumphs, like life itself.’She wrote that in the 1960s. This year’s triumphs had little to do with me–but with the more-than-plentiful rain, which got every fruiting thing, including all my many hollies and viburnums, really loaded

Extend your clematis bloom season to spring through fall, with dan long - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:25

Extend your clematis bloom season to spring through fall, with dan long

When I’m plant shopping, I try to discipline myself by reciting a little mantra: “early, middle, late.” As in: It’s a long season of possibilities, if you plan correctly. Early, middle, late is the reminder to fill my garden-center wagon (or my online shopping cart) with more than a single moment of a favorite plant, and enjoy a prolonged season.You might already be following that advice with lilacs or daffodils or daylilies and have not just one variety but a whole sequence, but we can—and should—be doing it with Clematis, too.My vine-mad friend Dan Long ofBrushwood Nursery, longti

What Is A Rain Barrel And Can It Actually Save You Money? - southernliving.com - state Texas
southernliving.com
28.06.2023 / 09:01

What Is A Rain Barrel And Can It Actually Save You Money?

Water is essential for life. Your plants need water to grow and thrive, and more during the hotter months. Ever wondered about catching rain to use during times when there is less or no rain? Installing a rain barrel allows you to do exactly that: collect and store a natural resource for later use. Harvesting rainwater has many benefits from saving money on your water bill to utilizing what freely falls from the sky for times when raindrops aren’t so abundant.

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