salad
strawberries
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Create a Barbie dream garden with many shades of pink - irishtimes.com - Ireland
irishtimes.com
13.08.2023 / 04:15

Create a Barbie dream garden with many shades of pink

My childhood self never owned a Barbie doll. Instead it was her British-made rival Sindy that I loved with a passion, from her sleek blonde chignon, sugar-pink tutu and hot-pink ballet slippers to the distinctive magenta-pink-and-black, heart-shaped Sindy logo that featured so prominently on the packaging. Too many years later, I still remember her with fondness.

Feel the Holiday Spirit with a Real Christmas Tree by Fantastic Gardeners - blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk - Scotland - city London
blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk
07.08.2023 / 11:42

Feel the Holiday Spirit with a Real Christmas Tree by Fantastic Gardeners

The all-year round wait is over – Fantastic Gardeners brings you the jolly hugs of evergreen trees! From this month forward, real Christmas tree delivery is available at every door in London. Forget the hassle and concentrate on gift selection or yummy recipe browsing, while we take care of the centrepiece in your holiday decoration.

Botanical Illustration and Gardener’s Art Books - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:49

Botanical Illustration and Gardener’s Art Books

For something a bit different this book on botanic art covers some of the unusual colours from black flowers, plants and seaweed like strange green, blue and puce pink.

Infusing Water with Fruits, Herbs and Spices - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:28

Infusing Water with Fruits, Herbs and Spices

Most people can benefit from drinking more water. Here’s how to make it more exciting!

Growing native fruit trees: pawpaws and persimmons, with lee reich - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state Maryland
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:07

Growing native fruit trees: pawpaws and persimmons, with lee reich

Lee’s tips for growing pawpaw or American persimmon couldn’t make it sound more appealing, or simple:“Plant it, water it, and keep weeds and deer away for a couple of years, and then do nothing,” he says. No fancy pruning (like those apples crave), no particular pests–and a big, juicy harvest. More details on how to choose which variety to grow are included in the highlights from the April 29, 2013 edition of my public-radio show and podcast, transcribed below. To hear the entire interview, use the streaming player below. You can subscribe to all future editions on iTunes or Stitcher (and browse my archive of podcasts here).growing ame

‘making more plants’ with ken druse (and how to avoid damping off) - awaytogarden.com - city Brussels
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:07

‘making more plants’ with ken druse (and how to avoid damping off)

Like all of Ken’s 18 books (!!!), “Making More Plants: The Science, Art and Joy of Propagation” is rich in instruction, but also visually arresting, since he’s an award-winning photographer, too.  It covers the botany of propagation—the why’s behind how you can make more plants of a particular species sexually or asexually or both—because as Ken says:“It is not essential to learn about botany to garden well; it’s inevitable.”Then in words and intimate pictures he covers virtually every tactic for doing so, from seed-sowing to leaf and root cuttings, to layering, grafting, division and more.  The photos are so beautiful, and Ken’s obvious enthusiasm so evident on every page, that I want to try everything. (Just what I nee

Organic lawn care with paul tukey: crabgrass control, reducing compaction - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Canada - state Maryland
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:07

Organic lawn care with paul tukey: crabgrass control, reducing compaction

IF YOU ARE STILL USING any synthetic chemicals on your lawn, I hope you will stop. So does Paul Tukey. When he founded SafeLawns in 2006, Paul says, “It didn’t occur to people that their lawns could be dangerous.”“The sad reality is that we know that a lot of the chemicals used to grow the lawn (the fertilizers), or the chemicals used to control weeds or insects or fungal diseases—all  of these chemicals are designed to kill things, and they can make us very sick, and they make the water very sick, and the soil very sick, and the air very unhealthy.”Giving up chemicals doesn’t mean you have to pave over your front yard.“We will have lawns long after all these chemicals are banned in the United States, as they have been banned in Canada,” says Paul—explaining that more than 80 percent of Canadians cannot use weed and feed products, or glyphosate (the active ingredient in Roundup herbicide) because they are

Designing with magnolias, with andrew bunting - awaytogarden.com - city Chicago - state Illinois - state Pennsylvania
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:06

Designing with magnolias, with andrew bunting

Andrew, who is now assistant director of the Chicago Botanic Garden, is past president of Magnolia Society International’s board of directors, and remains a member of the society’s board. In his tenure over 20 years as curator at Scott Arboretum of Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania, Andrew built the magnolia collection from about 50 to more than 200 cultivars. That’s a lot of magnolias.Now Andrew Bunting is author of a book on the queen of flowering trees, called “The Plant Lover’s Guide to Magnolias,” just out from Timber Press as part of an ongoing series on various distinctive genera of plants.We talked magnolias on my public-radio show and podcast. Read along while you listen in to the April 25, 2016 edition of the podcast using the player below (or at this link)–and even learn how to train a magnolia or any w

Links: intimate flowers, bird poop, and why vulnerability is a good thing - awaytogarden.com - state Florida - state Massachusets
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:02

Links: intimate flowers, bird poop, and why vulnerability is a good thing

EXPLODING Eremurus, why vulnerability is good for us, and the answer to why bird poop is white—all, and more, in the latest collections of links I’ve loved lately while staring into my computer screen (which I alternately do between long gazes out the window). Five links worth exploring:

The latest on backyard tick research, with dr. neeta connally - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state Connecticut
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:56

The latest on backyard tick research, with dr. neeta connally

In the fall of 2016, Dr. Connally won a $1.6 million grant from the Centers for Disease Control to fund a four-year study, in coordination with the University of Rhode Island, to gauge the effectiveness of various tick control methods in the areas around people’s homes. She’ll tell us more about the angles being pursued, and also about self-care topics, from treated clothing to the use of topical repellents and more.Read along as you listen to the Dec. 11, 2017 edition of my public-radio show and podcast using the player below. You can subscribe to all future editions on iTunes or Stitcher (and browse my archive of podcasts here).backyard tick research, with dr. neeta connallyQ. A little context first: You’re in the Northeast, where a lot of the cases of Lyme in the United States occur, but there are multiple tick species around the nation. You

My growing fascination with (yup!) fungus - awaytogarden.com - Netherlands
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:50

My growing fascination with (yup!) fungus

FIRST, A LITTLE SCIENCE LESSON: Fungi don’t have chlorophyll, so they cannot make their own food (like plants do), nor can they ingest it (like animals), except through absorption from their surrounding environment. Most fungi are saprophytes, meaning they feed on dead or decaying material, like the leaf litter of the forest floor—or the debris in your compost heap. Their second critical role: Most of the plant kingdom depends on symbiotic fungi called mycorrhizae, which inhabit the plants’ roots, to live. (Thank you for patiently listening to that.)I MADE PIZZA THE OTHER DAY (no, not a mushroom pizza), something I do a lot from scratch, and when the yeast acted oddly I did what any 21st century human does: I looked for an explanation online. I still don’t know what caused my yeast to misbehave, but here’s what I learned: The kind of yeast you bake with (or make beer or champagne with) are unicellular fungi, technically sp

Of sharing friendship, books, and lentil soup: adventures with katrina kenison and me - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:46

Of sharing friendship, books, and lentil soup: adventures with katrina kenison and me

Katrina and I have celebrated our similarities and differences since we met a couple of years ago at a book-industry trade show(read the whole story on her website). We both have corporate-publishing backgrounds, but then chose country, not city, as backdrops for our “second half” of life. Our differences aren’t really so different, we learned when reading the manuscripts last year to each other’s new books-to-be, “Magical Journey: An Apprenticeship in Contentment,” and“The Backyard Parables: Lessons on Gardening, and Life.”Katrina has been nurturing a husband and two sons for 25 years, the same time I’ve been mothering a sometimes-unruly gaggle of plants. (Yes, the garden has proven to be as worthy and complicated a life partner as any human mate.) Her new book isn’t about gardening, like mine is; it’s about finding herself with an empty nest. But we both explore themes like impermanence, adaptability, and the “what’s next” question we all find ourselves facing over and again—in the seasons of a garden, or a human life.Maybe owing to decades of cooking for her three hungry guys, Katrina is the kind of guest who always arrives

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