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Pelargonium Grandiflorum and other ‘Geraniums’ - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:51

Pelargonium Grandiflorum and other ‘Geraniums’

I have tried to grow several Pelargonium varieties this year and been pleasantly surprised at the various forms and colours I have succeeded in producing.

Coral and Other Pink Flowers - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:51

Coral and Other Pink Flowers

A bit of light relief for a dark corner! Spreads well but easliy controlled like butter (take a knife too it..

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.

‘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

Why i plant spinach late, and other tasty tidbits - awaytogarden.com - state Maine
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:01

Why i plant spinach late, and other tasty tidbits

I have been known to plant spinach in my mittens, actually, as late as Thanksgiving, and again as early as March if the raised beds have drained out and the soil is workable. Seeds sown from September until the ground freezes up, then topped with a floating row cover, will offer a real headstart of a harvest in the North in April, when much

Galls, leaf mines and other tracks and signs of insects (win a field guide!) - awaytogarden.com - Usa - state Vermont
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:55

Galls, leaf mines and other tracks and signs of insects (win a field guide!)

Charley Eiseman and Noah Charney’s 2010 book is full of photos of all the oddball things you see outside (if you stop long enough to notice!): egg cases and cocoons and all kinds of webs; folded and curled-up leaves as if something’s hidden inside (it is!); and all manner of bumps, lumps, notches, and holes in foliage, bark, you name it. Even tiny previously unexplained pattern in the sand…and soil…a.k.a. tracks and signs of insects.“I’ve always been interested in everything around me,” says Charley, whose Master’s degree is from the University of Vermont’s field naturalist program. “Then someone gave me a digital camera right after I graduated from college, so I started paying closer attention to the little things.  And then I started wishing I had a field guide to tell me what all these signs left by insects and other invertebrates were—but it just didn’t seem to exist.”Charley and Noah took it upon themselves to create that guide, in “Tracks and Sign of Insect

Japanese maples and other choice acer, with adam wheeler of broken arrow - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Japan
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:53

Japanese maples and other choice acer, with adam wheeler of broken arrow

Adam and I talked about not just the Japanese types, but also other garden-sized maples for adding interest in every season and garden situation–in pots or the high shade of woodland gardens, to full-sun locations.my maple q&a with adam wheelerQ. When I was at Broken Arrow recently, there were many choice things to look at—but I kept noticing the maples you offer, particularly. How many do you grow?A. In the collection at the nursery, I suspect we have 150 or 200 different maples, and really that’s the tip of the iceberg with this genus.Q. There are a lot of native A

Week 5: hellebores, salamander eggs, and other timely teachers - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:52

Week 5: hellebores, salamander eggs, and other timely teachers

I was fighting the cues: wanting to get on with cutting miles of clean edges between turf and beds despite sodden soil (answer: don’t!) or rake some grassy areas that are still plastered with leafy, twiggy winter detritus but likewise still soft. Again: no can do, without pulling up the lawn.As much as I want to make it all “just so” in time for Open Day next weekend—maybe I can’t.The orientalis hybrid hellebores (Helleborus x orientalis) know about

Gardening with bear (and other late arrivals) - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:52

Gardening with bear (and other late arrivals)

Ten size-XL paw prints adorned the back porch; on the front welcome mat was deposited some apparently undesirable reject from the compost pile–not tasty enough, I guess. Feeding the birds? Not me, at least not right now. Project Feeder Watch, a bird-counting program with Cornell Lab of Ornithology that I look forward to each year (as you can read here), starts Saturday, but I think I’ll skip a week or two before I put out any more feeders. Extra-warm weather has at least one of the local bears on an extended feeding frenzy; the birds will have to be patient. After all, look what happened to the iron pole holding up the one feeder I

Cecropia moths, millipedes and other wonders - awaytogarden.com - Usa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:44

Cecropia moths, millipedes and other wonders

TIME FOR A LITTLE NON-PLANT MOMENT, captured in a quick jumble of other-than-botanical snapshots from around the garden lately.

Frog condos: oxalis, bromeliads and other habitats - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:42

Frog condos: oxalis, bromeliads and other habitats

The guy up top (a green frog, Rana clamitans) spent most of the season tucked into a big pot of Oxalis vulcanicola by the bigger frogpond out back, soaking up the rays and waiting for unsuspecting insects to pass his way. The male green frog who made his summer home my above-ground seasonal water gardens–two big troughs I fill with water by my kitchen door, like this–considered a nearby bromeliad (in this case a Vriesea) to be his digs, when he wasn’t at poolside. (Some years little tree frogs have tucked the

Snoop on giant rutabaga and other ‘vegetation’ - awaytogarden.com - Britain
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:37

Snoop on giant rutabaga and other ‘vegetation’

I COULDN’T RESIST (which is, of course, why Snoop Dogg made the video, right?–to get all of us “gardeners” into the fold, or at least to his upcoming concert in Cardiff, Wales). I would bet my garden harvest that this is the first video to combine Brassica napobrassica, the giant rutabaga (the British call them “swedes”), with Cannabis sativa, which Snoop Dogg calls “vegetation”–as in “I do vegetation myself, and I want to know your secret.” Whose secret does Snoop want? That of Welshman Ian Neale, whose prize-winning “swede” was 85.5 pounds–and awaits confirmation as a world record.

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