Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Zester Daily Soapbox: "Waking From Our Lawn Coma" by Margie Grace, Grace Design Associates
Chanticleer: A true pleasure!
From Asian gardens and a water garden to artistry among the paths that end in surprising whimsy, (like a carved stone "settee"), there's something that will delight just about everyone looking for an escape from the hub-bub of our busy lives. (Stacey is trying out the built in remote on the arm rest!)
Enjoy these images but better yet, plan a visit. You won't be disappointed.
~Lynne
GMG
Taking on a bromeliad
I was dreading this job. The spikes on this bromeliad are painful and I have the scars to prove it.
I will be dividing all these pops.
Now you can see the crown of thorns.
Would you pay $5 for these bromeliads if you find them in a garage sale?
My wife is planning a garage sale later this month and I am thinking of having a bromeliad sale. Should I ask for more???
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Fall for container gardening!
Golden-yellow beauty!
Fall is in the air
The weather was so nice that I couldn’t resist a long bike ride; it truly felt like fall. The temperature was in the low seventies with a nice breeze blowing from the Everglades.
There is nothing like an intense exercise outside in pleasant weather, it takes away all the stresses of the day.
Ibises or as they are known around here “Florida pigeons”
This lonely Great Egret was looking for diner.
Another spectacular Florida sunset.
Today was the official start of the dry season, according to an article in the local newspaper. Scientists predict a particularly dry season this year, I hope the plentiful rainy season will get us through the winter. The year around water restrictions are in effect.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Garden Bloggers' Muse Day -September 1
Blame It All On My Roots
Blame it all on my roots because I am returning to the garden of my youth, one that combines flowers, fruit, herbs and veggies. I get very sentimental when I think of how our family was sustained by the good earth's bounty and the fruits of our labor .
Here's my new raised herb bed which I made with stones left from a previous owner.
The rosemary topiary in the center is the first I've kept alive with a grow light over the winter . The hen contains golden oregano and the other pot, thyme. I plan to use seeds in the Spring to fill the bed with basil, cilantro, chives, garlic and sage.
I couldn't resist these two cone-shaped boxwoods and will add long-blooming roses and other flowering plants to the border below.
Why is it that a garden seems small until you start digging? Clearing the area, removing and transplanting , hauling the stone from storage and filling the bed took me 7 hours. I thought I'd be sore the next day because I haven't been able to work outside much this extremely hot summer but the ole' bod rose to the task.
Although there's a lot of work yet to be done I think I've made a very good start.
Written by Carolyngail at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago All rights reserved
Autumn Garden Renovation, Take 2
Painted old Rusty the Rooster red as his features could hardly be seen and placed him at the side of the herb garden. He's holding up a pot of basil.
I must get a net to cover them because those pesky
Written by Carolyngail at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago All rights reserved
Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day-Sept.15,2010
I've also added blueberries - a Northland and Bluecrop which is planted in almost total acidic pine fines. Its hard to get enough acid for blueberries so I'm adding an acidifier as well.
A Change of Heart : Renovation and Renewal Time at Garden Designers Round Table
"Are you tucking your vegetables in far corners because you think they're dull and ugly? the garden article asked. A nod and sigh to the tomato and peppers near the utility box. Think your garden is too small to grow them? Umm , pretty small, lots of herbs in pots on the patio. " Why not have a beautiful garden and eat it too? Vegetables, fruits , herbs and flowers growing happily together in what the French call a potager . Well I'm already enjoying the fruit of my prolific Asian pear tree, and the two grape vines I planted this Spring will produce their first crop next year, so if I plant an apple tree and some blueberries I'll have a home fruit orchard.
The more I thought about having an ornamental vegetable garden the more I liked it. The idea that the potager is an ornamental, four-season landscape that can be the center of attention even in a small urban plot such as mine was appealing. Of course I also had visions of fried green tomatoes, okra, succotash and a beautiful salad with nastariums and pansies. So with this is mind I cleared my back 40 of most of its perennials and began my adventure in potagering ( is there such a word? If not, there is now. We Southerners like to make up our own.)
With the exception of removing a huge 25 year old yew I'm proud to say I did all the grunt work myself and lived to tell the tale . This 40-year-old body trapped in a 66 one wasn't even sore the next day, a true testament to what gardening and landscaping has done for me.
The fun part was selecting and planting the clipped boxwoods, 'Knockout ' rose shrub, two blueberries, coneflowers, ornamental kale and variegated sage. Before planting I prepared the beds with my special recipe of alfafa humate and cattle manure compost, cottonburr compost and fine pines soil conditioner. When passersby got a whif of it they thought they were in the country. In a barnyard. No matter how composted it is, cattle manure smells like a barnyard until it airs out.
This is merely the beginning of an exciting gardening adventure . I'll need more potager- appropriate whimsicals such as Rusty the Rooster who now sports a bright red coat. My collection of colorful gourd birdhouses will have a place on the garden wall. Fall will be spent planting bulbs for Spring and securing a dwarf apple tree, Winter for planning the raised bed veggie and herb beds and Spring for planting .
Busy with my new garden I lost touch with the real world. Then out of the blue came a message from the Garden Designers Round Table : This month's topic is renovation and renewal and you're on the list. No kidding. Very timely, y'all. Here's my contribution :
Genevieve Schmidt @http://www.northcoastgardening.com/2010/09/garden-restoration-renovation/
Jocelyn Chilvers, The Art Garden @ http://jocelynsgarden.blogspot.com/2010/09/renovation-evolution-of-garden-garden.html
Susan Morrison @ http://www.blueplanetgardenblog.com/2010/09/garden-designers-roundtable-from-junk-pile-to-garden-art.html
Lesley Hegarty and Robert Weaver @ Hegartywebberpartnership.wordpress.com
Rochelle Graeger @studioblog.com
Susan Cohen @ susancohengardens.com
Garden Bloggers Muse Day -From Sweet Carolina
I feel a close connection to this beautiful state as the first documented record of my Irish ancestors show they purchased 150 acres in Mecklenburg County, ( near Charlotte, hometown of Elizabeth Lawrence ) North Carolina in 1773 for the sum of 80 pounds, a good amount in those days. Now that's my idea of a country estate.
My daughter and her family are re-locating to the Tarheel state and of course Mawmaw had to go along to make sure her Little Sweetpea, Lea, is well taken care of. There'll be a lot of adjustments to make but one thing they've already discovered is that its easy to like the polite manners and hospitality of neighbors and the locals .
Meanwhile I'm looking forward to meeting fellow garden bloggers and visiting some of Carolina's finer gardens.
Leaving you with a video of one of North Carolina's most famous sons and America's country boy from Mt.Airy , Andy Griffith :
Written by Carolyngail at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago All rights reserved
Tips for Protecting Your Fall Landscape
Here at GMG we asked a few garden experts to weigh in with their tips on the best things you can do this fall for a fabulous garden next year. Check them out and let us know your favorite tips!
Plant now, bloom later
Judy Nauseef, president of the Association of Professional Landscape Designers (APLD), suggests planning ahead for next spring. “Fall is the time to take stock of your garden and plan for next year,” she advises. “You can see what worked and what didn’t, where you have holes and what needs to be replaced or moved.”
“Once you know what you want to add, plant new perennials and shrubs in the fall, and you will have larger, stronger plants with better blossoms next spring,” adds Nauseef.
Everything’s coming up roses
“Fall is an excellent time for planting, and roses are no exception,” says Steve Hutton, plantsman and president of The Conard-Pyle Co.
According to Hutton, establishing roses in the fall is easy. “The weather and soil conditions are better in the fall, as opposed to spring when it tends to be cold, muddy and wet.”
Frost protector
No matter what you’re growing, a sudden frost or freeze is deadly, spelling doom to your garden and landscape. Protect your lush flowering baskets, vegetables, herbs and favorite plants from Jack Frost with FreezePruf. This non-toxic spray can increase a plant’s tolerance to cold and protect home gardens from damage caused by cold.
This means gardeners can get a couple more weeks of growing and harvesting – at least two weeks earlier in spring and two weeks later in the fall. Sounds good to me!
Deer-proof your garden
Winter months are some of the deadliest times for deer destruction in the garden. "Deer are creatures of habit and stay near a good food source – like your backyard," says Dave Mizejewski, naturalist with the National Wildlife Federation. "A lush garden or lawn is a magnet for hungry deer and rabbits, especially in the winter.”
To keep deer out, look for all-natural products, like Liquid Fence Deer & Rabbit Repellent, that use taste and scent aversion to turn animals off your plants and make them unappetizing to common garden-munchers.
Winterize your accessories
According to the “garden accessory connoisseurs” at Campania International, a little care will help your garden "art" last for generations. Cast stone planters and statuary should be raised off any surface, which freezes and thaws. Terra cotta planters, which can absorb moisture and are subject to winter freeze-thaw cycles, should be stored indoors for winter.
If your planters are left planted outside over the winter, raise them off the ground so they will drain and not freeze to the surface. To winterize both cast stone and terra cotta accessories, simply place them on two pressure-treated wood strips, making sure not to block the drainage hole.
Happy Fall!
-Stacey
Fall Faery Event!
Over the Top! And Don't Stop!
In Honor of National Punctuation Day...
Lucky for me, Jeff Rubin, Founder of National Punctuation Day® provides a step by step plan for this special day.
When asked how we should celebrate, Rubin states, "I’ve been giving this a lot of thought, as several newspaper reporters who have interviewed me for stories have asked me this question.
Here’s a game plan for your celebration of National Punctuation Day®. A few words of caution: Don’t overdo it.
• Sleep late.
• Take a long shower or bath.
• Go out for coffee and a bagel (or two).
• Read a newspaper and circle all of the punctuation errors you find (or think you find, but aren’t sure) with a red pen.
• Take a leisurely stroll, paying close attention to store signs with incorrectly punctuated words.
• Stop in those stores to correct the owners.
• If the owners are not there, leave notes.
• Visit a bookstore and purchase a copy of Strunk & White’s The Elements of Style.
• Look up all the words you circled.
• Congratulate yourself on becoming a better written communicator.
• Go home.
• Sit down.
• Write an error-free letter to a friend.
• Take a nap. It has been a long day."
I dare any of you to find a punctuation error in this post...go ahead...I double dog dare you (wait, is that hyphenated?)
-Karen
GMG
APLD Heads to Big D
Dan Maffei and the APLD local team have planned a spectacular conference highlighting the hottest trends in landscape design. We'll see and hear first hand how Dallas landscape designers' dramatic approaches to incorporate sustainable initiatives, art and horticulture in their gardens.
I always learn something new at the workshops and lectures. Cutting-edge landscape designers share their secrets on such topics as creating sustainable designs, using new and different plants and smart water-wise practices.
We're staying at the Fairmont Hotel in the heart of Dallas’s Arts District, and the opening reception is being held at the Nasher Sculpture Center and catered by none other than the famous Wolfgang Puck. Yum!
Plus there will be a TweetUp Wednesday night at Pyramid Lounge from 5-7:30. Stay tuned for lots more to come.
'Pink Lemonade' on The Martha Stewart Show!
Don't Eat Off These Platters!
Today I thought I would share some beautiful images of Longwood Garden’s giant hybrid water-platters thanks to our resident GMG photographer, Peggy.
These plants, which are at their peak now, are absolutely amazing and really don’t look real until you see them up close and personal. Here's McKenzie from Longwood, who's measuring pollen from the water lilies.
To learn more about how these fascinating plants grow, check out Longwood's website at www.longwoodgardens.org.
Enjoy,Inspiration at the APLD Conference in Dallas
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2010
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October
(31)
- Zester Daily Soapbox: "Waking From Our Lawn Coma" ...
- Chanticleer: A true pleasure!
- Taking on a bromeliad
- Have a Green Thumb All Winter Long
- Fall for container gardening!
- Golden-yellow beauty!
- Fall is in the air
- Garden Bloggers' Muse Day -September 1
- Blame It All On My Roots
- Autumn Garden Renovation, Take 2
- Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day-Sept.15,2010
- A Change of Heart : Renovation and Renewal Time at...
- Garden Bloggers Muse Day -From Sweet Carolina
- Tips for Protecting Your Fall Landscape
- Fall Faery Event!
- Over the Top! And Don't Stop!
- In Honor of National Punctuation Day...
- APLD Heads to Big D
- 'Pink Lemonade' on The Martha Stewart Show!
- Don't Eat Off These Platters!
- Inspiration at the APLD Conference in Dallas
- Sorry Honey!
- Celebrating Wilburton Inn Style
- My daily ritual
- Change of plans
- Vegetable garden ready for planting
- From one now there are eight.
- Coleuses the ideal plant
- Fall colors in the Rocky Mountains
- A different botanical garden.
- This bougainvillea is getting on my nerves
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