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On the Bookshelf: The Truth About Organic Gardening
December 9, 2009. Does your brain fog over like San Francisco Bay every time you try to decipher what approach might best handle a plant's attack from pests or disease? Are you overwhelmed by the organic and synthetic chemicals found on garden center shelves touting to be the «best» at eliminating what ever? Do yourself a favor then and read The Truth About Organic Gardening, by Jeff Gillman, a professor at the department of horticultural science at the University of Minnesota.
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Garage growing can be beautiful …
November 13, 2009. Three potted gerbera plants continue to reward for being moved into a sunny window in the garage. All I've done since then is give them some water about once a week, and they keep giving back. In a previous post I offered a photo I took of the last gerbera blossom. But today my favorite photographer made the latest gerbera the subject of his lens.
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Enjoying fall but looking toward spring
November 8, 2009. There is a certain air of relaxation that accompanies fall gardening, especially when done on a warm fall day. A killing frost finally hit my south-central Connecticut gardens when early morning temperatures fell into the high 20's during the early morning hours of November 7 … uncharacteristically late for a killing frost as one usually hits here before Halloween. Earlier light frosts finished off the tender annuals, and now the lower temperatures finally nipped the high-reaching cosmos blossoms and turned the hydrangea leaves from their handsome green and purple tones to a less attractive wilted brown. I'm glad I caught photos of these earlier. A few lower growing salvia and lavender blossoms linger still, but for the most part all flowers are done for the season. It's time to look toward spring. I took advantage of today's sunshine and warmth to dig up, thin, and replant a bed of narcissi . The bulbs had been in place for nearly 10 years, and the number of blossoms they produced had started to decline. I gently sunk a garden fork around the perimeter to loosen the soil, then slowly moved the fork deeper until I could pry the bulbs up between the tines of the fork. Carefully prying the bulbs up through loosened soil allows you to free them with minimal damage. Once I was sure all the bulbs were out, I expanded the bed and added compost to the new planting hole. I gently teased any bulb masses apart so as not to damage the roots, then sunk the bulbs into the fresh, soft soil, keeping each about 2-3 inches apart. With 3 to 4 inches of soil shoveled over the top, and a good watering, the new bed – twice the size of the old one – was ready accept periwinkle and columbine plants in the top levels of the soil. So how is this relaxing? I had the sun on my back, the sounds of birds in the air, and as I placed each bulb into its new home, I imagined the blossoms that will great me in the spring.
Missed Opportunity – A Gardening Oops (Goops)
November 1, 2009. Ahh Fall. When trees so easily offer their leaves back to the earth. Leaves cover everything – porches, patios, lawns, and gardens. I continue miss the opportunity to collect enough of these leaves into accessible piles where they will naturally follow the steps of decomposition and become leaf mold. Often, at this time of year, my husband and I are strapped for time and anxious to get the next load of leaves off the lawn. So we blow or rake them into the adjacent woods. Sounds perfectly normal. But when I want to access what, after a couple of years, has become leaf mold, I have to struggle through fallen branches, rocks, tree stumps, and uneven, sloping grounds … and this is a Gardening Oops – what I call GOOPS.
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