By joenesgarden, 1 year and 10 months ago

Earth Hour – Click Off

For one hour on Saturday, March 27, 8:30 to 9:30 pm local time, you have the opportunity to join a movement.  All you have to do is switch off all non-essential lights for one hour to become part of a world-wide effort to highlight, so to speak, the issue of climate change.

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Earth Hour is sponsored by the World Wildlife Fund as a global effort to get people to pay attention to energy consumption and how excessive energy use contributes to global warming.  No matter which side of the climate change fence you stand on  - even if you straddle the fence - turning off non-essential lights for an hour should not be a problem for most.

Last year over 4,000 cities in 87 countries participated.  Eight U.S. states officially joined in, as did the cities of New York, San Francisco, Miami, Los Angeles, Dallas, Chicago, and Atlanta.  During 2009's Earth Hour, lights went off on the Brooklyn Bridge, the Empire State Building, headquarters of the UN, the Gateway Arch in St. Louis, and the Golden Gate Bridge.  Outside of the United States the Eiffel Tower, Great Pyramids of Giza, Acropolis and Parthenon in Athens, and sites in Bejing, Hong Kong, Australia, and South America went dark for one hour.

So, set a reminder on your cell phone or make note on the calendar, but on Saturday night, March 27 shed a little less light on your home between 8:30 and 9:30 pm local time – doing so just might shed more light on a world-wide problem.  Personally, I'm looking forward to a hour of candlelight with my husband.

By joenesgarden, 1 year and 10 months ago

Bagging with BAGZ-IT

I'll get this out of the way right off the bat … I have not received the following items free, nor have they been sent for my review.  The truth is I simply like my BAGZ-IT products and want to give credit where I think it's due.  Here's what I'm talking about.  This big vinyl scoop on wheels, the LG-BAGZ-IT and it's «mini» sized sibling.

BAGZ-IT front   BAGZ-IT side

I bought my residential-size BAGZ-IT at the Connecticut Flower and Garden show three years ago.  It's been great for garden-bed clean-ups and fall leaf collection - since it's edge lays flat on the ground I can easily rake the millions of acorns our oak tress drop onto the lawn.  When the big green scoop is scooped full, you simply pick up the handle and roll the whole thing to your dumping area.  Because the entire unit is light-weight, I can easily rest the open edge against the upper edge of my welded-wire compost bins and pick up the wheeled end to dump the BAGZ-IT contents into the compost bin.  For things I don't plan to compost, I simply wheel the loaded BAGZ-IT into the woods and use the same maneuver to empty contents onto piles there.

The light weight of the unit allows you to easily roll it over logs, up and down stairs, and over other uneven surfaces.  I must admit I was a little unsure the size of the wheels would allow heavy loads, but so far so good.  The manufacturer claims you can haul firewood in the BAGZ-IT, but I have not done so.  I'd rather save this handy-dandy tool strictly for gardening-related uses.  And I do wish I could stand it unit upright, but it's not designed to do so.

It's easy to store this 21» wide, 24» tall, 46» long unit along a garage or tool shed wall because it folds flat – try that with a wheelbarrow.  Still, the residential sized unit is a little too big to toss into the car when heading off to work away from home.

So at this year's Connecticut Flower and Garden Show in February I picked up the mini BAGZ-IT.  Same tear-resistant vinyl, same wheels, also folds flat, but measures less than 18» wide and high, and 34» long.  When open, the mini holds 30 gallons of dry material, as opposed to 9 cu ft for the residential model.  The smaller size allows me to roll it into my perennial beds for early spring clean up, and the mini stands upright.  Plus it has a handy tool pouch on one side, closed with Velcro, to hold unused tools.  It also has a snapped strap to secure any long-handled tools you need to cart to a work site.  I caution you, though, remove any tools from the side pouch before doing any heavy dumping.  I nearly lost my favorite Hori-Hori knife when it fell out while I had the mini BAGZ-IT turned upside down.

If you need to study more photos than mine above, head to the BAGZ-IT website and scroll through the many photos there.  You can also order the bags there … unless you live in New Hampshire where a few retailers carry them, you can only get BAGZ-IT online or at a trade show.

I don't often suggest products, but this is one set of tools that really help this aging-but-refuse-to-quit-heavy-gardening-body get jobs done.

By joenesgarden, 1 year and 10 months ago

A picture speaks

Happy first day of SPRING!

tete-a-tete1

By joenesgarden, 1 year and 10 months ago

Simply said, Delightful.

white crocus 4 Being somewhat superstitious - for instance never, I mean never say the Red Sox have a game tied up until they make the very last out – I've hesitated to mention the weather that has blessed Connecticut gardeners and other Nutmeggers this week.  I think any possible jinx from me is passed though, the latest weather forecast is calling for cooler temperatures, rain, and wind early next week.  So … how to describe the last few days?  Wonderfully warm during the day yet chilly at night, soothing sunshine, refreshing spring air, in a word  «Delightful.»

With three days of outside work under my belt, my gardening raking muscles are reminding me they have gone little used for too long – no matter how I try, my winter exercise routine does not keep these muscles in tone. I don't know about gardeners/homeowners in more southern states, but New Englanders go through a spring ritual of clearing multiple fallen branches and twigs, acorns, and other debris – including mounds of wind-swept leaves - from lawns and gardens.  Many bemoan this task, but I embrace it as it gives me the opportunity to slowly build up gardening stamina, clear the winter cobwebs from my head, and observe how all my woody and herbaceous family members have braved the winter.

boxwood leafminer damage Most have done quite well.  The boxwoods, however, are loaded with boxwood leafminers.  Notice the yellowed spots; each contains a leafminer waiting to hatch into a flying insect that will lay tons of eggs that will become leafminers that will injure any remaining uninjured leaves.  I'm not sure I will be able to save all of them, but I'm trying.  I sprayed each with horticultural oil, said to suffocate leafminer larvae, and will spray them again after a few more warm days.  To work, the oil has to cover all leaf surfaces, top and underside, and it must be applied before the larvae hatch into the little insects that will flitter about blooming boxwoods.  I also sprayed my pieris shrubs to prevent the tiny lacebug that love to give pieris leaves that unattractive mottled look.

ladybug on coleus On a more positive note, I found a lone ladybug wandering around inside the house so, like any good gardener I found it a plant to monitor.  It seems pretty happy on this little coleus.  As often happens this time of year, my indoor coleus developed an aphid/white fly infestation.  Since my windowsill plants are small, I use the kitchen sink sprayer to liberate the tiny pests from the top and undersides of the leaves.  The ladybug, though, which feasts on these insects might take care of this infestation  - a one bug army of sorts.

And, for the first time in recent memory I was able to plant peas on St. Pat's day … a tradition according to The Old Farmer's Almanac.  But my planting method is not traditional.  My first set of peas – Snowflake Pea Pods, height 22 to 24 inches from Kitchen Garden Seeds - went into a large pot on my front porch – lots of midday to afternoon sun.  Then I sprinkled a few seeds of Tom Thumb lettuce from Pinetree Garden Seeds.  This tiny heading lettuce was a new found favorite of mine last year – sweet, crunchy leaves of the freshest spring green - and I vowed to plant as much Tom Thumb as possible this season.  In fact it has it's own pot right next to the peas.

Why not plant both in the vegetable garden?  I have a serious problem with voles; they love the rich soils in my vegetable beds.  These lovely little varmints wait until peas and lettuce, and many other vegetable plants, are just beginning to show some real promise, then they have an underground feeding fest and leave only gaping holes where the veggies once grew.  So, we are undertaking a major project.  We're going to dig out the main long narrow vegetable bed – built into a slope with the lower edge supported by a stone wall – and line it with wire hardware cloth to prevent the voles from entering the bed from underground.  Watch for future posts on this project; until it's done, all veggies go elsewhere.

In the meantime ENJOY SPRING BLOOMS!  white crocus 2

By joenesgarden, 1 year and 10 months ago

Spring promises – GB Bloom Day

A few bulbs are showing off in my Connecticut gardens.  A small bunch of iris reticulata are my current show stoppers.

iris reticulata close up 3-14-10   iris reticulata

A single white crocus stands nearby.

crocus

But these narcissi, along with so many others, hold the promise of spring.

narcissi buds

It's always interesting to look back at what was blooming in my gardens for previous Garden Bloggers' Bloom Days … iris reticulata and crocus were also in bloom in my yard for 2009's March GBBD.  And it's even more fun to visit Carol at May Dreams Gardens for a glimpse of other gardens in bloom and showing off for Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day.

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