Lessons About Plants & Gardens
Old Skills Make a Really Thick Hedge
Hedges can be just privacy screens. But they often have big gaps. Trained properly, they can be thick; thick enough to be more than a visual barrier. In old days (and in other countries today), hedges are living fences so they must be impenetrable thickets. Even though we’re not trying to keep the cows in…
Read MoreHow Do You Clean the Fuzz of Young Gourds?
Our friend Sue Ban taught us how to cook with gourds. I love this because yellow squash are so hard to grow without synthetic chemicals. And this is a more tasty but similar thing. One complication is that the young, tender gourds are fuzzy. And unlike peach fuzz, this fuzz is difficult to get off. …
Read MorePhlox for Parking Lots
Over the past few decades slow changes in the hort industry left old fashioned, home gardening in the shadows. Today, landscapers, growers and customers aim for new, lush and sexy plants, patios, turf and tools. As a friend once told me, “You garden designer types just like to tart things up. Don’tcha?” I was more…
Read MoreOpen Source vs. Proprietary Plants — Can People “Own” Plants?
Yes, they can, they do and they want to own even more. You can, but it’s complex and expensive. So mostly the people who own plants are huge agricultural companies. They control the plant– you’ve heard about this with genetic modification no doubt, but it sure happens in the flower world, too. It used to…
Read MoreMaking Soil Better with Mushrooms
When you dig up a plant, you get plant, roots and dirt. If you take that plant away, you leave a hole. In field nurseries or turf farms, we do that over and over and over and leave a big hole. Filling that hole can be a big problem. Buying top soil is expensive. It…
Read MoreComparing Sizes
Asparagus from Seed
Everyone, yes even the web, will tell you that if you want to grow asparagus, start from crowns planted in the fall. But some recent research and plain old common sense says that asparagus from seed can be just as productive. It certainly is cheaper. If you look around gardens this time of year, you’ll…
Read MoreCemetery Lily in Medicine, Art, and Memories
Through recent trials, we know one species of crinum lily thrives in unexpected places like the mid-west, high plains of Denver, in Ohio and New York. Three foot tall pink or white flowers top sculptural gray leaves. You can see the universal quest for life in its robust growth. Ironically, the same species has long…
Read MoreGarden Things to Do in the Heat; Capture Summer’s Energy
Gardening work gets rearranged around here when the afternoons get really hot. Rearranged; not stopped. Gardening must go on. In fact, contrary to lots of gardening media and advice, it should go on. Think about it from an energy standpoint: this is peak production time. As on rainy days, there are some things that work…
Read MoreJust a Few Pics from the Day
[Not a valid template] Some days, I’m just too tired to write. The morning started with driving, helping out the tree crew who’s working on the tree/hedge line of the pasture and getting fruit trees set up for a fire sale this weekend. Isaac made that look spiffy while Knox bush-hogged. Fire wood cutting, bulb…
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