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November 30, 2009

Capitol Christmas Tree

Capitol Christmas tree

Photo credit: Associated Press

If you'd like to follow the installation of the U.S. Capitol Christmas tree, check out this site where pictures are being posted throughout the procedure.

The tree is in the ground and it is being "trimmed" by the Capitol arborists. Lots of smaller trees are being delivered to Capitol offices.

The tree is a gift from Arizona, and it is an 85-foot blue spruce from the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests.

The President and the first lady will help light the tree at 5 p.m. on Thursday.

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 3:21 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden news
        

She's baaaaack!

San Diego Zoo

 Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Susan Reimer

Garden Variety has returned from The Left Coast, as we like to say, where she spent Thanksgiving with her son, and the sun!

I mention the weather because all my Mid--Atlantic friends seem to have spend Thanksgiving dodging raindrops.

While in San Diego, Garden Variety and the man who edges her beds took the daughter who cooks with her herbs to the San Diego Zoo.

They took pictures of all the animals; while Garden Variety took pictures of all the flowers. And there were plenty of them.

It was a hibiscus festival in the Zoo, with more varieties and colors than I have ever seen back East.

There were lots of tropicals and succulents, as you might expect to find in November in San Diego.

But the azaleas, the snapdragons, the geraniums and the daylilies were plentiful, too.

You can see my photos -- all 70 of them -- on Flickr by
following this link.

Oh. Did I mention? We went to the beach on Thanksgiving Day.

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 1:27 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden travel
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

How fair is a garden amid the toils and passions of existence. Benjamin Disraeli

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 29, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

"I appreciate the misunderstanding I have had with Nature over my perennial border. I think it is a flower garden; she thinks it is a meadow lacking grass, and tries to correct the error." --Sara Stein, “My Weeds: A Gardener's Botany”

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 28, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

You need patience to be a good gardener. If you don’t have patience, and you stick with gardening, it will teach you patience.” --Bill Turull Jr. as quoted in “People, Places and Plants” magazine, N.E. / N.Y. Edition, Summer 2005

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 27, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

"If I were to name the three most precious resources of life, I should say books, friends and nature; and the greatest of these, at least the most constant and always at hand, is nature." --Naturalist, John Burroughs

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 26, 2009

Never too late for bulbs

Anna Pavord "Bulb"In my garden column today in The Baltimore Sun, I talk to "the tulip lady," British garden writer Anna Pavord, who has just released a voluptuous new book on all kinds of bulbs called, well, "Bulb."

(Look on baltimoresun.com for a photo gallery of a few of her favorites.)

When I complained to her about planting 150 tulips one fall weekend, only to find the following spring that critters had eaten every single one, she inspired me to try once again by planting them in pots -- with lots and lots of drainage.

I'd tried this once before and the bulbs rotted. I am certain that drainage not critters, was the reason for that failure.

I can place the pots, Anna said, to fill in empty spots in my garden in the spring when the tulips emerge.

(This solves another problem. I'd like to add more bulbs to my garden, but I can't for the life of me remember where they old ones are planted.)

I was reading the garden blogs when I found another suggestion from Judy Lowe, author of the blog, diggin' it.

A friend told her to plant the bulbs in wide, shallow bowls, overwinter them in a protected area, and, in the spring, dig similarly sized planting holes and slide in the contents of the bowl.

This also quite conveniently solves the problem of not knowing where to plant new bulbs.

But back to Anna Pavord's book.

There are more than 600 photos of Anna's favorite bulbs, from anemone nemrosa "Blue Beauty" to an incredible double page photo of allium shubertii (which I actually planted for the first time this fall.)

While talking to her, Anna described finding flowers blooming in the mountains of central Asia where they explode in color and then retreat into their bulbs to regroup for the next season.

 Not a drop of rain falls on them during their summer dormancy she said. Perhaps that is the reason why our tulips fade after a season or two...all that rain.

Anna was asked by London's Telegraph to name her top 10 bulbs. Keep reading for her list and her comments.

 

1. Tulipa orphanidea Whittallii Group, a cumbersome name for the most gorgeous tulip I've ever grown, pointed petals the colour of caramel.

2. Iris latifolia called English iris to distinguish them from the similar looking Dutch iris. Abandoned by the Dutch when they found it couldn't be forced as a cut flower. Superb ink-dark flowers. In danger of disappearing altogether unless we gardeners seek it out.

3. Lilium x dalhansonii 'Mrs R O Backhouse' the kind of lily I like best with speckled reflexed flowers of a smudgy apricot orange.

4. Fritillaria meleagris the enchanting snakeshead fritillary, never better than when naturalised in the kind of damp meadowish grass it likes best.

5. Cyclamen hederifolium best bought as a plant rather than a dry tuber, so you can choose exactly the flower colour and leaf patterning you want.

6. Hippeastrum papilio There is a life beyond the well-known pink 'Apple Blossom' and it lies with these deeply intriguing, orchid-like hippeastrums, this one creamy-green and maroon.

7. Crocus sieberi subsp. sublimis 'Tricolor' has petals banded horizontally in purple, white and yellow. Strong, showy and unusual in the intensity of its colour.

8. Arisaema candidissimum With arisaemas, I feel a new obsession coming on. Strange, witchy plants with hoods and spathes like our wild arums, but MUCH more frightening.

9. Narcissus 'White Lady' typical of the old cultivars that Alan Steeet of Avon Bulbs has been collecting and propagating for some time. Fine papery petals and a soul that is still wild.

10. Crinum x powellii 'Album' Too much strappy, beefy foliage, yes, but such an elegant neck to the flower, such poise and coming at such a good time of the year.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden books
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

"Occasional drama is what you want in an herbaceous border, to wake up the sleepy hordes of daisies and well-bred bellflowers." --Anna Pavord, “The New Kitchen Garden”

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 25, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

"It was one of those perfect English autumnal days which occur more frequently in memory than in life." --Mystery Writer P.D. James

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 24, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

"'There's nowhere left to plant' is not an uncommon cry and, ironically, the larger the garden, the worse that problem can be." --Joy Larkcom, Creative Vegetable Gardening,

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 23, 2009

Time away from the garden

 

San Diego

Photo credit: Flickr/biofriendly

Garden Variety will be away for a few days.

The man who edges my beds and the young lady who cooks with my herbs and I will be flying to San Diego to spend the holiday with the Marine who hates vegetables and his beautiful vegetarian bride.

It was May the last time I visited San Diego, and it was like visiting another planet. The hills were brown and pocked with boulders, but where there were plants, they were astonishing.

In the town of Carlsbad, so near the ocean, the mists keep the temperatures  moderate and my son and his wife do not even have air conditioning in their new apartment complex.

Further inland, the air heated up and the flowers were scarcer. It will be fascinating to see what is there now, as the mountains and the coastal regions approach winter.

I'll bring back pictures to share with you. And memories to sustain me.

In the meantime, there will be a new garden quotation to inspire you every day, and a Thanksgiving Day treat. So check back.

While I am away, just talk amongst yourselves....

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Garden inspirations
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

Try as we may, there will be failures. Moving a plant to another part of the garden sometimes makes all the difference, but enough is enough: getting a garden together requires a measure of ruthlessness." --Pamela J. Harper, “Designing with Perennials”,

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 22, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

"April is the cruelest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull roots with spring rain." --T.S. Eliot, "The Waste Land"

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 21, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety"We can complain because rose bushes have thorns or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses." --Abraham Lincoln
Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 20, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

“People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us.” --Iris Murdoch

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 19, 2009

Pumpkin crisis




Start thinking pecan pie.

The folks who make just about all the canned pumpkin in the world are reporting that this year's harvest was so poor that we're going to see the impact on our grocery shelves this holiday season.

Libby's says heavy rains during the 13-week harvest in Morton, Ill., -- pumpkin capital of the world -- frustrated efforts to collect all the pumpkins. That, on top of a poor growing season.

"Libby’s has been part of [the holiday pie] tradition for more than 80 years and we appreciate that honor," said vice president Paul Bakus. "That's why we wanted to alert bakers to the anticipated shortage.

"Our calculations indicated that we may deplete our inventory of canned Libby's pumpkin as we approach the Thanksgiving holiday."

There was a shortage of pumpkin in August and September, too, when Libby's typically relies on surpluses from the previous season. But 2008 wasn't much of a year, either, and home cooks started noticing the empty spots on grocery store shelves.

Libby's, as reported here on Garden Variety, seemed confident that the 2009 harvest, which was scheduled to roll into the stores by the end of September, would take up any slack. But the rainy fall made it impossible for the heavy trucks to get into the fields.

The longer the pumpkins sit in the field, the poorer the quality, said Libby's, and the company is considering simply plowing the remaining pumpkins into the fields to enrich the soil for 2010.

Meanwhile, Giant, Safeway and Wegman's in Maryland report enough canned pumpkin on hand to make it to next Thursday. Giant, in particular, anticipated the shortage and contracted for other brands.

For a look at a Libby's tractor stuck in the mud, keep reading.

libby%27stractor.jpg

Posted by Susan Reimer at 9:56 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Garden news
        

Be nice or leaf (Part 2)

For those who consider fall leaves nothing but a bother, take a minute to view the whimsy of illustrator Christoph Niemann's "Bio-diversity" in the New York Times.
Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:30 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden art
        

Weekend garden events

 

 

 

Photo credit: AP (file photo 2008)

Friday, 8 to 10 p.m. "Ladies Night," Homestead Gardens, Davidsonville. Potted paperwhite giveaway.

Saturday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. "Poinsettia Tour," Homestead Gardens, Davidsonville. Take a free shuttle to Homestead Growers to see where the poinsettias are grown; 6 p.m., "Illumination Ceremony" with carols by The Annapolis Chorale.

Saturday, 10-10:30 a.m. "Meet the Critter," Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. No fee.

Saturday, 1-3 p.m. "Pumpkin Spice Candles," Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. Adults. $8 for members, $10 non-members. Make your own. All materials included.

Saturday, 1-3 p.m. "Box Turtle Art," Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. Ages 4-8. $10 members, $18 non-members. Make a box turtle art project. Stories and snacks.

Saturday, 1-4 p.m. "Jim Shore Collectibles Expert," Valley View Farms, Cockeysville.

Sunday, noon to 4 p.m., "Poinsettia Tour," Homestead Gardens, Davidsonville. Take a free shuttle to Homestead Growers and see where the poinsettias are grown.

Sunday, 10-10:45 a.m., "Nature story time," Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. All ages. No fee.

Monday, 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. "Native American Art Workshop," Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. 4 to 6 years old. $25 for members, $40 for non-members.

Tuesday - Dec. 31, 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. "Evergreens 101," National Arboretum, Washington. Learn firsthan which trees last the longest, smell the best and make decorating easiest. Free. No registration required.

Tuesday - Dec. 3, 7 p.m.- 9 p.m. "Full Moon Hikes," National Arboretum, Washington. Seasonal highlights and points of interest on this 4-mile, mildly strenuous hike. Held rain or shine. Ages 18 and older. $18 for members, $22 for non-members. Registration required.

Friday, 1-6 p.m. Book signing with Dr. Joe Wheeler, author of the "Christmas in My Heart" series. Valley View Farms, Cockeysville.

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden events
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

"The Best Plants Come with a Story." --Maria Rodale in Organic Gardening Magazine, June/July 2006

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 18, 2009

Be nice or leaf

Baltimore Sun file photo

I found my neighbor Bob just outside my picket fence the other day, using his leaf blower in reverse - sucking up, and chopping up, the leaves my husband had swept into the street.

Next, he went into the leaf bags we'd put out for recycling and was sucking those dry, too.

Bob, as you might guess, is a big believer in composting and in using leaves as mulch in his gardens.

I agree. But things are a little tricky at my house.

My husband is kind enough to blow the leaves out of my many gardens and then run over them with his mulching lawn mower, bagging them as he goes.

I use a bag or two in my compost pile.

And then I put the rest right back on my gardens.

My dear husband is so tolerant of all my gardening, but I think this chore maddens him. It is pretty clear I am undoing what he has just done!

There is a school of thought that all leaves must be removed from the garden, to prevent disease and infestations. And of course, there is Bob's point of view: leaves are a gardener's gold.

(Susan Harris does a good job of sorting out these opinions on her Sustainable Gardening blog).

Me? I'm just trying to keep the peace in the house.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 8:00 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Weekend Chores
        

Fun with rain barrels

rain barrel

If you have been conscientious enough to install a rain barrel to collect the rain the pours off of your roof, now is the time to put it away for the winter.

That's the advice of Shawna Coronado, who blogs at GardeningNude. (Ok. Stop it.)

She recommends that you disconnect the rain barrel from the downspout and drain it. If it is possible, move it inside. If you can't do that, flip it over so water does not collect in the bottom and freeze because that will cause just about any rain barrel to crack. I know. Mine did.

It might also be necessary to get come flexible downspout tubing to direct rainwater away from your foundation or your garden or your deck - wherever you have located your rain barrel.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (3)
Categories: Weekend Chores
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

There is a great pleasure in working in the soil, apart from the ownership of it. The man who has planted a garden feels that he has done something for the good of the world. --  author unknown

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 17, 2009

Spent blooms

Beautiful blooms are not the only subjects for the garden photographer.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 8:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden photography
        

Paperwhites on the rocks

paperwhitesI was scrounging in garden centers for bargains when I was ambushed by a display of paperwhites.

The pretty white flowers gleamed on the dark green box, and the price wasn't much. About the same as a couple of lattes.

So I bought some.

I have only ever forced a bulb once. (I don't even like the expression. Sounds like "at gunpoint.")

My neighbor Patty gave me an amaryllis for Christmas last year, and it actually grew and bloomed for me.

But, mostly, I am "The Land Houseplants Forgot." I don't have much in the way of windowsills or good light, except through the sliding glass door in the kitchen.

I sometimes put plants on the floor there, such as the basil when it is cold outside. But generally, the family objects.

Anyway, I bought a paperwhite narcissis kit: five bulbs, soil and a little plastic pot. I did this even though I have read time and again that paperwhites, for all their virginal beauty, have a distinctly unpleasant smell.

Paperwhites are also famous for flopping over from the sheer weight of themselves, but blogger Margaret Roach of A Way to Garden, suggests mixing eight parts water to one part gin or vodka and using that mixture to water the bulbs the first few times.

She got the tip from a veteran gardener at one of her lectures who swears the booze keeps the plants' leaves short.

I'm gonna give it a shot (modest bartending joke). Thank heaven the trick doesn't call for white wine...

Photo credit: Flickr/acertainworld

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Container gardening
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Of all the wonderful things in the wonderful universe of God, nothing seems to me more surprising than the planting of a seed in the blank earth and the result thereof. --  Celia Thaxter

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 16, 2009

Gnome de plume

I didn't know there was gnome history, let alone gnome rules. But Angela Treadwell-Palmer, who writes under the nom de plume, The Weeding Gnome, knows about both.

Apparently garden gnomes are kind of like elves, who come out when you are not around and help you with your garden chores.

However, there is also a kind of PETA for gnomes. The group comes around and "liberates" gnomes that are enslaved in your garden and return them to the woods.

You can read more in Angela's newsletter.

By the way, there is also history, tradition and rules...yes, rules...for gazing balls in the garden.

I know. That was news to me, too.

Photo credit: Gardeners Supply

Posted by Susan Reimer at 2:19 PM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Garden humor
        

Indian summer days

It is nearly Thanksgiving here in Maryland and only the oak trees are hanging on to their leaves and, still, we are in the middle of a 70-degree day. Its the second in a row, with promises of at least one or two more.

How I love the Mid-Atlantic region. Weather like this allows you to garden well past the time when the rest of the Northeast has oiled its pruners and put them to bed.

I was out this weekend, planting bulbs in containers (more on that later this week in my column in The Baltimore Sun), trimming back the hosta foliage and picking up all the twigs that landed in the yard after a wind storm.

My neighbor Bob and my neighbor Ruth think I am nuts, and that I "make work" in the garden. Bob gardens on a principle of benign neglect and Ruth is grateful when the chores are done for the season.

But I will continue to find things to do until the snow flies. And after, if we have a break in the weather.

Years ago, I wrote a column about my determination to keep gardening. It was about my son, Joseph, too. He was just a teen-ager when this column appeared in 2000. It seems like a million years ago now.

The column remains one of my favorites, and I share it here.

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Gene Sweeney (1998 file photo)

My 16-year-old was standing on the deck, smiling, and I knew by that rare expression on his face that I had amused him again with the inexplicable chores I create for myself in the garden.

"Dad," he hollered. "C'mere. Mom is trying to hold back the seasons."

A higher power had done that for me. The calendar said November, but I was sweating as I worked. I was watering, too, and that felt kind of silly.

"Mom," Joe said firmly. "It's over. Come inside. Relax."

He was talking about the season for gardening, but I told him he was wrong. It is never really over. It is only interrupted, perhaps, by an occasional snowstorm.

"There is always something to do in the garden," I said, and he shook his head and went back inside for another dose of college football.

I have always loved the mild, summery autumns of the mid-Atlantic region, and now that I have given myself over to gardening, I love this season even more.

Fall doesn't have the energy of spring, when you can almost feel the new growth pushing out of the ground. And it doesn't have the sunny radiance of summer, with that season's abundant growth and color.

In fact, aside from a few fading mums and some darkening sedum, there isn't much to look at in my fall garden. Even the hostas have wilted like lettuce that has been frozen and thawed. Nevertheless, I can feel the ground around me drinking in every last ray of the sun (and drop of water, too, this dry fall), and hoarding it against the winter to come.

There is plenty for me to do. Divide the daylilies and the irises. Rearrange the "furniture" in a newly planted bed that didn't grow into the shape I had imagined for it. Sprinkle a little bone meal there, a little lime here, some Epsom salts on the roses and some spent coffee grounds on the hydrangea.

Plant the narcissus bulbs and a few new perennials. Clean the tools and sort the supplies on the shelf in the garage. My gardening books give me an endless list of things to do before the frost seals the earth, and seals me inside my house.

I notice with some sadness that the seed in the birdfeeders does not disappear so quickly anymore, and I know most of my gardening companions are gone. I replace the seed with suet for the ones who winter over.

The last of the leaves fall like raindrops on my naked vegetable garden and I decide I will leave them there for the winter, like a coverlet for the worms. The rest go in the compost pile. I might not be much of a cook, I tell my disgusted children as I carry kitchen scraps outside, but I sure can make great dirt.

As I work, a breeze rustles the wind chimes, and I think about how remarkably warm the wind is for November. I remind myself to take them down before they rattle like Marley's chains in the bitter winds to come.

My garden gets a buzz cut in the fall. I cut the faded perennials back to the ground. But the ornamental grasses will stay until March winds blow them bald.

I fear the rake in my vulnerable gardens. So, on my hands and knees, I scrape the leaves out of my gardens with a gloved hand and cast them behind me onto the grass.

I hear the rus-s-s-k, rus-s-s-k of the rake, and I am momentarily confused by the sound. I rock back on my heels and look behind me to find my 16-year-old raking leaves.

I could tease him about this voluntary chore and ask a cynical question about what he is hoping for in return. But I say nothing and return to gently picking leaves out of my garden the way I once picked them out of a laughing toddler's hair.

We are silent as we work, the two of us. Trying to hold back time.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 12:07 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden inspirations
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

It used to be thought that our love of plants was an impractical but pure passion. But now, in the age of environmental crisis, we're discovering that gardening is essential to human life. --  Jacqueline Heriteau

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 15, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Too old to plant trees for my own gratification, I shall do it for my posterity. --  Thomas Jefferson

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 14, 2009

Shuffle the deck: Container garden recipe cards

P. Allen Smith's Container Gardens Deck

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Jerry Jackson

For those of us who go to the garden center with a page torn out of a magazine and the fervent hope that we can re-create the picture there, P. Allen Smith has an answer.

Container garden recipe cards.

A deck of 50 cards depicting container gardens seen in his book, "P. Allen Smith's Container Gardens," is divided by season. Each card has a picture of the finished planter on the front and a shopping list and a planting diagram on the back, plus a few tips.

Each card also tells where the container would do best - sun, shade or partial shade - and tells of the design principle that Smith is using: color, shape and form, or whimsy. These design elements are described on bi-fold card that also includes a list of supplies the gardener should have on hand.

A couple of thoughts on what is otherwise a very handy product:

The cards do include - indeed there isn't room for -- a list of substitutes if you can't find the plant in the "recipe."
And, it is not immediately clear to me if the containers on the winter cards - there are only seven - are meant for outdoors, and in what zone.
The container that uses orchids is photographed on a kitchen table. I understand that that is a centerpiece. And several use evergreens, such as dwarf spruce or junipers.
But what about the one that includes snapdragons and English daisies or lamb's ear and scabiosa? How long might we expect those containers to last?

Having said that, the recipes for the spring and summer containers are a vision. And, though several of the containers are quite unusual, most are the kind of 18-inch decorative pots that are easy to find at a garden center.

This deck of cards sells for $14.99. Less on Amazon. I'd say it was worth it.

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Container gardening
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

If I had but two loaves of bread, I would sell one and buy hyacinthus, for they would feed my soul. --  The Koran

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 13, 2009

Weekend gardening events

PaperwhitesSaturday, 10 a.m. Homestead Gardens, Davidsonville. "Paperwhites and SuperMoss Workshop." Make your own holiday paperwhite planter with decorative moss. Cost includes all materials, including terracotta pot, SuperMoss and three bulbs. Cost: $10/$9 for Garden Club members.

Saturday, 10 a.m., Valley View Farms, Cockeysville. "Carrie's November Gardening Tips." It's bedtime for the garden. Carrie Engel will talk about what to do to protect plants for the winter. Late season chores and catch-up projects are also on the agenda. Plus gift ideas to grow and give. Saturday, 10 - 11:30 a.m.,

Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. "Tree of Thanks." Ages 5 and up will learn the history of the Thanksgiving holiday and about early Americans and Native Americans and who they lived off the land. Reading of "The Giving Tree," by Shel Silverstein. Children will also make a "tree of thanks" to take home. Saturday, noon -12:45 p.m., Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. "Family Nature Hike." Join one of the naturalists for a walk to see what is happening out on the trails. No fee for members, $2 non-members. Ages 4 and up.

Sunday, 2 - 2:30 p.m. Irvine Nature Center, Owings Mills. "Meet the Critter." No fee.

 

Photo credit: Flickr/acertainworld

 

 

 

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 2:03 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden events
        

Garlic: vampires, werewolves and now, H1N1

Garden Variety

Photo credit: AP

Garlic is a popular remedy for what ails you in Serbia, and now the open-air markets are the scene of panic buying as people purchase it to prevent swine flu.

The price of cloves has skyrocketed in the country, and public places have begun to smell powerfully of garlic as people munch them like, well, mints.

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 11:25 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden news
        

Weekend garden chores

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Jed Kirschbaum

November is one of the toughest months in the garden - in terms of work, that is.

Its chores rival those of the spring, but with one difference. In November, it is a race against time and winter.

Though there will probably be unseasonably warm days between now and the thaw of March when you can get out in the garden and get some clean-up done, it isn't anything you should count on.

Get it done now. And then rest by the fire. You will find you actually have fewer chores in the spring!

With a special thanks to Margaret Roach of A Way to Garden and Helen Yoest of Gardening with Confidence and North Country Maturing Gardener, here are some garden tasks you need to complete before the snow flies.

Now is the time to prepare paperwhites, amaryllis and hyacinths for forcing indoors.
Mulch your roses and other shrubs, as well as your strawberry plants. Rake well under roses to remove diseased foliage.
Fertilize your lawn. Keep mowing until the grass stops growing and let the clippings lie on the lawn to return nitrogen to the soil. Then take your mower in for service. You will avoid the spring rush.
Consider using an anti-desiccant on evergreens to prevent the loss of water during the winter.
You can run over the last of the leaves with your lawn mower and let them lay on the grass. Or you can start a separate leaves-only compost pile for soil amending or leaf mulch.
As long as the ground is not frozen, there is still time to plant perennials, shrubs and trees.
After the first frost, it will be time to prune your roses.
Rake or blow the leaves out of your beds. Run them over with a lawn mower and them put them back on the beds to amend the soil and act as mulch.
Wrap the trunks of smaller trees to prevent damage by rodents.
Water trees and shrubs until the ground freezes. Check for and remove diseased foliage.
If you are going to have a live Christmas tree, dig a hole now and replace the dirt so you can easily plant the tree after the holidays.
Think about sowing some spinach now for a super-early crop in the spring.
If you had areas of your garden where things did not do well this year, take a soil sample and have it tested. You still have time to amend the soil so that the plants there will get a fresh start in spring.
Prepare your seed bed now for early spring crops, such as spinach, peas, asparagus or strawberries.
Summer flowering bulbs such as cannas, dahlias, and elephant ears need to be dug carefully for indoor storage.
Keep weeding!!!! You will save yourself backbreaking work in the spring.
Protect your fountain from freezing. Disconnect the hose, shut off the pump and protect the pump. If you have a cement fountain, put a towel in it. The towel will absorb water and freeze and the concrete is less likely to freeze and crack.
Likewise, bring clay pots and ceramic bird baths indoors to prevent cracking.
Don't forget the birds. Provide plenty of seed, suet and water. Leave the seed heads for the birds, too.

 

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Weekend Chores
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Varietey

 

Just living is not enough . . . One must have sunshine,freedom, and a little flower. --  Hans Christian Anderson

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 12, 2009

"Kale, kale, the gang's all here!"

Garden Variety

In today's gardening column in The Baltimore Sun, I'm writing about ornamental cabbage and ornamental kale.

In the mid-1990s these tough little gems began to appear in landscapes as contractors looked for something to fill the empty spaces left by mums. Home gardeners quickly followed suit.

Grace Romero, Burpee's Lead Horticulturist, provides some background on the plant and its mysteriously beautiful change in color.

Grace Romero, Burpee's Lead Horticulturist, provides some background on the plant and its mysteriously beautiful change in color.

Kale originated as wild species in the Mediterranean, but it was the
Japanese who first selected, and continue to breed the many beautiful
ornamental forms we grow these days.

A USDA collecting trip introduced the ornamental kales to the US in 1929 and these first appeared in US seed catalogs in 1936. The fantastic varieties sold today are still bredby Japanese seed companies.

Cool weather (night temperatures below 50 degrees F) degrades the green pigment in the leaves, and allows the bright purple, pink and cream colors to show.

When pansies and mums are done in late fall, the ornamental kales persist. These are more tolerant of cold weather, enduring temperatures down to 5 degrees F. That's because the leaves are a bit thickened, waxy-textured, unlike in the more fragile, succulent flowers in mums and pansies.

Garden Variety

Photo credit: University of Wisconsin/Madison

 

ornamental kale

 

Photo credit: Handout

ornamental kale

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Kim Hairston

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Fall gardening
        

Speaking of the garden

 

A garden is a place arranged for promenades and at the same time for the recreation of the eyes. But it is also an accessory to the house, serving it as an accompaniment, an environment; and, within certain limits, it is simply another apartment, an annex of the house. Therefore, how can the art which built and adorn the dwelling be refused the right to interfere in this exterior house? --  Vitet

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 11, 2009

Flowers for my best friend since the seventh grade

Garden Variety

 Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Susan Reimer

Garden Variety took the day off Monday to play tourist with Nancy, my best friend since the seventh grade, and her husband, Mark, and daughter, Heather.

Nancy and Mark had driven from Seattle to Baltimore to bring their daughter some furniture and stuff for her new apartment and her new life on the East Coast, and so Heather and I showed them the sights in Baltimore.

(Mothers, it can be said, do so much better when they have mental pictures of their children's lives that they can occasionally "take out" and find comfort in. I call them "visuals.")

Anyway, I wrote on Monday about the trips Nancy and I have taken over the years with Connie, my other best friend since the seventh grade, and a particularly memorable time on Whidbey Island, off the coast of Washington State, and the flowers there.

I vowed that I would find some gardens for Nancy, even if it was November in Baltimore.

Here is some of what we saw on, of course, Federal Hill.

So Heather's new life in Baltimore now has some structure to it, including a new kitchen island. And Nancy and Mark have begun the drive back to Seattle, racing against the oncoming winter weather.

Drive safely, my friends.

Garden Variety

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 2:10 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Garden photography
        

FreezePruf? Not so much

 

FreezePruf

 

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Susan Reimer 

Over the weekend, I tested a new product designed to protect plants from a sudden frost and extend their bloom time. It's called FreezePruf and it is made by the manufacturers of Liquid Fence.

I sprayed my begonia and my dahlia thoroughly and left my coleus unprotected on the afternoon of what was predicted to be a frosty night.

Sure enough, the next morning the ground, and the cars, were covered with a silver frost and I checked my container plants for damage.

The coleus, as you can see from the picture below, was devastated by the cold, but the begonia and the dahlia seem fine.

I cheerfully reported here on Garden Variety that the product appeared to have worked as designed...protecting plant cell walls from the expansion and breakdown that freezing temperatures can cause.

However, when I took a look at the containers a couple of days later, the begonia leaves had browned and wilted. So had the dahlia, only slightly less so.

(You can see in the photo above that some of the leaves have browned slightly, although they have maintained their shape.)

I don't know what I did wrong. I sprayed the plants thoroughly. But both were clearly showing frost damage that had only revealed itself after the warm sun had "defrosted" the leaves.

I welcome anyone else's thoughts about what may have happened with a product that is getting all kinds of positive press. I am perfectly ready to believe I screwed up.

On the other hand, maybe it isn't nice to fool Mother Nature.

FreezePruf

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Susan Reimer

Posted by Susan Reimer at 1:48 PM | | Comments (3)
Categories: Garden products
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

 I too have a new plaything, the best I ever had, a woodlot. --  Ralph Waldo Emerson

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 10, 2009

Michael Pollan's garden

If you are wondering if the cobbler's children have shoes, take a look at this photo slideshow of author Michael Pollan's home garden. It appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle. Pollan and his wife are residents of the San Francisco Bay area.

The author of "The Omnivore's Dilemma" and "In Defense of Food," lives what he preaches, and has created a lush kitchen garden in the front of the house he and his artist wife purchased three years ago.

Garden writers? This is what best selling looks like.

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 2:05 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden photography
        

And we have a winner!

The Bizarre and Incredible World of PlantsStephanie is the winner of "The Bizarre and Incredible World of Plants!"

My fellow blogger Kate Shatzkin, of Charm City Moms, picked her name at random from among the 10 Garden Variety readers who commented on my Sunday post about the book.

That is many more commenters than I have ever had before! Either Garden Variety is getting really popular, or everybody wanted this lucious book!

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 12:18 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden books
        

Elmo looove Michelle!

As promised, first lady Michelle Obama appears on "Sesame Street" today to talk about vegetables and to help the show celebrate its 40th birthday. "Sesame Street" aired for the very first time on this date in 1969.

She and Elmo and several children plant tomato, cucumber, carrot and lettuce seeds in a makeshift garden box.

They are digging the soil when Big Bird arrives and asks if she and he are related, after all he likes seeds, too.

"You're tall like me," the yellow one says. "Maybe we're from the same family."

Before the show is over, the vegetables themselves come to life and cheer for the first lady - as can only happen on "Sesame Street."

The first lady's vegetable garden and her chef, Sam Kass, had starring roles in last week's episode of "The Biggest Loser."

And Mrs. Obama will appear on an "Iron Chef America" episode to be aired this winter in which Bobby Flay, Mario Batali, Emeril Lagasse and White House head chef Cristeta Comerford have to come up against a recipe around the vegetables from her garden.

(Needlesstosay, that episode has already been taped)

The White House vegetable garden has taken on a life of its own, garnering more attention for the first lady's message of healthy eating than anyone could have imagined.

"We're trying to reach as many people as possible,"  Mrs. Obama's spokesperson, Katie McCormick Lelyveld, told the Associated Press. 

"And by working with platforms with simliar goals like Irong Chef, The Biggest Loser and Sesame Street, we're able to do just that."

And speaking of good press, assistant chef and vegetable garden overseer Kass is getting his share. He was the subject of a couple of stories in the New York Times and another in People magazine.

He's already made People's 100 Beautiful people. Can "The Sexiest Man Alive" be far behind?

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 10:18 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: White House Vegetable Garden
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Nature will bear the closest inspection. She invites us to lay our eyes level with her smallest leaf, and take an insects view of its plain. --  Thoreau

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 9, 2009

My best friend since the seventh grade

Garden Variety

 Nancy, Susan and Connie

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Susan Reimer

Garden Variety is taking a day off today.

Nancy, my best friend since the seventh grade, is in town with her husband, and I think we will do some touristy stuff.

Nancy and Connie and I have been best friends since junior high, which is what we used to call middle school.

After the three of us finished the heavy lifting of raising young children, we began to plan weekend getaways for just the three of us every year or so. One of us would do the planning and the other two would simply make plane reservations.

One of our trips was to New Orleans, where we stayed in a funky B&B and toured the Garden District of the city. This was, of course, before Katrina.

For another weekend, we went to Deep Creek Lake in Maryland - in the cool and quiet late fall - and walked in the woods and talked for hours.

We have visited New York City. St. Michaels, MD, upstate New York and Bucks County Pa. All three of us did not make it every time. But whenever two of us are together, the other is there as well.

One of our most memorable trips was arranged by Nancy to Whidbey Island off the coast of Washington State, where she and her family now live.

We stayed in a cottage that was more like a doll's house and visited the shops and restaurants on the tiny island.

I am telling this story because my vivid memory of that trip is of the flowers.

The cool, moist weather on that tiny island produced the most beautiful and abundant window boxes, containers and tiny front-yard gardens.

The colors, perhaps enhanced by the droplets of water in the air, were almost unreal.

Nancy will only visit for a little more than a day. She and her husband drove across country to bring furniture to their daughter in Baltimore. They have other friends and other stops, and then they must head back to the left coast.

The pressure is on me to make Nancy's brief time here memorable.

There are plenty of museums and monuments and art galleries in Annapolis, Baltimore and Washington.

But I will try to find some flowers for her, too.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Garden inspirations
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

In his garden every man may be his own artist without apology or explanation. --  Louise Beebe Wilder

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 8, 2009

Gardening from the couch: The Bizarre and Incredible World of Plants

"The Bizarre and Incredible World of Plants" is actually the best of three other books: "Pollen," "Seeds" and "Fruit."The Bizarre and Incredible World of Plants

All of them are pictorial wonders that use the best of science, art and technology to depict the anatomy of plants and their proficient reproduction.

This lush and otherworldly picture book ($29.95, Firefly Books) illustrates in the smallest detail the inscrutable work of plants making more plants, and fruits making more fruit, flowers making more flowers.

Robert Kesseler using an electron microscope produced the images. Wolfgang Stuppy and Madeline Harley of London’s Royal Botanic Gardens write the accompanying text with wit and erudition.

This is truly a look into the secret life of plants.

(And I will send this luscious book to a lucky someone randomly selected from among the commenters to this post. Be sure to include your e-mail. I won't share it, but I will need it to contact the winner.)

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (11)
Categories: Garden books
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Adopt the pace of nature; her secret is patience. --  Ralph Waldo Emerson

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 7, 2009

FreezePruf: It worked

Previously, I wrote that every garden writer worth her dirty fingernails was sent a spray bottle of FreezePruf by the folks who make Liquid Fence.

The spray is designed to protect the plant's cell walls from expanding in the cold and breaking down.

I promised I'd try it and report back.

Well, it worked!

I sprayed the annuals and the dahlia in two deck containers and waited for the first frost. That frost arrived last night, and I woke this morning to a silver glaze on the grass and on all my gardens.

But the containers were perfect!

You can see for yourself later today when I post some pictures. I have a crazy day of errands today, so I will download the pictures this evening. Check back!

Posted by Susan Reimer at 8:40 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden tips
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

I've never been without a garden, It's a lifetime challenge: a thing of beauty and a 3-D puzzle. --  Beatrice J. Elye

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 6, 2009

More weekend garden events

Department 56This weekend at Valley View Farms in Timonium:

Using Collected Material for Bonsai, Saturday, 9:00 a.m. Many wonderful projects begin with material found in the wild or in the neighbor’s yard. Martha will show everyone what to look for. She will also discuss how to get your bonsai ready for the winter ahead.

The Great Pumpkin Seed Contest, Saturday, noon. Before Valley View cuts open the Great Pumpkin, turn in your guess: how many seeds inside the giant orange orb. The first person to correctly guess wins a $300 gift card from Valley View Farms. WBAL’s chief meteorologist Tom Tasselmeyer is our official seed counter.

Department 56 event, Saturday and Sunday, all day. See the Lighted Christmas Village and meet John Hessler, Valley View's own Dept. 56 master village builder, Saturday at noon. He will demonstrate how to build and put the special finishing touches on your display that make it truly unique.

On Sunday, from 1-4 p.m., Dept. 56 head designer Scott Enter will be on hand to sign Dept. 56 items purchased at Valley View Farms this weekend. And Dept. 56 representative Cathy Kramer will be here to answer questions and share her knowledge.

Special guest Ken Schwarz, founder of the second oldest collector’s club (Chesapeake 56) and author of "Dicken’s Village, the First Ten Years" will be available on both Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. to answer any of your Dept. 56 questions.

The purchase of any Dept. 56 item this weekend enters you in an hourly drawing (1-4pm) for valuable signed retired pieces. Must be present to win.

Saturday, 7 a.m., a special half-price sale of last year's display pieces and retired pieces. Special holiday value sets of Dickens Village, Snow Village, Christmas in the City, North Pole and New England Village.

Holiday lighting tips: Sunday, 1 to 4 p.m., Valley View Farms lighting expert Don Hagewiesch will be on hand to discuss indoor and outdoor lighting techniques. He will show you how to turn your home and landscape into your very own winter wonderland.

Photo courtesy of Dept. 56

Posted by Susan Reimer at 12:48 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden events
        

Weekend garden events

Mark Roberts Christmas fairiesHomestead Gardens in Davidsonville is having its holiday open house this weekend. Get the first glimpse of Homestead's lavish Christmas displays Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

There will be an orange and grapefruit sale to benefit the Lothian Ruritan's community projects.

And on Sunday from 12:30 to 3:30, Mark Roberts will be signing his holiday fairies. Bring yours for an autograph, but check in with customer service when you arrive.

 

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 12:43 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden events
        

Bo and the White House gardens

 

White House gardens

 

Photo credit: Associated Press 

At the White House, the groundskeeper is also the dog sitter.

Dale Haney, who has been at the White House for 40 years, has been walking every presidential pooch since King Timahoe of the Nixon administration.

Now he is in charge of Bo, the Obama's Portuguese water dog, when the family isn't around. (By family, we mean Mrs. Obama, who, like mothers everywhere, ended up with most of the dog duties.)

Haney is in charge of all the White House grounds - 18 1/2 acres - a job that is pretty much 365 days a year. Mowing the North and South lawns alone takes eight hours, he reports.

He oversees a staff of 20 and reports to work every day at 6 a.m.

Just as most presidents have done, Barack Obama planted a tree - a Littleleaf Linden - to commemorate their time in the White House. But the vegetable garden, planted by the First Lady, is a new experience for Haney.

And Bo?

He seems to be the reason that the Obamas are so interested in Haney's work on the grounds.

"They know what's going on because they're always out here walking the dog," he said.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 12:01 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden news
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Will is the root, knowledge is the stem and leaves, and feeling is the flower. --  Sterling

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 5, 2009

And the winners are....

All-America Selections

All-America Selections, which for more than 75 years has been testing and judging plants, has announced its 2010 winners.

Drum roll, please.

In the bedding plant category, zinnia "Zahara Starlight Rose." (Shown, left) Long lasting, with generous blooms, heat and drought tolerant. The perfect plant for beginners.

Also in the bedding plant category, snapdragon F1 "Twinny Peach." The "snap" is missing in this snapdragon: double or butterfly flower forms are missing the jaws. Unique blending of peach tones.

The cool season award winner is Viola F1 "Endurio Sky Blue Matien." Looks delicate, but is tough as nails. Has a unique spreading/mounding quality.

And the flower award winner is gaillardia F1 "Mesa Yellow." Three-inch blooms throughout the summer Attracts butterflies and is a good cut flower. Cascading quality in pots. Excellent recovery from severe weather.

For a slide show of the winning flowers, go to The Baltimore Sun's Home and Garden section.

For more details on each of the plants, go to All-America Selections.

 

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 11:50 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden news
        

Politics and the White House vegetable garden -- again

Sean Hannity of Fox News is complaining about the timing of an episode of The Biggest Loser in which the weight-loss contestants visit the White House vegetable garden -- on election night.

The contestants harvested some vegetables from the garden, alongside White House chef and vegetable garden overlord Sam Kass, and made a healthy dish on the episode.

Meanwhile, the Democrats and the Obama administration were losing a couple of governorships.

"You know, I think there could have been a more fitting night to air this episode, but I guess not," he writes.

Since the episode aired after the polls were closed, it isn't clear what has Hannity's shorts in a bunch.

What is clear is that not all the cabbage heads are in the garden.

Here are some pictures of The Biggest Losers at the White House.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 10:45 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: White House Vegetable Garden
        

Growing garlic

Growing garlic

Photo credit: AP/Kathy Willen

In my column today in The Baltimore Sun, I am urging gardeners to consider planting a handful of garlic bulbs when they are planting their daffodil and tulip bulbs. It is the perfect time of year!

Garlic planted between now and about Thanksgiving will grow roots now and put up shoots in the spring and be ready for harvest in July.

There are two kinds of garlic, soft neck and hard neck, and it refers to the stem that comes up through the middle of the clove.

Almost all supermarket garlic is a softneck variety. This is because softneck garlic is easier to grow and plant mechanically and also keeps longer than hardneck garlic. Softnecks have white papery skin and lots of cloves, often forming several layers around the central core. The flexible stalk also allows softneck garlic to be formed into garlic braids.

Hardneck garlics have a "scape" - stalk - which coils from the top. On the top of this scape grow a number of what are often called garlic flowers. Hardneck garlics have fewer, larger cloves than the softnecks. They also have less of an outer bulb wrapper, sometimes none at all. This makes them more sensitive and reduces their shelf life.

And, of course, there is elephant garlic, the source of much confusion. People buy elephant garlic because of its size. They also assume that it must be more strongly flavoured than ordinary garlic. In fact the opposite is true.

In terms of flavor, elephant garlic is to garlic what leeks are to onions. It is much less intense and sweeter.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (3)
Categories: Vegetable gardening
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Though we travel the world over to find beauty, we must carry it with us or we find it not . . . The difference between landscape and landscape is small, but there is a great difference in beholders. There is nothing so wonderful in any landscape as the necessity of being beautiful under which every landscape lies. --  Emerson

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 4, 2009

Tulip dreams and daffodil nightmares

The fun bunch over at Old House Gardens, a catalog for heirloom bulbs, is having bad dreams, and the rest of us get to wake up to good news -- their first season-ending sale since 2004.

"We had a really bad dream," they write in their newsletter. "'Mary Copeland' and 'Lady Derby' were standing by the exit ramp holding signs that read 'Homeless' and 'Will Bloom for Compost'"

"We woke up knowing that we had to have a sale. So we've pruned our prices on dozens of awesome bulbs by 25 to 40 percent."

Old House Gardens has added bulbs to some of its samplers and added a new daffodil sampler, too.

"Don't Leave 'Mary' and her friends to face winter alone!"

Now, that's a pitch.

Old House GardensAlso, in its October newsletter, Old House Gardens also has some wonderful old drawings of pattern beds.

From 1850 to 1920, gardeners would plant bulb beds in the middle of their yards in elaborate patterns that required hundreds and hundreds of bulbs. Those of us gardeners who dot their beds with clusters of a few bulbs here and a few bulbs there will be overwhelmed by the detail.

The newsletter also has charts to help us less creative types decide how many bulbs we need per square foot

Take a look.

 

 

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 11:38 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: From the catalogs
        

White House vegetable garden-sort of

Sam KassThere are a couple of stories in the New York Times this morning that are worth reading if you are a fan of the White House kitchen garden.

In the first, Rachel Swarns profiles Sam Kass, who was a personal chef for the Obamas during their busy campaign days and moved with them to the White House. He has been Michelle Obama's devoted partner in the White House kitchen garden and the White House farmers' market and in all her healthy eating initiatives.

Kass has been attending briefings in the West Wing and sitting in on policy discussions, and past White House chefs find this astonishing. He recently sent an email asking if the White House had a point person on "colony collapse," the mysterious disappearance of the bees that pollinate our food.

In a second story, long-time Times food writer Marian Burros describes a White House kitchen overrun by celebrity chefs - from Alton Brown to Mario Batali and Emeril Lagasse. And all of them are cooking out of the White House garden. The garden will star in a episode of Iron Chef in January.

I continue to be amazed at the power of that garden. It is just this side of extraordinary for a 1,1,00 square-foot patch of vegetables to have the impact that it has, from the new national attention on childhood obesity to the blogging Obama haters who are convinced the garden is either faked or contaminated.

Photo credit: Associated Press

Posted by Susan Reimer at 10:40 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: White House Vegetable Garden
        

Scents of the season: wood smoke

I was tending to the plants on my deck in the last rays of the day when I was struck by the smell of ... wood smoke.

Someone somewhere in my neighborhood had built a fire in their fireplace, and the air was lightly tinted with a scent I had not encountered for many months.

After days of rain, I was expecting, I guess, the smell of moist earth -- that rich, muddy smell. Or of wet leaves beginning to decay, that slightly tangy smell.

But the smell of smoke kind of startled me for a minute and jolted me into a new season more certainly than the cool nights had done.

And it caused me to think about how the seasons smell, each as distinctive as different pots of soup or bottles of perfume.

The smell of the earth thawing in the spring and the dry, dusty smells of August bring me into the moment. They are the right smells for the time.

But that smell of wood smoke threw me. Threw me into the future. Threw me into winter, which is not here yet and which can stay away just a little longer.

Because I will know when it is time for winter. It has its own smell, too: Sharp and stingy and bright.

Photo credit: Flickr/jaaron

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (4)
Categories: Garden inspirations
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

The best stock a man can invest in, is the stock of a farm; the best shares are plow shares; and the best banks are the fertile banks of a rural stream; the more these are broken the better dividends they pay. --  H.W. Beecher

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 3, 2009

Angela Treadwell-Palmer: The Weeding Gnome

Garden VarietyMeet Angela Treadwell-Palmer, a young Baltimore horticulturist.

You may already know her as the woman who designed the vegetable gardens in front of City Hall. But she is also the author of The Wedding Gnome, a newsletter that weekly takes on gardening issues that irritate its author.

October's rants, for example, included the castigation of garden center owners for their lack of imagination in presenting fall design ideas for gardeners; greedy and impatient plant collectors who won't wait for new varieties to be properly trialed, and the truth about the winter hardiness of coneflowers.

Angela's determination that plants be thoroughly tested before they are marketed is hard won. She is the head of Plant Nouveau, which markets new varieties. If she's wrong, her company suffers the consequences to its reputation.

And she sees breeders rushing plants to market before their hardiness -- or even  their eventual size -- is known.

"I am a gardener, too," she said. "I want to have everything new. It is like fashion. People are always going to want new things. It would be nice if people did it the right way."

Angela lives in the Guilford neighborhood of Baltimore with her husband and her two children - and about 50 garden gnomes. Hence, the name of her newsletter.

If you'd like to read Angela on a regular basis, you can subscribe at her Web site, Plants Nouveau.

Her newsletter is also full of tips and plant suggestions -- and terrific pictures of new plants and ones that will be available soon.  

Photo credit: Angela Treadwell-Palmer

 

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 7:00 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Garden blogs
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Much may be done with those little shreds and patches of time which every day produces, and which most men throw away. --  Charles Colton

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 2, 2009

Bat news: white-nose syndrome

White-nose syndrome

Photo courtesy of U.S. Fish and Wildlife 

Faithful Garden Variety readers will remember that my daughter, Jessie, may or may not have been bitten by a bat during her sleep this summer and was forced to endure the rabies series of shots.

It was not clear that the bat had had rabies - or even that it had left its tiny bite somewhere on her skin. But you don't get do-overs with rabies. It is 100 percent fatal. The shots are a must

(Not nearly as painful as they once were, they are still hideously expensive.)

Not one to hold a grudge, Garden Variety was pleased to learn that Congress has approved $1.9 million in federal funding for research to identify the cause and seek solutions to the "white-nose syndrome" that is devastating bat populations in the Northeast.

This is on top of the $500,000 that had already been allocated for monitoring the mysterious disease, which has 90 percent mortality rates in some places.

White-nose syndrome is exactly that. The noses of the bats display a white dusty fungus during their hibernation. The fungus is just enough of an irritant to keep the bats from entering the deep slumber of hibernation, and they expend valuable energy reserves.

As a result, when spring comes and the bats emerge from their cave sleeping places, they don't have the strength to survive until the insect population arrives for supper.

(Maryland does not have the deep cave system bats require for hibernation. But Southwestern Pennsylvania and West Virginia do.)

Bats have a different kind of reputation at this time of year, but they are an important link in the agrarian food chain because of their appetite for insects.

And they are protective of humans as well because they are so good at eating mosquitoes, which carry the West Nile virus.

This appropriation is probably not enough to understand and irradicate this fungus. The Bat Conservation International urges gardeners and others to contact their congressmen to urge additional funding.

Hey bats. All is forgiven.

 

Posted by Susan Reimer at 2:59 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden news
        

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

Each of us is a trustee of the past, so on the traditions of the past may we build today for a better and more beautiful tomorrow. --  author unknown

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        

November 1, 2009

Speaking of the garden

Garden Variety

 

What is a weed? A plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered. --  Ralph Waldo Emerson

Posted by Susan Reimer at 6:00 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Garden quotations
        
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About Susan Reimer
Susan Reimer has spent 16 years writing about raising kids - among other topics - in her column for The Baltimore Sun. And every time son Joseph or daughter Jessie passed another milestone - driver's license, college, wedding or a move to a new military duty station - she has planted another garden. Now she will be writing about those gardens - and yours - here on Garden Variety.

Susan isn't an expert gardener, but she wasn't an expert mother, either. Both - the kids and the gardens - seem to be doing well in spite of her.

She lives in Annapolis with her husband, Gary Mihoces, who loves to cut his grass but has noticed that there seems to be less of it every time the kids pass another milestone.
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