baltimoresun.com

October 25, 2010

Governor's garden is put to bed for the winter

Government House vegetable garden

Sue du Pont, spokesperson for the Maryland Department of Agriculture,  volunteers her time at the Government House vegetable garden. She holds the rye/oat seeds that were planted Monday as a cover crop on the garden.

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun/Susan Reimer

Volunteers from the University of Maryland Extension Master Gardeners program were at Government House in Annapolis Monday, putting first lady Katie O'Malley's vegetable garden to bed after a successful season.

The garden battles shade and drainage issues, but some careful planning for the second year produced many more tomatoes and peppers, plus the usual bounty of greens and herbs.

Monday, Lisa Winters, Sarah Findlay and Carole Fullagar were tearing out the last of the tomato and pepper plants, cutting back the herbs that will overwinter, including sage, lavendar, mint and oregano, and tending to the chard, kale and parsnips that will continue to produce for weeks.

"We're mindful that this is a historic building," said Winters, "so we have pansies to put on the front row."

Behind the pansies, the Master Gardeners will plant a cover crop by scattering handfuls of rye and oats in the planting rows. The grains will grow to about two feet high and prevent wind and water erosion over the winter.

Next spring, the gardeners will cut the grains to the ground, leaving them in the garden to provide mulch and to amend the soil. And the roots will remain in the soil, breaking it up and then decomposing to return more nutrients to the soil.

(Have you planted your cover crop yet? You still have time.)

Continue reading "Governor's garden is put to bed for the winter" »

Posted by Susan Reimer at 1:17 PM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Fall gardening
        

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

Continue reading ""Kale, kale, the gang's all here!"" »

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