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Showing posts from 2007

250 Million Trees Planted in Mexico During 2007 Under UN

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Mexico's president Felipe Calderon announced the news that 250-million trees were planted in his country during 2007. The UN Environment Program set a goal of four-times that number to be planted around the world to combat climate change. The story was reported at Yahoo News (click link to read) and came to me through an Internet based Urban Forest newsletter. Calderon reported using local labor and investing $540 million in the project. Environmentalists Complain Greenpeace complained that the planting was done without enough thought. Trees were not planted in appropriate locations and no arrangements were made for their care after the initial shovel-in-the-ground effort was completed. The Greenpeace spokesperson also said that the rate of deforestation in Mexico is an astounding 1.48 million acres a year. The United Nations claimed success, however. A total of 1.4 billion trees were planted. The top ten countries were: Ethiopia, Mexico, Turkey, Kenya, Cuba, Rwanda, South Korea,

Come Garden With Me, Planning for a Scented Garden

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As holiday favorites prove, sometimes the old family recipes are the best at satisfying a hunger. Gardening books are like that, too. Lately, I've been reading some out-of-print gardening books written by gardeners rather than plant people. (The online book swaps, such as Paperbackswap , are great sources for these treasures. Paper and hard backs are available.) The beautifully photographed, encyclopedic tomes are nourishing, too, but no one can grow or even have a passing first hand knowledge of the thousands of plants described in them. I thoroughly enjoy Perenyi and Mitchell's books, too, but they gardened in a different zone with a planting schedule that is unlike our zone 7 heat, humidity, short winter and ice storms to consider. "Come Garden With Me" is a compilation of garden columns written by Elizabeth Pickett Mills. You can tell by reading her columns that she actually is a gardener who messes with plants, dirt, houseplants, bugs, sprays and all the othe

Great Soil is Teaming With Microbes, Pre-Season Sales

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Seed starting requires sterile surroundings to prevent the range of problems collected together under the name "damping off" disease. But, soil itself has to be loaded with beneficial microbes in order to support plant life. A book I would like to get ahold of, "Teaming With Microbes; A Gardener's Guide to the Soil Food Web", published by Timber Press tells the whole story. Joe Lamp'l reviewed the book in the Dallas Morning News . Here's one quote. "Only since the invention of the electron microscope have soil scientists been able to fully study and understand the symbiotic relationships within the soil. Since then, we've learned that a single teaspoon of garden soil can contain more than a billion bacteria. We discovered that plants attract bacteria and fungi to their roots so that protozoa and nematodes will eat these single-celled organisms and then excrete the excess nitrogen in a form that feeds plants." Click on the link to read his

Award for All the Dirt from Red Dirt Ramblings

Another Oklahoma garden blog, Red Dirt Ramblings , has graciously awarded All the Dirt on Gardening an award. Author, Dee Nash wrote about her three favorite blogs. Here is the entry (The Red Dirt author) received this award from Grace at Rose Cottage Lane . Thanks so much, Grace. The way this award works is that I must now nominate three blogs which are favorites of mine. Gee, I only get to pick three? Think, think, think . . . . Okay, here are three favorites, but it was very difficult to choose. First, Confessions of a Pioneer Woman because she writes one jammin’ blog. She’s becoming quite famous, having been on CNN and in The Daily Oklahoman. She takes wonderful pictures, and her self-deprecating wit is hilarious. Second, I love Tongue in Cheek . Corey is an ex-pat living in the south of France. Her writing is heart felt; she is living an authentic life; and she also takes great pictures, some of which are featured in Victoria’s January/February issue. Yes, Victoria is back!! I’ve

Eliot Coleman at Horticulture Industries Show in Tulsa, January 2008

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Chelsea Green Publishing was a new name to me until I became interested in growing greens here at home. Food safety, convenience, freshness and the joy of growing were my motivations. "Four-Season Harvest" is one of the top resources for anyone considering growing their own food for home use or to sell at markets and restaurants. Today's column in the Muskogee Phoenix summarized the book and an upcoming horticulture show where the author, Eliot Coleman will be speaking. Enjoy! Published December 26, 2007 06:05 pm - Garden column: Gardeners and those who are interested in selling at farmers' markets will find a treasure trove of information at the Horticulture Industries Show in Tulsa on Jan. 4 and 5. The Kerr Center, Oklahoma State University, the Arkansas State Horticulture Society and other organizations sponsor the show so costs are kept well below a usual two-day conference. This year's show, "Celebrating Horticulture Four Seasons of Success," will

History of Iris

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In 1958 Buckner Hollingsworth's, "Flower Chronicles" was published by Rutgers University Press. Each chapter summarizes the history of an individual flower. IRIS "Namesake of a goddess; symbol of a Bronze Age religion; heraldic device of the kings of France; "soveraigne" remedy for a vast number of ailments from weak eyes to insanity; flavor for various beverages hard and soft; basis for countless perfumes and powders; ornament of our gardens. The Who's Who item of the iris is a long and distinguished one." Hollingsworth gardened on acreage for 25-years and when she and her husband moved to a small house lot in the town where they managed a museum, she used her extra time to research favorite plants. Folklore, herbology, medicine and poetry are included, along with historical references. Did you know that Iris is the flower of the fleurs-de-lis? Or that it is pictured in frescoes from 3 or 4 thousand years ago? Early medical practitioners used

Labyrinths Around the Globe, Calendar Site and Anne of Green Gables

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FROM THE LIBRARIANS GUIDE TO THE INTERNET Here are a couple of fun links for your entertainment from lii.org Everything you need to plan your 2008 calendar is at the calendar website . Chinese, Christian, Jewish plus calendars no longer in use, such as the Mayan calendar are on the site with history and interesting information. Anne of Green Gables is turning 100 and there is an entire website dedicated to the events surrounding the celebrations. TODAY'S COLUMN Published December 19, 2007 07:03 pm - Find yourself in a maze By Molly Day Submitted Story Arizona, India, Scandinavia and other locations around the world had spiral rock carvings as early as 3,000 years before the birth of Christ. In American, the Hopi people used square labyrinths to represent their Sun Father and Sun Mother. A labyrinth is similar to a maze but the labyrinth has a single path that leads to the center or goal location. A maze on the other hand, has loops, forks and cul-de-sacs that circle the walker ou

New Nutritional Melons from the USDA , MIT Offers You 1500 FREE Courses Online and Cats in the Garlic

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BRIGHT ORANGE MELONS WITH MORE NUTRIENTS A new, more nutritious melon has been invented, the Avant Gardener reports. The cultivar is available to growers from ARS Crop Quality Unit . The link takes you to the usda.gov site with the original report. The new melon was bred to have fewer pathogens in the skin and more vitamin A, C, folic acid, calcium, iron, magnesium, potassium, anti-oxidants and sugar. Watch for 'Orange Dew' in a farmer's market near you. LOVE THE WORD FREE MIT is offering the course materials for 1500 classes free online for everyone. Click here for the index of classes. Topics of interest include soil behavior, architecture, design for sustainability, kitchen chemistry, how to make almost anything, industrial landscapes, environment and society. Then there is also magic, witchcraft and the spirit world. At the top of the page you can register for monthly email updates. TODAY IN THE GARDEN Three-hours out in the sun today! The rest of the last bulb shipment

MOBOT Shows How To Use Environmental Consciousness by Recycling Plastics from Garden Centers and Botanical Gardens

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GMPRO Garden Center Magazine ran a story today about the need for garden centers and botanical gardens with environmental consciousness to find a way of recycling plastic garden pots. " Steve Cline at Missouri Botanical Garden has created perhaps the most successful horticultural pot recycling program in U.S. This past year, the program collected more than 100,000 pounds of horticultural plastics." According to the story, 80-million tons of plastic end up needing to be recycled every year. "In the horticultural industry alone, about 350 million pounds of plastic is produced each year. The Missouri Botanical Garden's Plastic Pot Recycling Program is the largest program of its kind, recycling both plastic pots and polystyrene cell packs and trays. Since 1998, this groundbreaking program has saved over 300 tons of plastic from reaching the landfill. The program has become hugely popular with gardeners in the St. Louis metropolitan area with many participants anxiousl

2008 All-America Selections Include: New White Daisy with Blue Center and a New Viola in Purple and Gold

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All-America Selections are new plants that are chosen every year as winners for gardeners. The selections have been made for 75-years and the plants are still reliable garden favorites. All the winners from 1933 to 2008 are listed on the organization's website. This year's three winners are: Osteospermum F1 'Asti White' a new daisy - blue centers on white flowers, Viola F1 'Skippy SX Plum-Gold' and Eggplant F1 'Hansel'. Of the three, the new daisy looks the best to me. The Johnny-Jump-Up or Viola has a strange color combination that looks like someone was trying too hard to come up with something new for the trade. But, maybe it is just what you need for your spring beds. Flower color is very personal. In general, I can recommend checking the All-America Selections site lists if you want to try something new. For example if you have never grown petunias or pinks from seed, use the AA site to select the type of seed to buy so you will have something rel

The Love of Gardening - Pass It On

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The love of gardening is passed on from one generation to the next . Just as genetic markers and predispositions for career choice skip a generation, it is often our grandparents who led us toward the love of flowers, fresh vegetables and fruit or just the processes of making beautiful surroundings for ourselves and our communities. Wherever you came to benefit from the love of all things earthy, pass it on to someone in the next generation. Encourage those younger than yourself in their horticultural hobby. We put in another 150-daffodils today. What is the count so far for spring blooming? I have no idea anymore. The battery powered auger really helps with large plantings. If all the bulbs put in this year bloom next spring we will either be out there among them or be standing in front of a window enjoying them. (Please, Mother Nature, no Easter weekend freeze next year that destroys all the buds like it did this year.) Look for the good and praise it extends to gardening - nurtu

Global Climate Change in Oklahoma

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Today's Garden Column is about the impact of global climate change on gardening in Oklahoma Plan ahead for possibly earlier spring next year Scientists around the world have looked at the evidence and have decided that climate change is real. Carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses are trapping more heat from the sun and are contributing to rising global temperatures.For Oklahoma, climate change is likely to lead to earlier springs, later falls, shorter winters, more damaging late spring freezes, and longer dry, drought spells. Local impacts will vary and there will still be the natural cycle of drier and wetter years. These are the Oklahoma impacts summed up in the Oklahoma Climatological Survey's statement on Climate Change and its Implications for Oklahoma. Climate change will bring new challenges to Oklahoma gardeners and farmers, but there are ways to meet these challenges. And new approaches can turn these climate challenges into new opportunities. Using water more ef

Tulsa OK Horticulture Industries Show Jan 4 & 5 2008

It is time to register for the Horticulture Industries Show in Tulsa Jan 4 & 5 2008. Early registration must be postmarked no later than December 14. This year's topic is "Celebrating Horticulture: Four Seasons of Success" and you can click here to go directly to the Oklahoma State University Horticulture site's info on the conference. The keynote speaker is author Eliot Coleman who now designs organic gardening tools for Johnny's Selected Seeds. His unique tools include Pinpoint seeder, Get-A-Grip handle-broadfork, three-tine cultivator, grading rake (metal toothed) and European style scythe. In his 40-years of working in the field (literally - he raised cattle sheep, poultry, veggies, etc.) he has written three books and many articles. His partner is also a horticulturist with a column in the Washington Post. Their website is called Four Season Farm . Barbara Damrosch's column this week is about the importance of growing what you eat or at least buying

Your Houseplants Need You

YOUR HOUSEPLANTS IN THE WINTER Check in with your houseplants now that dry, furnace air is all they get to breathe. Even though most houseplants need less fertilizer and water during winter months, the dry air inside homes and offices can make them need a winter tonic. If the leaves are yellowing, try a little houseplant food in tepid water. (Houseplants want water that is within 10-degrees of air temperature so do not shock them with cold water from the faucet.) If the leaves are browning on the tips, they may be over-fertilized. Plants with drooping leaves need to be put into a sink full of tepid water until the top of the soil is wet. Drain the pot and then put it back where it was. How is the light level during the winter rain? Can you move the plants to a location where they can receive brighter light? Even near a reading light can help when it is dark out for a couple of days. Softened water is great for your hair and laundry but the salt is very hard on plants so use something e

Trillium Symposium April 2008 in Delaware

News from the online Trillium and Woodland Plants conversation is that the 2008 Trillium Symposium will be April 17 to 19 and enrollment is limited to the first 200 who register. The workshops and seminars will feature the conservation and propagation of trilliums on the east coast of the US. If you do not grow Trilliums yet, click on this link to see beautiful photographs of them. The Minnesota nursery, Specialty Perennials sells seed and has dozens of links to more wonderful photos at this link . Once you see Trillium photos, you will realize how often you have enjoyed them in shade gardens. Companion plants that want similar growing conditions include spiderwort , bleeding heart, green dragon arum, Jack-in-the-Pulpit, woodland phlox, columbine and Virginia Bluebells. The Symposium is $195 if registration is received by Jan 31, 2008. A member of the same plant family, Toad Lilies grow well in my shade garden. The ones I purchased as plants from Bluestone Perennials bloomed th

Join Seed Savers Exchange

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Membership in the Seed Savers Exchange costs $35 per year and this is the right time of year to join. Members pay for membership and they pay for seeds but membership gives you access to a wider selection. Photo: Blue Poppy - one of the new 2008 seeds available from Seed Savers. The list of seeds is inspiring - almost 13,000 varieties. Request a print catalog at their site. Formed in 1975, the members of the nonprofit organization save and share seeds of heirloom varieties . A quote from their site: "Heritage Farm, Seed Savers Exchange’s scenic 890-acre headquarters near Decorah , Iowa, is a living museum of historic varieties. Amish carpenters have constructed an inspirational meeting area in the barn’s cathedral-like loft, and also a complex of offices and seed storage facilities that feature a magnificent oak post-and-beam frame." Seeds can be purchased from their website without becoming a member. Links include Eating Beans, Seed Collections, Prairie Plants, etc. If you

Gifts for Gardeners 2007

This is the month of shopping for people who love plants. Fortunately, there are so many choices that no two gifts have to be alike: a pot of bulbs, a new tool, planters, live plants, grow lights, heaters and heat mats, shelving for indoors and out. The amount spent can be from zero with a gift certificate for hours of digging and weeding to a fountain outside on the deck. Gifts for gardeners includes items for every pocketbook and gifts from the humble to the sublime. Washable garden gloves $5 — Ora Mae Piester, 918-683-4433, sells them for Muskogee Garden Club. Or, become charter members of the new Oklahoma Botanical Garden, north of Tulsa. Send $35 for an individual or $50 for a family to Oklahoma Centennial Botanical Garden, 5323 W. 31st Street North, Tulsa 74127 and 728-2707. On the higher end, a broad fork to loosen soil without using a rototiller, $160, or Johnny’s Selected Seeds, www.johnnyseeds.com and (877) 564-6697. Seed collections: children’s garden, hummingbird and butte

Winter Beauty

One of the wonders of the Internet is that you can see nature even when you don't feel like being outside. A site featuring the beauty of the Ozark Mountains in Arkansas, Ozark Light has the photos of Randy Wilson. A must see. After you enjoy the photos, click on the Links link to browse more. Horticulture students at Connors State College in Warner, OK, grew poinsettias as a fund raiser. The plants are selling for only $8. Call to be sure they have what you want before you go - 463-6265. "The Horticulture students and student workers have grown a beautiful crop of poinsettias this year. We have red, burgundy, white/pink, and white. They are $8.00 each. Cash or checks." And, you get to help a student in the process: win-win.

December 18 Christmas Centerpiece Class $15

Call to reserve your space in a Christmas Centerpiece Class being held on Tuesday Dec. 18 through the Horticulture Department of Connors State College. There are 3 sessions available: 2-4; 4-6; and 6-8. Cost is $15.00 a person. The class will be making a one sided, asymmetrical arrangement in red carnations, white mums, etc. Call to reserve your space (and allow us to have materials) by Thursday, December 13. 918. 463.6265 Debby Golden, Agriculture Division Chair/Director of Horticulture Connors State College Rt. 1 Box 1000Warner, OK 74469 office - goldend@connorsstate.edu

Exciting Days in Winter Gardening

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King's Crown Bustani Plant Farm Diamond Frost Euphorbia, Kings Crown Dicliptera and Wandering Jew all took root this week in water and were transplanted into little pots of well draining soil. Highlights of propagation OPTIMAL CUTTING MEDIUM It's actually better to start cuttings in a well-draining, moist, combination of sand, moss, potting soil but I was in a hurry when I started the process. LIGHT Neither dark nor bright light helps cuttings root. Diffused light makes the healthiest plants at this stage. TEMPERATURE Temperature recommendations vary but 70-degrees F is usually the goal. When the air is cold, the soil can be 10-degrees cooler than the air in the room. ROOTING HORMONE Sometimes I use Rootone and sometimes I don't. A few of things I've learned about it: 1) Using too much can cause as many problems as not using it; 2) Nurseries use a type of rooting hormone we home gardeners cannot buy; 3) Don't stick the cutting into the bottle because
BUILD AN ISLAND OUT OF BOTTLES AND LIVE ON IT On the green living blog, ECOBLE there is a fascinating story about a man in Mexico who built his idea of paradise on 250,000 recycled plastic bottles. Richie Sowa built it first in 1998, but Spiral Island was destroyed by a hurricane. The island is classified as a ship, so it is allowed to float in Mexico's waters. On September 7, 2007 the new Spiral Islander social network utility was opened to the public. Click here to see the blog entry and the video that accompanies the story. NANCY SZERLAG RECOMMENDS GARDENING MAGAZINES Master Gardener, Nancy Szerlag, writes a garden column for the Detroit News . Since my column this week is about gifts for gardeners, I was curious about her recommendations. Her suggestions are magazines and completely different from mine, so I will list them for you. The link above is to the entire column so you can get more details about the magazines. - Chicagoland Gardening (866) 806-1498, www.chicagolandga

Baker Creek Seeds in Missouri

Baker Creek Seeds is the most local seed company we have, even though it is in Missouri. Since we are supposed to purchase seed from the closest producer, Baker Creek is it. Plus, the seeds I buy from them germinate and grow decently. My gardening skills are still developing so I'm probably not the perfect person to judge by. But! Even in our yard, the successes outweighed the failures with Baker Creek Seeds. From their email newsletter - 2008 catalog is 100 pages in length, with over 1200 items listed. Weekly Christmas music festivals on Sundays, 3pm-8pm -music shows, crafts, and shopping. 200 new seed varieties, including many unique varieties. Also added growing information and photos to the new catalog. For a sneak preview of the new catalog www.rareseeds.com/2008catalogBW.pdf New items here: www.rareseeds.com/seeds/new/ For more information about Village, go to www.StreetsOfBakersville.com Garden forums at www.IDigMyGarden.com Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company2278 Baker Creek

Blue Flowering Plants

Today's garden column was about blue flowering plants and blue foliage plants. In case you missed it, here is the link. http://www.muskogeephoenix.com/features/local_story_332190559.html?keyword=secondarystory Brent and Becky's bulb sale just got twice as interesting: 50% off all remaining bulbs. "The Curious Gardener's Almanac" was reviewed on a blog that is new to me, Applejack . The reviewer enjoyed the book and said it is about the adventures of us commoners in the garden rather than the professionals. It sounds entertaining.

Weeder for Small Troughs

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HOW CAN YOU WEED BETWEEN SMALL PLANTS? On the Alpine-L conversation, Alpine-L, the Electronic Rock Garden Society those who grow in troughs need special weeders to get between plants. A Northern California company, Hidatool .com, has this weeder on sale. It was recommended by a member and certainly looks like it would do the job. EVERYTHING ON SALE 10% OFF Gardening Tool Root Cut Weeder: Blade Length 1 3/4inch (45mm)fork Tip 1inch (25mm)Overall 7 1/2inch (190mm)Item#N-2207Price $7.00

Lighting Enhancements for Indoor Growing, Fall Planted Spring Blooming Bulbs and Pruning Thornless Blackberry Bushes

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THE SHED SAGA If you are a regular reader, you already know about the rainbow ceiling in the new garden shed. This is a photo from yesterday - more changes and improvements were made today - the tweaking continues. The new feature today was the addition of reflective insulation material on the wall to the right to take advantage of the sets of grow lights hanging there. Reflective material on the wall behind the grow shelves maximizes the use of artificial lighting. THE ONE THOUSAND BULBS A gardening friend from Daffnet (the daffodil conversation online) told me that Brent and Becky's Bulbs is having a last of the last sale (25% off). So I ordered. It is now official: We will have put in 1,000 bulbs this year when they arrive and get planted. The photo below is one of the beds - it now has 700 bulbs in it. We can see this bed from the kitchen table windows. Two things about the Brent and Beck's sale: 1) My online friend said they didn't have in stock everything they ad

Science Daily: Carnivorous Plants and Saving Butterflies

Science Daily email today has several articles of interest for nature lovers. First on the slimy saliva of pitcher plants, "Carnivorous plants supplement the meager diet available from the nutrient-poor soils in which they grow by trapping and digesting insects and other small arthropods. . . . that they employ slimy secretions to doom their victims. " If you had been wondering how they do it, that mystery is now solved. And, a link to an older column about Monarch butterfly way stations . Butterfly gardening has to be part of any garden. The video on the link works without any advertising, too. The other great part of the Monarch column is that there are several other informative links to the topic. Plant butterfly nectar sources even if you can't stand the idea of planting caterpillar edible ones.

Go Native, Take Care of Your Houseplants and Are You Too Old To Blog?

New Book Urges the Planting of More Native Plants A professor at the University of Delaware has a new book out, " Bringing Nature Home: How Native Plants Sustain Life in Our Gardens " and it is of course published by Timber Press . The link above is to an interview with Dr. Tallamay in the college's paper. (288-pages, 300-photos, $27, free shipping on the publisher's website.) From the interview: "I took a course in woody landscape plants and found out about all these fascinating exotic plants,” says Tallamy . “Meanwhile, in my entomology courses, I was learning about plant-insect interactions. “All of the information I needed to realize that covering the land with alien plant species might not be such a good idea had been neatly placed in my lap in grad school, but it was 20 years before I made the connection: our native insects, and therefore our wildlife, will not be able to survive on alien plant species.” Houseplant Advice And, from a blog called Gardening

Low-cost, Pet and Child Friendly, Chemical Free Pesticides

We all want low-cost as well as pet and child friendly solutions to gardening dilemmas. Chemical-free pesticides are also the territory of all gardeners who are trying to be good stewards of the earth. In "Designing with Succulents", Debra Baldwin recommends using a spray of diluted rubbing alcohol to cure plants of sucking insects such as aphids and mites. On the Aroid-L discussion there have been several suggestions for dealing with fungi this weekend. Ground cinnamon is recommended as a natural fungicide for use on tubers and roots that have been cut or dug up for winter storage. In addition, orchids, aroids, agave and other plant roots benefit from a thick cinnamon coating while damp. Used on succulent cuttings, it is said to speed up the callus production which is important. And, if the root of a plant has begun to rot, remove the affected portion and cover the cleaned root with cinnamon to use it as a fungicide. The injured roots have to be dampened to make the cinnamo

ResearchBuzz, Locatetv, Museumpods, Surfmind

From today's ResearchBuzz.com newletter - There is a new online service, locatetv.com , that allows you to search by topic, actor, episode name and other criteria. Locatetv provides extra information that you may not have had. For example a search for the topic "gardening" led to the show called "Gardening by the Yard" and the date of production, 1995. Below that is a list of upcoming episodes, the channel and time. When you click on an episode it shows the original date. Saturday's show, "Fall Chores" is a 2006 program. Etc. Botanical gardens such as Missouri Botanical Garden are included in museums that have podcasts. Look at Museumpods.com for places you might want to go over the holidays. At Surfmind.com you can search for "botanical" and get great links, including . botanical gardens, herbals, master gardeners - well, look for yourself or use your own search terms to find what interests you.

Thanksgiving 2007, Houseplants Clear the Air, Talking Drum in Tulsa

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Photo: Happy Thanksgiving from Abby Thanksgiving is a day that marks the beginning of winter even though it does not officially start until December 21st. The focus now is on indoor activities: Shopping, writing cards, traditional foods, reconnecting with friends and family. This week's garden column is about houseplants that will help keep the air inside your home clean and good for breathing. If you missed it here is the link. http://www.muskogeephoenix.com/features/local_story_325180331.html?start:int=45 We dined at Tulsa's Talking Drum on Lewis near 71st for the third Thanksgiving in a row. The people who own it are warm and the food is beyond good - it is fantabulous. A dozen salads and a dozen entrees to choose from on the buffet, with home made desserts to top off the experience. Beer and wine for those who enjoy it. It all makes for a very happy dinner table. Hope you had a fantabulous Thanksgiving, too.

Perennials from Seed, Plants Need Nutrients, Too

There are two newsletter on About.com that I subscribe to: Landscaping and Gardening. They are not always what I'm interested in the day they arrive but are always worth a scan. The irritating part of them is the relentless advertising, popups, etc. For example, today's Landscaping email from David Beaulieu had a link to a video about starting perennials from seed. In order to watch the video the viewer has to watch a video from an unrelated advertiser. Argh. Anyway, the presenter in the video recommends planting perennial seeds in the summer after they are put in ice cube trays in the freezer for a few days. Then she suggests planting the starter pots in the ground for the summer and transplanting them out of the pots and into their permanent position in the fall. In the Gardening newsletter , Marie Iannotti , has a good column about diagnosing plant problems and a great explanation of micro and macro nutrients plants need. Follow the links above to read all about it.

Becoming a Farmer’s Market Grower

Becoming a Farmer’s Market Grower is the topic of a free workshop that will be held Dec 1st in Tulsa. If you have any interest in growing and selling at farmers' markets, here is your chance to connect with the people and information that can help you be successful. The full notice follows - Be a part of one of the fastest growing sectors of Oklahoma agriculture as we meet the rising demand for fresh, locally grown products. This is a free workshop for potential producers of fruits and vegetables….the products that are in highest demand at local farmers markets. Home gardeners, acreage owners and farmers, are all welcome to attend. Saturday, December 1, 2007, From 9 a.m. until Noon OSU Extension Center4116 E. 15th Street, Tulsa, OK 9:00 Welcome and Introductions, Sue Gray, Tulsa County OSU Extension Horticulturist 9:10 Getting Started at Farmers Markets and Resources Available, Doug Walton, Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture 9:30 Market Manager Panel, Find out what prod

Gardening Thanksgiving Week

Our gardening continues! I dug and fertilized a new bulb bed today, planted bulbs in established beds and dug up and potted more tender perennials for the winter. One bag of Earth Smart composted chicken stuff was enough for the entire bed. A lot of the garlic is coming up, feeding those wonderful bulbs for next summer's harvest. After the first freeze kills them back we will give them a thick mulch. In the meantime they are taking advantage of our still 80-degree days. I'm watering, too. All the shrubs that have been planted this month have to be watered until the weather cools more. Don't neglect them; they are developing roots even though they don't look like they are doing much right now. Mothballs saved another bed from the marauding cats. $2 a box at the dollar stores; 2-boxes keeps them out of most of the vulnerable plantings. The neighbors' cats all hunt in our yard. I watched them falling out of trees yesterday as I sat at the kitchen table. They climb the

Gardening History Timeline, Michael Garofalo's Green Way Blog

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Cute garden artifact made of a bicycle wheel and some scrap tubing. We saw it on the garden writer's event in Kansas City. There is some great garden browsing available at Michael Garofalo's site. On one of the cold nights ahead, take a look at the Gardening History Timeline . Gardening is a hobby for Garofalo along with other interests such as Tai Chi. His blog is called Green Way . His website The Spirit of Gardening includes topics: Spirituality, Zen, Trees, Weeding, Flowers, etc. Follow the links to enjoyable browsing.

Bugs, Slugs and Other Thugs, Dicliptera Cuttings and a Possom in the Shed

Today's column was about beneficial and destructive bugs in the garden. If you missed it here is the link to " There are good bugs and bad bugs for gardeners " that ran today. Storey published the book, "Bugs, Slugs and Other Thugs" in 1991. It has tons of good ideas. I've written most of next week's column on cleaning indoor air with houseplants - what an interesting topic it turned out to be. With that done, I started snipping plants to see if I could propagate them with cuttings. That I nternet research led me to the discovery of all things D icliptera . The one I want to propagate is a perennial that attracts hummingbirds. The parent plant is from Bustani Plant Farm and needed to be trimmed to store it for the winter. What do gardeners do with clippings? We stick them in soil to see if they will root. It's a good sickness. Really. Then there is a mystery herb in the little herb bed. It's leaves smells like root beer and the plant has brig

Healing Plants, Spring Flowering Bulbs, USDA Forest Service Celebrates Wildflowers

There are great blogs on the Internet. Follow this link to MMS Gardens to read descriptions of many many medicinal plants and their usefulness. Yarrow, Johnny Jump Ups, Columbine, Pot Marigold, Foxglove, Lily of the Valley, Basil, Evening Primrose, Rosemary, Salad Burnet, Hens and Chicks - the Daily Weeder Blog list is not a medicine cabinet replacement but a great read if you have a bit of time to read about herbs and flowers. Touch of Nature - one of my favorite low cost bulb suppliers - is having their end of season sale. For example, 50 tiny tarda tulips for $6, 50 Tete a Tete Narcissus for $12, etc. Follow the link. And, one more great link to the United States Department of Agriculture's Forest Service Wildflower information. Two links go to Oklahoma's wildflowers: Southern Region and Southwestern Region . Happy gardening.

Holiday Gifts of Spring Blooming Bulbs

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If any of your bulbs are still sitting in bags waiting to be planted outside, consider keeping some out of the garden and using them for holiday gifts or decorations for your own home. Charley's Greenhouse sent out an email with the instructions if you missed them in my column last week. Here are the basics from Charley: Most spring-blooming bulbs need a cold dormancy period of 10-12 weeks for best stem and flower development. Choose containers that are shallower rather than deeper. Start with large, firm bulbs of similar size so they will all bloom at once. Add about 1 inch of sterile, good draining potting mix to the bottom of the pot. Set the bulbs in so they are almost touching. Add more soil to within ½ inch of the top of the pot. For increased show in limited spaces, combine 2 or more types of bulbs in your pot. Layer the bottom of the pot with larger bulbs. Cover them with a layer of soil. Next add a layer of smaller bulbs like dwarf daffodils and reticulated iris. Cover th

Milkweed Beetle at Bug Guide

The black and orange beetle in yesterday's post? A milkweed beetle. Guess where I found it? On the Asclepias I grow to feed Monarch butterfly caterpillars. Asclepias is milkweed. The answer came from Bug Guide online. When I went to What's That Bug to search all their beetle photos, one of their posts had a link to Bug Guide. Also, I tried to save the Monarch caterpillars from the freeze but they resisted and died anyway. Sigh. You can't save nature from its own cycles. Yesterday's post took me 3-hours over a two-day period to get loaded onto Blogger. I took some nice photos at Greenleaf State Park today but Blogger will not allow them onto today's blog. Maybe tomorrow. I hope you had time to cover vulnerable plants or bring them in! Brrr.

Prepare Garden for Freezing Weather

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Well, it's here - the first freeze is coming this week. Time to bring in all the tender plants in pots and water the perennials so their roots don't freeze. Any plant that prefers a dry climate should not be watered because they dislike cold, wet soil. One example of that type of plant in my garden is lavender. Sage is another. I moved a couple dozen pots indoors after spraying them with Safer Soap. Otherwise bugs will come in with the plants. Photo: Anyone know what that bug is on my hand? It is crawling on the Asclepias with the Monarch butterfly caterpillars and Aphids. I took it off a couple of times and it found its way back to the Asclepias. There are all manner of seeds that need to planted between now and January because they need a shot of cold weather in order to germinate. The annuals in this category include poppies and larkspur. Many perennials, including shrubs and trees, require cold and wet to sprout through their tough seeds. This link at Alchemy-Works, in Elmi

Sowing Seeds in Winter and Learning More About Gardening

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Photo: In the foreground is the lantana that keeps the butterflies happy. Center is one of the Castor Bean plants - seeds from a Missouri seed company, Baker Seed. Then there is the stunning red maple in all its Nov 2nd glory. It is time to think about sowing seeds that will succeed because they need a winter freeze in order to sprout in the spring. Wintersown is a website with everything you need to know. At the site, there is a cool link to the National Agricultural Library. Click on Plants and Crops and then Gardening Resources for an education in gardening. Here are some of the interesting links: North American Native Plant Society American Public Garden Association Gardening Launch Pad with over 5,000 links to gardening topics Master Gardeners links Garden Web - gardening community on the Internet Cyndi's Catalog of Garden Catalogs - 2,000 of them Gardening is the kind of hobby that becomes a part of your life and a part of your family. Enjoy these wonderful pre-winter