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 Thursday, December 13, 2007
New Plants and Tools, Part II
by Sara Begg, Executive Editor
I have two routes of egress from my house. One leads to the back yard (and the recycling box, the grill, and the hose), one to the front yard (the bigger portion of my garden, our stroller "zone", and the way out to the street) . At any given moment, I might need to go out, in any kind of weather. In most cases, I need footwear. And I need footwear that is sturdy enough to allow me to walk at least out to the curb (where I might need to fetch plant catalogs that my husband has tried to secretly recycle for the third week in a row) and into the garden. For the last two years, I've been wearing fluorescent blue rubber clogs for this purpose. And while they worked well for three seasons, they are a bit dodgey for winter.
Well, two weeks ago, my lovely younger brother, who works for Puma and Tretorn sneaker companies, gave me a little slice of garden footwear heaven. They are called Skerry Vinter--I think that is Norwegian for "scary winter". But really, they are making winter not so scary. They are low, sturdy rubber boots lined with some kind of cozy, artificial fur. They are like outdoor slippers. They are beyond perfect. The only flaw may be that the sole doesn't seem like it will grip the ice so well, but so far they've been fine. So, now I have the skerries at the front door and clogs at the back. No more carrying wet mucky shoes from the front door to the back.
The second "tool" is from Lee Valley. It is called A Saw for All Seasons. I guess it was originally intended for cutting drywall. They've adapted it as a root saw for gardeners. I haven't used it, but you can bet it is on my wish list. I've destroy more than one pair of pruners trying to cut roots in the dirt. Lee Valley is also selling a couple new products from Haws. A lovely red watering can that looks easy to carry and fill, as well as an elegant brass watering wand.
Read Meg Lynch's blog
Read Lisa Newman's blog
12/13/2007 9:39:14 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, November 29, 2007
New Plants and Tools, Part I
by Sara Begg, Executive Editor Today's post is inspired by a press packet that came to Horticulture a few weeks ago. We receive alot of press packets and alerts about new plants, tools, and really, any product that might remotely qualify as garden-related (reusable cement anyone?). The packet I was leafing through this morning was from Terra Nova Nurseries, one of the big breeders, growers, and plant introducers (is that a word?) in this country. They first became known for owner Dan Heim's heuchera breeding and until recently, I thought of them as rather heuchera-centric. But now, things seem to have changed. Of the 41 new perennials they are releasing in 2008, I've picked out five that particularly made me swoon on this cool, grey, dark November morning (NB: I have grown none of these plants, so cannot advise anyone on the quality, vigor, or hardiness of these plants)(NB part deux: These particular plants appealed in part because I'm planning for a pale lemon yellow/blue spring palette evolving into a hot orange/purple scheme by late summer).
 Bergenia 'Solar Flare'
  The variegation of this bergenia is nuts and gorgeous. This is a genera I cannot get enough of. If they die in my garden, I plant more.

Echinacea 'Tiki Torch' There are so many gorgeous new coneflowers out there. This crazy orange (and the name) screams summer to me. 
Coreopsis 'Moonlight' Can't resist the pale lemon yellow color, even if it will be blooming when my hot orange/purple combo will be supposedly in full swing. I usually don't get that psyched about coreopsis, but I'm trying to break through my prejudice. We'll see if 'Moonlight' can do it. 
Campanula 'Summertime Blues' The printed picture looks super-blue, but I'm guessing it tends more towards a purpley-blue, which would work well for me if it really blooms for as long as they claim. 
Heuchera 'Midnight Rose' Had to include one of these guys. And this hot pink-flecked-burgundy-leaved heuchera looks really beautiful. I love using heuchera leaves in little bouquets, you appreciate their details better that way. This color combo really gets me pumped. Have you ever seen Hemerocallis 'Midnight Oil'. Ridiculous. 
And that is it. Photos will be posted by noon today (and are courtesy of Terra Nova Nurseries).
Read Meg Lynch's blog Read Nan Sinton's blog
11/29/2007 8:33:19 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, November 21, 2007
A City of Gardeners
by Sara Begg, Executive Editor I've been off my blog for some time now, mostly because I've been travelling and been away from my computer. I've been up in Toronto for a family wedding and was there for what feels like the better part of November. And it was great. Hard, but great. In Toronto, all the streets are familiar, even if I've never been down them. Everyone I've known all my life lives there. It makes it hard to visit, because I miss it both as a city and as my former home. I was also amazed at how many gardeners are living in the city. In any given neighborhood, most of the front yards are planted up with interesting plants---cool trees with good texture and size, unusual shrubs and perennials, not to mention vegetables and fruit trees poking out of every possible pocket of soil. It seems to me that gardening is a bigger part of the culture there than it is here in Boston. I don't know why, but it just is. I don't think I've ever really noticed that before, perhaps because I usually spend the bulk of my time north of the city.
On another note, if you do not have Acer japonicum 'Aconitifolium' in your garden, you must go out and get it now. I put it in my garden in the summer of 2006 and it has quietly been holding its place in the garden since. Quiet until now. It is simply on fire. A shockingly bright orange in late November, when everything else is turning brown, beige, or at best, muted yellow. The stem of each leaf is scarlet red and the rest of the leaf is brillant orange. I gather from other gardeners that it is not always orange, in fact, it can be an amazing blend of red, orange, and yellow in its best years.
Read Meg Lynch's blog Read Nan Sinton's blog 
Photo courtesy Great Hill Horticultural Foundation
11/21/2007 8:23:59 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, November 01, 2007
Shrub borders
Sara Begg, Executive Editor
The perennial craze that has been ongoing in this country (world, probably) for the last 30 years has meant that shrubs have been given the short shrift. I overlook them myself. I bet out of each order that I place through mailorder or each purchase I make at a nursery, 75 percent are perennials, 20 percent are annuals or tender perennials, and 5 percent is made up of shrubs and trees. Well, no more. The extended fall that we are experiencing here in the Northeast means that a good garden can't rely only on perennials and annuals to pull it through. (Not that it should ever have, long autumn or not, but I've been lazy).
After a trip to Martha's Vineyard last weekend visiting houses and gardens, I've been made to see the incredible beauty of the shrub border. The textures, colors, and shapes of the borders were remarkable and elegant. Their muted hues accented by the red and purple berries of deciduous hollies and beautyberries. None of the gardens I saw would be considered a "collector's garden" but were gardens of very good design. They allowed the natural beauty of landscape to speak for itself, accented by plants. Plants that were in most cases natives.
While I don't think I'll be going down the path of full shrub borders anytime soon, I've already been trolling the catalogs for shrubs to help add heft, shape, and beauty to my (perennial) borders.
Read Meg Lynch's blog
Read Lisa Newman's guest blog
11/1/2007 8:22:38 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Fall Planting
Sara Begg, Executive Editor
I haven't been able to get into the garden for long chunks of time lately, but that doesn't mean that I don't get things done in the garden, they just get done late. For many of my beloved bulbs that is fine. For other things, well, it causes problems, especially when the "other things" are bareroot plants desperate to get in the ground. To say I like to experiment with how long things can stay out of the soil is a stretch. I leave things out for days, convincing myself that plants are resilient. And they are, but I think my garden would be much better and the plants would be happier, if I would just get them in the ground. So, my fall garden resolution is to buy, acquire, accept from others, only the amount of plants that I can successfully get into the soil in a span of three days (could I stretch it to five? Any thoughts out there? Guess it depends on the plant). Yes, a solution to this would be to have a nursery bed (no room) or have containers and potting mix at the ready for those barerooted numbers (too much clutter already in the small garden). So I'm stuck with my resolution.
Of course, I have to start this resolution after I get my two new Adiantum pedatum (Maidenahair ferns) and a few chunks of bare-root peonies that came from a good friend's neighbor's garden in Garrison, NY. The clumps are alleged to be 100-years old, so it will be interesting to see what the peonies look like (if they make it....gulp).
I wonder if anyone else out there makes these resolutions, and if they do, how fast do they break them?
Read Meg Lynch's blog
10/17/2007 9:01:17 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Change in the seasons
Sara Begg, Executive Editor I think for many gardeners the best times of year are the times when the seasons shift. When you live in a part of the world like New England these times are even better (in my opinion). This fall is providing particular relief to us in Boston because we are finally getting rain! Phew. My garden has had a tough summer go of it and I'm looking forward to an upcoming weekend of bulb and perennial planting, having waaaay over-ordered from Brent and Beckys Bulbs and Odyssey Bulbs as well. While I might be cursing myself as I struggle to find one more open spot in my tiny city garden, I will be happily hopeful all winter long as I wait for the show in the spring. If you haven't ordered bulbs yet for planting this fall. It is not to late. Do it now and you'll thank me in the spring. This spring for me (not unlike most springs) is going to be all about tulips, the viridflora 'Spring Green' and parrot tulips 'Black Parrot' and "Professor Rontgen' (see attached photo) which is a gorgeous swirling combination of orange, peach, salmon, and pale yellow. You have to pick them for the house or they fall over from the weight and get wrecked.
Read Meg Lynch's blog
10/10/2007 10:41:49 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, September 20, 2007
Pickling Recipe
By Liz Olson, Editorial Assistant When I saw Roger Swain last, he recommended that I read The Joy of Pickling Linda Ziedrich. I wanted to try my own pickling and I love reading new recipes, so I was excited to pick up the book. She has great recipes for anything you can imagine, and everything you never thought about pickling. I have written a recipe below from The Joy of Pickling that I’m going to try with my cucumbers and onions this weekend.
Bread-and-Butter Pickles
Ingredients:
6 lbs. pickling cucumbers (4 - 5 inches)
2 lbs. small onions, sliced into thin rounds 1/2 cup pickling salt 4 1/2 cups cider vinegar 3 cups sugar 1 1/2 teaspoons ground turmeric 1 teaspoon celery seeds 2 teaspoons yellow mustard seeds 1. Gently wash the cucumbers, and remove the blossom ends. Slice the cucumbers crosswise 3/16 inches thick. In a large bowl, toss the cucumbers and onions with the salt. Cover the vegetables with ice cubes from two ice trays. Let the vegetables stand three to four hours.
2. Drain the vegetables. In a large non-reactive pot, bring the remaining ingredients to a boil. Add the vegetables, and slowly bring the contents to a boil. Using a slotted spoon, pack the vegetables loosely in eight pint or four quart mason jars, leaving 1/2 inch headspace. Divide the liquid evenly among the jars. Close the jars with hot two-piece caps.
3. To ensure a good seal, process the jars for 10 minutes in a boiling-water bath. 4. Store the cooled jars in a cool, dry, dark place for at least three weeks before eating the pickles. (Makes about four quarts)
9/20/2007 8:54:31 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, September 14, 2007
Harvesting Season
By Liz Olson, Editorial Assistant It has been a week of the harvest. Roger Swain arrived at the office carrying crates of beautiful fruit⎯Gravenstein apples, ‘Sungold’ cherry tomatoes, five varieties of grapes (including concord, which were my favorite), and two kinds of plums. He picked all of it from his garden, and all had amazing flavor. Our advertising and marketing director, Barbara Emerson, also brought in beautiful heirloom tomatoes (‘Black’ variety) and cherry tomatoes from her garden.
With fruit on the brain I went excitedly to my own garden after work last night. Although it was on a much smaller scale, I had a fun harvest of my own, and a little to share! I had two heirloom tomatoes (‘Better Boy’), a summer squash, a cucumber, three carrots, and lots of cherry tomatoes and basil to pick.
Back in June, I planted Achillea ‘Apricot Delight’ (Achillea millefolium) and Cosmos ‘Sensation Blend’ (Cosmos bipinnatus) around my vegetable garden. I’m glad I did it⎯I enjoy seeing their pink flowers when I visit my garden at the end of the day.
9/14/2007 3:22:24 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, September 07, 2007
Wandering Jew in the office
By Liz Olson, Editorial Assistant
My co-worker Melanie has a beautiful Wandering Jew plant (Tradescantia pallida
‘Purple Heart’) in her office, which I have admired for some time. She needed to re-pot it recently because it has grown really well and quite quickly. I took a small piece of the plant to propagate hoping that I too would have a large trailing ‘Purple Heart’ soon.
Tradescantia pallida
‘Purple Heart’ is a great indoor plant for cool climates, but it is a good groundcover for outdoor gardens in Zones 8-11 as well. It is drought-tolerant with succulent leaves and stems that trail out of containers and window boxes.
Annie’s Annuals is a good source to see pictures, buy, and learn more about Tradescantia pallida ‘Purple Heart’.
 
9/7/2007 2:34:43 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Gardens Abroad
By Liz Olson, Editorial Assistant
I just got back from vacation in England and Scotland. I lucked out and had beautiful weather during my stay. I was able to visit several gardens outside of London and around Glasgow. Two of my favorites were Hampton Court Palace Gardens and Glasgow Botanic Gardens. It was my fourth time visiting Hampton Court. I went back because it is one of my favorite spots in the area. Every inch of the park had something beautiful in bloom. The Glasgow Botanic Gardens were lovely as well. I had never been, and I had a wonderful time strolling from one garden or greenhouse to the next. They have a great vegetable garden outside and an impressive tropical plant display inside. Here are two images from the Glasgow Botanic Garden. One is a view of a vegetable patch, and the other is of giant Gunnera, which I had never seen and I am fascinated by. It looks like it belongs in prehistoric times like one of its common names, Dinasour Food, implies.  
Gunnera manicata is native to Brazil and Columbia. It grows best in a very moist climate and long growing season. Although Glasgow is not a tropical location it has both those requirements. Here are a few links to find out more about giant Gunnera.
Desert Tropicals
Cool Exotics
Wikipedia
9/4/2007 3:15:37 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Caterpillar predators
By Liz Olson, Editorial Assistant As I was puttering around my vegetable patch yesterday morning before work I noticed a large caterpillar on one of my heirloom tomato plants (‘Better Boy’). I had never seen one as big on a plant or with white on it, so I took a couple pictures. After asking my co-worker Nan about it and searching online a bit I found out that it is a hornworm caterpillar being attacked by braconid wasps.
Braconid wasps naturally control hornworm caterpillars. Female wasps inject eggs into the caterpillar’s body. The larvae that hatch from the eggs feed inside the caterpillar until they mature and eat their way out through the caterpillar’s skin. The caterpillars would otherwise eat the tomatoes.
 
It is a good idea to leave caterpillars with cocoons alone so the wasps can emerge to attack more hornworms. I did not know this when I saw it and killed it, but I’m glad to know for the next time. What’s that Bug? Is an online source to help identify caterpillars.
8/22/2007 4:39:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, August 16, 2007
Death of 'King Kong' and 'Big Red Rudy'
By Liz Olson, Editorial Assistant
Two weeks ago my co-worker, Melanie, let me take pieces from two of her coleus plants to try and propagate in the office. I tried Coleus ‘King Kong’ and ‘Big Red Rudy’. They both have beautiful leaves so I was excited at the prospect of having my own. Melanie propagated the plants (pictured) that I took leaves from and they grew beautifully.
 
Unfortunately, the leaves I tried to propagate have looked progressively worse over the past week. This morning they both looked dead so I decided to toss them out. ‘King Kong’ was definitely dead, but it turns out that ‘Big Red Rudy’ had started a root system and probably would have sprouted at some point. I didn’t realize this, though, until I had already wrecked the roots. I feel terrible that I killed it, but I’m going to give it another try next week. Also, I’m really excited because Melanie and I are going to order some coleus plants from a nursery in Minnesota called Color Farm (www.colorfarm.com). We’ve never ordered from them before, but they have gotten good reviews so we’re going to try them out. I’m going to try ‘Fireworks’, ‘Buttercream’, and ‘Lime Frill’.
8/16/2007 3:44:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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