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Showing posts from July, 2015

A garden is first and foremost...

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by  Dominique Lafourcade “A garden is first and foremost a work of art,  with the garden playing the roles of architect, sculptor,  musician and painter in turn.  A garden should move visitors, setting all their senses aquiver”. - Dominique Lafourcade by  Dominique Lafourcade

3 Simple Garden Design Tips

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Jan Johnsen garden and photo - Heaven is a Garden      Jill Sell of the Cleveland Plain Dealer just wrote a lovely review of my book,  ' Heaven is a Garden':  "As life gets more hectic, we seek homes and gardens that are refuges from the chaos. It doesn't matter if we have a five-acre property, suburban half acre or a balcony off our apartment; a garden that provides serenity is a treasure.  Jan Johnsen's  Heaven is a Garden   (St. Lynn's Press) is a gem of a little book that provides both inspiration and practical suggestions for creating our own garden sanctuaries.  from Heaven is a Garden A few of her thoughts: • A cozy, sheltered corner can be created next to your home by using the rear wall as one side of the corner and a low hedge as the other side. Johnsen calls the result "a wonderful niche for a small table and chairs. " • Plant beds shaped as spirals are most captivating, according to the author. Try compact herbs, low box

Before and After - Garden Photo of the Day

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This is a great reminder of how fast plants grow - Golden Majoram is planted in the squares at the base of this Grape Arbor. The photo at top is taken from one end while the after photo is looking toward the other end...

T. Jefferson's Amazing Vegetable Garden

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Vegetable Garden at Monticello  Thomas Jefferson, the third president, w as an ardent plant lover and a pioneer plant distributor. He collected exotic trees and shrubs and investigated new crops to grow in the United States. He  was  instrumental in introducing many vegetables into the young American culture. For example, he smuggled rice in a tea canister from his tour in Italy and sent it to South Carolina and Georgia as a possible crop. His attempts to have farmers in those areas sow various varieties of foreign rice, were finally successful  and, in time, it became a flourishing agricultural crop. Jefferson also sent Lewis and Clark off to explore the west and asked them to gather native seeds. He corresponded with many to have them send vegetable  seeds from other parts of the globe.   Nicholas King, mapmaker for the Lewis and Clark expedition explained, “ no person has been more zealous to enrich the United States by the introduction of new and useful vegeta

Nature has a reminder for you....

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Love is everywhere

Children and Hands-On Learning

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Stack some stones with kids! The fiber artist Renate Hiller was interviewed about handwork and kids. I thought it addressed the value of children and gardening perfectly: "In the past there were all the professions of the shoemaker and the tailor and so on, and that’s also being lost.  If you do practical work somewhere on the school grounds, there is practical work going on. The children will all go to that.  They’re really drawn to that. They want to experience it and however the reality is that there’s less and less of that. In the home, you know you can use already bought vegetables, all chopped up and ready to eat.  There is very little activity like kneading the bread, and you know children grasp first an item and then they grasp with their mind.  So if they have very little to grasp other than plastic readymade toys then what their mind grasps is very little.. ." Renate Hiller

Removing Invasive Plants : Japanese Knotweed

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Japanese Knotweed in flower   Ja panese knotweed ( Fallopia japonica ) is a highly aggressive and invasive plant.  It is the  closest thing that you'll find to Godzilla in the plant world. It spreads by underground rhizomes, especially in wetland areas and along rivers.  The plant originated in Asia and was introduced to the U.S. to control erosion on disturbed sites. photo by Tom Heutte And that is where our troubles began: Japanese knotweed  can grow almost anywhere and spreads like crazy. . Michael De Rosa writes, "Cutting and removing standing vegetation is a beginning, but without removing the root ball completely, the plant will re-colonize the area within the same growing season. Moreover, the plant will regenerate into an entirely new plant from broken stems, leaves and root parts. Knotweed will generate new growth from broken stems and rhizome parts. This is what makes knotweed such an insidious plant . It is able to clone itself

Changing it Up - Garden Photo Title Page

Hello ! I have decided to change the photo that appears at the top of this garden blog often. I hope it doesn't upset some...Life is changing rapidly these days and I thought, 'Why keep it static? That is 20th century'. If you like the idea of me changing the title photo often - I would love to hear it...It is an experiment. BTW, in the same vein, what is it with the coca-cola cans with people's names? 

TULSI - India's 'Holy Basil'

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I am sitting here, drinking a lovely cup of  Tulsi tea , and I realized I should share tulsi with all...Tulsi tea provides a calming effect and its anti-stress properties are well known in India. Also known as the Queen of Herbs, it is the most important plant in the Hindu way of life. What is Tulsi (Holy Basil)? TULSI  (Ocimum sanctum), known as Holy Basil - is the sacred herb of India. ( Please note it is a different plant from the pesto variety of Basil, Ocimum basilicum.) It has been revered for over five thousand years as a  healing balm for body, mind and spirit . The leaves, flowers, fruits, root, branches and the main stem and everything about Tulsi is sacred in India; even the soil under the Tulsi plant is holy. ( Padmapurana 24/2) Tulsi  is indigenous to the Indian subcontinent. It is a bushy shrub about 18 inches high with oval and serrated leaves (the leaf colors range from light green to dark purple, depending on the variety). In the wild, tulsi is an

The Plant Finder - A Great Resource!

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The Missouri Botanical Garden (MOBOT)  offers an online resource that I love:  The Plant Finder.  (Click on name for link) L ook up, view a photo and read about the over 6,800 plants which are growing or have been grown in their Kemper Center display gardens by scientific name, common name and/or selected plant characteristics. TheWilliam T. Kemper Center for Home Gardening opened in 1991 and spreads out over 8.5 acres. There are 23 demonstration gardens filled with ideas for home gardeners.  You can also call their Master Gardeners and get personalized answers to your specific gardening questions, 9 a.m. to noon, Monday through Friday. Call (314) 577-5143. Kemper Center Plant Doctors Bring in a sample of your sick plant and let the Master Gardeners at the Plant Doctor desk diagnose your problem and provide treatment recommendations. This is a walk-in service from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Service is free with Garden admission. T

Monet's Giverny - A Quote

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Giverny - onet's garden outside Paris ' Everyone discusses my art and pretends to understand,  as if it were necessary to understand,  when it is simply necessary to love. ' - Claude Monet Monet's Giverny By Snap 713 on Flickr

Unplug in the Garden - Garden Trends

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In 2010 Husqvarna and Gardena released a  Global Garden Report  and identified the FEEL GOOD GARDEN as one of the top gardening trends in the world... They wrote: "...individualism in the garden is on the rise, replacing conformity.  jchants photostream - Lake Forest Secret garden tour Gone is the obsession with keeping up with the neighbors’ ...  it’s now about expressing yourself using your outdoor space, encouraged by on-line friends." Leaves on Sticks.... That's me - your on-line friend! And I encourage you to keep expressing yourself in your 'feel good' (FG) garden.  Here is what the  Global Garden Report  said specifically about FG gardens: Julianne Moore's City Garden - a verdant retreat The Feel Good Garden "As we continue to live stressful lives, there is an ever increasing need for a safe haven at home.  Globally more of us are turning to our gardens for the peace and tranquility that nature is perfectly sui

A NZ Church Made From Trees

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I had to share this! Click on this for a great little video. .. Barry Cox thinks outside the box.. . While touring New Zealand, Europe and America, often on a motorbike, Cox studied  the proportions, angles, heights and pitches of church roofs.  Barry started Treelocations, a business that moves large trees using a specially designed tree spade that can scoop up a whole tree, root ball and all.  After planting more than 4000 trees on his dairy farm in the Waikato, New Zealand, Barry found another property nearby with  sandy loam and Mount Pirongia rising majestically in the distance. "I walked out my back door one day and thought, 'That space needs a church' –" said Barry,  and so he drew on all the research he had done over the years of studying churches. " I wanted the roof and the walls to be distinctly different, to highlight the proportions, just like masonry churches," he said. He chose Alnus glutinosa 'Laciniata', or