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 Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Nasturtiums in Bloom
by Meg Lynch, Editor I have a couple perennials in my small front garden, but mostly I like to use this space to experiment with annuals. This year I designed my plan around sherbet flavors—lemon, orange, raspberry, watermelon. I ordered seeds of annuals that fit this color scheme.
But this year the garden just didn’t work out as I planned. (I mentioned that to my co-worker Jill yesterday and she said, “Well isn’t that what happens in gardening?” Good point!) It started out well. I won’t get into my excuses for why it all went downhill. They’re pretty typical—maybe you’ve used them too. At this point, all I have is the pair of perennials (Helenium ‘Mardi Gras’ and Coreopsis ‘Limerock Dream’) and the Johnny-jump-ups that self-sowed. But I also have nasturtiums! Indian cress nasturtiums, or Tropaeolum majus, the only part of my seed order to survive the summer (knock on wood). I think I sowed three seeds to a hole. I know I didn’t thin the seedlings when they sprouted, as I should have. But that seems a happy thing now, because the plants take up a good amount of space that would otherwise be empty. Their big leaves, which I love, hide a lot of bare ground. And they just started blooming over the weekend. Some of the flowers are bright orange and some are golden orange, with nice markings in their throats. Nasturtiums are edible but I won’t be trying these because they grow right at the edge of the road. Tropaeolum majus is a climbing type of nasturtium, but I’ve been letting mine ramble instead of tying it up. 
 
7/8/2008 11:37:19 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, July 01, 2008
My Voluptuous Garden
Voluptuousness abounds in my container garden this summer. The Proven Winners plants we received as trials for next year's growing season are amazing. Here are a couple shots—one of my favorites is the lantana (Citrus Blend). How does your garden grow? Come to the forum and share your summer stories and photos. 
  
Now that the dust has settled after the move of the Horticulture home office from Boston to Cincinnati, I’ll be here on the blog and in our forum more frequently. I’m looking forward to getting to know you, and hope you’ll help us build our online community. You, our readers, are our #1 priority, and we want to facilitate greater dialog among us. I invite you to write to me when you have a concern about the magazine, an idea for a story, a complaint or kudos. Tell me what you want to see more or less of, or not at all. Open and honest communication is one of my passions, and I’ll make every effort to respond to your emails in a timely fashion. Here’s my email: edit@hortmag.com By way of introduction: •I blog, therefore I am •My wings are made of words •I’m a yogini, hiker, reader, gardener—these keep me grounded •I’m a seeker of truth, an agent for change •I’m a mother (one daughter, age 25, who’s married and happy—what a blessing) •I’m happily single, still live in my hometown, own a condo (which gives me time to hike, read and practice yoga!) •I’m wild about muscle cars (odd addition to the list, but true—give me a ’69 Chevy SS and an open road and I’m gone!) •I believe in the power of peace and love We’re hard at work on the October/November issue and duty calls. Thank you for being here. Peace and love to you and yours. Patty Craft managing editor Annuals
7/1/2008 1:49:16 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, June 23, 2008
Johnny-jump-WAY-ups
by Meg Lynch, Editor
Last year I planted Johnny-jumps-ups (Viola cornuta) in my front garden. This year, true to their common name, these annuals have reappeared, “jumping up” from seed last year’s plants dropped.
Or at least I thought their common name referred to their tendency to self-sow and reappear. Now I’m wondering if it has anything to do with their ability to climb. See, the plants in my garden this year have grown much taller than the 6 or 8 inches typical of Viola cornuta. They are using my perennial sneezeweed (Helenium ‘Mardi Gras’) as a ladder. The tallest bloom is about 16 inches high. The sneezeweed won’t bloom for a couple more weeks, and neither will the nearby coreopsis and nasturtiums. The Johnny-jump-ups have been a great filler, with their purple and yellow blooms. I didn’t plan on this – I wasn’t even sure the little violets would come up at all. So it’s a great example of the way plants can add to a garden’s design all on their own. How have plants surprised you in your garden? Leave a comment below or chime in at our Forum.
6/23/2008 11:52:43 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Road Paved with Flowers
by Jessie Gridley, Associate Editor I fell in love with the botanical world while working in a flower shop as a water girl eight years ago. The job was simple: water, deadhead and try not to kill anything while the florists were away. Prom time came with Mother’s Day the very next day. For those of you not in the floral business, Mother’s Day is the pinnacle of busy days—trailing in sons and daughters of every age. An extra set of hands was needed to patch together tardy corsage orders for brace-faced boys. I did OK, which meant that it was time for me to be taught the florist’s trade. From that point on, I looked forward to spending my holidays home from college, where I switched majors from plant biology to journalism, working creatively as a florist. I discovered that every fresh-flower customer had a story, which I know is the same for all of you avid gardeners. There was the widower, a kind crouching old man who came in at the same time and day every week to by a single red rose to lay on the grave of his wife. The regulars did not need an occasion to decorate their homes with fresh blooms. And of course there were the celebrators, grievers and countless lovers, whose special moments (good and bad) I was able to be a part of. Being around flowers and those with similar passions enlivened me, just as I know working with Horticulture as an associate editor, and with all of its passionate readers (yes, you), will too. Time has passed, and although I’ve switched to the journalism field, I’ll always be a water girl. What is your story? How did you become enamored with the botanical world? Leave a comment below, or post your thoughts in our Forum.
6/17/2008 4:08:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Weeding Tips and a Tool
by Meg Lynch, Editor We had a few colder-than-average, rainy days (over the weekend, naturally) but now the weather is sunny and warm here. We are past the last-expected-frost date in my area, but the nights are still chilly. I'm looking forward to planting annuals out front in a couple weeks. In the meantime I have some seeds to sow out there. I went out today to get the area ready—weed seedlings are popping up everywhere and I wanted to clear them out.
Our "Organic Approach" columnist, Peter Garnham, recommends attacking weeds with a sharp hoe while they are young and still resemble little threads with tiny leaves. At that stage they can't reroot themselves after you simply dislodge them from the soil with your hoe. I followed Peter's advice and went out this morning, when there were plenty of freshly sprouted weeds after the weekend's rain. The earth was still a bit damp, but not soggy—the best conditions for easily pulling bigger weeds' roots up out of the soil. Instead of a hoe, I used a tool that's new to me but popular among some of Horticulture's readers: the Cobrahead. I quickly found out why it has so many fans. The makers describe its sharp head as a "steel fingernail," which is really accurate. You just grip the handle and pick away, as if you are scraping something with your nail. I was surprised at how precisely I could maneuver it. I zeroed right in on weeds big and small and scooped them up by their roots. I just severed the really tiny ones and scratched them back into the soil.
And it seems like the Cobrahead will be a good tool to use when I plant my seeds and seedlings later—it works as a digger, too. Visit the Cobrahead website
5/6/2008 4:51:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Chicken Update from Barb Our May issue features
an article on chickens and their place in the garden, by Peter Garnham.
Barbara Emerson will be blogging about her garden chickens over the next
several weeks. Below is her latest report.—Meg
What a delight to see the new chicks chirping and running around this morning. They are eating and drinking just fine. They get fresh water with a tiny bit of cider vinegar mixed in, and organic starter grower crumble in their feeder.
The cutest of all are the Polish chicks—even at this young age they are starting to show the pompadour look! I am unabashedly a big fan of Polish chickens. Of the four breeds I have experience with so far, my Polly (featured on pages 50 and 55 of the Horticulture article) is the prettiest and friendliest.
Spring of 2007 started year one for me as a mother of hens . . . and it has been so much fun. This time around I am more relaxed and feel more confident of what to expect. Sounds like raising children, doesn’t it?! Guess I am clearly hooked. I can imagine trying new breeds and combinations of hens long into the future. Not only are they great fun to watch as they grow and learn, but also the eggs are divine!—Barb
Birds
4/22/2008 12:52:21 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, April 14, 2008
Barb's Baby Chicks
Our May issue features an article on chickens and their place in the garden, by Peter Garnham. The photos with the article show Barbara Emerson's hens, which she got last spring. Barb will be blogging about her chickens over the next several weeks. Last week she welcomed some new chicks to her flock. Below is her report.—Meg So far six of the eight baby chicks I am expecting have reached their new home….joining their adult “cousins” that are featured in the May issue of Horticulture. It had been quite a journey for them, but surprisingly they were quite boisterous when I put them in the cardboard box they will call home until they feather out and can move outside. All are heritage breeds. There are two Polish and two Rose-Combed Leghorns chickens for me, and two Rhode Island Reds for my friend and chicken-raising mentor, Dave. Soon to come are two Barred Rock chicks for Dave.
Here is a bit about the trip they made. Fertile eggs take about 20 days to hatch. These chicks were born on Friday, April 4, in Iowa (at Murray McMurray Hatchery). They were mailed through the USPS on Saturday, April 5, to my friend Norm on the South Shore of Massachusetts. (The majority of mail-order poultry companies require a minimum order of 25—our eight chicks were part of a larger order Norm made.)
When they are mailed, all the chicks are crowded into a smallish box
and this keeps them warm for the trip from the hatchery. They aren’t
meant to eat or drink for two days after hatching, so they can use up
the remaining yolk that has been feeding them during the hatching
process. So not having food and water while they are in the mail system
is OK.
Early last Monday morning, Norm got a call to pick them up at his local post office. As soon as he got home from the post office, Norm dipped each chick’s beak in water to clue her in about how to drink. Norm is an experienced chicken raiser and he said this is the most active group he has ever seen and they all survived the trip. It is not unusual to lose one or two.
I picked up our chicks from him on Wednesday and drove them to my home on the North Shore. We asked for my and Dave's eight to come labeled so that we could tell them apart from Norm's chicks, which are a different breed. But there was a miscommunication and two were not labeled. No problem there—we’ll call Murray McMurray and get details about how the Barred Rock chicks look, and Norm will i.d. them and bring them to me this week to join the others.
Lots of travel for anyone, let alone a baby chick!—Barb
Birds
4/14/2008 9:32:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, March 20, 2008
Snappy Seed Tray
by Meg Lynch, Editor I sowed seeds of cosmos, marigold, and love-in-a-puff last weekend (indoors).
I like to start my seeds in individual pots, instead of flats. I’ve found that the cardboard cases that juice and tonic bottles come in make good trays for the pots. I can easily move them all at once to the sink for watering and to a brighter position once the seedlings sprout. The cardboard is very sturdy, since it is meant to carry glass bottles. The plastic liner that wraps around it makes it even sturdier and somewhat waterproof. This was a 12-pack of Snapple iced tea, and 9 three-inch pots fit well in it. Last year I used a 24-pack to hold 48 one-inch pots.
Annuals | Propagation
3/20/2008 11:07:49 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Flower Show Quiz
by Meg Lynch, Editor First, thanks to all for the comments on my previous post about Gerard the living stone. I do have seedlings as well as Gerard, which I started last summer. I'll try to get a picture of them—but they are still really tiny, so I'm not sure how the picture will come out. In the meantime . . . the New England Spring Flower Show is going on in Boston this week. Sara and I were at the show last night, when the theme was "Plant Geeks." (That's us, I guess—and proud of it!) At our table, we ran the "Plant Geeks Olympics," a 10-question quiz. Halfway through the night we decided it was a bit on the too-hard side, but everybody was a great sport about it and had fun, which is really what the show, our quiz, and gardening is all about. We had a good time talking to fellow gardeners and taking in the beautiful garden displays. (And the music of the player piano stationed near our table. Will I ever get "Margaritaville" out of my head?) Here are the questions on our quiz. Answers appear at the bottom of this post. 1. Agapanthus is native to which country: a. Egypt b. Algeria c. South Africa d. India
2. There are over 3,000 registered named varieties of which plant: a. hosta b. astilbe c. clematis d. daisy
3. The genus name of flowering tobacco is _________________. 4. Aronia arbutifolia, Fothergilla major, Itea virginica, Rhus copallina are good native alternatives for this invasive ornamental plant: __________________ 5. Cape fuchsia is the common name for:
a. Fuchsia magellenica b. Phygelius capensis c. Oenoethera canadensis d. Dicentra spectabilis 6. There is a blue impatiens. True or False?
7. What is the new genus name for coleus? ______________ 8. How can a gardener identify a plant in the Mint family? __________________ 9. ‘Cosmic Purple’ is a cultivar of what kind of vegetable? ______________________ 10. Botanically pronounced, Cotoneaster rhymes with “Easter” or “Faster”?
ANSWERS: 1. c, South Africa 2. a, Hosta 3. Nicotiana 4. We were looking for burning bush (Euonymous alatus) 5. b, Phygelius capensis 6. True 7. Solenostemon 8. The plant has square stems 9. Carrot 10. Faster (co-tone-ee-AST-er)
3/12/2008 9:50:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Living Stone (I Presume)
by Meg Lynch, Editor Another sure sign of spring, for me, is when my living stone (Lithops sp.) begins to shed its old body—which is really just pairs of water-filled leaves.
This is a succulent plant native to South Africa, where it sits low in the ground, protected from grazing animals by its pebble-like appearance. I had wanted a living stone for a couple years before I finally found a local greenhouse that had some. It was July 15, 2002, to be exact—I noted it in the cactus and succulent diary that I kept at the time: “LIVING STONES!!! !!! !!! Very excited! One is greenish and the other grayish/peachish—they look good and I will take careful care of them!” At some point soon thereafter the gray one died, though I don’t seem to have noted it. On March 1, 2003, I mention that lately the still-living living stone, the green one, which I dubbed Gerard, “started to open a pinhole and that turned into a large oval-shaped separation and inside there are what look like tiny Gerards.” I had been hoping it was going to flower. But it was just going through the routine of a living stone: to shed its leaves each year, revealing new leaves inside. Sometimes they open to show more pairs than the last year, and form large clumps this way. (Gerard has held steady at two pairs.) It has done this right around the middle of February every year since. It takes a couple months for the old leaves to completely shrivel away. All of my references say not to water a living stone at all until it has finished this routine, but toward the end I do give it a little water. I think it helps to move the process along—the new leaves swell up with water, and as they do they shrug the old leaves farther off.
Read more about living stones
Mail order living stones
Get the reference in the title of this post
Cacti and Succulents | Houseplants
2/26/2008 4:12:23 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 15, 2008
Windowsill Spring
by Meg Lynch, Editor I know spring is around the corner when my houseplants start to perk up. Here are the first of my cacti to bloom. Some others have buds forming. These are planted together in the bottom half of a clay pot designed to cook a chicken. It is the perfect shape and depth!
These first blooms prove for me that the sun is getting stronger and the daylight hours, longer. Do you know we start Daylight Savings Time in three weeks? I can’t wait to be getting home while it is still light out—looking at the garden is a great way to end the day. Read Lisa's blog Read Sara's blog

Cacti and Succulents | Houseplants
2/15/2008 4:18:50 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, February 12, 2008
A Trip to Des Moines
by Meg Lynch, Editor My fiancé and I went to a wedding in the Des Moines area over the weekend. We had some spare time, so we checked out the Des Moines Botanical Center. It was a great break from the frigid weather! Even John, who is not exactly a “plant person,” enjoyed the colorful bulb display blooming inside the entrance. (He took these photos with his cell phone.)
The main part of the Botanical Center is a Plexiglass and aluminum dome, 150 feet wide and 80 feet tall at its highest point. The collection of plants growing in the dome includes unusual tropical plants, familiar houseplants, shrubs, and fruit and nut trees. Some of the palm trees there are quite large, and you follow winding paths through the dome, heading up and down to different levels, so you really get the feeling of being in a lush tropical garden. And it is always fun to see the plants you grow as houseplants in their natural state (big!). The Botanical Center also has an annex called the Gardener’s Showcase, where volunteers design exhibits demonstrating design ideas or certain groups of plants, and classes and events take place in the center’s classrooms. The temperature was -2 when we left Des Moines on Sunday, heading for the airport in Omaha. I spotted a billboard for Omaha’s Botanical Center (or Lauritzen Gardens) and remembered writing a little box on an event there when I first started working at Horticulture. Too bad we had flights to catch. (Right, John?) I’d like to get there someday. Preferably a warm one!
Read Lisa's blog Read Sara's blog
Garden Visits
2/12/2008 3:17:54 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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