Sunday, February 12, 2006
Birds in the Garden
Snow in the Garden
Descriptions of the pictures are enumerated from the top:
1. Butterfly Bush decorated with Christmas ornaments in the front garden next to the lamp post.
2. A grouping of spirea next to the front staircase. It is difficult to see with the snow, but behind the spirea are Rosa glauca and miscanthus 'Adagio.' Further back is Wiegela florida to the left and a lace bark pine in the center.
3. Lacecap hydrangea in the front garden. To the left of the hydrangea is the rose Frau Dargmar Harstrup.
4. The arbor over the entrance to the side garden is covered with the rose Dortmund. In the forefront of the picture are caryopteris. For winter interest, I hung a string of decorative apples on the fence.
Saturday, February 11, 2006
Forced Branches and Bulbs: Forsythia, Hyacinth, Tulips, Muscari, and Crocus
The hardest step in forcing bulbs is planning ahead by buying and preparing the bulbs. Last October, I tucked away several extra bags of hyacinth, tulips, daffodils, muscari, and crocus for forcing. I have found that bulbs will force by chilling them in the refrigerator away from fruit for a minimum of ten weeks. After which they can be potted up inside as I need them. I also force bulbs by planting them in pots in the fall and, then, storing these pots in the garage for at least ten weeks. After the chill time, I bring the pots inside, water them, and they will grow and bloom in a matter of weeks.
Usually, after the middle of January I will bring in a pot or pot up one each week. This combined with forsythia branches, snowdrops, and amaryllis will keep my home full of flowers until the first crocus appears.
Gardening with Children: A Child's Garden by Molly Dannenmaier
I hope that by teaching children to love nature that as adults they will save and maintain native and heirloom plants. With that in mind, I am always looking for ideas and information to help kids fall in love with the garden. A Child's Garden by Molly Dannenmaier is the best book I've read on creating a garden for both children and parents in an average backyard:
A Child's Garden: 60 Ideas to Make Any Garden Come Alive for Children
The book offers information on how children play, which garden elements provide essential sparks for imaginative play, and how to integrate this into a residential garden. Photographs support the text by giving concrete examples of how to affect these ideas.
This coming spring I'm planning to incorporate several of these ideas into my own garden. Here are four of my upcoming projects:
- create a space for kids to dig besides the vegetable garden
- build a bin to gather natural materials such as seed pods, sticks, pine cones, and leaves as material for creating
- make simple topiaries with wire frames with the kids
- plant a living hiding spot with either a weeping mulberry, ornamental grasses, or a tepee made with grape or bean vines
Other good books I've read on kids' gardens are Roots, Shoots, Buckets & Boots and Great Gardens for Kids.
Related post: Ten Tips for Planning a Children's Garden
Saturday, February 04, 2006
Madame Isaac Pereire
Friday, February 03, 2006
Elwes Snowdrop
I love snowdrops. They are the first bulbs to bloom, oftentimes pushing through the snow. Not only do they offer the promise of spring, but also make wonderful cut flowers. The three petal flowers open to look like helicopters and reveal little white hoods with green markings and yellow stamen. I love to put a vase of these on a cake pedestal so I can look up at the flowers from my library table.
Plant snowdrops in the fall in groups of at least ten. Snowdrops can easily be tucked under shrubs, at the foot of deciduous trees, around evergreens and in between perennials. The key is to plant a lot of them: think 100s. My favorite place to buy bulbs in large quantities is Van Engelen Inc. They offer fall bulbs wholesale by catalog and on the web at http://www.vanengelen.com/. A hundred bulbs will cost less than $30. Snowdrops will also increase and in a few years you will have nice clumps of them.