Horticulture - garden magazine Subscribe to Horticulture magazine - garden magazine
Get a free issue of Horticulture magazine Horticulture garden tours Horticulture gardening events Sign In  
 Friday, February 15, 2008
Roots in February

by Lisa Newman, Art Director

A few weeks ago someone arrived with quince and black pussy willow branches for me. I put both into a large vase. I loved watching them bloom. The quince stayed in bloom for a really long time, brightening my kitchen during New England’s cold February. The pussy willow provided nice texture to the arrangement.

My mom taught me early how to force branches. I believed that she was the only one who knew this magic trick. I would go out and collect pussy willow, apple branches, and forsythia and she would arrange them in large vases and I would watch as the branches came to life. I’m now the keeper of those vases.

My mom also taught me that we could start new plants from some of the branches that we forced. That’s how I started a few plants in my garden with branches from my mom’s garden. They make a nice connection to the past. And a double pleasure—first the blooms and then a plant.

Well, I know my mom wasn’t the only one who knows this trick to brightening the long New England winter. And now I have a question and I am without my mom to answer it.

I just noticed that both the quince and the willow have developed incredible roots. However, it’s February, and where I live there’s more than foot of snow on top of a base of ice. We won’t be ready to put anything into the earth for another two months. So the question: will the shoots keep? Is there anything I should be doing to keep them from molding? Am I crazy—should I just toss them? Seems awful to do that.

If you have any clues, please leave me a note. Just click “Comments.”

Thanks.

Read Meg's blog

Read Sara's blog



2/15/2008 4:31:54 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [8] 
 Friday, February 01, 2008
Catalog Therapy

By Lisa Newman, Art Director

Horticulture’s third-annual “Plants We Love” issue hit the newsstands just about the same time that my friend Jeffrey called to schedule our second-annual “tea and seed catalog” get-together.

Jeffrey was already there when I arrived at the local eatery, Elmer's. He was sitting at a table buried beneath a mountain of catalogs. A steady stream of gawkers couldn’t resist a look. Everyone had something to say. Mostly they all expressed the same end-of-January longing for plants, color—the promise that all of the pictures held. (At home, my dog Amos was pining for some garden action, too.)

Amos.gif

I ended up with a long, long list and plan on placing my orders today—after some editing, so I don’t overspend or overestimate my ability to actually get all of these planted. Then the next move is space planning, inside and out.

I’ve always wanted a cutting garden, and this year I am determined to get one started. I hope that I can pull this off from start to finish. I’d never really considered starting an entire garden from seeds but here goes.

A sampling of the list:

  • ‘Moonshadow’ and dwarf sunflowers
  • ‘Apricot Blush’ zinnia
  • ‘Glacier Star’ morning glory
  • ‘Black Watchman’ and ‘Antwerp Mixed’ hollyhocks
  • Dahlias of all varieties
  • Mixes of blue-shaded sweet peas
Read Meg's blog





2/1/2008 4:14:10 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, January 11, 2008
On Bring Plants In (Or Not)

By Lisa Newman, Art Director

window.jpgOn a visit to North Hill (Wayne Winterrowd and Joe Eck's Vermont garden) a few years ago, I noticed all of the great container plantings throughout the gardens. I finally saw beyond the potted geranium. Suddenly the idea that I could have tropical plants in containers, that I could move plants around during the summer months to fill in holes in the garden, that I could use containers in groups along the side of the house in lieu of the dreaded foundation plants—well it was a whole new world opening up before me. I went home and started a garden of containers.

But then came the problem of storage and over wintering. This year it sort of came to a head. I’ve run out of places to stash the plants. I asked everyone how they handled this problem. One piece of advice stuck: Edit the plants down to those that will over-winter well and are deserving of the space.

So this year, I have brought in all of the containers but have not kept all of the plants. A few of the larger leggy plants have been brought down in size—I rooted cuttings that I can nurse throughout the winter. I began to realize that what I need to learn to do is to create an indoor garden that I enjoy rather than indoor storage that just torments me every time I look at it.

Until I get a bigger house or a better set of skills I think I’ll use the winter as an excuse to rethink what I have, to start over with new plants come spring, and to try my luck at propagation. Here’s
hoping for success and spring—when I can move it all outside where the plants and the “gardener” will be happier.





1/11/2008 4:48:49 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, December 10, 2007
Holiday Shopping

by Lisa Newman, Art Director

I enjoy shopping at two types of stores-- gourmet grocery and cooking supply stores and nursery and garden stores. So faced with the holidays I rethought the gift giving options and tried to find presents that would would be fun to give and would keep me out of the mall and in the shops I enjoy visiting.

A few of the solutions:

Customized "mini-gardens". Grab a low container and create a mini-garden that also doubles as a table centerpiece. This little garden will live throughout the winter and will happily make the trip outside come spring.

Plant bulbs in a container and provide instructions for how to force these bulbs indoors. A great way for friend to enjoy midwinter blooms and bulbs for the next season.

Mail-order presents. I ordered items from catalogs and web sites, including plants and shrubs for planting next season. I created cards with the images clipped or downloaded from the catalogs and created a collage of the plants that will be shipped to them as they are ready.

If you're still looking for a great source of gifts for gardners, head to the botanical garden shops at your local botanical garden or visit on-line sites for botanical gardens around the country.

And if friends are reading this entry-- I'm hoping for a hand saw for pruning. And always plants, new plants and seeds for next year.



Read Meg's blog

Read Sara's blog



12/10/2007 1:08:19 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Tuesday, December 04, 2007
Sentimental

by Lisa Newman, Art Director

I was walking around the garden this morning. Something I do most mornings. Coffee in hand. Amos and Chester (my labs) at my side. I note the plants, see what’s blooming, think about what changes I might like to make. Take stock.  Just take it all in before the day gets going.

I realized this morning how many memories are attached to everything in the garden. There’s the spot, once vacant, where my dad and I stood the first time he came to see my new house. A lilac planted in his memory now stands there.  The stonewall started by visiting friends—wobbly but irreplaceable. Fritallaria planted one fall by a friend as a surprise to cheer me the next spring. The tiny but growing maple rescued from the family house by my brother. Its parent was a tree given to my mother by her mother, which was too large to remove when we sold that house. Plants given to me to start my garden by friends, all gifts from their own gardens. Empty spaces of now-gone plants mistakenly weeded by children eager to help and too cherished to scold.
I’m sure that your garden is also full all of these kinds of memories. We all just need to look beyond the plants and the hardscape to remember how everything found its home in our garden.

There are so many other spots, plants, places that hold wonderful memories. While I love the garden itself, I’m realizing how much more is living and loveable in that space I call my garden.

Read Meg's Blog

Read Sara's Blog



12/4/2007 9:37:23 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, November 15, 2007
Fall Lessons Learned

by Lisa Newman, Art Director

We all learn differently. Some of us read up on techniques before venturing into new territory, and others of us (me) stumble into knowledge.

Last fall I read about tuber storage in Horticulture. I stored lots of dahlia tubers in the basement as instructed. The story stopped there, and so did I, when maybe I should have read up on what to do next, in spring. Here’s what happened with the stored dahlia tubers, some cannas tubers a friend gave me, and colchicum bulbs I bought in late August.

I learned that timing of planting is worth noting. I didn’t think about putting the dahlias in the ground until sometime in late June. The canna tubers a friend gave me, along with some gladiola bulbs, languished unplanted for 2 or 3 extra weeks. The colchicum bulbs got stashed in a closet.

The results: If not for the very unusual summery fall weather here in the Northeast, a frost would have killed the plants long before they had time to bloom. The dahlias were about to bloom at the end of October. The cannas were just beginning to flower.

The gladiola bulbs yielded fantastic blooms that kept on going for weeks. The lesson learned with those: They would have been really nice in the garden, instead of slumped over in too-small containers with barely enough dirt. (That’s where I shoved them in a desperate summer effort to just put them somewhere.)

As for the colchicums, I found them blooming in the closet one day. I had forgotten to plant them and in the dark closet they began to bloom. I quickly got them into the ground but in that haste I didn’t bury them at the correct depth and although they bloomed they looked ridiculous sticking up many inches higher than they should have.

So why confess to all of these blunders? It’s my nature I guess. And I guess it’s my nature to learn by trial and error. Or at least that’s been the case before. This year I plan to store everything in one place. I’ll label the tubers and bulbs and prepare a journal with informed information on when, where, and how to plant. Here’s hoping for abundant blooms on the dahlias, showy cannas to punctuate the end of the season, colchicums nestled in at the right depth, and gladiolas standing straight in the garden where they belong.

Read Meg's Blog

Read Sara's Blog



11/15/2007 5:08:08 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Fall companions


While Nan Sinton is leading a tour in South Africa, our art director Lisa Newman will be offering her thoughts on her autumn garden.


by Lisa Newman, Art Director

Asters appeared a few weeks ago and I realized that I didn’t like them. I thought it was because they were leggy and misplaced in the garden. They seemed to loom up dead center in the garden announcing themselves as a very unwlecomed focal point. I considered moving them but knew they’d have deep purple blooms soon and I could use them as fresh picked flowers. I put off moving them. Not long after that, my neighbor began a new garden. He said he liked asters so I thought I’d dig them up and pass them along. When I started digging, however, I began to resconsider, running down the list of virtues and that’s when I hit upon the reason I didn’t like this plant. It's not so much the plant but rather what it announces—the end of the gardening season. I started thinking about what I could do to embrace the season and even extend it. So I began searching out plants that would bloom in late September and early October. If the aster had some companions, then it would just be part of a new scene in the garden, not a reminder that the season was coming to a close.

A Hydrangea 'Limelight' and an oakleaf hydrangea along with some big,bold dahlias (I plan to save the tubers for next season), Rudbeckia nitida, ruby-leaved heucheras, a few sedums are now providing companionship to the aster. This morning while gathering a bouquet of fresh-picked flowers from this new assortment I noticed, tucked way back under the  robust hydrangea, the most beautiful crimson bloom of a salvia (an annual in my part of the world) that I had forgotten I’d even planted. So bring on fall now that I see this new world of new possibilites.


Read Meg Lynch's blog

Read Sara Begg's blog




10/31/2007 4:42:45 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, August 17, 2007
Parsley Party

By Nan Sinton, Director of Programs

I went to pick parsley last night and discovered that someone had been there before me – in fact a contented gathering of the beautiful green and black “caterpillars” of the black swallowtail butterfly, Papilio polyxenes, was happily feasting on my kitchen door pot of parsley. These lovely larvae require a meal on members of the carrot family in order to complete their development and have adopted Dill and Parsley, neither of them native to North America, as tasty additions to their diet.  So now I’ll have to remember to plant a lot of extra parsley for the larvae, as well as lettuce for the rabbits and everything else for the wood-chuck.

Read Liz's blog
Read Meg's blog



8/17/2007 9:22:29 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, August 06, 2007
Kitchen Gadget Rescues Pineapple Lily!

By Nan Sinton, Director of Programs

I was at Tony Avent’s amazing nursery Plant Delights with Horticulture’s “Great Plants event a couple of years ago. Tony has planted an avenue of golden dawn redwoods, Metasequoia glyptostroboides ‘Ogon’ with a ground cover of the purple pineapple lily, Eucomis comosa ‘Sparkling Burgundy’ near the entrance to the nursery. It looks sensational so of course I bought a couple of pineapple lilies and brought them back to Massachusetts.

I planted these bulbs in a container which I over-winter in my garage. This year they are really hitting their stride. The other day I had an “eek” experience when I looked at those beautiful dark burgundy leaves and found, nestled deep down in one of my lilies, a greedy snail! Too far down to pick out by hand, too small a space to get at –and then I remembered them – the ice tongs. One of those rarely used kitchen gadgets tucked away at the back of a drawer the all but forgotten ice tongs did the trick. The snail was extracted, the lily continues to bloom beautifully and the tongs have moved from the recesses of the kitchen drawer to a handy spot in my greenhouse. Who knows what other rescue missions they will perform?

P.S. I’ll be back at Plant Delights with the speakers in our fall symposium, Smaller Garden/Big Ideas. We’ll be there on Friday, October 19. Tony has invited all the registrants for the Raleigh symposium to come for breakfast and a little shopping at Plant Delights. I wonder what treasures I’ll find this time?

For more details click here or go to our web site and click on symposiums.

Read Meg's Blog
Read Liz's Blog



8/6/2007 1:49:40 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Thursday, June 14, 2007
Primulas from Michigan

By Nan Sinton, Director of Programs

It was a cold February day when I chatted with my friends Marcia and David at the Horticulture winter symposium in Troy, Michigan. I first met this gardening duo when we traveled together on Horticulture garden tours and I have come to know them as international travelers, avid gardeners, and lovers of music. I’ll never forget persuading David to sing on the stage of the Greek theater in Taormina, Sicily during one of our tours. His magnificent voice gave us some idea of what a performance there could have been. Back home in Michigan he and Marcia tend a garden ‘up north’ and over the past thirty five years they have cultivated Primula japonica in a damp spot.  These candelabra primulas thrive, and now, thanks to the wonders of over-night shipping, they have shared their bounty and sent me some to add to my own garden. When I got to the office I discovered a package of seedling primulas waiting for me, carefully packed and fresh as can be.  I am thrilled to have these small treasures to grow in my garden. There is nothing quite as delightful as a shared plant and I look forward to many springs admiring the primulas in bloom.

Michigan gardeners enjoy some of the finest wildflower and woodland garden displays found anywhere. Think of blankets of trilliums, yellow and pink lady-slipper orchids, the pristine white of bloodroot. Now is definitely the time to take note of gaps in our spring garden planting so that we can add more plants for an event prettier display next year.

Read Meg's Blog



6/14/2007 9:22:36 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Thursday, June 07, 2007
Apples and Oxalis

By Nan Sinton, Director of Programs

Is it apple cider or apple pie? The scent of sweet shrub (sometimes called strawberry bush), Calycanthus floridus, fills the air in spring with what reminds me of ripe apples. The dark red blooms are about the size of a large strawberry and a powerful presence at the edge of my spring woodland. (If you’d prefer a pale yellow blossom then look for the selection ‘Athens’.) Clean glossy deep apple green foliage, adaptable to part shade to sun, this native of deciduous woods from Maryland to Florida and Mississippi is perfectly comfortable in more northern gardens (Zone 5, maybe 4, to 9). Calycanthus has an Asian cousin, the beautiful, though unscented, Sinocalycanthus chinensis. Its’ flowers remind me of a tiny single peony –elegant and tough.  And, yes, I’m growing Sinocalycanthus too. My plant started as a tiny mail-order rooted cutting. Now, three years later, it is a sturdy 4’tall shrub and blooming profusely. The late Dr. J.C. Raulston made a number of crosses between Calycanthus and Sinocalycanthus, most notably ‘Hartlage Wine’ (Calycanthus raulstonii ‘Hartlage Wine) with large deep wine red blooms. Now there is another outstanding new hybrid, Calycanthus ‘Venus’ from the propagation work of Dr.Tom Ranney. It has blooms as large as those of Sinocalycanthus and a delicious fragrance. Just imagine collecting all of these--the possibilities for a garden display are amazing.

Less amazing, in fact daunting, is the world class crop of oxalis that has appeared in my beds and borders this spring. What should I do? I’m all for 4 leaved clovers and shamrocks but I have oxalis by the zillion. I know that hand weeding may cut down on the population but all those tiny thread like roots will quickly re-colonize the area. Should I smother it with newspapers and mulch? Try very careful weed wiping with glysophate? Suggestions welcomed before the oxalis starts having territorial ambitions and heading for the house!

Read Meg's blog



6/7/2007 9:12:25 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, May 18, 2007
Knowing when it’s really spring!

By Nan Sinton, Director of Programs

I’ve always lived near the sea, which for a gardener can be both good and bad news. Good for the ocean’s moderating effect on winter cold and summer heat, bad for the wind, the salt and the storms. One thing I‘ve learnt is that in New England fall will linger and spring will be late.

In London in early March I saw the daffodils in full bloom, and later, on the Horticulture tour to Sicily, there were hillsides of golden coreopsis and blue alkanet, (Anchusa arvensis). Back home in Massachusetts snow and ice covered the ground.  Now, nearly two months later, the daffodils are still blooming in my garden, joined by Leucojeum aestivum, the spring snowflake, and something that came as a sweet surprise, a collection of grape hyacinths, Muscari sp., a gift last year from a friend. Dark blue, pale blue, white, two shades of blue-- this is the prettiest mix I’ve ever seen. (It came from the excellent John Scheeper’s Beauty from Bulbs catalog). But much though I enjoy the extended bloom of the bulbs, our weather has remained chilly and the trees are just barely beginning to open, so I was taking a chance in early May when I decided to call it ‘officially’ spring and bring out the bananas. My “plantation” winters in the garage – more on garage gardening another time – and were already leafing out and heading for the ceiling. I’m growing Musa bajoo, the Japanese fiber bananas, which are technically hardy in Zone 6 so I don’t actually have to dig them up and take them indoors, but I do. When I decide that spring has come I prepare a big hole for each plant, mix in a hearty feed of cow manure and my best compost, move the bananas out on a two-wheeler, remove the individual black garbage bags in which they’ve spent the winter, settle them into the ground with a deep drink of water and hopefully, they are off to a happy summer of growth.

I’ve always enjoyed growing tender and tropical plants and find it encouraging that one of the finest sub-tropical gardens in the world is actually in the far geographical north, in Scotland, at Logan Botanical Garden. There the garden is on a tiny peninsula surrounded by salt water and the resulting mild climate enables the gardeners to grow an amazing range of plants. Bulbs from around the world, Chilean flame trees and New Zealand tree ferns, the enormous pre-historic looking Gunnera manicata from Brazil and the tiny Gunnera magellanica from Chile mingle with perennials and vines,  trees and shrubs from Asia and the United States. I’m looking forward to making a return visit to Logan with our Horticulture group when we visit Private Gardens in Scotland at the end of August.  I think Logan is at its best in late summer, as are many of the gardens that we plan to visit.  And by that time in the summer I’ll be ready not only for new ideas but to see new plants to try in my not-always sub-tropical greenhouse and garden. I wonder if a tree fern would like to join the bananas for a winter snooze in a New England garage?

Nan Sinton
Director of Programs,
Horticulture Magazine
98 N.Washington Street
Boston, MA 02114

Read Sara's blog
Read Meg's blog


5/18/2007 4:03:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]