Archive for December, 2009

Flowers for special dates

December 29th, 2009

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St. Valentine’s Day, which has its origins in the pagan festival of Lupercalia, is recognized in England, France, Austria, Germany, and the United States. Although the custom of sending romantic cards to suitors began in the early part of the nineteenth century, flowers are a more recent custom, not from any ancient belief or tradition. Originally just men gave women flowers. In more recent decades, women have given flowers to their true loves on St. Valentine’s Day.

Traditionally, long-stemmed, red roses are associated with this holiday although carnations, tulips, azaleas, and other flowers are catching up in popularity. So are sweetheart or miniature roses, which are just as attractive, but not as expensive, as tea roses and come in the same range of colors from red and pale pink to white, cream, lavender, peach, and yellow.

If you are buying a dozen roses to go, instead of having the florist deliver them, visit your local florist to experience all the choices, fragrances, and colors! Select blooms that are just beginning to open for longest vase-life.
Wrap the flowers well to protect against the cold, as chilling February temperatures can damage the delicate blossoms. An alternative to roses is to buy, or have your florist make up, a mixed bouquet with a red-pink-white color scheme. Possibilities include carnations, daisies, freesia, and tulips as well as more exotic choices like Peruvian lily (Alstromeria), red anthurium, or red ginger. Add a few sprigs of baby’s breath and some greens for the finishing touch.

Potted flowering plants will help extend your Valentine’s Day greetings and brighten up winter days ahead. Many florists, garden stores, even many grocery stores, carry potted azaleas, cyclamen, and chrysanthemums and may even have unusual varieties. Kalanchoe, with its scarlet red flowers set high on spikes, is usually seen around the Christmas holidays but works as a gift here too. There are even more dwarf forms of this plant, with double flowers, called Calandiva. I personally like potted red tulips, as such bulbs are a sign spring is on its way.

African violets are one of the easiest flowering indoors plants to grow, and can be found with reddish flowers in some varieties. Just make sure these stay warm, have bright but indirect light, and dont overwater. Use lukewarm water to avoid shocking the roots, and keep it off the leaves to avoid spotting them.
Another group of potted flowering plants that has become quite popular are the orchids. There are hundreds, mainly hybrids, to choose from at full service greenhouses or online. These make quite special gifts. Just keep in mind orchids are generally epiphytic, meaning they grow in a medium such as bark and not soil. This means they need frequent watering, and higher humidity. Some can be a challenge to get to rebloom indoors, although the moth orchid (Phalaenopsis) and dendrobium are fairly easy and good choices for beginners.
When buying a flowering potted plant, select one with many buds about to open, rather than one already in full bloom. Check buds, blossoms, and undersides of leaves for signs of disease or insect pests.

Ensure that your gift gets proper care by enclosing a note with care instructions. Mention that plants need to be kept well-watered, but not overwatered, and out of drafty areas. Temperatures should be 45 to 55 degrees F at night, around 65 to 70 degrees F during the day if possible. Recommend that the recipient remove the foil or paper covering the pot, or make a hole in the bottom, to allow adequate drainage when watering.

If your special someone is a gardener, present him or her with a “bouquet” of seed packages for cut flower varieties including cosmos, delphiniums, shasta daisies, snapdragons, zinnias, asters, and baby’s breath (Gypsophila). Or promise to plant a culinary herb or perennial garden in the spring. Gift certificates to local garden stores make great presents as well. If you want to give roses, how about a coupon for an actual rose plant in the spring?

Your choices are endless. Valentine’s Day isn’t just roses any more.

Planning a cottage garden

December 8th, 2009

Good to See You Again Baby(Blue) Delphinium.

The best word to sum up the cottage garden is informal’ or unsophisticated’. It is a style in which a random mix of plants is grown.

Look for self seeding varieties of annuals and biennials that will pop up wherever they like, creating color combinations that change each year, and team them with a range of perennials that grow to different heights.

The garden in which they grow will have a small-scale, purely functional framework, without any grand vistas or extravagant hard landscaping.

In a cottage garden the trees should, whenever possible, be fruit trees or at least blossom trees of some kind. Apples, pears, plums and cherries will all help to create the right atmosphere, as will nut trees. If there is a space for a large tree, a walnut would be an ideal choice.

Colorful plants, or perhaps herbs, in simple pots by the door will look appropriate. Make the most of vegetable and fruit bushes, letting them be part of the garden design. Do not be afraid of using rows of vegetables, herbs, climbers, bedding plants or flowers for cutting, especially alongside a path.

There is no need to grow only old-fashioned flowers because it is how the flowers are used and grouped that creates the cottage style, not the type they are. Choose as many scented plants as can be fitted into the space available, especially from among the many varieties of climbing rose and honeysuckle. Roses and flowering shrubs will provide a framework for the other less permanent plants.

The overall effect should be well-tended disorder’, a comfortable mix in which all the plants are allowed to run together. Situate the plant close together to create an overcrowded, lush effect, and keep weeds down until plants take off. This is a great opportunity to grow all your favorite plants in rich profusion.

The epitome of a cottage garden is a profusion of scented roses, lilacs and lilies mingled with bright flowers and the foliage of herbs that are both ornamental and useful.

Create a cottage garden instead of a front-yard lawn, or next to a garage of fence; anywhere you will see and enjoy it frequently. All these flowers require is full sun and rich, well-drained soil.

Here are a few varieties of suitable cottage garden plants to get you started:

The climbing Rose Danse du feu’ has a height and spread of 2.5 meters and produces a profusion of red blooms in summer. It is ideal for growing along a fence, arbor, or trellis.

Potentilla is a good edging shrub which produces gold flowers all summer long. It sports dark green compound leaves and is drought tolerant growing from 30 cm to 1.2 meters tall and 60 cm to 1.2 meters wide.

Delphiniums add colorful height to the cottage garden, reaching to nearly 2 meters. Their green leaves and deeply cut and their flower spikes come in shades of blue, lilac or white which show in early summer.

The biennial Sweet William, freely self seeds and has green lance like leaves and produces fragrant pink, red or white flowers.

California poppies are fast growing annuals with slender, blue-green foliage; showy poppy flowers in colors from cream to bronze and orange.

White Alyssum is another fast growing annual with fine, deep green foliage, masses of circular white flower heads and will self seed.

Perennial Coneflowers grow to nearly a meter tall and stand upright with clumps of mid-green, arrow-shaped foliage. Their tall stems are topped by rosy purple flowers with dark centers.

Tall Foxgloves form clumps of dull green foliage and produce tall flower spikes with cream and mauve bell-shaped blooms.

Enjoy the informal mass of easy-to-grow colorful blooms and bask in its casual, country charm.

Canadian Gardening

December 6th, 2009

cosmos

People around the world tend to have a prejudice about the prospects of Canadian gardening or simply, the gardening in Canada. Its position in North America, to the north of United States and near the artic circle adds an air of chill to the whole subject. In fact, it is cold there in Canada and hence a common man cannot be out rightly blamed for his mental picture about the horticultural scene of Canada. But, in reality, the climate does not prevent one from pursuing Canadian gardening.

The widely populated areas of Canada such as Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario and the Western Provinces, has an agreeable weather and hence is wholly suited both to horticultural pursuits and to the development of the highest type of civilization. Now, the basic knowledge one should have about Canadian gardening or generally, any type of gardening that is, gardening design operations are determined by the summer season rather than winter. And mind you, Canada has a distinctive summer season, though short in duration than a typical Florida summer. In fact, the Canadian summer is highly adapted to grow fruits like apple, plum, pear and peach and kinds of forest and ornamental trees; all hardy shrubs, roses, and of course every popular genus of hardy perennials, such as peonies, irises and delphiniums.

Province wise, it is found that Canadian gardening is strong and flourished where English sections of the populations live. It is something they attribute to their mother country. With respect to the kinds of plants widely grown and the types of design followed, whether in cottage gardens, large private estates or public parks, there is hardly any difference one could find in the Canadian gardening in comparison with the US style of gardening.

The seasons of Canada can be broadly classified as early spring, late spring, early summer, late summer, autumn and winter. The plants typical for these climates also obviously vary. But, from the beautiful bulbs for springtime and shrubs, small trees and climbers for autumn delight to stunning evergreens for winter and year-round interest, the choices are plenty in Canadian gardening. In the hands of a creative gardener, the choices available are more than enough to realize a unique Canadian gardening experience.

In Canadian gardening, as a first step, gather a good idea about the conditions suitable for the plants you plan to grow. Generally the place should have enough sunlight and good drainage. The fertility factor is self assuming and hence not mentioning in detail. Go for native plants so that it has a good chance for longer survival. When it comes to fertilizers and pest killing, it is better to go for natural choices than chemical ones. The less you use chemical compounds, the better your garden and its vegetables will become. Flex your muscles to pull out the weeds (it will make a good physical exercise as well).

One can have a beautiful and eye-catching garden with a little amount of planning and creative acumen. With some application, any one can have a stunning Canadian garden at his backyard or patio. But Canadian gardening is not as simple as it appears. Canadian gardening requires constant care and nourishment, almost in a daily basis. Enjoy the journey of Canadian gardening and see how well it works out for you. It is all about learning to live alongside the nature and its greenery, whatever the climatic constraints may be.