Top

March Garden Guide For Plants Flowers And Landscapes

October 3, 2009 by Flower Vegetable Gardens · Leave a Comment 

by Kent Higgins In Northern United States and Canada When severe Winter weather is over and signs of new growth are evident, carefully remove Winter protection from bulbs, Roses, perennials, evergreens and other plants. Complete pruning fruit trees and all ornamental shrubs such as Butterfly Bush, Peegee Hydrangea, Vitex, Rose of Sharon and others that bloom at midsummer and later. Don’t prune Spring-blooming kinds such as Forsythia, Flowering Quince, and Deutzias until they are through bl

What To Do In The Garden For March

September 26, 2009 by Flower Vegetable Gardens · Leave a Comment 

by Kent Higgins In Northern United States and Canada When severe Winter weather is over and signs of new growth are evident, carefully remove Winter protection from bulbs, Roses, perennials, evergreens and other plants. Complete pruning fruit trees and all ornamental shrubs such as Butterfly Bush, Peegee Hydrangea, Vitex, Rose of Sharon and others that bloom at midsummer and later. Don’t prune Spring-blooming kinds such as Forsythia, Flowering Quince, and Deutzias until they are through bl

March Garden Guide For Plants Flowers And Landscapes

September 24, 2009 by Flower Vegetable Gardens · Leave a Comment 

by Kent Higgins In Northern United States and Canada When severe Winter weather is over and signs of new growth are evident, carefully remove Winter protection from bulbs, Roses, perennials, evergreens and other plants. Complete pruning fruit trees and all ornamental shrubs such as Butterfly Bush, Peegee Hydrangea, Vitex, Rose of Sharon and others that bloom at midsummer and later. Don’t prune Spring-blooming kinds such as Forsythia, Flowering Quince, and Deutzias until they are through bl

What To Do In The Garden For March

September 12, 2009 by Flower Vegetable Gardens · Leave a Comment 

In Northern United States and Canada When severe Winter weather is over and signs of new growth are evident, carefully remove Winter protection from bulbs, Roses, perennials, evergreens and other plants. Complete pruning fruit trees and all ornamental shrubs such as Butterfly Bush, Peegee Hydrangea, Vitex, Rose of Sharon and others that bloom at midsummer and later. Don’t prune Spring-blooming kinds such as Forsythia, Flowering Quince, and Deutzias until they are through blooming. You may r

Thompson Morgan gardening products, gardening products, gardening products Affiliate Program Review

Thompson Morgan gardening products, gardening products, gardening products Affiliate Program Review Work with one of the UK’s leading mail order suppliers of quality gardening products. Established in 1855, our range now includes over 6,000 plants, bulbs, seeds, fruit, seed potatoes plus many more products. Thompson Morgan gardening products, gardening products, gardening products Affiliate Program Details: Commission: 12% Action Referral Period: 30 days Average Validation

These bulbs are made for walking.

The walking onions are on the move here at Hawk’s Haven, the cottage our friend Ben and Silence Dogood share in the precise middle of nowhere, Pennsylvania. Walking onions ( Allium cepa var. proliferum, as in prolific) aren’t your garden-variety onion. They’re more like perennial scallions (green onions), since they don’t form big bulbs at the base like true onions. Instead, they form smaller, quarter-size bulbs that grow in clumps and send up hollow green stems that can be used in any way yo

Activities In The Garden For The Month Of April In The South

by Thomas Fryd April across the in South find the redbuds and dogwoods flinging their beauty with utter abandon and the bulbs lift their blooms to catch the gentle breezes and everything whispers the message of spring again. The beautiful display of early color reminds the alert gardener of the many garden activities that must be done to insure continued pleasure throughout the remainder of the year. Lawns: Most of the grass areas of our gardens began growing during the latter part of last m

Treating Vegetable and Flower Seeds

April 20, 2009 by Flower Vegetable Gardens · Leave a Comment 

by Marshall Clewis All untreated seeds carry on or within them microscopic fungi and bacteria. Hundreds of kinds of seed-borne organisms, capable of causing plant diseases exist. These fungi and bacteria may cause seeds to decay in the soil and young seedlings, bulbs, corms or rhizomes to rot before or after shoots emerge from the soil. Organisms carried on the seed may also be the source of certain types of dwarfing or stunting, root rots, smuts, wilts, mildews, leaf spot and blights, strip

Bottom