• 140 replies
    marye
    Joined:
    So after getting a fairly gratifying amount of long-overdue yard work done over the holiday weekend, I am getting a big kick out of the fact that decades' worth of chance-acquired plants are starting to look like they belong together. And then in another topic JurassicBlueberries was holding forth on the care and feeding of blueberry plants, and what with one thing and another, I bet we've got gardeners here. Let's talk! (PS: Folks, this should probably go without saying, but if your gardening efforts involve the cultivation of plants illegal in your jurisdiction, please do not post about them here. For all practical purposes, everyone in the world can read what you post here, and that definitely includes your local law enforcement. Or your not-so-local law enforcement. Or your mama. Silence is golden.)

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • heathaafeathaa
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    hey marye
    i dont no if Okland has a costco but lastyear i got some amazing,roses 5gal.for 10.00.i do beleive i got a couple americain beautys i can try to fish around the garage i may have kept the tags.as i ended up will several kinds."cant keep track".but they are huge ,they produce lots of blums constantly.yah i do beleive that Feb is bare root time.im still "test and trial "w/my gardens.i 've lived on the east coast up till 7 yrs ago .do the iris bulbs go in the same time the daffodils do?my mums are absolutly amazing.,my boyfriend came home on day frrom the dollar store and said here got some flowers for ya,.these little guys are huge bushes now.great fall colars npw.cant beleive those little guys took off that way.i wish i had some of your ferns.back home in maasachusettes we have llots of forest so lots of big ferns.well happy planting and yard work.
  • marye
    Joined:
    I think
    American Beauty is long since off patent. As I recall they're a really pretty color; I'll look into it, thanks for the tip. Around here, bare root time is more like February; the ground doesn't really freeze (or if it does, it's the apocalypse, especially for the succulents...). I've got some pink and white daffodils waiting to go in but they'll probably have to wait till I get back from LA next week. This year, the winter rains are well upon us already, which is a nice change from last year. Of course, we count no chickens when it comes to rain hereabouts.
  • unbrknchain
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    American Beauty Rose
    marye,I browsed the Jackson Perkins website. http://www.jacksonandperkins.com/. There isn't a listing for "American Beauty". But a request via email or a phone call may produce something. There's a variety out there called "Marmalade Skies" with a fragrant tropical red-orange flower. You might want to ask about it, also. They do mail order bareroot rosebushes. For Oakland gardening, I'm assuming it's best to plant bareroot in April or May? October's a good time to broadcast wildflower seeds before the winter rains.
  • marye
    Joined:
    maidenhair ferns
    amazingly, they still live. I took two of the three pots out to get some rain water, which they seemed to like.
  • cosmicbadger
    Joined:
    Marye your wish is my command (this time)
    Recipe is in the recipe forum How are the maidenhair ferns?
  • marye
    Joined:
    and where is the RECIPE for that pesto soup?
    Which I've gotta say would taste darn good today, as once again it's cold and rainy in Oakland. We seem to have gone straight to winter, but not before I got a fair number of leaves raked and into the compost bin. I brought one of the younger cacti indoors to dry out a bit and am keeping an eye on the rest. It would be a slight exaggeration to say we've had more rain in the last two weeks than in the entire previous winter, but we do seem to be off to a wet start. I think fire season is officially over at this point, which means we're now in mudslide season...
  • cosmicbadger
    Joined:
    autumn chores
    just cut the grass for the last time this year. Gathering walnuts as they fall and harvesting late grapes from the vine on the house. Little trees planted last winter have mostly survived the summer and should be fine for next year. The mad red and white Salvia (variety 'HotLips'!) continues to bloom like its summer. Sunny days, but nights drawing in and cooler now, leaves turning. Squirrels and jays hoarding acorns and hazelnuts. Time to sort out some firewood and cook chestnuts on the embers. Last of the basil in pesto soup yesterday, need to cut and dry the rest of the herbs soon. Will have to wrap up the tree fern and the bay tree before the frosts set in.
  • marye
    Joined:
    very true.
    NURTURE them gardens! I grew potatoes in Oakland this past year just for grins, since they were sprouting. Very small but tasty. I think they really prefer a more serious winter.
  • grateful daddy
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    New Potato
    Potatos? Maybe if your in Idaho. This ground on which the seed of love is sown, All graceful instruments are known. Don't think Bobby's singing about gardening here, but what the heck, all gardens need LOVE!
  • marye
    Joined:
    meanwhile, in the maidenhair nursery...
    the babies in all three pots are thriving. Not growing especially fast, but looking green and healthy. In an attempt to learn something, I've taken a bunch of spore-laden fronds and overlaid them on a pot of wet soil. I am completely confident that if I TRY to grow these no business will result, but I'd love to be proved wrong.
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Forums
So after getting a fairly gratifying amount of long-overdue yard work done over the holiday weekend, I am getting a big kick out of the fact that decades' worth of chance-acquired plants are starting to look like they belong together. And then in another topic JurassicBlueberries was holding forth on the care and feeding of blueberry plants, and what with one thing and another, I bet we've got gardeners here. Let's talk! (PS: Folks, this should probably go without saying, but if your gardening efforts involve the cultivation of plants illegal in your jurisdiction, please do not post about them here. For all practical purposes, everyone in the world can read what you post here, and that definitely includes your local law enforcement. Or your not-so-local law enforcement. Or your mama. Silence is golden.)
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

Given that we've got, like, fires and water rationing and all kinds of weird stuff going on here at the moment, I have not been so gung-ho with the outdoor gardening this year and just worked on sustaining what's already out there with a minimum of water. Switch from the sprinkler to hand watering. Etc. Luckily last year I had a binge of buying cacti on ebay, and they're not too thirsty. After being essentially dormant since I got them last year, they've finally had enough sunshine and warm weather to start waking up, and since most of them are of assorted mutant varieties, they're pretty interesting to watch. E.g. one from Florida that looked like a melted candle is now apparently bursting forth with four branches and looking a lot like one from Sonoma County that it formerly didn't resemble at all. Meanwhile, inside the house, the houseplants are taking over. I am astonished to report that the baby maidenhair ferns mentioned last year sometime survived in significant numbers and are now about half an inch tall -- and surrounded with a new crop of barely-visible babies. The parent plant, which is looking better than it has in its life, has managed to colonize about half a dozen adjacent flowerpots with the darn things, which of course puts me in a quandary because most of those pots have rooted cuttings of other things that I'd like to give away, but do I trust J. Random Freecycle Person to adequately nurture baby maidenhairs? No I do not. And I'm reluctant to disturb them at this vulnerable stage. So while on the one hand I am being aggressively consoled for every maidenhair fern that ever died on my watch, and there were a lot of 'em, I am also being overrun a bit. Still, it's a nice problem to have.
user picture

Member for

17 years 1 month
Permalink

Not too long ago it was time to harvest the corn in my Nannie's garden. It's a family tradition. We all get up at the crack of dawn & Pick, shuck, de silk, wash, boil, de cob ~ finally..bag & freeze. 687 ears later & lots of sweat & laughter it's time for supper.... yep, Corn on the Cob :) PEACE
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I have really fond memories of the days when I was a kid and we grew corn in the back yard. Where I live now there's not enough sun. Alas! But luckily we have the farmers market.
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

well, we had this little faux spring last month here in Oakland, and now we're in the midst of winter storms and the plants are a bit confused. But the rain is coming at a good time for their growth spurts, pretty much. I was out in back seizing the moment to toss some flower seeds on the hillside when to my great astonishment I noticed lots of incipient blooms on the wisteria. The astonishment being because this wisteria has never shown the slightest inclination to bloom in the decade and a half it's been in the ground. It started as a bonsai prospect when it was a tiny little thing at the nursery 20-odd years ago, and no doubt its stunted childhood had an impact, because while it grew quite vigorously it's never flowered once. Till now. I don't even remember what kind it's supposed to be!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Nice story Marye. Made me think at once of Lowell George (much missed) and one of my all time favourite songs "I've got mysterious wisterias hanging in the air The rocking chair I was supposed to fix Well it came un nailed And all the things that I let slip, I found out quick It comes from moment to moment, day to day Time seems to slip away But I've got twenty million things to do, twenty million things And all I can do, is think about you With twenty million things to do"
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

if it made you think of Lowell George it's gotta be good. I'll take a pic when they're a little further along.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

it's a freakish 40 in indiana-- 40 degrees, 40mph winds... but i have been able to go out, pick up sticks and junk, deadhead the stuff the birds cleaned, and- and most importantly- check out all the new green buds poking out of the mulch! i know i have to wait a few more weeks- i'll wait. i'm patient... if winter comes, can spring be far behind! caroline
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Love wisteria, planted it at my former house back in the 80's at each corner of the front of the house and twisted the shoots together when it started to grow. It was so beautiful,grew up to the roof line with it's twisted trunk, and across the whole front and side of the house. Just beautiful. Always one of my favorites.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

my broad beans have aphids any way of getting rid of them WITHOUT pesticides Bob - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Spanish Jam
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

this is only our second year with the garden... i am concerned that i don't see any worms around....i am thinking of introducing some to the garden...what is your opinion on this?....good idea, bad idea?.. i am new at this so looking for some advice.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

hey noonie- have you added any compost? organic material- you can buy cow manure, my sister in law lived by the county fairgrounds and had year-round access to horse manure- she had the prettiest garden in town... enrich your soil and see if that doesn't help-- work it in with a shovel or a cultivator-- if you compost it, the worms will come... good luck and have fun! caroline
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Bob, the best thing to do is either to physically rub them off the affected shoots/and or spray with a mixture of a couple of drops of washing up liquid to a gallon of water (morning or evening). You can put the mixture in one of those pump hand sprayers and reapply regularly. Works quite well. Good luck! CB
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

bob, one other thing you can try is a mix of about 1 part regular vinegar (not balsamic, the other one) to 5 parts water and spray in on your beans or whatever it was that has those bugs. I think if there is anything on them now, they should be removed by hand, then hopefully, the vinegar will keep the others away. please do a test on one or two stalks to see if this is a suitable 'solution' (pun intended) before you cover the whole thing. everyobody should have a compost can, and preferably one thatt has a tap type drain at the bottom, that liquid that comes out can be diluted with watter and used to fertilized potted plants and flowers and such. though I personally do not mind the smell of manure ("it's really not to bad when you think about it, you have a 'nure' with a 'ma' in front of it... ma-nure") the compost system, when properly done, don't stink so much. very KIND folks got this site and everything you need to know laid out here: http://www.howtocompost.org/ good luck!!
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I just swept up a slew of oak leaves and threw them in the compost this morning!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I love the smell of compost in the morning. Smells like 'victory' ( -;
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

it does too, my patch is manured with donkey poo - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Spanish Jam
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 8 months
Permalink

sow with seeds of lovefertilize with hope water liberally with faith reap a harvest of smiles and laughter
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Inch by inch, row by row,Please bless these seeds I sow. Please keep them safe below Till the rain comes tumblin' down. Pullin' weeds and pickin' stones We are made of dreams and bones. Need a spot to call my own Cause the time is close at hand. Grain for grain, sun and rain I'll find my way in nature's chain Tune my body and my brain To the music of the land.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Anyone one know what tro use to get rid of grubs without killing the soil or self It's for my vegetable garden....
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years
Permalink

Don`t know if your town allows it but chickens eat grubs, and other pests . but you may have to have some type of fence around each plant so the chickens don`t dig them up looking for the grubs . not to mention you get some nice composte from the chickens . hope this helps you . Happy gardening !!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

yup, some birds love grubs... so get more grub-eating birds to your yard with water, nesting and feeders. some species of birds, like European starlings, blue-jays, purple martins, crows, grackles, meadowlarks, cardinals, blackbirds and robins all eat grubs. Starlings, robins and cardinals will also eat adult Japanese beetles. You can run a rake over 'grubby' areas (pun intended) to help turn up emerging grubs for visiting birds. OR ask someone in your garden shop about this stuff: Apply Parasitic Nematodes. Upon penetrating a grub, the nematode inoculates the grub with the bacteria. The bacteria reproduce quickly, feeding on the grub tissue. The nematode then feeds on this bacteria and progresses through its own life cycle, reproducing and ultimately killing the grub. Heterorhabditis bacteriophora is a type of commercially available nematode for grubs. Milky Spore. This is a bacterium once ate by grubs, builds up in their blood, eventually causing their demise. It's considered a long term solution and is usually used in areas experiencing severe infestations. Its needs to be applied over the course of a couple of seasons (2-4 years) in order for it to build up in the soil. After that, it is supposed to last for a decade or longer. Ask your local garden center or extension office where to get milky spore in your area. the cheap way: use a glass beer bottle or slass pop bottle. Leave a little beer (what a waste) or soda pop in them. It appears these 'grubby buggers' (poor attempt at a British pun intended) love this stuff. your very own Grub Motel, they crawl in & can't get out, so they drown. leave a bottle on its side, or bury it down a bit so the opening is at ground level... so they can get in easy but the pop or beer cant get out. grubby buggers!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

if you have the 'bad' type of grubs in your compost, best to put that compost in a closed plastic bag and set it in the sun for 12 hours or so to kill them before adding the compost to your garden. if you are not sure which are the 'bad grubs in compost, take a few to your garden shop to show them and ask. peace.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Well its summer in Miami that means a low of 80 and a high of 92-94 with 100% humidity. I do little gardening-mostly cut the grass and in the early morning a little weeding. We had a huge crop of mangos the best in over 20 years. I have 3 large mango trees in my yard and 3 avocado trees. I have given away probably 300 mangos to friends and customers.Was walking in the back yard and came upon 2 black racers wrapped up in a ball of snake love. They could have cared less about me. Lots of flowers and misquitos.This is the time of the year (actually they peaked about 3 weeks ago) when all of the pointseanna trees flower and Miami is awash in bright orange, yellow and purple trees. And the road goes on forever.... BobbaLee
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

pix! Nothing like mangos in the garden here, but the flowers are definitely out in force.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

This last week all my little carnations are coming into bloom, here on the southern Oregon coast. The scent of them floating around the garden and into the house is so nice. I've been growing them for about 4 years. No maintence, but they are delicate - when weeding I often pull a piece of the plant out by mistake. I tuck in somewhere else and it thrives there. Plant carnations - they love you back.
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

but I've never had much luck growing them, for some reason. Sunshine-daydream1951 told us that in Spain they have CLIMBING carnations. Does it get any better...
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

all the cacti that needed repotting have now been moved to larger quarters. This process was complicated by the fact that, this being Oakland, an unusual selection of opportunistic plants had taken up residence in the pots, most notably a flock of baby redwood trees and, much to my amazement, a baby maidenhair fern that was emerging from the drainage hole of one of the pots. I was pretty worried they were too delicate to make the transition. But after several weeks, the baby redwoods are robust and growing, and the baby maidenhair, while very tiny, is definitely sending out new shoots. Yes, they are going to look pretty funny growing up with Bumpy the mutant Peruvian cactus, but that's the Oakland garden for you.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

MaryeI bet you could make some interesting Redwood bonsai. We have some very rare cacti in South Florida and the Keys. Check out the Florida Native Plant Society-South Florida is home to some of the rarest plants in the world. I will have to ask my kids how to upload photos. Bob And the road goes on forever.... BobbaLee
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

i finaly transplanted my tomato's to the garden... i am glad i waited we lost our cucumbers and beets to late frost in may our peas are doing good... i have decided to keep all the herbs in pots so we can have them fresh year round....this our second year for our garden and i am surprised how relatively easy gardening is...my wife planted more beets and cucumbers we will see how that goes hopefully we can harvest them before it gets cold again.... peace and hugs to all
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

A horticultarist (?) developed a new rose for Linda McCartney-I wonder if anyone could do that for Jerry? Calling all rose experts..... And the road goes on forever.... BobbaLee
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

I have an Althea tree-like shrub out back and a young one out front. What type of rose would best serve Jerry's memory? A climbing rose, a grandiflora, a florabunda? I'm partial to the fragrance, singular blooms, and long stems of the grandifloras.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 11 months
Permalink

mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm