Garden Journal

Garden Log 4/23/22

Garden Log 4/23/22 It’s suddenly 80F outside, bizarrely, though we’re expecting it to drop again and have some cold nights next week (probably not below freezing, but I wouldn’t put tender tomatoes or tropicals out yet). But the garden has responded by leaping into full-on spring mode, which is nice, I guess, although I prefer […]

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Garden Log 4/21/22

More seedling transplanting. A few notes: – the reason why they set up grow light systems on chains is so you can keep the lights just above the plants, maximizing their light. You don’t want them actually touching the plants, though, so check regularly and raise as needed. – another alternative to self-watering trays are

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Garden Log 4/6/22

I stopped by Empowering Gardens yesterday to get some more plants — they have lots of pansies, violas, ranunculus, hyacinths, and primroses in for your spring planters. Here’s a trick I learned at a free container gardening workshop up at Gethsemane Gardens (a lot of the nurseries offer free workshops, check their websites for dates

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Garden Log 4/5/22

Swung by Home Depot yesterday and picked up some more pansies, plus ranunculus. I have a lot of planters to fill, so it’s going to be a little while before they’re all fully planted, but that’s okay — I kind of like doing it in stages in early spring, when everything is emerging bit by

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Garden Log 3/26/22

We’re having another cold spell (fingers crossed it’s the last of the season), frustrating my plan to go out and start prepping the vegetable beds today. Instead, I’ve been reading the lastest issue of The English Garden. Reading garden magazines is a great way to learn more about gardening, though it can be a little

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Garden Log 3/25/22

Took 10 minutes to finish pruning the Russian sage. You don’t have to prune it, but it gets pretty floppy and sprawly if you don’t, so most gardeners recommend cutting it back to about a foot high once a year, either in the fall or late winter. Russian sage is a great parkway plant, since

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