I braved the cold winds to start up my plot for a third year at the Fenton Community Garden. I'll be posting every Friday about what edibles I'm growing in my 10x20 plot. Hope you join me and also let me know what you are growing too!
And speaking of spinach... (see our last blog post for the Spinach growing tips video), I took off the cover cloth to reveal my spinach plants not only overwintered, but looks pretty darn good too. I tasted one leaf and it was nice and sweet. I have enough to make a decent salad with, so I'll save them for when my niece's visit this Easter weekend as they are big green eaters.
Under the cloth as well were six big Calabrese broccoli plants. They were full of small heads and just on the verge of bolting (going to flower and then setting seed). I ripped them all out and now have a big pot of tender heads that I'll have with pasta and butter sauce tonight for dinner.
I weeded a bit then out in two types of sugarsnap peas. Both varieties I had been sent to trial. One is Renee's Garden 'Sugar Daddy' snap peas and the other Peaceful Valley 'Oregon Sugar Pod II' peas. I put one on one side of the trellis and the other opposite it. One is bush-forming and the other should keep on producing new peas until the heat of summer moves in.
To label the peas, I made my own new signage. I go to a lot of meetings so collect many plastic badge holders (if the event doesn't recycle them). I use them for our annual Seed Exchange and other events, but still have plenty extra. So I took a few and pulled off the bulldog clips, then I inserted the now-empty seed packs. I then took the sticks off some political fans I got this summer at various local parades and inserted them inside to act as stakes. I hope they last as long as the plants do.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Video Wednesday: Growing Spinach All-Year-Round
Here is an excerpt from the "Growing Greens All-Year-Round" talk by Cindy Brown of Smithsonian Gardens speaking at the Washington Gardener Magazine Seed Exchange 2013 on Saturday, February 2, 2013, at Green Spring Gardens in Alexandria, VA.
If you missed this year's Seed Exchanges, don't fret! Mark your calendars for next year: January 25, 2014 at Brookside Gardens in Wheaton, MD, and February 1, 2014, at Green Spring Gardens in Alexandria, VA!
Thursday, March 21, 2013
See Washington Gardener Magazine at the Washington Home & Garden Show
Be sure to see Washington Gardener Magazine at Booth 605!
Kathy Jentz, Editor/Publisher, Washington Gardener Magazine, will be speaking on Saturday and Sunday on Local Gardening Challenges (Deer! Clay Soil! Drainage Issues!).
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Video Wednesday: Community Harvest
Community Harvest celebrates the natural and cultural harvests of our community, documenting the dramatic transformation of a forgotten vacant urban alley in our Nation's Capital into a majestic public garden and collaborative green space.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Win Passes to the Washington Home and Garden Show
For our March 2013 Washington Gardener Reader Contest, Washington Gardener is giving away several pairs of tickets to the Washington Home & Garden Show at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC. The show runs from Friday, March 22 to Sunday, March 24. Tickets are $12 each at the door or $9 if ordered in advance online.
The Washington Home & Garden Show is better than ever with more diverse exhibits, more categories, and more presentations on our fabulous stage! The show offers a unique and broad selection of home improvement-related businesses. You’ll enjoy various entertaining features and special guest speakers including local master gardeners. Get ideas, investigate new products, gather information and meet the professionals to help you make your next remodeling, renovation, or decorating project a breeze! To find out more, visit their web site: www.washingtonhomeandgardenshow.com.
To enter to win one of pairs of show tickets, send an email with “WHGShow” in the subject line to WashingtonGardener@rcn.com by 5:00pm on Wednesday, March 20. In the body of the email please include your full name, email, and mailing address. The ticket winners will be announced and notified by Thursday, March 21.
UPDATE:
The each receive a pair of tickets to the Washington Home & Garden Show at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC. The show runs from Friday, March 22 to Sunday, March 24. Tickets are $12 each at the door or $9 if ordered in advance online.
The Washington Home & Garden Show is better than ever with more diverse exhibits, more categories, and more presentations on our fabulous stage! The show offers a unique and broad selection of home improvement-related businesses. You’ll enjoy various entertaining features and special guest speakers including local master gardeners. Get ideas, investigate new products, gather information and meet the professionals to help you make your next remodeling, renovation, or decorating project a breeze! To find out more, visit their web site: www.washingtonhomeandgardenshow.com.
Be sure to see Washington Gardener Magazine at Booth 605!
Kathy Jentz, Editor/Publisher, Washington Gardener Magazine, will be speaking on Saturday and Sunday on Local Gardening Challenges (Deer! Clay Soil! Drainage Issues!).
The Washington Home & Garden Show is better than ever with more diverse exhibits, more categories, and more presentations on our fabulous stage! The show offers a unique and broad selection of home improvement-related businesses. You’ll enjoy various entertaining features and special guest speakers including local master gardeners. Get ideas, investigate new products, gather information and meet the professionals to help you make your next remodeling, renovation, or decorating project a breeze! To find out more, visit their web site: www.washingtonhomeandgardenshow.com.
To enter to win one of pairs of show tickets, send an email with “WHGShow” in the subject line to WashingtonGardener@rcn.com by 5:00pm on Wednesday, March 20. In the body of the email please include your full name, email, and mailing address. The ticket winners will be announced and notified by Thursday, March 21.
UPDATE:
The following individuals won our March Reader Contest:
Arlene Markowicz
Diane Svenonius
Roxanne Sykes
Jeffrey
Trunzo
Alyssia Greiner
Dorothy Cichra
Rajat Sarkar
Jessica Bilics
Sarah Lawler
Beth Py-Lieberman
The each receive a pair of tickets to the Washington Home & Garden Show at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC. The show runs from Friday, March 22 to Sunday, March 24. Tickets are $12 each at the door or $9 if ordered in advance online.
The Washington Home & Garden Show is better than ever with more diverse exhibits, more categories, and more presentations on our fabulous stage! The show offers a unique and broad selection of home improvement-related businesses. You’ll enjoy various entertaining features and special guest speakers including local master gardeners. Get ideas, investigate new products, gather information and meet the professionals to help you make your next remodeling, renovation, or decorating project a breeze! To find out more, visit their web site: www.washingtonhomeandgardenshow.com.
Be sure to see Washington Gardener Magazine at Booth 605!
Kathy Jentz, Editor/Publisher, Washington Gardener Magazine, will be speaking on Saturday and Sunday on Local Gardening Challenges (Deer! Clay Soil! Drainage Issues!).
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Washington Gardener Enews ~ March 2013 ~ No-Stress Gardening
The Washington Gardener Enews ~ March 2013 issue is now sent to all current Washington Gardener Magazine subscribers. It is also posted and archived online at: http://issuu.com/washingtongardener/docs/wgenews-mar13
INSIDE THIS ISSUE:
~ No-Stress Gardening: Why I Stopped Worrying and Learned To Love the Weeds
~ No-Stress Gardening: Why I Stopped Worrying and Learned To Love the Weeds
~ Top Local
Garden Events Calendar for March-April
~ Magazine Excerpt: How to Make Seed Tape
~ Mid-Atlantic Garden To-Do List for March-April
~ Reader Contest: Passes to the Washington Home & Garden Show
~ Reader Contest: Passes to the Washington Home & Garden Show
~ Washington
Gardener's Recent Blog Post Highlights
~ Spotlights Special: "Under the Sea" Coleus
~ Spotlights Special: "Under the Sea" Coleus
~ Washington Gardener Magazine
Back Issue Sale!
and much more...
and much more...
Friday, March 15, 2013
Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day: Windy March
It has been so windy here for the past few days that this is the only decent photo I have been able to get from all the blooms in my garden for this monthly Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day post.
This is an Iris Reticulata 'Harmony.'
Also in bloom now in my zone 7 DC/MD border garden are:
~ Viola
~ Primrose
~ Daffodils 'Tete a Tete'
~ Daffodils 'February Gold'
~ Daffodils 'Ice Follies'
~ Hellebores
~ Crocus 'Pickwick'
~ Crocus 'Remembrance'
~ Snowdrops common sp.
~ Winter Jasmine (still!)
~ Heather
~ Nemesia 'Poetry Blue'*
~ Pansy 'Cool Wave Purple'*
~ Pansy 'Cool Wave Golden Yellow'*
So what is blooming in YOUR garden today?
*I'm trialing these cool-season annuals for PanAmerican Seed.
This is an Iris Reticulata 'Harmony.'
Also in bloom now in my zone 7 DC/MD border garden are:
~ Viola
~ Primrose
~ Daffodils 'Tete a Tete'
~ Daffodils 'February Gold'
~ Daffodils 'Ice Follies'
~ Hellebores
~ Crocus 'Pickwick'
~ Crocus 'Remembrance'
~ Snowdrops common sp.
~ Winter Jasmine (still!)
~ Heather
~ Nemesia 'Poetry Blue'*
~ Pansy 'Cool Wave Purple'*
~ Pansy 'Cool Wave Golden Yellow'*
So what is blooming in YOUR garden today?
*I'm trialing these cool-season annuals for PanAmerican Seed.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Video Wednesday: Garden Flashback
Local gardener, Deloris Bailey, made this slide show from pictures of her 2012 garden plot in Reston, VA.
Wednesday, March 06, 2013
Video Wednesday: Philadelphia Flower Show 2013
Big Ben video show of British pop culture music and celebrities from the Philadelphia Flower Show 2013.
Monday, March 04, 2013
Winter Aconite: You Can Grow That!
They tolerate frost and ice well – looking good even in the worst conditions.
Plant them under deciduous trees and in woodland settings. They are ephemeral so will disappear as other early spring plants are filling in.
You can buy bulbs to plant in the fall. If you want to propagate them, wait until the foliage starts to die back, then dig up the tubers, divide and re-plant them.
Garden Bloggers You Can Grow That! Day was started by C. L. Fornari of Whole Life Gardening because she believes “Gardening is one of the most life-affirming things we can do.…We need to thoroughly saturate people with the belief that plants and gardening are worth doing because of the benefits gained.” Garden bloggers who agree post about something worth growing on the fourth day of every month. Read this month’s You Can Grow That! posts or stop by the You Can Grow That! Facebook page to read all of the posts.
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