06 December 2013
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Trowel & Glove: Marin gardening calendar for the week of Dec. 7, 2013
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Marin
The Garden Society of Marin’s annual greens sale is 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 7 at the Marin Art Garden Center at 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. in Ross. Call 457-2565 or go to gardensocietyofmarin.org.
The Marin County Indoor Antique Market’s 29th annual Christmas show is from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Dec. 7 and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 8 at the Marin Center Exhibit Hall at 10 Avenue of the Flags in San Rafael. Free. Call 383-2552 or go to www.goldengateshows.com.
West Marin Commons offers a weekly harvest exchange at 1:30 p.m. Saturdays at the Livery Stable gardens on the commons in Point Reyes Station. Go to www.westmarin commons.org.
Ed Rosenthal discusses “Protect Your Garden” at 4 p.m. Dec. 7 at Book Passage at 51 Tamal Vista Blvd. in Corte Madera. Free. Call 927-0960 or go to www.bookpassage.com.
The Novato Independent Elders Program seeks volunteers to help Novato seniors with their overgrown yards on Tuesday mornings or Thursday afternoons. Call 899-8296.
Volunteers are sought to help in Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy nurseries from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays at Tennessee Valley, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesdays at Muir Woods or 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays or 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays in the Marin Headlands. Call 561-3077 or go to www.parksconservancy.org/get-involved/volunteer/.
“The Flower and the Vase,” a floral design demonstation class with MaryAnn Nardo, is from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Dec. 12 at Terrestra at 30 Miller Ave. in Mill Valley. $45. Go to www.terrestra.com/ floral/ to register.
The SPAWN (Salmon Protection and Watershed Network) native plant nursery days are from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Fridays and weekends. Call 663-8590, ext. 114, or email jonathan@tirn.net to register and for directions.
The 27th annual St. John’s Tour de Noel house tour is from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 14 at four homes in Ross. $30 to $45. Lunch is available for $15. Call 456-1102 or go to www.stjohnsross.org/tour.html.
Marin Master Gardeners and the Marin Municipal Water District offer free residential Bay-Friendly Garden Walks to MMWD customers. The year-round service helps homeowners identify water-saving opportunities and soil conservation techniques for their landscaping. Call 473-4204 to request a visit to your garden.
Marin Open Garden Project (MOGP) volunteers are available to help Marin residents glean excess fruit from their trees for donations to local organizations serving people in need and to build raised beds to start vegetable gardens through the MicroGardens program. MGOP also offers a garden tool lending library. Go to www.opengardenproject.org or email contact@opengarden project.org.
The Marin Organic Glean Team seeks volunteers to harvest extras from the fields at various farms for the organic school lunch and gleaning program. Call 663-9667 or go to www.marinorganic.org.
San Francisco
The Conservatory of Flowers, at 100 John F. Kennedy Drive in Golden Gate Park, displays permanent galleries of tropical plant species as well as changing special exhibits from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. $2 to $7. Call 831-2090 or go to www.conservatoryofflowers.org.
The San Francisco Botanical Garden Society, at Ninth Avenue and Lincoln Way in Golden Gate Park, offers several ongoing events. $7; free to San Francisco residents, members and school groups. Call 661-1316 or go to www.sf botanicalgarden.org. Free docent tours leave from the Strybing Bookstore near the main gate at 1:30 p.m. weekdays, 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. weekends; and from the north entrance at 2 p.m. Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. Groups of 10 or more can call ahead for special-focus tours.
Around the Bay
Cornerstone Gardens is a permanent, gallery-style garden featuring walk-through installations by international landscape designers on nine acres at 23570 Highway 121 in Sonoma. Free. Call 707-933-3010 or go to www.cornerstone gardens.com.
Garden Valley Ranch rose garden is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays through Sundays at 498 Pepper Road in Petaluma. Self-guided and group tours are available. $2 to $10. Call 707-795-0919 or go to www.gardenvalley.com.
Don Landis teaches “How to De-Bitter Olives” from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dec. 8 at Jacuzzi Family Vineyards at 24724 Arnold Drive in Sonoma. Free. Reservations required. Call 707-931-7575.
The Luther Burbank Home at Santa Rosa and Sonoma avenues in Santa Rosa has docent-led tours of the greenhouse and a portion of the gardens every half hour from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. $7. A holiday open house is from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 7 and 8. $2. Call 707-524-5445.
McEvoy Ranch at 5935 Red Hill Road in Petaluma offers tips on planting olive trees and has olive trees for sale by appointment. Call 707-769-4123 or go to www.mcevoy ranch.com.
Wednesdays are volunteer days from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Occidental Arts and Ecology Center at 15290 Coleman Valley Road in Occidental. Call 707-874-1557, ext. 201, or go to www.oaec.org.
Quarryhill Botanical Garden at 12841 Sonoma Highway in Glen Ellen covers 61 acres and showcases a large selection of scientifically documented wild source temperate Asian plants. The garden is open for self-guided tours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. $5 to $10. Call 707-996-3166 or go to www.quarryhillbg.org.
The Trowel Glove Calendar appears Saturdays. Send high-resolution jpg photo attachments and details about your event to calendar@marinij.com or mail to Home and Garden Calendar/Lifestyles, Marin Independent Journal, 4000 Civic Center Drive, Suite 301, San Rafael, CA 94903. Items should be sent two weeks in advance. Photos should be a minimum of 1 megabyte and include caption information. Include a daytime phone number on your release.
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YardandLawnCare.Com Teaches Gardeners and Landscapers the Fundamentals
Adriene Blais
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Garden gift ideas
You’re making your holiday shopping list and checking it twice, and here are some gift ideas for the gardeners — naughty or nice — in your life.
BEST BOOK. The new book “Gifts from the Garden” combines the beauty of the bounty with the skills of the crafter for the green-fingered DIYer who wants to make the most of harvests throughout the year. From the edible to the decorative, author Debora Robertson shows how to make a unique something for every occasion — potted bulbs in teacups, personalized seed packets, herbal teas, floral-scented lip balms and indulgent body scrubs. Using fruits, veggies and nuts, she shows how to make spice rubs and fresh pesto, chile jams and tomato chutneys — gifts from the heart of your kitchen. $24.95; www.amazon.com
BIRDIE TREATS. Give your best birding friends a basket of treats meant for their feathered friends. Fill a basket with a trio of special blends that include sunflower meats, peanuts, safflower and pecans or sunflower meats infused with fiery hot habanero chilies to keep the squirrels away. A nutberry blend combines all of nature’s best in one bag — fruits with insect suet kibbles and whole kernel sunflower meats. $12.99-$17.99 per 5-pound bag.
Or, stock a basket with a suet cake feeder and the cakes to go in it — $1.69-$1.99. Cole’s Wild Bird seeds and foods available at wildlife stores and garden centers nationwide; find a retailer at www.coleswildbird.com or 770-426-8882.
GARDENIA GOODNESS. No air freshener can compete with the sweet fragrance of a flowering gardenia. The Heavenly Scented Evergreen Gardenia brightens a room with its clear white blossoms, and comes in a golden sparkle ceramic container that’s about 7 inches tall and wide; plant care information is included, $59.95. Jackson and Perkins; www.jacksonandperkins.com or 800-292-4769.
CLASSIC WISDOM. The 222nd edition of the 2014 Old Farmer’s Almanac entertains and inspires throughout the year. In addition to gardening tips and plant profiles, the periodical features pie recipes and then ideas on how to lose the pounds after eating all those homemade desserts, $6.99. The Old Farmer’s Almanac for Kids with magical pumpkins, towering beanstalks, Salsa princesses, buzzing hummingbirds, bug costumes and friendly farm animals, $9.95. Available at garden centers nationwide or www.almanac.com or 877-717-8924.
EASY DOES IT. If flower-arranging makes you feel uneasy, the Easy Arranger removes all that anxiety. The elegant hand-woven wire grid is placed on top of a vase and gently pressed down around the outer edge. Each petal of the crown then serves as a compartment for a stem and guides the user to perfect placement. Add flowers between the wires to make flowers stay where you want them. The bendable, reusable and decorative grid in 5-, 6- and 8-inch diameter sizes, can be used over a variety of vases and other vessels. Holiday special, $6 from The Gardener’s Workshop; www.shoptgw.com or 888-977-7159.
BEST WEEDER EVER. Take out carpets of weeds in one swipe, using the Japanese hand hoe. Forged of high carbon steel, it maintains a sharp edge. Holiday special, $19.95, www.shoptgw.com or 888-977-7159.
COMFY, CUTE LOOK. If the gardener on your list is a gal, Garden Girl USA’s trim-fitting gardening pants, $93.99, or capris, $89.99, might be the thing. Made of durable fabrics, with pockets galore, Garden Girl’s signature hip/waist stretch panels provide “give” in all the right places, making it easy to bend, lug, haul, squat or crawl through typical days in the garden. They’re also ideal for comfort when hiking, dog-walking, tending toddlers, cleaning, or bopping around town. Floral-patterned Wellington boots, $85.99, complete the look; www.GardenGirlUSA.com or 866-610-5459.
ROSY DREAMS. Treat your special gardening friend to a David Austin gift voucher. Request that the confirmation, complete with 120-page “Handbooks of Roses” catalog, come straight to you for gift-giving. The roses will be shipped in spring at the right time for planting as bare rootstock. Two beauties to ponder: Munstead Wood, a deep crimson rose, $27.95 each or three for $71.25, and yellow climber Golden Celebration, $25.99 each or three for $66. www.DavidAustinRoses.com or 800-328-8893.
TWEET TIME. Watching wild birds from the window is especially sweet in winter. For close encounters with interesting birds of all kinds, consider The Winner Multi-Purpose Window Feeder, $35.99, which attaches to the outside of windows with three suction cup mounts and holds up to ½ pound of seed, suet or fruit. Another possibility is Dorothy’s Cardinal Feeder, $59.99, designed to attach to a post or a hook; this 13-inch feeder is topped by a height-adjustable, 15-inch clear-view dome that protects birds and feed from weather, while warding off unwanted larger birds. www.DrollYankees.com or 800-352-9164.
SPACE SAVER. Easy access to organized gear is the dream of every gardener, athlete, outdoor enthusiast or homeowner with too little space. Boulder-based Studio-Shed.com offers pre-fabricated single room structures designed for use as garden sheds and storage, as well as backyard home offices, art and music studios and more. Cost for an 8-by-10 Studio Shed storage model with unfinished interior and block/metal siding starts at $6,300, plus installation and shipping, starting at $900 each. Less expensive Small Shed DIY Kits are also available.www.Studio-Shed.com or 888-900-3933.
HAND TOOL SETS. The Gardeners Hand Tool Gift Set from Joseph Bentley contains the small tools that are used most often by gardeners of all skills — trowel, transplanting trowel and hand fork. All three tools have carefully finished solid oak wooden handles and polished stainless steel heads. The tools are presented in a wooden seed box and nestled in shaved wood, $39.99 in gardening stores and at HomeDepot.com, Amazon.com and Sears.com.
STYLISH COMPOSTER. The Green Cycler is a clean, odorless kitchen countertop solution that turns kitchen scraps into “black gold” for the garden in a matter of days rather than weeks and months, $99-$139. www.thegreencycler.com or 855-432-6866.
HUMMER HEAVEN. Hummingbirds are territorial and will use this swing, with a shimmering copper finish, as a perch to watch over their food source, according to birding experts. Simply place this swing near feeders and enjoy watching them sit and swing. The red glass bead attracts hummingbirds, $16.99. National Wildlife Federation at www.nwf.org or 800-822-9919.
HOLIDAY HAPPINESS. The bird seed wreath is perfect as a holiday treat for backyard birds. Made with black oil sunflower seeds, peanuts, colored safflower and red millet, this 8 ½-inch wreath weighs a hearty 2¼ pounds, $19.99. National Wildlife Federation at www.nwf.org or 800-822-9919.
WELCOME EVERYONE. Welcome friends and family to your garden with a whimsical “Welcome to my garden” plaque. Handcrafted from 100 percent recycled aluminum and made in the USA, the sign measures 12 inches wide and 7 inches tall, ground stake included; two to four weeks for delivery, $39.99. National Wildlife Federation at www.nwf.org or 800-822-9919.
FINE FEEDER. Turn your fruit feeder into a piece of artwork for your backyard. This heavyweight feeder holds two fruits, such as apples, and gives the birds a place to perch. Made of long-lasting beautiful copper, $29.99. National Wildlife Federation at www.nwf.org or 800-822-9919.
MASON JAR MAGIC. Reminiscent of the vintage blue glass canning jars used in the 1800s, the Perky-Pet Mason Jar Collection brings rustic chic to any outdoor space. The three styles include a wild bird feeder, hummingbird feeder and wild bird waterer, $17.95-$19.95. www.birdfeeders.com or 855-PERKY-PET.
DIY GOODIE. Got kids or DIYers in the mix? Give them an “experience” with NativeCast’s DIY planter kits. This eco-concrete container is perfect for crafters, DIY lovers, party favors, crafty kids, and stocking stuffers. The kit includes NativeCast’s custom eco-concrete mix, a mold, organic potting soil, and herb seeds, $15-$35 and up www.nativecast.com.
LIVING ART. Topiaries created with moss and succulents are living art that delights anyone who loves animals and wildlife. From a life-size bull frog to a full-size giraffe, Gardens by Teresa in Yorktown, Va., can create it. Her online gardening shop also features handcrafted wire topiary frames that look nice on their own; custom topiary orders accepted. www.gardensbyteresa.com or 757-532-0080.
Gardening Tips: Caring for your Christmas tree
Posted: Friday, December 6, 2013 11:00 am
The Christmas season is here and with it brings many traditions, including putting up and decorating a Christmas tree. Although artificial trees are very popular, I’ve always thought nothing can beat a real Christmas tree. North Carolina ranks second of all 50 United States in the number of Christmas trees harvested each year. Most of this production takes place in the Western part of the state.
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Friday, December 6, 2013 11:00 am.
December gardening tips
As our temperatures cool, lengthen the days between watering plants. Most established landscape plants will need deep watering 1-2 times in December and January. Cover frost-sensitive plants if evening temperatures drop below freezing.
Annuals: Plant annuals. (African daisy, calendula, geranium, candytuft, Iceland poppy, larkspur, pansy, petunia, snapdragon, stock, sweet alyssum, lobelia, dianthus, primrose)
Bulbs: This is the last month to plant spring-flowering bulbs (amaryllis, anemone, bearded iris, crinum, crocus, daffodil, Dutch iris, freesia, ranunculus, and gladiolus).
Grapes: Plant bare-root Thompson seedless grape stock in a sunny location. Prepare a hole 1½ ft. deep and wide and plant grape stock, leaving 2 inches of stem above ground. Water well. Do not prune grapes until all leaves have fallen off the vines.
Groundcovers: Plant Gaillardia x grandiflora ‘Mesa Yellow’ (a groundcover with bright-yellow, daisy-like blooms), moss verbena, asparagus fern, wandering Jew and vinca.
Perennials: Plant brittle bush, penstemon, chocolate flower, ruellia, chaparral sage, Texas sage, desert marigold, carnation, geranium, English daisy, globe mallow, and agapanthus.
Roses: Begin researching roses to plant in January. #1 grade roses are recommended. Climbers, floribundas, grandifloras, hybrid teas, and miniatures all grow well in Yuma. Prune dead canes and dead-head old blooms. Do not prune roses heavily this month. If leaves show powdery mildew, spray both sides of leaves, Dec.-March, with Neem oil on a cool day.
Shrubs: Plant butterfly bush, myrtle, gardenia, orange and yellow bell, fairy duster, greythorn, honeysuckle, desert barberry, Baja senna, Cape plumbago, lantana and datura. Do not fertilize or prune established shrubs.
Trees: You might wish to purchase a potted Christmas tree this year and transplant it in your yard after the holidays. Aleppo pine, Afghan pine, Italian Stone pine, Arizona cypress, and Mondell pine grow nicely here. Fruit trees can be planted now (choose a variety requiring less than 400 chill hours to set fruit). Fertilize established fruit trees. Water citrus trees once a month and fruit trees every three weeks. Do not prune fruit trees this month.
Vegetables: Continue to plant vegetables from seeds or transplants to insure a continual supply of produce. (Asparagus, beet, artichoke, salad greens, bok choy, broccoli, cabbage, carrot, cauliflower, peas, radish, green onion, spinach, and turnip) Continue planting herbs. Thin seedlings. Plant strawberries.
How to prepare poinsettias for the holidays
Will it hurt my liriope if I prune it now? It grows along my sidewalk and makes shoveling snow difficult.
Liriope has done plenty of growing already, and pruning will not kill it. However, as long as the leaves are green it’s carrying on photosynthesis and producing carbohydrates to store, so you may want to wait for a snow forecast before you cut it back.
Is it too late to divide and transplant my ligularia?
While almost all perennials can be transplanted in fall as long as the soil is not yet frozen, ligularias are an exception and division should be done only in the spring. It is recommended to divide ligularia every three years to maintain vitality. Be careful to ensure that they never suffer dry soil.
Plant of the week
Winterberry holly
Ilex verticillata
Winterberry, our native wetland holly, makes a stunning specimen for the winter garden. Its autumn leaves turn yellow and fall to reveal a breathtaking view of thousands of brilliant red berries clinging to bare stems. What a joy to have such color in the middle of winter. Bird watchers appreciate seeing birds flock to the berries for a midwinter feast. Winterberry reaches heights of 6 to 10 feet with equal spread and is also available in dwarf varieties such as Maryland Beauty. Plant in moist, acidic organic soil. Females set fruit best in full sun and require a male pollinator. Some female varieties must be matched with a particular male variety. —Shelley McNeal
Late fall garden tips
Posted: Friday, December 6, 2013 12:07 am
Now that cold weather has really arrived, I hope that most of your ‘outside’ garden chores are completed. Some of those may have included using your mower with the mulch setting to finely chop leaves and twigs and at the same time mulch your lawn areas with this natural winter protection. Chopped leaves help to fertilize the soil and the mulching effect will protect the grass through our variable weather of cold, cool and sometimes mild days ahead.
In the perennial beds, leaving the stalks of plants with good seed heads provide food for the birds. We usually leave our zinnias, cone flowers and black eyed Susan until spring cleanup. During winter, when the feeders are empty, the birds scour the flower beds. It helps the perennial plants to have a stem during cold and windy weather. The stem and dried leaves of the hibernating perennial collect the tree leaves that are blowing around. This collected leaf material provides a blanket of insulation protecting the root mass of the perennial throughout the winter.
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Friday, December 6, 2013 12:07 am.
Holly wears the crown – Gardening tips for Christmas from Alan Titchmarsh
Not to worry – plant one of each if you can then you will have a holly bush with wonderfully golden variegated leaves and – in the case of ‘Golden King’ – berries as well.
Do not worry that the bushes will eventually eat you out of house and home.
They are relatively slow growing and if you plant them with a view to cutting a few stems every Christmas you can keep them within bounds by means of this annual pruning.
They make great back-of-the-border plants and are a terrific backdrop to other plants in summer.
Look around and you will find all kinds of variation in both leaves and fruit – some of the berries are red, others orange and there are even yellow varieties.
Some leaves are variegated, others dark green, some have very few spines on the leaves, others, like hedgehog holly Ilex aquifolium “Ferox” have so many spines they erupt through the centre of the leaf as well as appearing on the edges.
There are even blue-leafed hollies – well, blue-ish leafed – to add to the variety.
None of these is too fussy about the growing conditions. They will do well in sun or shade, though leaf variegation will be less dramatic in deep gloom, and they can cope with most soils.
Plant a container-grown holly now and if it is already in berry you can risk taking a few sprigs this Christmas as well as looking forward to masses more in the Christmases to come.
Don’t miss Alan’s gardening column today and every day in the Daily Express. For information on his range of gardening products, visit www.alantitchmarsh.com
Award winning garden designers Andrew Fisher Tomlin and Tom Harfleet …
Award winning garden designers Andrew Fisher Tomlin and Tom Harfleet along with Swedish designer Kajsa Bjorne have today launched the first garden show that will be entirely 3D printed. Called miNiATURE it will take place from 5 – 8 March 2014 at The Strand Gallery in central London.
Tom Harfleet said “The concept behind miNiATURE is to create a platform where leading garden designers and landscape architects truly have the ability to create unique and ambitious gardens, even if they are in miniature. Currently show gardens provide a platform to engage people with new design but often these can end up as safe and self-limiting due to budget and in order to win a medal.” He added “miNiATURE aims to change this by giving designers an outlet to explore creative designs at low cost through modelling. “
Up until recently this took place ‘on screen’ and a physical model could take time and expense but now with the advent of 3D printing we have the ability to produce high quality, detailed and accurate 3D models to communicate ideas and engage directly with clients. The show’s lead sponsors are 3D specialist printers Hobs 3D and the London College of Garden Design.
Some of the UK’s leading garden designers have already committed to showing unique new designs at miNiATURE including RHS Chelsea Flower Show ‘Best in Show’ winners Sarah Eberle, Adam Frost and Jo Thompson with further international names to be announced shortly.
-ENDS-
Lead sponsors: London college of garden design, and Hobs 3D
Media supporter: Into gardens Charity supporter: Streetscape
The miNiATURE show is sponsored by Hob’s 3D and the London College of Garden Design with media support from Into Gardens. The show will support the landscape training charity Streetscape.
Further events around the show and supporters will be announced shortly. Tom Harfleet and Andrew Fisher Tomlin have previously collaborated in projects in the UK, Australia and New Zealand. This is their first collaboration with Kajsa Bjorne, a landscape designer based in Sweden and Australia.
For more information please contact Andrew Fisher Tomlin on 07957 855457 or Tom Harfleet on 07766 884819
Email: Andrew@andrewfishertomlin.com
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