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Gardening: Landscape you want, garden you get

I have been helping people design, install and renovate their gardens for well over 30 years now – with landscapes ranging in scope from modest residences, townhouses, estate gardens and commercial rooftops.

If three decades of landscaping has taught me anything, it’s that many of the design mistakes people make are relatively common.

So I thought that I would share a few of these with you today, in hopes that you can avoid them and achieve that perfect garden space sooner, rather than later.

How big does it get? I have seen a giant redwood (Sequoiadendron giganteum) planted in a foundation bed because this was the garden designer’s signature tree and there was nowhere else to put it. Needless to say, it had to be removed within just a few years (it grows to an average of 150’ tall) and it should never have been planted there in the first place. Had it been left, those vigorous tree roots would have quickly plugged the foundation drains and heaved the sidewalk. So, always purchase a plant that will mature to fill the space you have.

Pretty isn’t always practical. Everyone loves the English cottage look, but when I ask them if they are prepared to weed constantly and divide perennials, that enthusiasm seems to wane. The other problem with a primarily herbaceous border is its lack of winter appeal – which translates into four to five months of dead sticks and dirt. A better approach is a mixed border with a blend of perennials, broadleaf evergreens (such as Pieris ‘Little Heath’) and even a winter-flowering shrub such as witch hazel or hamamelis.

Fruits or vegetables? There are far too many permaculture websites out there extolling the virtues of growing vegetables below fruit trees. The truth of the matter is that it is very difficult to grow edibles of any kind under fruit trees due to shading or root competition for available nutrients and water. That said, many fruit trees can be espaliered or flat-trained against fences or garage walls a few feet away from raised vegetable beds so that they can both peaceably co-exist.

Do you really need it? When it comes to hard landscape features such as decks, patios and gazebos, far too often they are installed without any thought as to how much they will be used. Case in point: I can recall a rather exclusive British Properties landscape where a beautiful custom-made gazebo (worth $25,000) was built overlooking a lake. In all the years that I took care of that garden, I never once saw it being used by the homeowners, but I did enjoy eating my lunch there.

Shade-loving grass is an oxymoron. While there are seed or turf blends (with more creeping red fescue) that tolerate partial shade, no lawn survives without sun,  it just slowly morphs into moss.

Your best option here is to convert that shaded lawn space using dwarf broadleaf shrubs such as Christmas box (Sarcococca humilis) or evergreen groundcovers like Japanese spurge (Pachysandra terminalis).

For those of you looking for a little more garden design inspiration, I will be giving a talk on “The art of gardening” at the ACT’s Tea Garden fundraiser on Sunday, June 1 at 1:30 p.m. Part of my presentation will include a rarely-seen image of 10-year-old me complete with 1970s checked shirt, a Beatle’s haircut and aerodynamic ears – that alone should be worth the price of admission.

– Mike Lascelle is a local nursery manager and gardening author (hebe_acer@hotmail.com).

 

Easy DIY Aquaponics System Review | Learn How to Build a DIYAquaponics …

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easy diy aquaponics system

Easy DIY Aquaponics system review offers general information about a brand new guidebook that offers people a lot of useful gardening tips. Is it believable?

Seattle, Wa (PRWEB) May 24, 2014

Aquaponics system is not a “panacea”. However, it can help to “cure” many problems that farmers and gardeners may face when planting and harvesting crops. The Easy DIY Aquaponics is a brand new program that offers people tricks and tips on how to build aquaponics system. The Easy DIY Aquaponics is created by Andrew Endres – an organic gardening enthusiast. After Andrew Endres launched the Easy DIY Aquaponics system, he received a lot of good comments from learners all over the world. The author has researched and studied for months to develop Easy DIY Aquaponics, offering many useful gardening tips and techniques. These tricks and tips are proven useful by users from many countries. The full Easy DIY Aquaponics system review, released on the site Vkool.com, tells people whether or not this guide is really useful.

The site Vkool.com published the Easy DIY Aquaponics system review, showing people everything they should know about Andrew Endres’s gardening techniques and tips. Unlike other gardening guidebooks that are sold in the current market, Easy DIY Aquaponics system is very easy to follow. The full package of Easy DIY Aquaponics system contains the Easy DIY Aquaponics core process manual, Easy DIY Aquaponics Trouble Shooting Guide, Easy DIY Aquaponics Monthly System Maintenance Log, Easy DIY Aquaponics Complete System Parts List, and Easy DIY Aquaponics system building video. In addition, the author provides customers with some useful bonuses, including “Insider Tips To Healthy Living”, “Making A Wind Turbine”, “Building A Green House”, “Ultimate Survival Plants”, “Worm Farming”, and “Vegan Cooking For Newbies”. The main manual just covers 53 informative pages, offering users tips on how to build a DIY Aquaponics gardening system at home.

Rocky from Vkool.com said: “Easy DIY Aquaponics system is a brand new gardening guidebook that teaches people a lot of useful tips on how to build a DIY Aquaponics system at home. The full Easy DIY Aquaponics package contains the main manual, video tutorials, and 6 additional bonuses. The author provides his customers with the full 8-week cash refund guarantee in case they do not like the tips and techniques contained in this program. Thus, if after following the gardening tips that this guide offers, users do not achieve success, they will get all their invested money back.”

If people want to read the entire Easy DIY Aquaponics system review, they should visit the site: http://vkool.com/easy-diy-aquaponics/.

If people want to know more about Easy DIY Aquaponics system, they can access the official site.

_____________________________________________

About the writer of the Easy DIY Aquaponics system review – author Lien Nguyen: Lien Nguyen is working for the site Vkool.com, offering readers a lot of informative and honest reviews about products in many fields of life. She always wants to give her readers valuable information and help them choose the best products.

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Gardening tips on growing tomatoes

Even people who don’t normally grow vegetables find the notion of picking their own fresh ripe tomatoes quite irresistible. Nurseries offer lots of transplants and some will be marked as being ideal for containers.
Tumbler is ideal for hanging baskets because its branches droop over the sides for fast ripening and easy picking. The long vines of grape tomatoes also droop and fruit thickly with small but very sweet tomatoes.
People with only a sunny windowsill might be interested in Tiny Tim, which usually grows just 30 centimetres tall. Generally, cherry tomatoes are more disease resistant than most other types.
After a few warm days, it’s tempting to put young tomato plants outside – but they still need to be kept warm because our coastal weather is unreliable in spring and nights are still cold.
Plastic milk cartons or polycarbonate juice bottles (with tops removed so hot air can escape) make good free cloches that protect young plants. But several kinds of reusable and reasonably priced commercial cloches are available in clear plastic. Row covers in spun fabric or plastic are available for tomatoes grown outside.
Greenhouses are the very best growing area for tomatoes. But containers against a wall under a south or west roof overhang yield enough to make people many delicious summer salads.
An alternative for people with gardens is to try blight-resistant tomatoes (these are the result of conventional breeding).
None are 100 per cent resistant, but when I tried them my garden, blight started exceptionally late and moved very slowly.
The blight-resistant beefsteak tomato “Legend” has been available as transplants and seed is available online. “Defiant” is another large blight-resistant tomato available from seed – both are bush types. Large blight-resistant cherry tomatoes include “Mountain Magic” and “Mountain Merit.”
In choosing tomato transplants or seeds it’s important to clue in to the difference between determinate (bush) tomato plants and indeterminate ones. Bush tomatoes produce all their fruit at the same time, then stop flowering. These are the best for containers because they’re easy to manage.
Indeterminate (vine) tomatoes don’t stop growing till frost. Suckers need to be pinched off frequently. If you don’t do this, a vining tomato plant will become a huge bush where tomatoes are deeply shaded and slow to ripen. At summer’s end, you’ll have a few handfuls of ripe tomatoes while zillions of green ones remain.
The practical way to prune vine tomatoes is to leave the first three or four suckers. That’s because these should have time to flower and produce ripe tomatoes. But the later ones should be removed.
Tomatoes are very greedy feeders. They’ll have lots to eat if you mix bonemeal and compost or rotted manure into their planting holes. They like frequent watering too.
Later, a mulch of aged manure and/or grass clippings helps to hold moisture around the plants.
It’s useful to know that contact with soil triggers tomato stems to put out roots. That’s why many gardeners plant tomatoes sideways with the top inch or two out in the sun. This produces a stronger plant and makes it easier to protect on cold nights.

Anne Marrison is happy to answer garden questions. Send them to her via amarrison@shaw.ca It helps if you can add the name of your city or region.
 

© Burnaby Now

Gardening Tips: Is my fig bush dead or not?

Posted: Friday, May 23, 2014 11:17 am

Gardening Tips: Is my fig bush dead or not?


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Many of you have been taking advantage of this string of nice weather by spending time in your gardens. Here’s a few questions I’ve been hearing lately you may be wondering about yourself.

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Friday, May 23, 2014 11:17 am.

Spectacular blooms: Alan Titchmarsh tips on growing peonies in your garden

There are some flowers whose brief moment of glory may put you off growing them. If they have a flowering season that is quite short it is easy to think that other plants and flowers will offer greater value. 

The peony is one such flower that is often dismissed on account of this shortcoming. 

But to do without peonies in my garden would be a great hardship. 

They are wonderfully spectacular, come in a wide range of colours from pure white to lemon yellow, through pink to deep crimson, and are wonderful when cut for the house. 

I wouldn’t be without them and have got over their short flowering season by planting them not only among other longer-flowering perennials, but also in a couple of short rows on the veg patch where they can be plundered for cut flowers without worrying about spoiling the overall effect of the bed or border.

When it comes to growing conditions, peonies enjoy any decent well-drained earth and, provided the soil is perked up with a bit of decent planting mixture, they are happy in chalky ground. For best results give them good light. They will cope with dappled shade, but in deep gloom they will be reluctant to do well.

Tips for high yields in a small or thirsty garden

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How can you get the most yield from a garden where space is limited, and water is too?

Plant smart, and pay attention to the soil.

“Your garden is only as good as your soil,” says David Salman, chief horticulturist at High Country Gardens, a Santa Fe, N.M., catalog that specializes in native and low-water plants.

Find out what nutrients your soil has — and what it’s missing — with a soil test, available through local cooperative extension offices at a nominal fee (home soil-test kits are less reliable, according to the Colorado State University Extension).

Encourage plant health by fertilizing with natural, organic fertilizers, which include fish emulsion and liquid seaweed, says Salman. Limit the use of chemical fertilizers because they don’t help build the soil.

“You will have more nutritionally complete vegetables if you have healthy soil,” he promises.

One trick Salmon recommends, especially for gardeners living in new housing developments, is adding a soil inoculant called mycorrhiza, a beneficial fungi. It’s found naturally in healthy soil, but often needs to be added to a new garden.

Peas, beans and soybeans could benefit from legume inoculants, which are species-specific (a soybean inoculant cannot be used to improve peas’ growth). Read product labels carefully or ask your gardening center for assistance.

“Your beans will do OK (without it), but if you really want to crank out the beans, you can do that with the inoculant,” says Salman. “It’s kind of a ‘grandma’s secret’ to growing great beans.”

Plants that can offer high yields with low watering include leafy vegetables such as kale, lettuce and spinach; beans, snow peas and sugar snap peas; and some varieties of cucumbers and squash, he says. Plant vining beans and peas if you have space or can grow them up a fence or trellis; plant bush beans and peas in large pots if space is limited.

Sarah J. Browning, an extension educator for the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, suggests planting radishes, carrots, peppers, zucchini and summer squash for summertime bounty. Peppers grow well in dry conditions, says Browning, and root crops such don’t need frequent watering.

Plant radishes early in the season or in part shade, and mulch them and other plants to retain moisture and combat weeds.

Browning recommends the cherry tomato cultivar Sun Gold and the slicers Big Beef and Celebrity as great-tasting high producers. Also look for disease-resistant tomato varieties, which are easier to grow.

Melissa Ozawa, a features editor for gardening at Martha Stewart Living magazine, recommends growing okra and Swiss chard; both are heat- and drought-tolerant. Melons also can handle less water once established because of their deep root systems, she says.

Not all vegetables grow well in all regions, so read seed packets, matching days to maturation to your region’s growing season, Salman advises.

Prolific, water-wise herbs include basil, oregano, parsley, thyme and rosemary, says Browning.

Try growing perennials such as rosemary, English thyme, tarragon and lavender in your ornamental beds.

Spring Garden Township teen launches web-design business

His office is in his family’s Spring Garden Township home. He squeezes in business appointments between school and track practice. And his mom drives him to client meetings at the local Starbucks.

Meet Nick Pitoniak, entrepreneur, age 16.

At an age when most kids are busy text messaging their BFFs or hanging out at the mall, Pitoniak, a sophomore at York Suburban High School, is building a web-design business.

The teenager has already snagged a few clients and launched a website for his company, Limeband Coding.

“I’ve always had a fascination with computers,” said Pitoniak, who taught himself computer code writing when he was 13. “Code controls the world and if you know the code, you can do anything.”

Pitoniak launched Limeband Coding in March. The name comes from the color of the headband Pitoniak wears during track and cross-country meets. It’s his good luck charm.

Limeband Coding isn’t Pitoniak’s first for-profit venture. He and his brother Bob started a lawn-care business in their neighborhood when Nick was 7 and Bob was 9.

The latest venture comes doesn’t come as a surprise to Pitoniak’s mother.

“Nick has always been an analytical thinker,” said Stephanie Pitoniak, an English teacher at Northeastern High School.

There have always been kids who run their own small businesses. Think lemonade stands and baby-sitters. Nationwide, 381,000 people under the age of 25 were self-employed in 2012, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy.

The popularity of TV’s “Shark Tank,” in which startup business owners pitch their products to a team of celebrity judges, has spurred a whole new generation of budding moguls, said Jay Azriel, who directs a program at York College for high school-age entrepreneurs.

“Being an entrepreneur is kind of cool these days,” said Azriel, an associate professor of entrepreneurship.

Young would-be business owners have plenty of role models their own age to which they can turn for inspiration.

Nick Pitoniak updates his own website in his York Township home. He named his business Limeband Coding after the color of a good-luck headband he wears

Nick D’Aloisio founded Summly, a smartphone application for organizing news stories, when he was 15. He sold the company to search engine giant Yahoo in 2013 for $30 million.

Moziah Bridges started a business making and selling bow ties when the Memphis, Tenn. preteen was 9 years old. Bridges has appeared on “Shark Tank,” been interviewed on the “Today” show and mentioned in Oprah Winfrey’s O Magazine.

And York Suburban High School is the alma mater of Evan Sharp, a founder of Pinterest, a popular social media website that allows users to post photos of their favorite items.

Despite some high-profile success stories, most young entrepreneurs face a major hurdle in getting adult customers to take them seriously, said Azriel, the York College professor.

Pitoniak’s fee for designing websites starts at $299. He recently lowered it from $399. But he realized he needed to discount his services further to convince skeptical adults he could handle the work.

He struck a deal with Lori Rhinehart to design a website for Rhinehart’s Lori’s Loop charity 5k run in exchange for her waiving the $20 entrance fee.

“He did a fabulous job,” Rhinehart said. “It wasn’t like I was dealing with a kid. He was every bit the professional.”

Anthony Billet, Pitoniak’s track coach, said the budding entrepreneur asks him lots of questions about marketing and how to get clients.

“You can just tell he has a drive within him that other kids don’t,” said Billet, the president of abSketches, a York architectural renderings firm. “He’s constantly thinking about every aspect of his business.”

Pitoniak plans to either enlist in the Navy or Air Force to learn more about computer programming or attend college to study computer science. He’s got his eye on Drexel University in Philadelphia.

He counts Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Aaron Swartz, the late co-founder of the news website Reddit, and Steve Jobs among his influences.

Pitoniak read a recent biography of the late Apple co-founder and came away impressed.

“It really inspired me that if you do what you love, and work hard enough, anything is possible,” he said.

Want to start your own business? Here are some tips

Tom Russell, president of Junior Achievement of South Central PA, offers the following tips for teens who want to start their own business.

• Begin with an idea you are passionate about, something that stems from a hobby or interest.

• Be prepared to spend 15 to 20 hours a week your business. If you’re launching a business just because you think it looks good on a college application, this is not thing for you.

• Print business cards to distribute to help publicize the business.

• Have a professional-looking website, including a professional-sounding email address.

• Use social media sites including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Pinterest to promote your business.

“You can do a lot of promotion of your business for free,” Russell said.

• Draft a mission statement capturing in a few words what your company does and what your goals are. That will help keep you on track.

Related

· More business news

NORA pushes for greening, gardening of unsold vacant lots – The Times

About 6,000 square feet of space on St. Claude Court in the Lower 9th Ward, once one of the thousands of vacant lots across the city, now cultivates vegetables and herbs for Rashida Ferdinand’s organization Sankofa Community Development Corp.

On land leased from the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority, students learn how to garden, produce is harvested and sold at community markets and neighbors have a section to pick vegetables for their own families to eat.

“It creates a model and a space of possibility,” Ferdinand said Friday, as city leaders and developers gathered in her garden.

The model is one that NORA hopes will be taken up, copied and reimagined by individuals and organizations citywide, as the agency tackles what to do with the 2,5000 remaining vacant lots on its books — beyond just cutting the grass.

Since Hurricane Katrina, NORA has sold 3,000 lots. But much of the city’s vacant land has been left unwanted by developers and have failed to sell at auction.

On Friday, NORA officials pushed a newly branded “NORA Green” initiative with four programs designed to get vacant lots back into use, at least temporarily, while waiting for neighborhood real estate demand to strengthen.

NORA Executive Director Jeffrey Hebert said his agency studied other cities — such as Chicago and Boston — for how to get vacant land back into productive use.

“What can you do in the interim until the market comes back?” Hebert asked.

A program called “Growing Green” offers leases of vacant lots for $250 per year for projects that focus on planting, gardening and urban agriculture. It will be a more broadly implemented version of NORA’s previous alternative land use project, Hebert said.

In addition to the annual $250 lease, applicants to the program must buy liability insurance for at least $1 million per incident and $2 million in aggregate, which costs an estimated $400 per year. To apply, visit NORA’s website.

Earlier this week, NORA launched an entrepreneurship contest looking for ideas on what to do with vacant commercial and light industrial lots for a chance at $7,500 in seed money from Entergy.

Other NORA Green programs include:

  • Green infrastructure projects that use planting and other natural ways of managing water.
  • Alternative land management in partnership with Louisiana State University’s urban landscape lab to research sustainable beautification of vacant lots.
  • As an extension of the Lot Next Door program, offering discounts on lot-buyers who plan to invest in landscaping improvements such as flower beds, patios or fencing.

Into the garden, go A special section filled with ideas for making your home …

What’s a growing trend for 2014? Restoring and sowing “balance” in life – and the garden, according to the Garden Media Group.

While to some that may mean practicing yoga near the euonymus, to many it also means making more thoughtful choices for this year and beyond.

Homeowners still want their outdoor spaces to look beautiful – lush plants, inviting furniture, chic accessories – but they also want to invest their time and money into high-quality, eco-friendly products with a smaller carbon footprint, the group reports.

And they want that outdoor space to do double duty – a place for solitude but also for socializing. Balance, remember?

Among the gardening trends highlighted by the group:

• Composting: Recycling food scraps to create compost is the new recycling.

• Growing fruit: There’s much interest in planting things like raspberries and blueberries for crafting cocktails and smoothies, hops for home-brewing and grapes for homemade wine.

• Bee-friendly gardening: Environmentally aware consumers are interested in planting native, pollen-rich flowers, trees and vegetables to provide safe shelters.

• “Fingertip” gardening: Gardens are going high-tech with mobile apps and technology. Suntory Flowers’ Virtual Container Designer app is one example.

Locally, Jeffrey Salmon noted another interesting trend in landscaping: Homeowners are requesting smaller flowering trees – patio-size trees – rather than big shade trees.

“People want to keep the sun in the yard,” said Salmon, president of Arbordale Nurseries Landscaping, 480 Dodge Road, Getzville.

Other landscape trends: Planting edibles into the landscape – using blueberries as a landscape foundation plant, for example. Salmon also noted a decline in plastic edging. It’s being replaced by natural products – perhaps local stones from places such as Medina. People want local, natural products, he said. Plants, stones, mulch.

“I think Buffalo people have accepted that we don’t need to truck the mulch from five states over. We can use the stuff here,” Salmon said.

Miniature fairy gardens continue to be hugely popular. And water gardens are evolving and maturing – with homeowners putting more thought into their placement and maintenance.

“People want them to be easier to care for,” Salmon said.

As for flowers, “I think tropicals are going to be a big deal again this year. Mandevilla seems to be one of the hot plants; it has been the last couple years, and it is again this year,” said Mark Yadon of Mischler’s Florist and Greenhouses, 118 S. Forest Road, Williamsville.

Container gardening also remains a popular option – including ready-made.

“You will see a lot of multiple types of plants – maybe three different plants – in one container, which makes it easy. You can just take that combination and pop two or three of them into a window box and instantly be done. Or put it into a basket or container of your own, and you have it already mixed for you,” Yadon said.

“We’re finding that more people want stuff done for them. We’re selling a lot more mixed containers that are ready to go out the door rather than people buying their own components and making the container themselves,” Yadon said.

“It’s big. It’s instant. It’s now,” he said.

email: smartin@buffnews.com