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Landscapers scramble to catch up

But with all the resulting dead trees, shrubs and lawns, she was setting up lawn companies for a stunning spring sales season.

And then she struck again.

The April rains and first measurable May snow in more than a hundred years have pushed back the outdoor planting season several weeks. Now that nicer weather is becoming the norm, lawn and garden retailers and landscapers are scrambling to make their sales goals in a much shorter period and before summer’s soaring temperatures.

“We do 60 percent of our sales for the year in a six-week period in mid-April to May,” said Matt Stueck, vice president of Suburban Lawn Garden, with retail locations in south Kansas City, Lenexa and Overland Park. But sales were down 43 percent from February to April compared to 2012, he added.

Sales have turned around in the last week at the south Kansas City location, which sold three truck semitruck-loads of bedding plants on the Saturday before Mother’s Day alone. That was a record day. And the store almost did it again on Mother’s Day.

“We won’t make it up in May. We will have to make it up in June — if we have a mild summer. If we don’t, we won’t,” Stueck said.

Landscapers also are fielding calls as homeowners are realizing some of their trees and shrubs won’t be budding again. But before taking new clients, they are trying to finish current contracts, some that should have been knocked off their list weeks ago.

Early 2012 weather was mostly so mellow that landscapers at Rosehill Gardens could clean up clients’ yards in February and March and head right on into spring planting in April. But now, in mid-May, they are still finishing winter cleanup and scrambling to get spring flowers planted before an early Memorial Day.

“We are a full month behind and booked up deeper than quite a while,” said Steve Heichel, landscape designer at Rosehill Gardens. “We’ve brought on two crews to try to manage the load and we are working Saturdays.”

Along with six more landscape workers, Rosehill has hired additional workers in maintenance and irrigation, as well as plant pulling at its farm just south of Kansas City. It now has about 20 more employees, or a 10 percent increase from the 2012 season.

“We all rely on each other to get through the crunch,” Heichel said. “If we can get the flowers in by Memorial Day and the landscaping by June and early July, then it depends on how hot it gets.”

After putting in a geothermal heating and cooling system that took a toll on their lawn last year, the Forman family of Prairie Village planned to have their yard nearly back in shape by now.

“We were going to transplant some hedges, put some new greenery in, replace a Japanese maple and reseed some major bare spots,” said Mary Forman. “I’m trying to be patient about it. We have a contract, so I guess (the landscaper) will get to it when they can.”

Garden hermit needed. Apply within.

If you’re a gardener, this time of year likely has you thinking about the backyard. Your plans might include moving the flower beds or restocking the fish pond. They do not, most likely, involve hiring a live hermit.

Had you been a wealthy landowner in 18th-century England, however, things might have been different. For several decades beginning at the middle of the century, live hermits were the height of fashion for the British gentry. New trends in garden design—away from formal, geometric grounds and towards artificial Edens—created a new kind of cultural habitat, which some people filled with an actual occupant. Provided with a hut or grotto to call his own and a few simple meals a day, a garden hermit might live for years on a picturesque corner of the property. Wandering guests would marvel at this living, breathing symbol of rural withdrawal.

Though today it sounds bizarre—indeed, indecent—to use a live person as a garden ornament, the practice had deep roots. The tradition extended all the way back to the Roman Empire, when the emperor Hadrian built himself a miniature villa on a tiny island near his palace to be used for solitary escapes. In his new book, “The Hermit in the Garden: From Imperial Rome to Garden Gnome,” Gordon Campbell, a professor of renaissance studies at the University of Leicester, traces the history and lasting influence of perhaps the strangest trend in the history of landscaping.

Hermits, and the hermitages in which they lodged, were chiefly a feature of the more lavish gardens of Georgian England, but there is also evidence of the phenomenon extending to Ireland, Scotland, and, less frequently, continental Europe. The hermit, Campbell argues in his book, was a public symbol of an emotion that we have since learned to bury: melancholy. Sadness was something one cultivated, a state that suggested emotional sensitivity and a kind of native intelligence. To employ a garden hermit—cloaked in rags, performing solitude—was to assert a fine sensibility, one keen to the spiritual benefits of privacy, peace, and mild woe.

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Preview Clayton Historical Society’s annual gardens tour

Posted May 17, 2013

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This year six gardens representing various gardening and landscaping styles are represented at the Clayton Historical Society’s 21st annual Clayton Gardens Tour. The tour will take place May 18-19.

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  • Showy columbine can be found in the front yard of the home of Frank and Georgianne Champion in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. The Champion's yard is one that will be featured in the Clayton Historical Society's 21st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour this month. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    Showy columbine can be found in the front yard of the home of Frank and Georgianne Champion in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. The Champion’s yard is one that will be featured in the Clayton Historical Society’s 21st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour this month. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • On her hillside garden, Georgianne Champion trims a carpet rose bush in her Concord, Calif., backyard on Wednesday May 6, 2013 in preparation for the gardens tour.  Most of the plants on the French country garden hillside are planted in baskets to protect against gophers.  (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    On her hillside garden, Georgianne Champion trims a carpet rose bush in her Concord, Calif., backyard on Wednesday May 6, 2013 in preparation for the gardens tour. Most of the plants on the French country garden hillside are planted in baskets to protect against gophers. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • Diane Carbine of Clayton, waters her backyard vegetable garden in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. Carbine's yard will be part of The Clayton Historical Society's 21st annual Clayton Gardens Tour on May 18-19. This year six gardens representing various gardening and landscaping styles are represented. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)

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    Diane Carbine of Clayton, waters her backyard vegetable garden in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. Carbine’s yard will be part of The Clayton Historical Society’s 21st annual Clayton Gardens Tour on May 18-19. This year six gardens representing various gardening and landscaping styles are represented. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)


  • A variety of color can be found in the front yard garden of Frank and Georgianne Champion's yard in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    A variety of color can be found in the front yard garden of Frank and Georgianne Champion’s yard in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • Showy red hot poker plants grab the attention of a hummingbird in the backyard garden of Georgianne Champion in  Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013.   (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    Showy red hot poker plants grab the attention of a hummingbird in the backyard garden of Georgianne Champion in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • The front side yard is landscaped at the home of Frank and Georgianne Champion on their Concord, Calif., property that meets their neighbors where they have created a gathering spot on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    The front side yard is landscaped at the home of Frank and Georgianne Champion on their Concord, Calif., property that meets their neighbors where they have created a gathering spot on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • Succulents bloom in the backyard of Georgianne Champion's garden in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    Succulents bloom in the backyard of Georgianne Champion’s garden in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • A quiet sitting area is seen in a corner of the beautiful backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group))

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    A quiet sitting area is seen in a corner of the beautiful backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group))


  • Glass plate art work blooms with other vegetation in the backyard of Georgianne Champion in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. Her home will be one featured in the Clayton Historical Society's 21st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    Glass plate art work blooms with other vegetation in the backyard of Georgianne Champion in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. Her home will be one featured in the Clayton Historical Society’s 21st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • On her hillside garden, Georgianne Champion trims plants in her Concord, Calif., backyard on Wednesday May 6, 2013 in preparation for the Clayton Historical Society's 21'st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour. Champion and her neighbors installed a rattle snake fence to keep the snakes from neighboring open space from coming into their gardens.  A gas burning fire in the lower portion of the yard makes the flagstone patio area warm and inviting. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    On her hillside garden, Georgianne Champion trims plants in her Concord, Calif., backyard on Wednesday May 6, 2013 in preparation for the Clayton Historical Society’s 21’st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour. Champion and her neighbors installed a rattle snake fence to keep the snakes from neighboring open space from coming into their gardens. A gas burning fire in the lower portion of the yard makes the flagstone patio area warm and inviting. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • A dwarf bird of paradise is photographed with a new bloom in the backyard of Georgianne Champion in  Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    A dwarf bird of paradise is photographed with a new bloom in the backyard of Georgianne Champion in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • A group of chickens roam the backyard of Diane Carbine's home in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013.  (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)

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    A group of chickens roam the backyard of Diane Carbine’s home in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)


  • On her hillside garden, Georgianne Champion searches for the perfect spot for a glass art piece with a neon light in her Concord, Calif., backyard on Wednesday May 6, 2013 in preparation for the Clayton Historical Society's 21'st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour.  (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    On her hillside garden, Georgianne Champion searches for the perfect spot for a glass art piece with a neon light in her Concord, Calif., backyard on Wednesday May 6, 2013 in preparation for the Clayton Historical Society’s 21’st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • A rocking chair over looks Marsh Creek as part of the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. Carbine's yard will be part of The Clayton Historical Society's 21st annual Clayton Gardens Tour on May 18-19. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)

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    A rocking chair over looks Marsh Creek as part of the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. Carbine’s yard will be part of The Clayton Historical Society’s 21st annual Clayton Gardens Tour on May 18-19. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)


  • Layers of colors can be found in Georgianne Champion's French country backyard  garden in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. Champion's garden is one that will be featured on May 18th 19th in the Clayton Historical Society's 21st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour.(Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)

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    Layers of colors can be found in Georgianne Champion’s French country backyard garden in Concord, Calif., on Wednesday May 6, 2013. Champion’s garden is one that will be featured on May 18th 19th in the Clayton Historical Society’s 21st Annual Clayton Gardens Tour.(Susan Tripp Pollard/Bay Area News Group)


  • Diane Carbine's front yard is photographed in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. This year six gardens representing various gardening and landscaping styles are represented. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)

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    Diane Carbine’s front yard is photographed in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. This year six gardens representing various gardening and landscaping styles are represented. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)


  • A deck leads to a swimming pool and spa in the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013.  (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)

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    A deck leads to a swimming pool and spa in the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)


  • A swimming pool and spa are seen in the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. Carbine's yard will be part of The Clayton Historical Society's 21st annual Clayton Gardens Tour on May 18-19. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)

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    A swimming pool and spa are seen in the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. Carbine’s yard will be part of The Clayton Historical Society’s 21st annual Clayton Gardens Tour on May 18-19. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)


  • A cactus garden sits inside of a sink in the barbecue area of the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)

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    A cactus garden sits inside of a sink in the barbecue area of the backyard of Diane Carbine in Clayton, Calif., on Saturday, May 4, 2013. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Bay Area News Group)



Water-wise gardening tips from the 9News Kitchen Garden

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KUSA – Warmer days and especially warming soil conditions make this a prime weekend for planting warm season vegetables.

Because of the drought, we are using a new planting technique this year in the 9News Kitchen Garden called the “waffle garden.” Instead of planting veggies in long rows, plant seeds and starter plants of the same kind within squares that are dug out to be slightly lower than the rest of the garden.

Within each square, lower the soil about 1-2 inches and then rim the edge of the square with a mound of soil about 3-4 inches high. This technique essentially creates a square saucer that holds water and prevents run-off after watering.

This technique also makes plants slightly denser than row planting. This tighter form of planting shades the soil more than row planting which helps hold in moisture. The shade also deters weeds.

Other tips for a water-wise edible garden:
• After planting, apply mulch around the bases of plants. Bark or even grass clippings from mowing the lawn are good mulches.
• Use drip irrigation. It is the most efficient method of watering all plants other than lawns. It is also gardener friendly because you can simply schedule automatic watering via the irrigation system’s timer.

What to plant
Once the danger of frost has past, get warm season crops in the ground. This year, de-emphasize the more ornamental plants, like pumpkins, and plant more serious edibles such as:
• Tomatoes
• Tomatillos
• Peppers
• Squash varieties
• Brussels sprouts
• Beans and peas
• Rhubarb
• Berries, such as raspberries and strawberries

Growing edibles is a sustainable use of resources when we use water wisely in the process.

Information courtesy Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado – sponsors of the 9News Water Wise Garden and the 9News Kitchen Garden. www.alcc.com

(KUSA-TV © 2013 Multimedia Holdings Corporation)

Gardening tips from the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum

KARE 11

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GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. — The late spring shouldn’t have a huge impact on home gardeners, according to Barb DeGroot of the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum.

DeGroot says the Arboretum’s experts say the best indicator of when to plant is soil temperature.  Different plants require different temperatures for optimum growth, so you may want to invest in a good soil thermometer.

The Minnesota Landscape Arboretum offers a variety of classes for beginning and expert gardeners.  Saturday and Sunday May 18th-19th the Arboretum will feature the annual Auxiliary Spring Plant Sale from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

For those who just want to view the plants, DeGroot says the tulips are out and gorgeous.

(Copyright 2013 by KARE. All rights reserved.)

Gardening with Tim: Tips and reminders

SEATTLE — Sometimes starting something new can be a challenge because it can be a bit of a dilemma where to begin — and gardening is no exception. And the science behind growing plants can be as complicated or as simple as you’d like it to be, so don’t let it get you down or intimidate you. I often tell people that the Master Gardener training classes I took through Oregon State University taught me how little I really know about horticulture.

The basic purpose of a garden is to enrich your personal environment, and hopefully enrich our overall environment at the same time. Gardening can take place nearly anywhere with the basic ingredients, whether you have a tiny patio, small or large backyard, a single window sill or acres of property.

Now, how you define a garden might be the best place to begin for beginners. Whatever you’re looking for, from tasty flavors and healthy veggies to tons of sweet smelling blossoms or even protection from elements like wind, sun and rain, make sure to determine what you want the end result to be.

“Just take a deep breath,” Allen Larsen said.

Larsen runs the Fred Meyer in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood. The avid gardener said they field lots of questions from gardeners just digging into the hobby. He encourages beginners to not be afraid to ask questions.

“Come out here and figure out what captures your attention and captures your imagination,” he said. “Is it going to be a flower garden or a veggie garden? Or is it going to be a hybrid garden?”

Larsen and I agree that starting small is your best bet for the truly novice gardener. In my experience, overwhelming yourself with too many plants or too big a space can lead to frustration. Small successes generate confidence to tackle bigger and more ambitious projects down the road. And when it comes to tools, you don’t need to spend a ton of money either.

“You don’t need a whole shed full of tools,” Larsen said. “There’s so many simple tools that can be multipurpose. [The basics are a] hand spade and a hand rake. You can do that with a pretty limited budget.”

Plants do have basic needs that you need to remember to pay attention to, such as water, sunlight and good soil. Reading labels on plants will tell you how much of each a particular plant needs. Make sure you read labels on fertilizers and pesticides carefully — and use both sparingly. You can hurt your plants and the environment with too much of either.

Surrounding plants once they’re in the ground with mulch — or in some cases wood chips — has several benefits. They hold in soil moisture which saves you on water and inhibit weeds from popping up which saves you frustration and time yanking out unwanted invaders. And decomposing compost and/or wood chips provides soil nutrients as the season progresses, so in the long run you might not have to worry about fertilizers if your soil is enhanced naturally. Ultimately, it’s a nice shortcut to a cleaner end result and look.

euphorbia

Euphorbia plant. Image courtesy of wikipedia

It was the names of plants that always made me the most nervous and frustrated. I really loved one of the tips that I got from one of my Master Gardener instructors. She said that if you make up nicknames for the plants in your yard — you’ll remember them. Down the road the more you garden, when you eventually need to look something up on a particular plant you’ll find out what they’re really called and then the actual name will stick in your head.

One example was the plant in my side yard at my old house in Portland that I called the “Alien Spaceship Plant” because that’s what it looked like to me. Down the road I found out that it was actually in a family of plants called ”euphorbia,” and the name stuck. (Full disclosure — I had to look up how to spell “euphorbia.”)

And while you might think you’ll make mistakes from time to time,  don’t worry — we all do. Seasoned gardeners just call them “learning experiences.” Happy gardening!

Beppi Crosariol’s tips for garden tipples

I recently spent a fine weekend getting up close and personal with a quarter tonne of bovine manure. Friends call me a farmer because I do business in bulk and grow from seed. One year, I tended more than 160 heirloom-tomato plants, though I’ve since scaled back on the vines to create more room for carefree crops, such as eggplants and beets.

If I could keep a cow, I would, because a pile of moist dung does not balance well on my bicycle. So, I’m grateful for Avis. And I’m grateful that the company waived its standard $100 cleaning penalty for soiled returns. This brings me to a principal rule of city farming: Use a rental vehicle for the manure.

Every grower, regardless of talent, has advice for neighbours. Ever notice? I’ll spare you the compost and sphagnum tips because you’ll find more dependable injunctions elsewhere in this section. But I can offer two gardening-related wine thoughts, neither a bum steer.

One: Invest in plastic glassware – tacky, perhaps, but the alternative is a patio tiled with broken glass. I like Govino tumblers, which taper toward the rim to amplify aromas and are moulded with an indentation for a less-slippery grip.

And two: Give due consideration to aromatic white varieties, such as riesling, sauvignon blanc, gewurztraminer and muscat. The punchy fruit and floral-herbal notes are able to cut through outdoor aromas better than other wines, be those scents from lilac blooms or a trunkload of manure.

Joie Farm A Noble Blend 2012 (British Columbia)

SCORE: 90 PRICE: $23.89 in B.C.

This is an unusual blend of gewurztraminer, riesling, pinot blanc, pinot auxerrois, schoenburger and muscat. It’s off-dry yet delectably crisp on the finish, with lychee, tropical-fruit and honey characters amped up by spice.It reminds me of Chloé perfume. joiefarm.com

Sokol Blosser Evolution White (Oregon)

SCORE: 88 PRICE: $16.95

Estate co-president Alison Sokol Blosser recently told me the winery’s inside nickname for this wine is “Conundrum Unplugged.” It’s a reference to Caymus Conundrum, the Napa blend that opened the floodgates for multi-grape, off-dry whites in North America. Unplugged? She means unoaked, as in fresh and pure. Made from nine varieties, including pinot gris, muller-thurgau and riesling, it’s smooth, with notes of peach, guava and melon. At just 12-per-cent alcohol, it’s a thirsty gardener’s delight. $19.99 in B.C., $21.20 in Que., $24.99 in N.B., $24.95 in PEI.

Villa Maria Private Bin Sauvignon Blanc 2012 (New Zealand)

SCORE: 88 PRICE: $16.45

A leading New Zealand brand, this delivers sweet grapefruit, lemonade and a hint of chalk. It is made for outdoor imbibing. $18.99 in B.C., $19.99 in Sask., $19.99 in N.B., $19.99 in N.S., $18.99 in Nfld., $19.35 in PEI.

Brumont Gros Manseng-Sauvignon Côtes de Gascogne 2012 (France)

SCORE: 87 PRICE: $12.70

Here’s a light, dry white that leads with the gros manseng grape’s uncanny flavours of apricot and peach, subtly framed by herbaceous sauvignon blanc. $13.35 in Que., $11.50 in N.B., $15.29 in N.S., $14.95 in PEI.

Garden Tips: Peonies need room to grow

One of my first gardening memories is helping my grandmother cut peonies. When I close my eyes I can see those pretty rosy pink, blowsy flowers and smell their sweet fragrance.

Peonies are an old garden flower. Native to Asia, they have been cultivated as ornamentals for more than 2,500 years in China and since the eighth century in Japan. They came to North America in the 1850s via Europe.

In the “old” days, most American gardeners like my grandmother grew three types of peonies: white, pink and red, all with double flowers. Of course these were the most common varieties planted in home gardens. The diversity of peonies readily available to gardeners today is much greater, thanks to plant breeders.

Today’s peonies come in white, pink, red, burgundy, lavender, coral and even yellow. Gardeners can find different garden peony (Paeonia lactifora) varieties. The varieties are classified based on their flower types, which includes singles, semi-doubles, doubles, Japanese and anemone.

Peonies do best planted in a site with well-drained soil and where they’ll receive full sun. Plants should be located where they are protected from the wind and forceful irrigation sprinklers. The tubers usually are planted in the fall, but early spring planting also can be successful, as long as the tubers still are dormant. Before planting, work the soil up to a depth of 12 inches, mixing some organic matter in with the soil at the same time.

When ready to plant, dig a hole wide enough and deep enough to accommodate the tubers. Good quality tubers have three to five “eyes” or pink buds. In the fall, you should be able to find some tubers at local nurseries, but specialty nurseries like the Peony Farm (Ilovepeonies.com) in Sequim have a wider selection of varieties.

(I have also seen some gorgeous potted peonies available at local nurseries this spring. These are planted like other potted perennials, just make sure they are not planted too deep.)

After digging the hole, position the tuber so that the eyes are no more than 2 inches below the surface. Because the tuber may settle deeper in the soil after you water, you should gently firm the soil around the tuber as you plant it. If the eyes end up deeper than 2 inches deep, you may get a peony plant that doesn’t bloom! However, it can take two or three years before a new plant provides you with a display of flowers, so don’t get discouraged if yours doesn’t bloom the first spring after planting.

When planting, be sure your peony has enough room to grow. A space 3 to 4 feet wide will give it enough room to grow and allow good air circulation. Peonies do not need or do well with frequent dividing. Many do well in the same spot for 20 years or more!

After planting, peonies are a low-maintenance perennial. Keep the soil slightly moist with regular irrigation and fertilize once a year with slow-release garden fertilizer if needed. Possible pest problems are powdery mildew and thrips.

— Marianne C. Ophardt is a horticulturist for Washington State University Benton County Extension.

Designer centres

16 May 2013

Offering design services is an increasingly popular method for garden centres to attract customers with money to spend, Jack Shamash discovers