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Time saving garden tips

SOME days there’s just not enough time to get everything done let alone keep everyone happy and on those days the garden takes last place on the to-do list.

To help anyone else who has my sort of time crunch, here are a few of my tips and tricks designed for the out-of-time gardener.

Tip 1: Weeding has to be the least enjoyable and most time consuming task in garden maintenance. To avoid weeding I keep all of the soil in the garden mulched year-round. I even mulch my containers to avoid having to weed them which also help to prevent drought stress. I use wood chips for mulching which I obtain from my friendly neighbourhood arborist.

When wood chips are unavailable, I use leaves from my own trees or those found during fall in the nearby city park. The trick is to make sure that every last inch of earth is covered with a thick layer of mulch so weed seeds cannot germinate.

Tip 2: Lawn cutting for some people is a form of therapy. For me lawn cutting is work. So I have eliminated the time most people spend cutting lawn down to zero. How? I killed all of the lawn in the front yard and installed planting beds interwoven with a bluestone patio and walkway. In the backyard, there’s a small patch of lawn that I refuse to cut, so my wife cuts it. The trick is to change the design of the garden to a less labour intensive style and if that does not work, then delegate.

Tip 3: I like growing veggies but much of my garden is dedicated to hardy ornamentals, so I grow veggies in containers. Veggies grown in pots take half the time to plant and maintain because there are no veggie planting beds to maintain. I can also change my veggie selections each year and move them around the yard as desired. Yes I do need to obtain or grow new soil for my veggie pots each year but that is what compost piles are for. When planting veggies in pots, bigger and deeper pots are best to provide a deep, cool root run. A pot the size of a washing machine is ideal but hard to find. Try upcycling or repurposing a pot from some other sort of container. One tip for planting pots, do not add shreds of foam, broken pots or any other manner of shrapnel to the bottom of the pot for drainage. Adding shrapnel to the bottom of the pot is a myth and those pieces simply perch the water table higher and deny plants the full depth of soil.

Tip 4: Solving pest or disease problems can be difficult, time consuming and often the problem persists from year to year. Some plants are important and worth fighting for, some are not. To avoid pest and disease problems I use the following pest and disease strategies: Firstly, avoid the use of chemical fertilizer because it forces soft lush growth that predisposes plant to pest and disease attack.

Secondly, choose the right plant for the right place, not the right plant for the place I want it to grow. Thirdly, plants that have a chronic pest and disease problem are ruthlessly ripped out and thrown into the compost or green waste bin. A case in point, I recently found that thrips were overwintering on my hellebores. Thrips are tough, persistent and cannot be killed in one year by any means. So I dug out all of my hellebores and tossed them in the green waste bin. The tip: a good gardener knows how to kill plants as well as he or she grows plants.

Lawn and garden tips from ExxonMobil and Monsanto

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Wed Apr 10, 2013 at 02:50 PM PDT

Lawn and garden tips from ExxonMobil and Monsanto

by BrianMcFaddenFollow for Comics


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Originally posted to Comics on Wed Apr 10, 2013 at 02:50 PM PDT.

Also republished by

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Shades of green at Artefact Home|Garden

A house designed by LDa Architecture + Interiors takes advantage of the site and places the living room to the south, where expansive windows take in the view and the sun’s rays for warmth and light.

We all know the basics of “going green” in residential design – downsize, repurpose materials, and buy local. But John Day of LDa Architecture + Interiors of Cambridge, Massachusetts, offered more precise suggestions. He showed photographs of beautiful and practical rooms that take advantage of nature, views, and daylight while maximizing solar gain with south-facing windows. He emphasized that using durable materials that will last and not end up in a landfill is another way to keep your project green.

Some little known facts about sustainable designs were revealed by Doug Hanna of S+H Construction of Cambridge, Massachusetts, who said the rules vary from town to town. In Cambridge, for example, sustainability is encouraged and installation of solar panels can supersede historical building regulations and be placed on rooftops of older houses. However in some historic districts in Boston, the equipment must be totally hidden from view.

Outside, you don’t have to rely only on native plants to make a green impression. That’s what Kimberly Mercurio of Kimberly Mercurio Landscape Architecture, also of Cambridge, Massachusetts, advocates. She says to mix native plants with site appropriate plants, and notes she likes to integrate outcroppings of existing stone rather than remove them. She also uses as much recycled stone as possible to create her beautiful hardscapes.

photovoltaicarrayincambridge.jpg

An S+H crew installed a photovoltaic array in Cambridge, where the sustainable outweighs the historic.

Kim.jpg

Kimberly Mercurio and her clients studied where they were walking most outside, and installed pieces of hardscape to create a stepping-stone effect that also is pervious so water seeps into the ground rather than running off into storm drains.

Sisters and Artefact owners Sue and Maureen Walsh spoke with verve about the products they carry in their store that are locally designed and/or made as well as products such as the Vellum furniture line that is made in the United States.

Our next salon is at the fabulous Fuller Craft Museum in Brockton, Massachusetts, where we will be looking to outdoor rooms with “Beyond the Patio.” Here’s more information and how to register: www.designnewengland.eventbrite.com

Check Out These Upcoming Tours of Homes and Gardens Nearby

It’s fun to check out some of the most amazing homes in East Atlanta Patch and throughout Atlanta. The various tours of homes offered throughout the city offers ample opportunity to see some of the best in interior design, landscaping and that special something that makes a home immaculate.

Here are upcoming tours of homes happening in East Atlanta and nearby:

  • Grant Park Home and Garden Tour: May 11, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and May 12, 1-5 p.m. Order Tickets Online – $20 for adults, $10 for children, (Children 3 and under free.) The tour begins at the park entrance at the intersection of Milledge and Cherokee Avenues. On the days of the tour, tickets will be available at our ticket booth for $25 each. The ticket booth is located at the park entrance near the intersection of Cherokee and Milledge Avenues.

 

  • 11th Annual Kirkwood Tour of Homes: May 19-20 (12-6 p.m.) See the results of loving renovations and new additions; enjoy the tree lined streets and home gardens; get interior design ideas from classic to funky-chic; and best of all, meet the people who make Kirkwood a great place to be. Find info about tickets on the Kirkwood Spring Fling site.

 

       

      • “Gardens of Eating” Decatur Garden Tour: April 27, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and April 28, 12-5 p.m. Advance tickets are available online and at Intown Ace and 17 Steps for $20. Fifteen gardens will celebrate combinations of herb, vegetable and flower gardens in Decatur, Winnona Park and Oakhurst.

       

       

      • 2013 Atlanta Symphony Decorator’s Show House Gardens: April 20- May 13, Set on a Buckhead estate, the 2013 Atlanta Symphony Decorator’s Show House Gardens is a grand chateau inspiired by the great architecture of France. With over 18,000 square feet of space, the house will come to life as the interiors are showcased with some of the Southeast’s most talented designers. For hours, ticket prices, and more info: click here.

       

      • Gardens For Connoisseurs (Fundraiser for Atlanta Botanical Gardens): May 11-12, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. From tranquil woodland settings to intimate urban spaces, the 2013 Gardens for Connoisseurs Tour showcases 11 spectacular private gardens representing the finest in garden design. For ticket prices, ticket purchases and more info: click here

       

      Did we miss an event? Add it to the comments area below this article.

TECHNO FILE: Building a home in the digital age

IT WAS a little unnerving this time last week to wake up to a thin layer of snow on the mountains that are visible in the distance from this tiny and remote village in the eastern Free State that I like to call home.

It reminded me why I sometimes don’t like to call this home: it’s probably the coldest place in the country in winter, and winter, as seen in last week’s snowfall, can last as long as six months.

Add to the mix a rented, 100-year-old south-facing farmhouse with a mountain on its northern side that blocks out almost all of the winter sunshine, and it can be an almost unbearable place to live in winter.

What could have possessed the owners of the original farm to build this sandstone house in such an inhospitable position, other than the fact that it is a good vantage point from which to see and defend against advancing marauders?

Despite the fear and loathing occasioned by the rapid onset of winter, my beautiful wife and I have resolved to linger in this village a while longer and have purchased a sizeable piece of land on which not to make the same mistakes as were made by the designers and builders of the house in which we presently reside.

Of course, that’s a lot easier than it was 100 years ago, even if you don’t have a lot of money to do it with, although choosing a piece of land that gets lots of winter sunshine is an obvious first step.

After that, technology comes to the rescue, as you’d expect.

First, especially if it’s rural farmland you’ve acquired, you’re likely to have some difficulty figuring out where your land begins and ends, and the arcane system of geographic co-ordinates used by the land surveyor will probably look like Greek to you. Luckily, a quick Google search turns up an application you can download and install on your computer that converts the meaningless co-ordinates to something Google Maps and Google Earth can understand — and before you know it, you’ve got your piece of land mapped out quite precisely.

Next, you don’t need to be an architect or a rocket scientist to design in 3D the house you hope to build. Not only that, but you can actually position your design on your piece of land in Google Maps and see how it interacts with the sunshine and shadows at any given time on any given day of the year — using a free Google application called SketchUp (it’s a 35MB download and fairly tricky to operate, but there are many tutorials available).

Now that you’ve figured out exactly where to put your house, and in which direction it needs to face to make the most of the weak winter sunshine, you need to decide what it will look like.

Unlike 100 years ago, you need not be limited to what your imagination is capable of coming up with.

Simply download and install a smartphone app, such as the wonderful Houzz, and you immediately have hundreds of thousands of photographs and products to inspire you.

Houzz is specifically aimed at renovators and builders and has a section for every room imaginable, as well as exteriors and landscaping ideas. Swipe through the photographs (or, separately, products), tap to add something that strikes your fancy to your personal “ideas book”, and you can quickly build up a wealth of reference material to help you design your own home.

Websites such as the popular Pinterest (also a smartphone app), which lets you pin things you like on the internet to virtual pinboards, offer equally excellent ideas-gathering services.

Designing a winter-proof house has never been so easy.

Youngsters have say on Narooma landscaping


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  • SCHOOL SAY: The students at Narooma Public School were consulted on what they want the Narooma Flat to look like…

AROUND 80 Year
Five and Six students from Narooma Public School last Wednesday had their say
on the design of the landscaping phase of the Narooma streetscaping project.

Eurobodalla Shire
Council project engineer Russell Burke and engineering cadet Tom Franzen
visited the students to show them plans of the road works and new roundabout
that are under construction.

The engineers
listened to their ideas on the landscaping that is to complete the works by
improving the streetscape along the Narooma Flat.

“The students
were keen to have their say and gave us great feedback by completing the phase
two survey and giving us drawings that represented what Narooma meant to them,”
Mr Burke said.

The students’
drawings were full of ideas about what they like to see included in the
landscaping design.

Eurobodalla Shire
Council Youth Committee members also contributed thoughts and ideas to the
project.

To date, Mr Burke
said 191 surveys have been returned to council and he and the consultant
landscape architects, Ayling Drury, agree this is an outstanding response
so far.

The community has
until this Friday to have their say by completing the landscape design survey
available at www.esc.nsw.gov.au

Hard copy surveys
can also be picked up at Narooma Library, visitors centre and depot and at Club
Narooma and ABC Meads Bakery on the Narooma flat.

Narooma
Streetscape Sunset Advisory Committee chairman and mayor Lindsay Brown said the
next step would be the preparation of a draft concept plan by Ayling and Drury
that considers everyone’s feedback.

“This concept
plan will then be presented to the community for further comment,” Clr Brown
said.

Narooma Sporting
and Services Club general manager Tony Casu said one concern was adequate
parking for the combined pool, NATA Oval and leisure centre complexes to allow
for say a swim meet and market on the same day.

The club wanted
to ensure its parking was not all taken and also had concerns about access to
club during the works and the final lay-out.

Beneath This Unreal Rooftop Pool Is A Master Bedroom, Bath

Back in 2003, this property was an ill-kept and forgotten 1920s bungalow. But, and this is key: It’s one of only seven Atlanta homes backing up to Piedmont Park, Kaye said. So after years of house-hunting, he saw the potential and snapped up the property within hours — for $345,000.

Over the next five years, the home would be overhauled from roof to terrace. “Common materials were used in uncommon ways for eco and budget-friendly, amazing results,” Kaye said in an email. “The house seamlessly blends traditional and modernist architecture for a one-of-a-kind home with 180-degree views of the park and skyline.” The grounds — based on the “principles of Versailles” and featuring 100 percent water reclamation — have since won several landscaping awards. If the entire property looks familiar, you may have seen it featured on HGTV’s “Groundbreakers.”

At 4,800 square feet, it’s no shack, with six bedrooms, a multi-story foyer, two-car garage and “floating” concrete walkway that crosses the koi pond. By way of custom doors on pivoting steel spines, interaction between common areas and the formal library can be customized — that is, opened or fully closed off for privacy. Ditto for exterior walls that retract to open the great room and master bedroom on three sides, unveiling those sweet, sweet views of Atlanta’s greatest park.

· 543 Elmwood Drive NE [Zillow]

80th Annual Historic Garden Week Has Something For Everyone

WEBB-Rke-5751The 80th annual Historic Garden Week in Roanoke will be held on Saturday, April 27, 2013. The tour is sponsored by the Roanoke Valley Garden Club and the Mill Mountain Garden Club.

The local tour is part of Historic Garden Week, an annual event presented by the Garden Club of Virginia, in which homes and gardens all around Virginia are open to the public. Well known as the oldest and largest statewide house and garden tour in the United States, tourists from all across the country travel to Virginia to take part in this springtime event. Proceeds from the tour are used to restore and preserve grounds and gardens of Virginia’s most cherished historic landmarks.

This year’s tour in Roanoke is titled “A Trolley Tour in the Mountains” and organizers are excited to have Roanoke’s Star Line Trolley taking guests to some of the homes on the tour. There are five beautiful homes for guests to visit. Two homes, Rockledge and Tarrylong, are located in part of the Southeast neighborhood below the Mill Mountain Star and three homes are in the adjacent South Roanoke neighborhood.

DYE-Rke-5831There is something for everyone – majestic mountain views, terraced gardens with stone patios, grounds that offer unique architectural features in surprising nooks and crannies, a hidden front yard putting green, a shaded private pool, a Spanish casa with both arid and lush landscaping, and homes filled with spectacular antiques and local art.

The event provides a unique opportunity to see unforgettable gardens at the peak of spring color, as well as homes sparkling with spectacular flower arrangements created by club members.

 Tour Headquarters: The Ronald McDonald House, 2224 South Jefferson Street: Trolley and shuttle transportation, tour tickets, restrooms and lunch. Please wear flat heeled shoes.

Tickets: $30 per person. No single-site tickets. Children ages 6-12, $15. Children 5 and younger, free admission. Children younger than 17 must be accompanied by an adult. Tickets may be purchased with cash or check on the day of the tour at any of the homes on the tour or the Ronald McDonald House.

Advance Tickets: $25 per person. Advance tickets may be purchased by mail until April 22 by sending checks payable to “Historic Garden Week” and mailed to Roanoke Council of Garden Clubs, 3640 Colonial Avenue, Roanoke VA 24018. Tickets are available for purchase by cash or check at: Roanoke Council of Garden Clubs, 3640 Colonial Avenue, Ronald McDonald House, Townside Gardens and Black Dog Salvage. For more information and online tickets go to vagardenweek.org.

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Safe from Sequester: $704198 for Gardening at NATO Ambassador’s Home

Truman Hall, a historic property that serves at the residence of the Ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). (Courtesy of NATO website)

(CNSNews.com) – Just over a week after sequestration took effect, the State Department allotted more than $700,000 for gardening at a U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Brussels, Belgium.

On March 11, State awarded a contract to provide gardening services at an “official residence” of the U.S. Mission in Belgium.

A State Department spokesperson confirmed to CNSNews.com that the contract is for Truman Hall, a historic property that serves at the residence of the Ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The current U.S. ambassador to NATO is Ivo H. Daalder, who was appointed by President Barack Obama in May 2009.

The total award comes to $704,198.30, including $134,744 for the base year and four one-year option periods thereafter.

A State Department spokesperson said that Truman Hall regularly hosts visitors from the 28 NATO nations and other Alliance partner countries around the world and is a valuable platform for America’s diplomacy.

The award provides for grass cutting, edging, trimming, weeding, and other gardening and landscaping services. It will also mandate the planting of 960 violas, tulips, and begonias.

Truman Hall, named after former President Harry S. Truman, was built in 1963 by Architect B.A. Jacquemotte and Landscape Architect René Pechère. The 28-acre property consists of several gardens, meadows and a lawn pavilion.

The award came just 10 days after automatic across-the-board cuts, known as the sequester, took effect on March 1. Prior to the cuts taking effect, Secretary of State John Kerry warned that the sequester could “seriously impair our ability to execute our vital missions of national security, diplomacy and development.”

In a letter to Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) on Feb. 11, Kerry said sequestration means $2.6 billion less in fiscal year 2013 for State Department programs.

“These cuts would severely impair our efforts to enhance the security of U.S. government facilities overseas and ensure the safety of the thousands of U.S. diplomats serving the American people abroad,” he said.

In addition to Truman Hall, the State Department is currently soliciting gardening services for U.S. Embassies in Jakarta, Indonesia; Santiago, Chile; Maseru, Lesotho; and Bangkok, Thailand.

The solicitation for the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta places a maximum amount of $500,000.

A State Department spokesperson said the award for Truman Hall was made at the lowest price technically acceptable, at a total cost of $704,198.30. The contract was awarded to Iris Greencare, a landscaping company based in Brussels.

Metallica donate to fan’s garden design project

Rockers METALLICA have made a green-fingered fan’s dreams come true by handing out funds to help him develop his garden design for a prestigious British horticultural competition.

Arek Luc’s garden design, inspired by the band’s track I Disappear, was accepted to go on display at the Royal Horticultural Society’s annual flower show at Hampton Court in England in July (13), but the project was in jeopardy due to lack of funding.

The rockers were alerted to Luc’s plight by their manager Peter’s wife, former British politician Louise Mensch, who read about the design in a local publication, and the stars decided to dip into their own pockets to ensure the project went ahead as planned.

Luc tells Britain’s The Times newspaper, “Louise e-mailed me and asked how much I still needed. I couldn’t believe it when they sent me several thousand pounds.”

Mensch adds, “The whole band was tickled pink (delighted) by Arek’s garden. The band does a colossal amount of work for charity but it’s not usually associated with gardens.”

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