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Mel’s Green Garden visits………The Getty Villa….Most beautiful spot in Los Angeles!

19 Apr IMG_1632

Spring Forward

13 Mar IMG_1301

Wave goodbye to winter with a little spring-cleaning — in your garden that is. I couldn’t have asked for better weather for doing just that this past weekend. Here are some tips for waking up your garden in the spring:

Do overseed your lawn and put some grass seed down. Spring and fall are the best times of the year to renew your lawn.

Do rake out your garden beds, gently removing all brown and dead leaves. It is great to remove all annuals.Do NOT cut branches of hydrangeas or tree peonies, as even though they might look dead and brown in March, they will bloom soon enough. They bloom on old wood, so you will have way more blooms if you leave them alone.

Do trim trees and shrubs. This is the BEST time of year to trim your trees back. I had the pleasure of trimming and training my pear trees behind my garage, flat to the garage in espalier form. This is their 3rd season in my garden, and it is a great way to maximize space in a smaller yard like mine.

Do cut back ornamental grasses and all annuals.  This is the best time for cutting back grasses.

Do apply a nice layer of compost. Your garden will more than reward you later this summer.

Of course I rewarded myself after I hauled a nice pile of dead and dried garden debris to my curb by…what else? Buying and planting pansies in my window boxes! The 10-day forecast looks great, and they can take it pretty cold. I felt so refreshed and renewed, you would have thought I’d spent the weekend at Sundara Spa! Not that there’s anything wrong with that…

Garden to Table

5 Mar
Show of hands! Who buys wonderful, expensive, organic fruits and veggies with the best intentions of making a healthful meal, only to throw them away weeks later, after the fridge starts to produce a strong, foul odor?

Mel’s tip, which has been working for a while:  When you realize you are not going to use them and they are about to mold or go bad, throw them in a plastic bag and freeze. Frozen strawberries, blueberries, raspberries and bananas are perfect for smoothies in your blender. In fact, they are better frozen because then you can skip the ice, making for more vitamin-packed smoothies.
With herbs or the veggies (cauliflower, broccoli, kale) about to spoil in your fridge, freeze and use them later in a soup. Soups are especially great in the fall, winter and early spring.

Overcoming clay soil

2 Mar

So you have clay soil, either because you live in Indiana or because you have new construction and your builders left you with compacted clay soil with a dusting of topsoil.  What to do?  Plant natives.

Try these natives I learned about on a recent Wisconsin Gardener show:  compass plant, prairie dock, Bergamot, big bluestem (ornamental grass),  ox-eye sunflower, yellow coneflower, rattlesnake master.

Natives are great for clay soil as they actually break through the clay and in time turn the top layers into organic matter and improve your soil.

Added bonus: praire plants or natives = a lot of insects = happy birds.

Tip of the Day

29 Feb
Simplify Watering!
Have a tricky plant in a spot that is hard to water, or always spills over onto your nice wood furniture? Instead of watering it the old-fashioned, “normal” way, just place 2 or 3 ice cubes on the dirt once a week. I started doing this last year and now water mostly with ice cubes, as it is way less messy. And it couldn’t be easier!

3 Tips for a Great-looking, Long-lasting Bouquet

23 Feb


1. Wash vase with bleach and water, NOT dish soap. Dish soap can leave behind a residue that can shorten the flowers’ life span in your vase. 2. Cut flowers early in the morning or late in the evening, when your flowers are holding the most moisture. 3. Remove all leaves that would be in the water, and give each flower stem a 2nd fresh cut as you place it into your vase.

Top 10 Seed and Garden Catalogs

17 Feb

Poring over seed catalogs and gardening books is my favorite winter pastime. A cup of coffee in one hand and my journal for notes in the other, I love planning my next season’s garden. And now I find that as I plan my own garden, creative ideas pop up for my clients’ gardens as well.  One example: I created a garden design last year that has a really nice foundation of plantings for each season, and I thought how great to layer herbs in throughout the whole garden. It would be beautiful to weave in rosemary, basil, thyme, parsley and lemon basil, with rosemary spilling over the rock ledge. This particular client loves to cook and has small children, so it would be fun for them to clip and cook.  They also live on a busy street, so how fun for the neighbors to get a whiff of rosemary as they walk by.

Here are some of my favorite catalogs and the reasons I love them so:

1. White Flower Farm www.whiteflowerfarm.com  White Flower Farm was my first catalog love affair.  It is the best catalog in terms of quality of pictures and description of plants. You can learn more from this catalog than many gardening books. This company is OUTSTANDING for customer service. If something dies, they will replace it or give you a store credit, no questions asked.  Their plants and bulbs are of superior quality.

2. Jung Seeds & Plants www.jungseed.com ”Respected for Quality, Value and Service, Seeds, Plants, Bulbs, Supplies, Gifts” I have ordered from Jung Catalog. They have the best prices, beyond fair and reasonable, and they always throw in random freebies. Old-fashioned in a way and very charming, they have everything from perennials, shrubs, and edibles to seeds and garden tools. You could easily plan your whole season, place one large order, and have it all delivered to your door. My dad does this. For years, he has ordered almost everything for his Door County garden from Jung Seeds & Plants, and he has the healthiest, most prolific garden and yard.

3. Seed Savers Exchange www.seedsavers.org I first learned about and fell in love with Seed Savers Exchange when they had a cute little store on charming Monroe Street in Madison, Wisconsin. I randomly bought 0ld-fashioned vining petunias, and my gardens have never been the same since. I was so sad to see this store leave Monroe Street. There has never been a garden store on Monroe Street since (hint, hint; Mel’s Green Garden can dream, right?). But they are in Decorah, Iowa, and I long to visit them there. And Seed Savers produces a beautiful catalog. What I love most is, they tell you when something is poisonous, and at what stage the seed or plant is poisonous. I buy seeds from SSE every season.

4. Van Engelen www.vanengelen.com ”The best Dutch flower bulbs at the best prices” I ignored this catalog for a long time. Then a dear friend asked me if I had read Tasha Tudor’s gardening books. I hadn’t, so I checked them out at the library and fell madly in love with Tasha’s gardening style. In her book she listed Van Engelen as a resource for purchasing her bulbs. That was enough motivation for me to step outside my comfort bubble.  WOW. I have never seen larger, healthier, cheaper high-quality bulbs. I am a customer for life. I ordered every kind of allium. I didn’t realize at that point of my gardening journey that you can have an allium blooming every day of the spring/summer/fall. Van Engelen has a superior bulb at the fairest price. Thank you, Tasha Tudor.

5. Klehm’s Song Sparrow www.songsparrow.com ”Farm and Nursery, Rare and Specialty Plants” I learned about this amazing catalog from being a member of the Wisconsin Hardy Plant Society.  Check this catalog out.

6. Logee’s www.logees.com Logee’s is your place for tropicals. I learned about Logee’s from watching them on a Martha Stewart Show. They have the tropicals , whether you are looking for a banana plant, King Tut grass, elephant ear, jasmine or an orange tree. They will have a healthy plant ready to ship to you at a good price. My sister orders from them more than I do.

7. Ambergate Gardens www.ambergategardens.com ”Distinctive Perennial Flowers, Bare Root, Mail Order Catalog” I heard about this Minnesota-based company when the owner spoke at a Wisconsin Hardy Plant Society. He gave a wonderful talk on shade plants. I had no idea how many varieties of shade plants were out there. So, for example, if you want an ornamental grass, tall or short, they carry a variety that will succeed in the shade.

8. Spring Hill Nurseries springhillnursery.com Everything I have ordered and planted from Spring Hill Nurseries has been successful. They sometimes have great offers in their catalogs; but what I like best is, they have full garden designs in their catalogs with exactly what to buy. Inspirational ideas!

9.  Johnny’s Selected Seeds www.johnnyseeds.com I have shopped here indirectly. The grower I buy from purchases his seeds from Seed Savers Exchange and Johnny’s Selected Seeds. Everything I get from this grower ROCKS! My dad also buys his seeds from Johnny’s. Again, success! I have enjoyed the fruits (and vegetables) of my dad’s seedlings in my garden and on my dinner plate.

1o.  Flora Grubb Gardens floragrubb.com I love everything about Flora Grubb. She has introduced me to airless plants like tillandsia and vertical gardening with fabulous Woolly Pockets, both still on my wish list. Flora Grubb also has amazing terrariums–so popular right now.  She has sass and style and is a very talented garden/floral designer.

Honorable Mention: Klein’s Floral & Greenhouses in Madison, Wisconsin www.kleinsfloral.com While they are not a mail-order-catalog store, they DO DELIVER. So if you know exactly what you want, you can  place an order and have them deliver for a small fee. If you are an impulse buyer, have small children or are short on time but love digging in dirt, place an order and have it delivered! Last year, I had King Tut grass, flats of purple petunias, gladiolus bulbs, and black ornamental millet delivered.

Tip of the Day

17 Feb

Daffodils make a great spring bouquet! Just make sure they STAND ALONE, as they will kill any other flowers you add to the bouquet.

Recipe for a Beautiful Winter Pot

16 Feb IMG_0831

Supplies for One Pot

Pot

Potting soil

Four 5- to 6-foot branches of white birch

Rubberbands, preferably clear

Evergreens: cedar, pine, fir, juniper

Manzanita, dogwood, or some other sort of twiggy, good-looking branches

One set of twig lights

Winterberry branches


Directions

1.  Make sure your pot is full of loose, soft, potting soil; it can be last season’s soil.

2.  Stick in and secure white birch branches into a tepee shape and secure with rubberbands.

3.  Add all evergreens, starting with pine, juniper and fir and ending with cedar.

4. Add branchy twigs of choice.

5.  Add twig lights.

6.  Last, add the winterberry branches. Be careful, as the berries are the best part and fall off easily

Voilà! You have a beautiful pot that will keep your dark days merry and bright for many, many months.

Note:  This pot is very costly to make, but almost everything can be carried forward to the next year, making it more of a one-time investment.  You could also consider buying faux winterberries. Pottery Barn had the best faux winterberries. Or do what Mel’s Green Garden is planning to do and grow your own for cuttings. Then the birds enjoy them all winter, too.  I was grateful my mother-in-law brought me some from her Rhode Island garden.

Flora fun for Valentine’s Day!

25 Jan

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