Direct sowing flower seeds is about the easiest and most budget friendly way to get a mass of flowers all season long with very little effort. It's incredible just how much you get from a tiny $3 pouch of seeds. And I think it's a great way for a new gardener to get their feet wet or the experienced one who's looking to fill an empty spot. Direct sowing simply means that, instead of starting seeds indoors weeks in advance of putting them out in the garden, you spread the seed in the garden according to the package instructions, usually after all chance of frost is gone. Aside from deciding where to plant them and keeping them watered as they germinate, direct sowing is about as easy as gardening gets. My problem right now (is it really a problem, though?) is that just when I think ...
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Tough Plants for a Driveway Garden
Every once in a while, I surprise myself. As I was looking back at last year's garden, I found this shot of my driveway garden and thought, "Hey, that's pretty good!" I don't do that as often as I should. The driveway garden is a miserably hot place and since I'm not the most reliable waterer, the plants are forced to fend for themselves. It's a test of sorts. One that involves extreme neglect worsened by heat radiating off an asphalt driveway and the high expectations of a crazed gardener. Aside from the spring clean-up and the occasional weeding, this garden is on its own. Totally. In addition to the elements, it's survived the bumps and bruises of all kinds of athletic balls, floor hockey games and the occasional kid. In many ways, it's a lot like me. Like most gardens, it's evolved ...
A New Year, TONS of New Plants and a Growing Wish List
The new plant wish list is getting longer in my garden notebook. I also keep an updated one in the notes section of my phone just in case I happen to pass a garden center this spring. Who am I kidding? I write of it as though it's a possibility when the reality is I will visit MANY garden centers and road-side farm stands. It's an obsession and one my kids have learned to accept. I've gathered images of all the new for 2020 or new-to-me plants I'll be on the lookout for this year. It's a motley list of veggies, annuals, shade perennials, sun perennials, and a drop-dead gorgeous new grass. Perhaps you'll find one (or several) here that you can't live without. In which case, we're kindred spirits and you can tell your significant other that Heather made you do it. Here ...
8 Christmas Gifts for Gardeners
All opinions are my own. I was not compensated to promote any of the following products. So you have a gardener on your shopping list and no clue what to get them. I have some ideas. All have been tested in my garden for at least a few seasons. You'll see from the pictures that some have a few dings and scratches. I'm not gentle with my stuff. Things have to be tough to make the cut. And all eight of my suggestions certainly do. Steer clear of the butterfly houses (they don't work) and invest in things that show you did your homework. What girl couldn't use another pair of shoes? I discovered the Muckster 2 from the Muck Boot Company at the Independent Garden Center show in August. The purple caught my eye. But I was most intrigued by the boot's lining. I've owned several garden boots ...
Espalier DIY: A Small Space Garden Solution
In 2012, I was scouting magazine locations and came across a garden along Chicago's North Shore unlike any I had ever seen. What stood out was the tree positioned in a narrow planting bed on a north-facing wall and I was instantly intrigued. So much so that I knew I had to figure out how to put something like that in my small garden. The homeowner, Kim Visokey (a self-proclaimed Garden Freak), had planted an espaliered Kieffer pear tree that produced plenty of edible fruit. Espalier is a pruning technique developed by a French monk, Father Legendre, in the mid 1600s, who stumbled upon the idea purely by happenstance. Food production can be a challenge, especially when you're faced with the task of feeding a monastery. As the saying goes, necessity is the mother of invention. Fruit buds ...
A Grateful Gardener Gives Thanks
Sometimes I wonder what I would be doing if I didn't have a garden. It's work, man is it work. But when you love something so much, it doesn't feel like it. Ok, sometimes it does. Like when the English ivy is sucking the life out of your serviceberry and you have to remove every. last. bit. of. it. Ugh. But it's done and the robins and cedar waxwings will be thrilled to have their favorite tree restored. I've learned to NEVER plant ivy, no matter how lovely a ground cover, again. In retrospect, I'm thankful for the lesson. Plants with attributes like "will tolerate sun and shade" or "fast spreading" and "tough as nails" are glaring red flags. Too much of anything is often not good. Unless it's chocolate. Every year brings new challenges, new realizations and plenty of new ...