May 1st is opening day, 10-6 pm. Above is the lovely Chicago Apache daylily. Get one free with any purchase tomorrow only. Not all of our plants are filled out yet, but remember it is only May 1st Tuesday, although it feels like it should be June after theis extended weird spring weather. Stop by and say hi, shop around and see our new building!
Shout out to my helpers today; Kelsey, Deb, Jeannie, Carrie, Sue, Frank, & JB.
Monday, April 30, 2012
Yesterdays Daylily Dig.
Many new varieties potted yesterday. Above is Siloam Amazing Grace....stunning!
Apricot Sparkles
Bold Tiger
Double Passion
Grandmother
Honeyed Popcorn
Janice Brown
Mary's Gold - very vibrant.
South Seas
Wildheart
and Wineberry Candy. As the season progresses we will continue to dig and move all of our 125+ varieties to the front of the farm. This gorgeous 'living billboard' is up against the treeline and seldom seen buy anyone. But that's where I started planting back in 2003.
Apricot Sparkles
Bold Tiger
Double Passion
Grandmother
Honeyed Popcorn
Janice Brown
Mary's Gold - very vibrant.
South Seas
Wildheart
and Wineberry Candy. As the season progresses we will continue to dig and move all of our 125+ varieties to the front of the farm. This gorgeous 'living billboard' is up against the treeline and seldom seen buy anyone. But that's where I started planting back in 2003.
Sunday, April 29, 2012
Root Rot
A number of things can cause 'root rot.' Another umbrella term to include plants that decline due to poor care, disorders or diseases. Watering can be tricky and is often what the gardener does wrong. On these continuing wet days with no sun, root rotting becomes a concern, especially for plants in low lying areas. When there is little to no sun a plant uses less water. Although a plant continues to transpire (breathing through the pores in its leaves) it uses less water in cool weather. On windy days plants use more water as the wind continues to dry them out they must continue to replace the water in themselves. Yes, I know it can get complicated. Checking the soil preferably with a tensiometer is best. I have even seen small home versions for about $15. It is a soil probe that tells you if you need you to water, takes out the guesswork. Yes, many of you know, but there are a lot of new gardeners out there! Other things you can do to curb this problem:
- right plant - right place, ie: don't plant prairie type plants in low spots, try siberian iris
- water only when needed - 2x per week max!
- do not mulch heavy around the crowns of the plants, the root zone is the part that needs it
- do not mulch at all on TB, IB, BB, SDB iris, or plants that have grayish foliage (sages)
- move plants or re-plant on ridges if you can't move them
- bigger plants will be more tolerant, they use more water and have more root to survive flooding
- get control of insects before they take over, many have larvae that feed on the root system which can lead to root injury and saturation
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