Archive for the ‘gardening’ Category

link love Wednesday: gardening social network sites

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010
Como Park Zoo Gardens

Como Park Zoo Gardens

We’ve been drowning in rain for past month, but the sunshine has poked through the clouds today. Here are some gardening social network websites to help you connect with fellow gardeners. Have fun, and happy growing! (more…)

link love Wednesday

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

Starting today, Wednesdays  are links day! Every hump day, I’ll share five websites I have bookmarked this week. They might be resources, blogs, catalogs or just plain ol’ inspiration, but these sites will help get your garden growing.

Dakota Garden: This blog offers lots of beautiful garden ideas and inspiration for anyone gardening in a tough, cold climate.

Hometown Seeds: If you have trouble deciding what to grow in your vegetable garden, check out this online seed catalog’s Survival Seed Packs.

Studio G: Landscape designer Rochelle Greayer shares plenty of landscaping ideas, inspiring photos, product reviews, and garden tours on her blog.

The Gardener’s Eden: Garden designer Michaela has a whimsical touch to her writing about horticultural history, products, and recipes.

Freedom Gardens: This online community offers a place for “gardening enthusiasts who are fed up with foreign oil, frequent food miles and high food prices.”

If you want to share some link love, send it to me at: Meagan@thegardeningjournal.com.

Labor saving tips for large gardens

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Garden bed at Duke Gardens

Many eager gardeners decide to tackle expansive gardens on their own. While you can save money by not hiring help, you pay for it in extra time spent in the garden. When, eventually, you notice Fido is looking a little pudgy because he hasn’t been walked in a month, you discover your kitchen has become a highly effective science experiment, and you wonder just how many times you can wear the same pair of shorts before they can stand up on their own, it might be a good idea to invest in some time-saving measures for you and your large garden. Here are just a few ideas for saving time in the garden:

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J Schatz: cute, modern garden decor

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

J Schatz Egg Planter

I love it when designers take a simple motif, and turn it into a whole line of fun, cute things. Take the garden decor of J Schatz as an example. They’ve taken the humble egg and turned it into ceramic bird feeders, bird houses and planters. They also offer egg-inspired home decor. The egg style is so sweet and the vibrant colors would be an eye-catching highlight in any garden. These would make a super housewarming gift or wedding present for your favorite gardeners.

[photo by J Schatz]

Top 5 garden articles of the week: Dry gardening

Saturday, July 5th, 2008

Dry grass

As we enter the height of summer, a lot of gardeners are preparing for dry, hot weather. What types of plants should you grow to deal with drought? What types of plants do well in a dry place? Check out these articles for some suggestions.

Green gardening: Low on water? These plants don’t mind – This list of plants from The Seattle Times thrives in dry conditions. These drought-tolerant plants are also low maintenance and can look great all season long.

Gardeners go for high and dry planting – High and dry gardens conserve water. These water-wise gardens usually showcase native plants, which offer season-long color and need little maintenance.

Chicago-area gardeners thirst for rain barrels – Demand for rain barrels in many cities has outpaced supply. Gardeners, eager to conserve water and save on their water bills, have snapped them up as quickly as they come in. Makes sense, given how easy they are to install and how much money you can save by using rainwater.

Use ornamental grasses to add special dimension to any garden – During the summer, ornamental grasses can thrive in hot, dry weather. In winter, they offer stand-out structure under the snow.

Water saving garden for summer drought – This brief article offers quick tips to plant a drought-tolerant garden.

Top 5 garden stories of the week: DIY garden design, sustainable gardens and more

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

Clover at the Lurie Gardens in Chicago

10 great garden ideas _ The Chicago Tribune photo gallery isn’t fancy, but it shows a bunch of do-it-yourself garden designs.

Garden is a seedbed for green cosmetics – A hand-tended, German garden provides the raw ingredients for an eco-conscious line of cosmetics touted by Hollywood-types as the bestest make-up evah. Interestingly, the company started focusing on herbal remedies.

Organic garden uses every sustainable trick – This eco-savvy garden shows how sustainable, organic gardening can look fit so seemlessly into conventional landscaped neighborhoods that you would never know it’s “green.”

Back to the garden – Author Michael Pollan suggests we all dig up our yards and garden not just for pleasure, but to sustain us in the “calamity to come.” He believes growing our own food we will make a bigger impact on slowing our destruction of the planet than the smaller things we are already trying.

The incredible, edible front lawn – Through the Edible Estates project, the Rodriguez family received a grant to plant a front-yard garden to feed their entire neighborhood. This is an amazing concept, and I really hope someone will create a foundation to help more people convert their lawns to vegetable gardens.

Elevating gardening to new heights: The New York High Line gardens

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Two echinacea flowers

The New York Times has imaginative photo composites and a detailed article about the future gardens that the city and Friends of The High Line will build on a nearly a mile-and-a-half long, elevated railway in Manhattan. The project is a fascinating mix of old and new, reuse and repurposing. With native plants mingling with hybrids for year-round color and art installations to catch entertain walkers in Chelsea Market, the space looks like a garden designer’s dream.

With more businesses moving overseas leaving aging factories behind, perhaps this is the future of public gardens in urban areas. Unused, but historically significant, commercial structures won’t be destroyed to make way for greenspace; they will be refashioned into gardens that protect both history and the future.

Top 5 stories of the week: Green gardening

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

It’s seems silly to even mention the word “green” when talking about gardening, but it’s been all about the environment in gardening articles this week. With rising food costs, many people are growing their own vegetables. But even though vegetable seeds and plants topped the to-buy lists, many gardeners still don’t grow green. Guerrilla gardeners found their way into the mix, with their stealthy greening of public spaces. Checks these links for tips on what to plant and how to plant it to have an eco-conscious garden.

Growing concerned – The Boston Globe offers tips on eco-friendly ways to garden. Ideas iclude rainwater collection, native plants, and composting.

Survey shows many gardeners skip green gardening practices- A recent survey by the National Gardening Association asked gardeners about their green growing habits. In this article, The Chicago Tribune covers the results and why the practices folks aren’t doing are important.

Amid city streets, a growing trend – Gardening continues to blossom, especially among urban-dwelling folks. This article from The Boston Globe deals out the numbers.

Guerrilla gardening – Guerrilla gardening, where gardeners stealthily fix a blighted plot of land that doesn’t belong to them, started sometime in the 1970s. This New York Times article follows Richard Reynolds and his group of guerrilla gardeners as they tidy up public spaces around London. Reynolds just released the book “On Guerrilla Gardening,” which discusses the movements history.

Easy foods for beginners – With gas prices bumping up the price of food and yet another produce-related illness outbreak, many people are growing their own vegetables this year. This San Francisco Chronicle article outlines ways to ease into growing your own vegetables at home.

Garden links: gardening life

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

gardening life magazine

The gardening life Web site features all sorts of sweet gardening inspiration. From curb appeal projects (including a contemporary Craftsman garden) to an encyclopedia of seasonal living, gardening life has tons of garden pictures that offer great ideas for landscape design and outdoor entertaining.

Urban gardening trend just keeps growing

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008
Used under Creative Commons license. Originally uploaded by Coffee Monster.

Further proof that urban gardening and farming have hit the big time: