I will be doing most of the planting and installation on my new flower bed myself, but when it comes to garden design, I need help–preferably from a pro. So before I started digging the new bed (more on that in another post), I contacted Knecht’s Nurseries and Landscaping in Northfield for some design advice. Knecht’s offers a one-hour consultation…
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Hooray for Autumn Joy
As I’ve been thinking about the new flower bed I’ll be installing this fall and next spring, a few plants rate as “must-haves.” One of them is Autumn Joy sedum, which is currently in bloom in my garden and in many others from Canada to the south. What a great plant! Its scientific names is Sedum ‘Herbstfreude’ so you can…
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Fall Bloomers: A Sign of Zone Creep?
Maybe it’s the heavy rains we have had this fall or a sign of global warming, but I’m finding surprising things blooming. Yesterday, I discovered new blooms on an English Larkspur (Delphinium elatum ‘Pagan Purples’). I bought the larkspur late in the spring in hopes of getting taller flowers in the back of my front bed. According to the plant…
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Bulbs in a Minor Key
There’s more to bulbs than tulips, daffodils and crocus. Many years ago, Mary Henry and Margaret Purcell wrote about so-called minor bulbs in Northern Gardener. I took their advice t and planted 80 squill (Scilla siberica) along with two different types of allium for a total of 157 bulbs in my Northfield garden. Mary and Margaret have only three rules…
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Use a Pumpkin for a Pot
I stole this fall decorating idea from an item I saw in a Gardener’s Supply catalog. The catalog was selling a ceramic, pumpkin-shaped pot to display fall-blooming plants. Very cute, but why not use a real pumpkin? The pots start at $19.95 (not bad, considering how expensive pots are) but pumpkins each cost $3 at the Bridgewater Produce stand outside…
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