Archive for the ‘Winter Topics’ Category

Protecting Garden Beds in Winter by Ruth Clausen

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

White Pine boughs make a good winter mulch for garden beds

Now that the holidays are over, in northern climates the ground is frozen. Now is the time to apply a winter mulch to keep the soil cold and insulate it from alternate freezing and thawing. The action of freezing and thawing, which occurs throughout the winter season, causes shallow-rooted and fall-planted perennials to be heaved out of the ground and roots to become desiccated. I find that members of the coral bells clan—heucheras, heucherellas, and tiarellas– are particularly prone to heaving.  

At this time of year there are plenty of evergreen boughs and discarded Christmas trees around, free for the taking (save those pennies for new plants). These are perfect to cut up and lay gently on frozen beds and borders. If there is still snow on the ground lay the boughs on top. I never got round to cleaning up all the fall leaves, but the evergreen boughs will prevent them from blowing all over the place. As the weather warms in spring gradually remove the boughs to allow new growth to occur.

Gardening Resolutions for 2010: Win A Free Pair of Garden Gloves!

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

One lucky reader each week in January will receive a free pair of Womanswork High Performance Gloves!

Send us your gardening resolutions for 2010 by adding a comment below, and we will pick one lucky winner each Thursday in January to receive a free pair of Womanswork garden gloves to help you with your resolution. We’ll get the ball rolling by telling you ours:

 Dorian Winslow’s 2010 Gardening Resolutions–

  1. Get my clivia miniata to bloom. I bought it in full bloom in Jan 2008, and since then it has been all strap leaves and no blossoms. All my sources say “easy to grow.” I recently found a page from the White Flower Farm website with complete instructions, giving me confidence that this is the year. We are now in the “winter rest” period. I hope to see a nice big bloom in about 2 months.
  2. Begin hosting once-a-month Womanswork evening meals at the local soup kitchen in Poughkeepsie. (Our first one is on Jan. 13th. See facebook for details.) Try to increase the output of our vegetable garden this summer so we can contribute to the meals from our own harvest.
  3. Build the greenhouse I’ve been planning for two years. We have the foundation completed. Read about it in this blog at: http://womanswork.com/garden-gloves-blog/?cat=8
Clivia Miniata in bloom

Clivia Miniata in bloom

Womanswork High Performance Glove

Womanswork High Performance Glove

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ruth Clausen’s 2010 Gardening Resolutions–

  1. To sow all the seeds and plant all the plants that I buy. Often I find that many plants stay in their pots most of the season because I can’t decide quite where to plant them. I will give extra veggie seeds to a local community garden as there are always too many seeds in a packet for one family.
  2. To thin veggie and annual seedlings ruthlessly, so that they are not crowded. I use seedling greens for early salads, but there are still too many. I resolve to lift a small clump of seedlings every 3″-4″(an old table fork works well) and transplant them elsewhere or give them away. 
  3. To plant up the containers on the deck BEFORE the plants become potbound and are young enough to really bulk up to their full potential. To my advantage, the plants will be healthier, dry out less often, and look gorgeous!

Eve Winslow’s 2010 Gardening Resolutions– 

  1. Make mint and basil herb boxes to enjoy fresh pesto and mojitos year round.
  2. Make a molded concrete planter for growing succulents.
  3. Can and preserve more from my garden for next winter.

Liberate that Evergreen by Ruth Clausen

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009
Douglas-Fir

This Norway spruce is in danger of losing a few branches

Having taken a walk around our neighborhood today after the first snowfall of the season, it is pitiful to see how some evergreens take such a beating with wet heavy snow. One’s instinct is to bash the snow off as soon as you can, but beating on an already stressed branch from above is trouble. Always brush snow off gently from below with a broom so that it falls away from the bush. This Norway spruce is in danger of losing a few branches.

Dwarf mounding evergreens, such as some Chamaecyparis and arborvitae tend to open up in the center under snow. Wearing garden gloves, protect them by winding soft twine round them from bottom to top, keeping the twine just tight enough for them to hold their shape. Snow then will fall off more easily. It is too late for this Tsuga occidentalis ‘Rheingold’.

Evergreen-Snow

It is too late for this Tsuga occidentalis ‘Rheingold’

Plants for Winter Interest by Ruth Clausen

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

This year it was Thanksgiving weekend before I had a chance to start tidying up in my garden. I’m not exactly a “neatnik” but I do like it to look nice and garden hygiene is important too. Be careful to clean up any dropped leaves beneath roses for fear of spreading black spot spores when the spring rains come next year. The  spores overwinter in organic mulch (I like to remove the mulch) and will be splashed up onto new growth and re-infect the bushes. Spent annuals go on the compost pile, but there are a couple of schools of thought about cutting back perennials. Some like to cut everything down, cover the beds with a good layer of compost or shredded leaves, and head out of town for the winter. Those of us who stay put through the winter need a pleasing view all year.

Conservatory Garden, New York City

Conservatory Garden, New York City

I took a walk in the Conservatory Garden in Central Park, New York City, to see how they handled the problem. Some cut and some left there as well. Ornamental grasses of course are dramatic against autumn leaves (purple smoke bush here with Miscanthus grass), and even more so in front of evergreens as the winter progresses. 

Others that I leave include rusty colored tall sedums such as ‘Autumn Joy’, ‘Garnet Brocade’ and ‘Frosty Morn’, purple coneflowers, black- and brown-eyed Susans, perennial sunflowers, Russian sage and all silvery-leaved shrubs (Caryopteris, butterfly bush, common sage etc.). Not only do these provide winter interest, they become popular feeding stations for resident birds that add so much to the winter garden.

Spore cases of ferns are also decorative, although some remove them for neatness. Here sensitive fern (Onoclea sensibilis) adds height and texture to a bed of Helleborus hybrids that will bloom next spring.  

Sensitive Fern Spores in my garden

Sensitive fern (Onoclea sensibilis) adds height and texture to a bed of Helleborus

In my garden, I leave the dried spore cases of ostrich fern (Matteuccia struthiopteris)  too under a canopy of Euonymus branches.

Building A Hobby Greenhouse by Dorian Winslow

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Delivering cement blocks for greenhouse foundation

What’s that noise?” my husband Tom asked.  “Oh that?  It’s just the cement truck backing up in the yard,” I answered.  Last week it was the jack hammer digging the hole in our yard.

When I said I wanted to build a greenhouse I did not mean the kind you pick out of a greenhouse catalog and construct in a weekend if you are a “handy do it yourselfer.” I meant the kind that is attached to your house, and you can walk into on a cold snowy day in winter to pick lemons from your lemon tree.

Planning A Greenhouse Can be Blissfully Complicated

Call it part of my charm, but my idea of a greenhouse is extremely involved. First, we enlisted a talented architect friend up the road, Eduardo Faxas, to help design the greenhouse so it will look like it belongs to the house, since it will be visible from the front.  Then we made the decision to bring in the local building inspector and build a cement foundation ‘to code’ just in case we ever want to dismantle the greenhouse and create a real room with insulation and flooring, etc. (With a lesser foundation we would not have that option down the road). It is also better for resale value because a greenhouse could be seen as undesirable by prospective buyers.

Last spring we did some interior renovations in my Womanswork home office and while the office was torn apart for that, we had the doorway to the future greenhouse installed.  We call it the ‘door to nowhere.’  For now. 

We are trying to get the greenhouse foundation wall completed and the cement slab poured before winter sets in.  My stepdaughter Eve and I have been donning our work gloves and shoveling in top soil around the wall to make it easier for our mason to continue his work.  The actual construction of the greenhouse will take place next spring when temperatures permit outdoor work again. Where we live (Dutchess County, NY), it is cold by mid-November. It won’t warm up until April or May.

Door Leading to Future Greenhouse

Door Leading to Future Greenhouse

Dorian and Eve doing some digging

Dorian and Eve doing some digging