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April Gardening Tips

by Tricia

April is here and it’s the ideal time for planting summer vegetables and flowers. Here’s a few April gardening tips for you. Keep in mind that those of you living in cooler zones might delay some of these tasks until May.

Begin planting summer annuals, bulbs and vegetables such as cucumber, melon and zucchini seeds. Transplant the potted tomatoes and peppers that you started earlier in the year towards the end of April or in early May. Gladiolus and Lilies can be planted now too.

If your plants have been frost damaged don’t cut them back just yet. They may look dead but given time the stems and branches may still prove to be alive. Wait until the end of the month watching for new growth or for the stems to green and perhaps you won’t have to prune very much.

Prune spring blooming plants once they have finished flowering. Plants that fall into this category include acacia, forsythia, philadelphus, lilac and viburnum.

April is the perfect month to reseed the lawn. The temperatures are still on the cool side and there’s usually plenty of rain. Apply grass seed over the lawn or in bare patches and then cover with a thin layer of top soil. Water twice a day if it’s not raining regularly. New growth should begin within about two weeks.

April is also the perfect month to apply mulch to your garden beds. Turn old mulch into the soil and apply a new layer that is about three inches thick. Mulch will help to keep the weeds down and will reduce water usage in the hot summer months.






Filed Under: Garden Maintenance, Garden Tips, Spring Tasks Tagged With: April gardening tips, cucumbers, mulch, pepers, plant summer flowers, plant summer vegetables, prune, reseed lawn, Spring Tasks, tomatoes

First Flower

by Tricia

I’ve just watched a program on television that we taped. It was on Nova, on PBS, and the episode was called “First Flower”. I didn’t realize this but the origin of the flower has always been in question. It was one of the lingering mysteries that plagued Darwin.

In this program, botanists explore an area in Northern China where one paleobotanist believes the first flower originated. In this program they find a fossil that is believed to be the oldest flower fossil ever found.

You can read more about this program Nova/First Flower on the PBS.org site. There’s quite a bit of information about paleobotanists – scientists who study ancient plants and their fossils, and areas of China where todays modern flowers are believed to have evolved. They refer to China as the mother of gardens.

The program was filmed in high definition, the scenery, the mountains, the gorgeous colorful flowers – all are just spectacular to view as you watch this program. If you get a chance to watch this program you should. It’s just wonderful to look at all of the flora that’s discussed and of course to view the scenery of the Hengduan Mountains of southwestern China and other scenic places.

In this program, one paleobotanist states that flowers evolved rather late in the fossil record, but they came to dominate the earth. if it weren’t for the evolution of flowers it’s said that humans might not have evolved because without flowers we would not have the products of flowering plants to eat.

Isn’t that an amazing theory? Are we, modern gardeners, worshiping the plants that allowed us to live and evolve in the first place?

I never really thought of visiting China before, because when I thought of China I’d always think of over crowded cities, but now, after seeing this program I have a different view of China and you never know, I just might visit the country one day.

Filed Under: Garden Buzz, In The Garden, Plant History Tagged With: botonist, China, first flower, flower fossil, flowers and human evolution, mother of gardens, Nova, origin of flowers, paleobotanist, study of ancient plants

Full Moon

by Tricia

Wordless Wednesday

tn_mooning2

I honestly can’t remember if I’ve posted a shot of this cheeky little gnome before, I don’t think that I have.

I guess this is the kind of gnome that a carefree, could careless gardener might purchase. It says “to heck with the world, and whatever you think” doesn’t it?

Would you purchase this gnome for your garden or perhaps front lawn?

Want to Join Wordless Wednesday’s? Sign up here:

Filed Under: Garden Decor, In The Garden, Wordless Wednesday Tagged With: cheeky gnome, funny, garden, garden gnome, Humor, mooning gnome, photo

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