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Edition 3.06 Plant Depot Garden News February 10th, 2005

Kellogg

 

San Juan Capistrano
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FEBRUARY

Now is a good time to start carrots, lettuce, spinach, beets, and other cool-season crops.

plant depot nursery

plant depot nursery

plant depot nursery

plant depot nursery

plant depot nursery

Be a Guest Gardener:

Gardeners love to learn from other gardeners "over the fence". We would love to include a tour and/or an article from one of our readers! Drop us an email

Drop us an email!

Quotation of the Week:

"My idea of gardening is to discover something wild in my wood and weed around it with the utmost care until it has a chance to grow and spread."
— Margaret Bourke-White

 

Valentines Day

Did You Know...

bouquet

The rose is a symbol of love, hope, joy, passion, remembrance, and condolence. No flower has been the subject of sonnets, plays, songs and poems more than the rose.

The history of the rose goes far back. The Greeks revered the red rose as having come from the blood of Adonis; the Romans used roses in their parties and thought nothing of carpeting the floor with rose petals; the Persians associated the rose with the heart; the early Christians made the rose a symbol of love in connection with the Virgin Mary and Christ's Blood.

The Victorians even talked in roses, and some of that language still survives today. A red rose, of course, signifies respect and love. A yellow rose, in Victorian times, meant a jealous suitor but today means friendship. The white rose signified innocence and purity. In the US, white roses are often used at weddings and have acquired the additional meaning of happiness and security. Pink roses are often used to signify appreciation or gratitude. White and red roses together signify unity. White roses fringed in red have come to mean the same thing.

The Victorians used more than just colors. Two roses bound together signified an engagement. A thornless rose signified love at first sight. A wilted rose, of course, signified rejection. There were also meanings in rosebuds, half-open buds and roses in full bloom, as well as meanings in the number of roses given; fifty roses, for instance, signified unconditional love and twenty-five roses were given as congratulations.

For Valentine's Day, rather than give any number of individual roses, why not give a rose bush? There may be no meaning in the language of roses for a rose bush but in the language of gardeners, it's surely a gift of love!

Featured Product:
Gardner & Bloome® Soil Building Compost

G&B Soil Building Compost

Soil Building Compost is a premium, all-purpose planting and garden soil amendment which contains all-organic, long-lasting ingredients, including chicken manure, bat guano and kelp meal.

The nutrient-rich ingredients improve aeration and drainage, help break up clay soils, increase moisture retention in soils and promote healthy root growth.

Gardner & Bloome® Soil Building Compost is excellent for seed top-dressing, bare-root planting and mulching.

Dependable Evergreens

fatsia japonica

Choose some of the easiest and most dependable evergreens as the backbone of your indoor displays.

Many of them are tough enough for the more difficult positions around the home, and most of those suggested here are bold enough to be focal point plants too.

dracaena

The glossy evergreens such as dracaenas, fatsias, ficus, scheffleras, palms and philodendrons generally make excellent stand-alone plants, but they can also be used as the framework plants for groups and arrangements. They will be far more robust than plants with thin or papery leaves, feathery and frondy ferns, or even those with hairy leaves.

You need these other leaf textures, as well as flowering plants, to add variety of shape and form and a touch of color, but it makes sense to use the toughest evergreens as the basis of your houseplant displays.

euonymus japonicus

When a tough plant is needed for a cold or drafty spot, such as a hallway or near a back door, consider using some of the hardy foliage plants that have to cope with frost and gales when planted outdoors! Fatsia japonica is a glossy evergreen with fingered foliage, rather like the palm of a hand. Others to look for are variegated varieties of aucuba japonica and euonymus japonicus.

Ivies are also ideal if you need a tough climber or trailer. There are lots of varieties to choose from with a wide choice of leaf shape, size and color.

Apple Brown Betty

apple brown betty

What You'll Need:

  • 2 cups sliced and peeled Granny Smith apples
  • 2 cups sliced and peeled Rome apples
  • 1 tbsp. fresh lemon juice
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 tsp. ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 cup low-fat milk
  • 1 tbsp. molasses
  • 1 tsp. vanilla extract
  • 2 ounces day-old Italian or French bread, torn into 1/2-inch pieces
  • Cooking spray
  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup chilled butter, cut into small pieces

Step by Step:

Preheat oven to 350º.

Combine apples and lemon juice in a large bowl. Sprinkle with sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg; toss well.

Combine milk, molasses and vanilla in a medium bowl. Add bread to milk mixture; toss to combine.

Add bread mixture to apple mixture; toss to combine.

Spoon bread mixture into an 8-inch square baking dish coated with cooking spray.

Lightly spoon flour into a dry measuring cup; level with a knife.

Combine flour and brown sugar; cut in chilled butter using a pastry blender or 2 knives until mixture resembles small pebbles.

Sprinkle brown sugar mixture over apple mixture.

Bake at 350º for 40 minutes or until golden and bubbly.

Serve warm with vanilla ice cream.

Yield: 6 servings

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