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San Juan Capistrano
Weather Courtesy of:
Contact Information:
E-Mail:
Click to contact us.
Telephone:
949-240-2107
Fax:
949-488-0187
Address:
33413 San Juan Creek Rd
San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675
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*** Visit Our Garden Gift Shop
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Featuring inside decor and antiques...
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(Click to Visit)
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September |
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Begin applying Hydrangea Blooming Formula.
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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!
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Drop us an email!
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Featured Quote: "My green thumb came only as a result of the mistakes I made while learning to see things from the plant's point of view."
~ H. Fred Ale |
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One of the challenges many gardeners face is how to add texture and interest to the landscape. One of the best ways to do this is by adding ornamental grasses to your garden. They have a natural fountainous growing habit and many produce beautiful flower blooms that will light up any garden.
Ornamental grasses are incredibly low maintenance, grow quickly, and are naturally disease and insect resistant. Add to that, their natural swaying movement in even the slightest of breezes and you have plants that add unparalleled beauty to any garden setting.
Another great feature of ornamental grasses is the fact that they come in a wide variety of shapes, sizes and color. There are many grasses that are perfect for creating borders and others that provide a nice backdrop to other plants or look perfect as individual featured specimens. The colors range from gold, green, silver and blue to shades of purple, burgundy, red and orange.
While most ornamental grasses prefer moist soil conditions, most become quite drought tolerant once established. They require very little fertilization and can get by with a single feeding of plant food per year. Most shorter varieties require no pruning at all (short of removing any spent flowers) and the only maintenance taller varieties require is a crew cut in late winter (down to 4-6" inches above ground level) to encourage new growth in spring.
We have a great selection of ornamental grasses just waiting for an opportunity to add interest and beauty to your garden.
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The Chinese lantern (Abutilon hybridum), aka flowering maple, is a beautiful evergreen plant that is found naturally in most of the world's tropical regions. It gets its various names from its maple-shaped leaves and bright colored flowers that resemble little Chinese lanterns.
The foliage is usually a lime green but there are variegated forms with white or yellow mottling. The flowers are produced almost year-round and come in a range of colors including orange, pink, red, white and yellow. Left alone the plant can reach 10 ft. high and wide, but can easily be kept smaller with pruning.
Chinese lanterns can be grown both outdoors and indoors. Outside they prefer a morning sun-afternoon shade location, but indoors they require as much light as possible. Keep the soil around the root ball moist but not wet and feed every couple of months, spring through fall, with GroPower Flower 'n' Bloom to keep your plants growing strong and healthy.
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Most home gardeners lament the coming of winter since it usually spells the end of the outdoor growing season. But it doesn't have to be that way. Many herbs can be grown indoors quite successfully in the winter months and then be transplanted into the garden the following spring. There's something about the taste of fresh, home-grown herbs in cooking that is hard to beat. The flavors are so much more flavorful and aromatic than using something dry out of a shaker bottle.
With the right location and care, many herbs can be fooled into thinking that summer is still here. If you're a little nervous or skeptical about growing herbs indoors, use some tried and tested varieties such as chives, coriander, dill, mint, oregano, rosemary, parsley, and thyme. Most of these can be started by seed, while mint and rosemary can be started by seed or cutting.
Most herbs are sun lovers and will require a southern facing window that gets at least six hours of sunlight per day. For less sunny locations, mint, parsley and rosemary will get by with less sunlight. You might also consider hanging a grow light 6-9 inches above your plants to provide light on cloudy days. Make sure to also rotate your containers at least once per week in order to help your plants grow evenly.
Start your plants in seed trays and then transplant them to window boxes or larger containers once the plants become rooted. Use a good quality potting soil, such as Gardner & Bloome Seed Starter, and make sure the containers you use have drainage holes. If you use water trays under your pots, make sure that you check them after watering and drain any standing water in them.
The herbs listed above will do fine provided temperatures are maintained between 55 and 70 degrees. Feed with a water soluble plant food, such as GroMore Seaweed Extract, every 2-4 weeks just as you would any other indoor plant, and don't water until the soil surface becomes dry. The use of a small fan will also help herbs survive the stuffy air conditions that can occur indoors in winter.
Plant pests are usually less prevalent during the winter months. Nevertheless, visually check your plants at least once per week, and treat your plants with an insecticidal soap before pests actually become a problem.
So don't let the winter doldrums get you down. Spice up your life and your winter meals with the addition of fresh, homegrown indoor herbs! |
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Summer's blasts of heat can make even the hardiest of shrubs look brown, tired, and just plain ugly.
Now is the time to give your bushes a haircut. Trimming the ends of the plant encourages new lush, green growth. Be certain to remove any brown, dead branches to open up the space and help the plant fill in the voids.
Ground covers like ivy will also benefit from a trimming.
Within weeks, new growth will appear, giving a fresh green look.
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What does the term deciduous mean?
Answer:
Any plant or tree that loses all of its leaves and goes into a state of dormancy (sleep) periodically is considered deciduous.
Most shade trees and many fruit trees fall into this classification, along with plants like forsythia, hydrangeas, potentilla, roses, spirea, weigela and many others.
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Were your petunias beautiful one day and demolished the next? Petunias, geraniums, dahlias, and cosmos, as well as other flowers, are feasts for budworms this time of year. If the buds are gone and the leaves have lots of holes with little black speckles (worm castings), then your flower beds may be home to budworms. If the buds on your petunias or geraniums are failing to open, your plants may be the victims of budworms. Check the buds for small holes about the same diameter as a pencil lead. They are the entry holes for a little moth larva that enters the bud after hatching in the spring and eats the flower petals even before the buds open up.
Safer CATERPILLAR KILLER contains Bacillus thuringiensis, a bacterium that is deadly to caterpillars of any type but completely safe for all other creatures great and small. You can obliterate the budworms without harm to such garden helpers as earthworms and honeybees, not to mention pets and children. Safer CATERPILLAR KILLER is also a nice safe way to protect your ripening vegetables from pests such as tomato hornworms and cabbage loopers.
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- 1/2 cup butter, softened
- 1 cup white sugar
- 2 eggs
- 1 cup mashed ripe bananas
- 1/4 cup milk
- 1 tablespoon grated orange peel
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/2 teaspoon almond extract
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup flaked coconut
- 1/2 cup chopped walnuts
- 1/2 cup crushed pineapple
Step by Step:
- In a mixing bowl, cream butter and sugar.
- Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.
- Beat in banana, milk, orange peel and extracts.
- In a separate bowl, combine flour, baking soda and salt; add to the creamed mixture just until moistened.
- Fold in the coconut, nuts and pineapple.
- Transfer to a greased 9" x 5" x 3" loaf pan.
- Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour and 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean.
- Cool for 10 minutes before removing from pan to a wire rack
Yield: 12 servings
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