I WAS OUT ON PATROL AGAIN this morning, tent-caterpillar patrol. Armed with a piece of bamboo I’d cut down to about 10 inches long and my camera (the latter being optional), I searched out and destroyed several nests of the Eastern tent caterpillar. Pretty brave of me, huh? [Read more...]
calling all caterpillars
remember, nothing lasts
NOTHING LASTS. Need I say more to a bunch of gardeners? Not winter, nor spring, nor any other season; not Narcissus nor magnolias. Not us. The Japanese celebrate this very fact (instead of fearing it) in the form of the Sakura Matsuri, or Cherry Blossom Festival, which honors the ephemeral nature of all things. I like to celebrate it at every passing in the garden, like today when the
magnolia flowers shattered in the warm breeze and fell from heaven to earth, like snow…speaking of things that are transient.
mole patrol
MY FRIEND TOM emailed the other day to ask about how to fight the moles who are disrupting his lawn and garden. And Garden Guy Kenn posted the same plea on our Urgent Garden Question Forums. From folk remedies like chewing gum or castor oil laced with dish soap, to hiring the nearest licensed nuisance wildlife control service, I have tried it all in years when they have similarly besieged me. I’m down to two methods of attack that I employ consistently:
happy one-month blog birthday!
I HOPE YOU WILL JOIN ME in wishing A Way to Garden a happy one-month birthday this week. It is young and barely rooted (note I did not say bare-rooted…we are in fact happily tucked into terra firma), but with your help it will flourish. It already is: More than 3,300 of you have visited a total of 8,300-plus times, when I had “forecast” that maybe 500 would come this first month. (My gardening is better than my forecasting, for which we should all be thankful.) If you like what you see, tell a friend: Use one of the icons made for sharing below each post, and pass along a little slip of something growing…us.
more tomato secrets
NO VEGETABLE IS MORE COMMONLY GROWN by home gardeners than the tomato (Lycopersicon lycopersicum), but that doesn’t mean you should grow the same common varieties year in and out. More than 100 kinds are available in specialty catalogs as plants these days if you don’t have seeds around to start right now (and I mean right now) for transplanting outdoors the first week of June. Don’t settle for the mundane; sow seed before the end of the month or order plants for delivery after Memorial Day. Want to know which nurseries have a really great selection? [Read more...]
waiting, waiting (part 3)
I AM WAITING for the first bunch of homegrown tulips to set on the dining table, but so far all I have is foliage and some emerging buds. I am happy to say I’ve been visited by the blue cohosh of “waiting, waiting: part 1″ and by those sharp little hosta shoots from “waiting, waiting: part 2.” From here on out it will all happen fast, maybe too fast, and then I will be regretting instead of waiting. Perhaps you already have your first tulips for cutting, but I bet there’s something that hasn’t happened yet that holds a special promise. (Like maybe some rain?) What are you waiting for in your garden?




















