IF YOU LIKE YOUR PERENNIALS SIZE XL, the genus Aralia is hard to overlook. And like shift workers, its members are just going to the job when everyone else wants to pack it in and crawl back into bed. Yes, the rest of the garden is really starting to crumple and yawn and otherwise express its exhaustion, but here come the aralias (including Aralia cordata, above). [Read more...]
bigger the better: aralia cordata and its cousins
doodle by andre: all dressed up…
UH-OH. WHAT IF WE GET THE GARDEN ALL DRESSED UP, and then nobody shows? Tours of (disclaimer) The Garden After the Flood are next scheduled for Saturday, August 22, 10 AM to 4 PM, during Copake Falls Day (that would be my town’s second annual shindig). Look for details on their site; find the village, just off Route 22 In Columbia County, New York, and they will point you here. Or ask Andre. He seems to have a read on how it’s all going to go. Damn.
margaret featured on the etsy blog!
HEADLINES FROM THE HANDMADE WORLD: I’ve been surrounded by handmade things and creative people since my grandmother made couture-quality clothes for my dolls and taught me to garden and bake as a little girl. Because of my love of things made from scratch, I am especially honored to be featured today in a “This Handmade Life” story on one of my favorite sites, the Etsy blog, which gets like 2 million clicks a month (um, just a smidge bigger than A Way to Garden!!!). I hope you’ll go make it 2 million and 1, and tell them Margaret sent you. Support those who, like you, encourage my creative self-expressions, won’t you, by leaving a comment there? Thanks.
planting do-over’s: more beans and greens
I PUT MY BEANS UP ON A PEDESTAL because they are one of the crops that’s finally producing here in the Year of Big Rains. In fact, I just planted another whole row of bush beans, along with more collards and kale, among many things. Welcome to Week 3 of the cross-blog Summer Fest 2009: Beans and Greens Week, a perfect time (if you hurry) to fine-tune the vegetable garden and eke out some produce for late summer, fall—and beyond. My tips for a never-say-die garden salvage job, and some easy recipe ideas, but first… [Read more...]
garlic harvest and curing: i did something right
I MENTION GARLIC HARVEST IN this month’s chores, but each year I need to remind myself of all the finer details: when to dig, exactly; how long to cure; where to store. So shall we have a quick review (and a look at the largest heads I ever grew, thanks to following my own advice carefully and feeding when the shoots were up and growing in spring)? [Read more...]
doodle by andre: (horti)cult(ure) of perfection
ONE OF THE GREAT JOYS OF LIVING ALONE is that there is only one circle on the chart here at A Way to Garden, eliminating the need for compromise. Newlywed and newly gardening Andre Jordan, on the other hand, has quickly learned the secrets to a happy marriage (carefully depicted by said doodler, above). So how do you design a “perfect” garden, or life? Separate beds, perhaps? This collaboration stuff is tricky business, methinks.
a fruitful year for my viburnum
IF I COULD ONLY HAVE ONE GENUS of plants (please, never let that be the rule!), it would probably be Viburnum. With my many shrubs busy setting fruit like mad here despite this wettest of years, I thought I’d praise these multi-season beauties with a post and a little slideshow. (That’s perhaps the showiest of all above, the doublefile viburnum, but I have more to share with you and my beloved birds). [Read more...]











