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sharing the wordpress love

wordpress-love

WHEN I AM PASSIONATE ABOUT SOMETHING, it’s hard to shut me up. I love plants, and frogs, so I blog about gardening; I love being a sister (well, most days I do), so I blog about that, too.

In the year or so since I left my fancy job as EVP/Editorial Director at Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia to live happily ever after at my dining table in a tangle of Mac laptops and self-cloning to-do lists, I’ve fallen in love one more time: with WordPress.

logo_bigger-1WordPress is the best blogging platform there is, and it’s also an open-source community, a fellowship of users who give one another WordPress love in the form of shared code and shared knowledge. You take, and you give back.

Until now, the only giving back I’ve been able to do officially is to co-sponsor WordCamp New York last October (and again for 2009).

logo_bigger-1Though I am not a developer, it has been a key goal to give the WordPress community back some code in return for all I’ve used. (As the WordPress.org footer says: “Code is poetry,” and I like to think I’ve finally added a sonnet to the vast library, albeit a ghost-written one, with many to come.) Its title:

Category Mapping Plugin for WordPress MU

Not Emily Dickinson or Shakespeare, but sweet.

logo_bigger-1My friends Brad Williams and Brian Messenlehner of WebDevStudios authored the sonnet for me, bringing to life the functionality I imagined and needed to operate The Sister Project blog network like a real network. If you have a multi-user (WordPress MU) network and want the top-level page to function like a portal, bubbling up posts from the other blogs, this is really going to help.

Of course, being the original (and only!) user these last months, I’m already impatient for Version 1.1 (2.0?); just ask WebDevStudios,  sponsors of the WordPressWeekly Podcast and organizers of the new WordPress New Jersey meetup group, how many times a day I IM them about some wild new idea.

So here it is, world: our first plug-in, Brad’s and Brian’s and mine, like every good thing in WordPress the result of cooperation and collaboration. You can let WebDev tell you more about it, or go visit its page in the plugin repository, where all such works are listed.

logo_bigger-1Without such lines of WordPress poetry, my life wouldn’t be as beautiful. If you have questions about WordPress or WordPress MU, contact me at awaytogarden at gmail dot com. I’m no expert, just a real, hands-on user, but I know an increasing number of people in the community who can help you bring more poetry into your life, and would happily share their contact info…share the WordPress love.

___________

P.S., the photo up top is a screen grab of a captioned image I submitted last year to Liz Strauss’s “Brand-New Blogging Feeling” contest, and was a winner. To me, WordPress is as loveable as one of my big green frogboys, and you know how I feel about them.

The Sister Project

The Confessional

Some stuff really gets A Way to Garden-ers going. Weigh in, or just lurk while everyone else shares about these hot buttons:

Compost, Compost, Compost

I am as proud of my compost heap as I am of any part of my garden. It is the archaeological record of my garden past; it is the stuff from which future gardens will arise. I read a lot about, from sources like these: Garden Organic, a 50-year-old British charity; Journey to Forever (don’t worry, not some into-the-bunker survivalist cult); and the vast Cornell Composting archive. Dig in.

Juicy Bits

375 VISITORS, 1 BIG RHODIE: spring garden open day, in a virtual visit. How it looked, and also what they all asked about

keeping deer out DEER FENCE: I tried every potion and anti-deer trick till I finally got real and fenced. Strategies for every garden situation.

secrets to great tomatoes TOMATO TIPS, seed to harvest: Dozens of tricks for a better crop.

yes, even in dry shade MY 4 TOUGHEST GROUNDCOVERS perform even in the worst spots, like dry shade. Maybe these tough perennials will serve you as well?

5 great small trees GARDEN-SIZED TREES can’t just be the right scale; they need to have multi-season interest, too, to earn a spot here. Maybe you have room for one of my 5 favorites?

10 underplanting do’s and don’ts MAKING MOSAICS—that’s what I call good underplanting of trees and shrubs with a tapestry of plants for many months of enjoyment. Here’s how I do it.

a ribbeting bullfrog whodunit LET BULLFROGS BE BYGONES? No way. Where have all my biggest frogboys gone? The latest frog mystery explained.

stars of the spring shrubbery BEYOND LILACS (and forget forsythia!), a slideshow of some of the finest spring shrubs you may not grow (yet).

speeding up the compost DRIVE BY, HIT-AND-RUN composting is my latest craze, and speeds up the decomposition process while making good mulch quickly. Here’s how.

making a 365-day garden THINK FALL (YES, FALL): Don’t get sucked in by spring-bloomers only when nursery shopping. A great garden happens 365 days a year: Shop smart to make it so.

the facts about bulbs SOMETHING UP with a flower bulb? Paltry bloom, or wondering when to feed or cut off the foliage? It’s all here.

must-read garden poem MY FAVORITE GARDEN POEM celebrates loss, one of gardening (and life’s) realities. It does it with humor: "Why Did My Plant Die?” is a must-read.

12 steps to sanity? HELP FOR GARDENERS: Hi, my name is Margaret, and yes, we operate a 12-Step program here. Welcome.

orchid rebloom made easy I REBLOOMED MY FIRST ORCHID last year (finally!) and it turns out to be pretty easy going. Here’s how.

my seed-starting 101 WHAT ABOUT SEED-STARTING in general? The A Way to Garden method.

crispy refrigerator pickles WHAT IS IT ABOUT refrigerator pickles that makes everybody so happy? Get those cukes growing now. And then some.

hail the stewartia I LIKE PLANTS THAT EARN THEIR KEEP. By that I mean they do more than a week or two of showing off; they look good in more than a single moment, or season. The small-ish to medium trees in the genus Stewartia are a good bet if that’s the kind of multi-season interest you are looking for. Sound good?

can-do pruning REPEAT AFTER ME: I can prune. I can prune. If you follow this simple method for starters, your woody plants will thank you.

the ‘other’ peonies JUNE IS PEONY TIME, the big raucous kind of peony time, but just before that another kind of peony you might want to consider adopting does its subtler, wonderful thing.

which lilac to plant? SO MANY LILACS, so little space. Browse a glossary of some of my favorites before you shop—maybe you’ll like them, too.