Jan 9

Previously I wrote about having hanging baskets full of edibles as a way to enjoy gardening in a limited space such as a mobile home park, or even an apartment balcony. Here are a few more ideas for those with green thumbs.

I recently met someone who makes very unique hanging gardens. He sews burlap into a long tube, inserts a thick piece of wire about 5 or 6 inches longer than the tube and then fills the burlap tube with dirt. The wire must be bendable, but not so soft that it will lose its shape. Poke it out the bottom of the tube slightly, and bend it at a tight angle to act as an anchor. Form the top of the wire into a loop which can then be fastened to a hook and hung. These tubes of earth can be bent into coils or curves in whatever way that suits your amusement, or just left long and straight.

Plant anything in your hanging tube: strawberries, lettuce, tomatoes and basil are all suggestions I’ve made before. Another idea is edible flowers. Nasturtium with leaves and flowers which are both edible, is quite peppery, A bonus of nasturtium is it grows on a long vine, making it perfect for the hanging container. For a mild and sweet edible flower try pansy, or the cucumber tasting borage. All of these are easy to grow from seed.

To plant your hanging garden tube, just cut very small holes in the burlap with scissors. Seeds can be pressed right into the vertical surface of the soil. If you wish to plant seedlings, you will want to prepare the holes in the tube ahead of time and insert the plants as you fill the tube with soil.

Adding a slow-release fertilizer will help your densely packed plants thrive in such a small amount of soil. This burlap tube method of hanging garden will need to be watered often to prevent it from drying out, as it is such a small volume of soil. A water-retaining substance added to the soil can help maintain moisture, but too much compromises the nutrient levels as it takes away from the quantity of soil. A liquid fertilizer could counter-act this affect, being effectively held in the water-retentive soil additive

Of course all of these planting ideas can be used for on-the-ground container gardening, too. In fact, a combination of both ground and hanging containers could make any porch or balcony a lush oasis. The addition of edibles adds to the rewards.

Jan 8

Garden centers are known to be retail firms, which sell products and plants related to the different garden needs. A garden center is also considered as a primary business. It caters to the general public and is open in showcasing its display and facilities for plants and gardens.

The items one can find in the garden centers in the United States are the following:

•Perennial and annual flowers
•Shrubs
•Trees
•Roses
•Hanging baskets
•Container gardens
•Houseplants
•Water gardening
•Bulbs and seeds
•Potting mixes
•Mulch and soil amendments
•Chemicals and fertilizers
•Garden supplies and tools
•Pottery
•Garden decors, and
•Fountains.

Numerous garden centers in the United States consist of various departments, which include feeds for wild birds, gifts, floral displays, barbecue grills, and outdoor furniture, along with home decors, landscaping services and designs, as well as pet supplies. Usually, during the Christmas season, a lot of garden centers host large holiday season shops. Others also contain an additional coffee bar or cafe, unlike other restaurants situated in several garden centers in Europe.

In addition to this, a greenhouse is also commonly found in garden centers. Hence, a greenhouse protect plants from cold snaps, renders the store to safeguard houseplants in excellent condition, as well as provides the garden centers’ customers dry area to stay in during the rainy season. Furthermore, the horticulturist employees of garden centers are skilled and knowledgeable in diagnosing problems as well as in giving recommendations to all gardeners. In most garden centers, they are considered to be free service providers.

The following are the garden centers located in the United States:

Gilson Garden
Address: 3059 N. Ridge Rd., Perry, OH
Telephone Numbers: 440-259-4845 (wholesale), 440-259-5252 (retail)

The Gilson Gardens is situated right in the center of Lake Country historic nursery industry. It is a trade garden center, wholesale nursery, as well as florist. This year-round service store provides an assorted selection of trees, shrubs, and floral and perennial creations. As for their wholesale nursery, it offers ground covers, ornamental grasses, vines, perennials, and shrubs for the garden centers as well as landscapers all over the Midwest.

The Gilson Gardens has been founded in the year 1947. This family-owned garden company has started with only one greenhouse. Plus, it acts as a type of “along the side” road stand, which offer bare-root perennials as well as field-grown shrubs. At present, the Gilson Garden Company has about fifty employees and lets them be engaged in growing and retail operations of the company’s five farms consisting of forty acres in manufacture.

In addition to this, the company believes that a nursery plays an important and unique role in every community. It also must be a mellow and pleasant place to work or visit, an area where plants and people are connected, providing each to learn and to grow. A cherished and respected place alongside Lake Erie and the surrounding beautiful ecosystem, the Gilson Garden does all it can to be the finest and responsible steward of nature for years to come.

Dickman Farms Greenhouses & Garden Center
Address: 13 Archie Street Auburn, New York 13021
Telephone Number: (315) 253-3030
Garden Center Fax: 315-253-2983
Wholesale Fax: 315-253-3377
Here at Dickman Farms Garden Center, everyone is surely welcome!

In Dickman Farms, one will have the opportunity to find out the biggest array of lovely hanging baskets, specialty annuals, exhilarating new perennials, and designer-styled container gardens.

You can also stroll along its nursery. There, you will discover how it blooms together with its beautiful fragrant roses, and a wide collection of ornamental trees as well as flourishing flowering shrubs. Thus, the Dickman Farm Garden Center Division of expansive wholesale also offers its customers the ability and edge to transport an extensive range of beautiful perennials and specialty annuals that are fresh from its greenhouses straight to its garden center.

Hidden Timber Gardens
Address: 462 S. Chana Rd. Chana, IL 61015
Telephone Number: (815)751-4162

Hidden Timber Gardens dedicates itself to producing native plants, hardy perennials, specimen shrubs and trees, ornamental grasses, plus, stunning collector hostas, which range in more than sixty selections.

The Hidden Timber Gardens is located on five and a half acre land and is surrounded by eight hundred white pine trees as well as undisturbed woodlands. It also has planted numerous specimen trees. Moreover, it displays gardens for everyone to see and to relish. By touring its gardens, one will witness the occurrence of plants in its natural habitat, helping its customers decide on which plant is perfect and suitable right in their gardens. It also offers different ideas for several plant amalgamations.

Aside from this, the Hidden Timber Gardens possess perennial plants, which are ascertained to be hardy in both zones four and five, disease resistant as well as low maintenance. It also prides itself in choosing plants, which will provide its customers all seasons’ varieties. Picking out from the large variety of lush specimen trees, shrubs and evergreens, one is in no doubt of being bestowed with a unique garden setting perfect for its owner!
Visit and delight in Hidden Timber Garden’s beauty and tranquility!

Beachside Gardens
Address: 3725 E.U.S.HWY 12 Michigan City, IN 46360
Telephone Number: (219)879-8878

The Beachside Gardens has celebrated more than twenty-five years of excellent service, particularly in its Northwest Indiana region. This garden specializes in the natural and beautiful Dunes Landscape. In addition, it also produces its own hanging basket or containers, and bedding plants in the location. Moreover, it houses a large array of exuberant perennials.

The Beachside Gardens has a big selection of water garden tools and supplies such as pumps, fountains, liners, Koi fish and an assortment of water garden plants. Furthermore, it offers the one and only hardiest Michigan Grown Rhododendrons and Azaleas. All of these and more are a great addition to any beautiful garden.

Wanczyk Nursery
Address: 166 Russell Street Hadley, MA 01035
Telephone Number: 413.584.3709
Fax: 413.586.9698

The Wanczyk Nursery was established in the year 1954. It grows excellently featured nursery stock. This nursery stock is sold both in wholesale and retail, all the way to New England. This excellent nursery, based in Hadley, Massachusetts grows burlaped and balled nursery stock right on seventy-five land acres. It also containerizes plants on its eight-acre retail site near Route 9.

The Wanczyk Nursery’s broad assortment of notable burlaped shrubs and balled stock include Carol Mackie Daphne, Rhododendron, and Arborvitae. In addition, it also possesses an extensive collection of perennials, which has several arrays of Hemerocallis (Day Lilies) and a variety of annuals. It prides itself on its high quality and numerous selection of reasonably priced nursery stock.

The Wanczyk Nursery is the grower. Please do visit them!
Abbott’s Landscape Nursery
Address: 2781 Scio Church Ann Arbor, MI 48103
Telephone Number: (734)665-8733

The Abbott’s Landscape Nursery is known as a family-owned landscaping center, which serves the Ann Arbor community since the year 1981. Its property is a farm from the 18th century refurbished into a beautiful plant nursery as well as garden center. It offers products that ranges from topsoil and mulch through the hardiest shrubs and trees as well as astounding perennials.

In addition to this, it provides a wide variety of potting supplies, garden ornaments, garden tools, books, and wind chimes. Its services also range from great expert advice regarding the garden center, to consulting services, landscaping designs, and excellent work crews that are friendly and helpful with installing, planting, and mulching one’s landscaping dream into reality.

The Abbott’s Landscape Nursery greatest positive feature is its service. Far different from the usual big-box stores, which sell plants, it’s there for its plants and also loves to share its expertise with those found of gardening.

Please visit the Abbot’s Landscape Nursery and experience its beauty!

Gro-Rite Greenhouses & Garden Center
Address: 30 Hillview Road Lincoln Park, NJ 07035
Telephone Number: 973-694-7495
Fax: 973-305-8497

The Gro-Rite Greenhouses and Garden Center is a foremost family-owned garden center and green house situated in New Jersey. Having two attractive locations and a wide array of endless varieties, it has become a principal seller and grower of wonderful and vibrant perennials, annuals, landscaping and nursery products.

At Gro-Rite, one can discover the delights of gardening. By just touring its growing facilities, perennial and nursery yards, picking up unknown facts regarding plant care, planting, the latest stones as well as landscape products, it sure makes for a great experience.

Princeton Garden Center
Fax: 305-971-6719
Address: 26100, SW 177th Ave., Homestead, Fl 33031.

The Princeton Garden Center’s garden decors and outdoor patio furniture, which are from its garden center collection, are truly ideal embellishments to one’s home. With its outdoor patio style piece, it helps create the mood of your garden atmosphere. It also provides you with great garden decor selections to choose from in order to bring out the life of your garden setting. Thus, at this garden center, one will discover numerous decor items like statues, water fountains, solar garden lights, and plaques.

Jan 7

Flower Delivery In May

During May the tulips which bloomed in April are beginning to fade away and the summer flowers are starting to take their hold bringing beautiful colour and excitement to your gardens and vases. By the end of May the Hydrangeas are out, confirming that the heat of summer is on its way. May is a great time to buy flowers or arrange flower delivery; the colours coming through are fresh and vibrant to complement the summer sun that’s beginning to arrive.

Although it might still feel like winter outside the gardens and parks are beginning to tell a different story, the hawthorns (known as the May flower) are beginning to bloom, Bluebells are beginning to carpet the floor with a bit of colour and the early apple trees are already filling with blossom.

The list below details some of the flowers that are beginning to bloom in May:

· Babies Breath

· Bells of Ireland

· Carnation

· Chrysanthemum

· Delphinium

· English Lavender

· Babies’ Breath

· Statice Sinuata

· Freesia

· Garlands

· Salal Garland

· Gerbera Daisy

· Greens

· Bear Grass

· Ivy

· Salal or Lemonleaf

· Tree Fern

· Hydrangea (late)

· Hypericum Berry

· Lily

· Lisianthus

· Love in the Mist

· Orchid, Dendrobium

· Roses

· Scabiosa

· Snapdragons

· Statice/Misty

· Stephanotis

· Stock

· Sunflowers

· Sweetpea

· Waxflower

From the 6th of May for 4 days Westminster Abbey becomes the home of flowers as the Major festival of flowers takes place from 11am. The ‘Rejoice’ as it’s named celebrates the 50th anniversary year of the National Association of Flower Arranging Societies (NAFAS). NAFAS is an educational charity dedicated to the promotion of the artistic use of all types of plant material through the medium of its flower clubs for both adults and children. A great day out for the family, whilst it is also educational in the sense that you can learn about flower arrangements, the hard work that goes into planning seasonal decorations and the passion that many people dedicate to this fantastic art.

There are over 200 flower arrangers, each of which represents a club across the United Kingdom, they showcase their designs and blooms throughout the abbey. This year the Golden Anniversary is sure to bring some of the most spectacular flower arrangements Westminster abbey has ever seen, whilst the scents of the flowers are sure to blow you away.

 

Jan 6

American visitors to the Old World are invariably impressed by the exuberant displays of container plants around homes, in gardens and parks, and in front of public buildings and places of business.


In Lisbon, with its narrow, winding streets, where there is hardly a trickle of sunlight, windowsills and tiny balconies are filled with potted plants. Often, they must compete with clothes hung out to dry. I recall one small balcony that contained numerous pot plants, several pieces of laundry, six song birds in cages, and three shouting green parrots attached to their perches by chains.


Throughout Portugal, containers range from tin cans, clay and decorated glazed pots at entranceways and in small patios, to large calstone urns and pots in elegant, formal gardens, like that of the Queluz Palace outside Lisbon. In the moister north, pot plants are seen less frequently than in the hot and dry south, which has a more typically Mediterranean climate.


The countless pot plants around fountains and pools in the Moorish gardens at the Alhambra and Generaliffe Palaces in Granada are unforgettable. At Generaliffe, they are arranged so precisely and symmetrically along the long, narrow canals that they are almost as diverting as the numberless fountains that leap and splash in these gardens where water in its myriad forms plays so important a part. Along the narrow streets of Seville and other Spanish cities, geraniums and climbing roses grow through the intricate lacework of little balconies. Patios, surrounded by high walls, are crammed with potted geraniums, stocks, lemons, oranges, boxwood, sweet bay, jasmines, and Swedish myrtle. Even more, steps are lined with pots of all sizes and descriptions and the tops of walls, also favorite places, resemble miniature gardens.


Italian and Greek Uses

The Italian garden would be incomplete without pot plants. In the terraced gardens of La Mortola in Ventimiglia and Borremeo Castle on Iseo Bello in Lake Maggiore, in the extensive Boboli Gardens in Florence, and in other villa gardens throughout Italy, handsomely designed hand-wrought clay pots are important aspects of the designs. Lemons and oranges, oleanders, gardenias, and geraniums are grown in them.


Greece, with its hot, dry summers, is equally a country of gardens and open courtyards of pot plants. In tin cans, whitewashed or painted yellow, pink, or blue to match the house, the Greeks grow their beloved carnations, stocks, gardenias, geraniums, jasmines, and particularly basil, the pungent Indian herb used for flavoring. When immigrants came to America earlier in the century, they brought with them the practice of growing basil and fragrant flowering plants in tins and other makeshift containers.


Through France and Scandinavia


The south of France, with its warm climate, follows the pattern of Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece. In the north, including Paris, pots, often of house plants, rest on windowsills and adorn courtyards. In formal chateaux and palace gardens, tubbed sweet bay, oleander, and orange and lemon trees are common, along with ornamental urns, introduced for architectural effect.


In Scandinavia, there are large plant containers in public squares and on broad sidewalks, in fact, wherever they do not interfere with pedestrian traffic. In front of City Hall in the heart of Copenhagen, great concrete containers with geraniums and other summer flowers are grouped among the benches where people sit in the sun.


In Britain


London, Dublin, and Edinburgh have window boxes and urns that decorate banks, department stores, public buildings, and offices. Azaleas and other spring flowers are followed by hydrangeas and geraniums in the summer and chrysanthemums in the autumn. Plant boxes are often placed on top of department store marquees. These are also a familiar sight in Paris.


In all these countries, with their centuries of experience, we can find ideas to adapt to our own climate, styles of architecture, and manner of gardening. The multitude of containers and plants offer many possibilities for adding architectural accent and introducing a distinctive kind of garden beauty.

Jan 5

Spring is here, summer’s on its way and it’s time to enjoy the fruits of other people’s labour. Yes, backyard show period is almost winning us and there’s a lot to see.

Garden shows in the UK come in all styles and sizes, so you’ll be able to prize one that appeals to you. Whether you want to go to a big show and gather up some tips and bargains or to a small secretive viewing, there’ll be something for you.

The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) puts on accepted shows throughout the summer, most famously the Chelsea Flower Show at the end of May, in central London. Here you’ll find show gardens laid out in an enormous diversity of styles – Mediterranean, woods, bungalow gardens, water gardens, riddle gardens, contemporary designs and gardens intended by notoriety gardeners.

They are all there to impress and inspire, with gardeners on hand to elucidate the philosophy and practicalities behind each sketch. Chelsea also has countless displays by nurseries specialising in certain types of plants and there stalls selling any number of badge gadgets, outside furniture and tools.

RHS shows are not just confined to London. There also displays in Cardiff, Malvern and Tatton Park in Cheshire. All the RHS shows are set in some acres and are big, flashy dealings that necessary to be booked well in proceed as tickets trade out swiftly. If you must dream for your patch makeover, they are great chairs to see all sorts of plants laid out in a patch blueprint pretty than in rows in a patch centre. You’ll be able to see what settings outfit them and what plants make good bedfellows. There are also demonstrations and workshops, so you can perfect your green fingered skills.

If you’d wish to see something more intimate and native then look out for the National Garden Scheme charity plot openings. Private gardens are open to the municipal just for a day or two each year, many belong with homeowners. Gardens come under very close inquiry before they are allowed to be part of the scheme, so what you see will be at the zenith of plot mean and upkeep. The great things is the gardens are limited to your spot (so with alike conditions to your patch) and on a domestic magnitude, so you can get an existent idea of what a bit of imagination and hard scion can achieve.

The National Garden Schemed began in 1927 and raises money for charities which help those who neediness attention tending. 30 million pounds has been raised so far – from modest captivate fees and money raised from tea, cake and factory sales which the private garden owners organise.

If you want to see gardening on a famous climb but without the commercial segment of the big flower shows then lead for a National Trust or English Heritage garden. These are beautifully maintained and modify from official gardens close to majestic homes, to woods, meadows, even coastal land. Many are romantic acne that had inspired painters and novelists over the years and are a great way to dodge the daily drudge of fresh life. Of course summer is a great time to holiday these seats, but most are open throughout the year so you can go back and see how effects change each spell.

Visiting beautifully intended and maintained gardens, whether on a overall balance or small and personal is forever a doctor. And what better way to get some great dreams for your own little chunk of Eden. Whether you want to start tranquillity or something with some wow-aspect, anywhere superstar will have achieved something parallel and will spur you onto do the same.

Jan 4

All garden have styles, just as with furniture and interior decorating. Sometimes styles can be blended and sometimes not. Generally, you want your more intensive formal-looking areas, like roses and annual flower beds, closer to the house; then you can let the garden become more natural as you move farther away.


Adding a small perennial flower bed next to the garage works beautifully. But a yard starts to look funny if you have a Japanese cloud-pruned pine, an English perennial border, some natural-looking shrubs, and a fish pond all at one time. If you live in the woods, among towering forest trees, one sheared bush will look odd. Pollarded trees look good next to the chateaux in France, but they look silly as the only two treated that way out of a row of trees on the parking strip in front of your house. Pollarded trees are the ones pruned to look like 6-foot lollipops.


Below are seven examples of popular garden styles:


1. Formal English: Clipped hedges, roses, knot gardens

2. English Cottage: Lots of fruit trees and perennials rambling around in great profusion

3. Japanese: Highly trained and maintained pines and other trees with masses of low sheared shrubs, placed rocks, and sand seas

4. Early American: Forsythias, quince, peonies, bearded iris

5. Pacific Northwest: Rocks to look like mountain outcroppings, rhododendron, pines, heather, vine maples, Douglas firs

6. Woodland: Tall trees with understory plants and groundcovers

7. Prairie: Grasses and sun-loving wildflowers


You would not put an art deco table next to your French Provincial couch. Be equally careful to blend styles in your yard. A good exercise for you is to start looking at yards as you pass them. When you find one you like, try to put into words what it is that appeals to you. You should know that people go through stages of gardening taste the way they do tastes in clothes or cars. At first people are attracted to the ‘mixture of color’ yards packed with annuals and dahlias. They also like sheared shrubs. They graduate through various styles and stages.


Because people like flowers, horticulturists began to breed bigger and more spectacular flowers on plants and shrubs to dazzle us. These are called ‘hybrids.’ Often the plants have lost many interesting secondary characteristics like scent and interesting sizes, colors, and shapes of leaves. Hybrid rhododendrons look a lot alike most of the year, but species (those are ones existing naturally in the wild) vary greatly in size: some have giant leaves while others are tiny plants. Some species rhododendrons have blue felt called ‘indementum’ under the leaves while others have gold felt. Some smell interesting if you rub or prune them. Some have dangling trumpets for blooms. Species plants are more likely to bloom at a different season or smell good. They also look more ‘natural.


There is nothing wrong with any style of yard. You may be torn among several, but eventually your own style will assert itself. Many go full circle and come back to ‘gaudy’ dahlias; others remain true to their first love, perhaps the rose, Still others find new styles that are more suited to their personality. Take some time to look in books and magazines and visit gardens to see what type you identify with most closely.

Jan 3

Flowers are one of the most delightful creations that nature has to offer but not all flowers need to grow at ground level. In fact, the flowering crabapple tree offers a gorgeous cascade of flowers right at eye level.


Crabapple trees are very popular for being able to provide aesthetics throughout the year. They give delight in all four seasons. During springtime, the delicate colors of the buds and leaves of crabapple trees can be very pleasant. The buds can be of one color and the opened flowers can be of a different hue.


Come autumn, the fruits of the crabapple tree will surely match the life of the environment. The fall makes the colors of the fruit become even more vibrant while the snow during winter can provide the best accent to the landscape. Flowering crabapples are definitely the best pick for use in your own home, even in schools, parks and commercial areas.


The flowers of crabapple tree are to be expected in full bloom during late April up to middle of May. There are classifications of the flowers of the crabapple tree. There is the single type with only five petals in it and the semi-double has six to ten petals. The double type has more than ten petals. Double-flowered crabapple trees will be able to keep the flowers longer but the fruits are not abundant. The colors of the flowers can range from the almost pearly white, delicately fine pinks or even a deep red. Some can even grow crabapple trees with flowers having coral or salmon color.


Given all these wonderful things about a flowering crabapple tree, it is only expected that one will aim to have one in his or her own yard. Crabapple trees, like any other trees, have peculiar characteristics and needs that will require certain responsibilities from the owner. Here are some pointers to take note in growing your own flowering crabapple tree.


1. Size of the Flowering Tree


Flowering crabapples can differ from one another in their sizes.


On the average, most crabapple grows at 15 to 20 feet height while some types average eight feet. There are certain cases when they reach up to 40 feet.


Taking this consideration seriously will help you utilize well the space in your yard. At the same time, it will ensure that your crabapple gets enough space to maximize its growth.


2. Shape of the Crabapple


The crabapple tree can take on different tree shapes. The crabapple can have a weeping, horizontal, columnar, rounded, pyramidal or vase-shaped structure.


The kind will generally depend on the growth habit of the tree.


3. Type of Soil


The growth of the flowering crabapples will depend largely too on how well the owner selected the site where it will be planted.


It is best to check the nutrient and ph levels of the soil that will best suit the crabapple.


Crabapples can best grow in rich loam. A loam basically is a combination of sand, clay and salt.


This flowering tree can also grow in other soil types. Just make sure that it gets a good drainage.


Maintain good moisture in the soil but avoid getting it excessively moisturized.


Acidic soil best supports the crabapple like with a pH ranging from 5.0 to 6.5. If needed, make the proper adjustments to make the environment favorable to the tree.


4. Exposure to Sunlight


Flowering crabapples require direct exposure to sunlight throughout the day to ensure the development of the flowers, as well as the fruits.

This means the trees must be planted on locations where they can access the sun for at least eight hours every day.


5. Avoiding Plant Stress


Crabapples are very sensitive to stress. Unfavorable environmental factors can affect the development of these trees.


The stress can result to a very unhealthy disposition of the plants like poor color of the leaf or scorches.


Some of the factors that can stress the crabapple include insects or pests, lack or excess in water supply, insufficient sun exposure or even kids who may damage the tree.


Conclusion


Flowering crabapple trees are delightful addition to your garden. Make sure that you plant and tend it well to ensure the beauty of this creation in your landscape.

Jan 2

The woody plants, smaller in size than trees, with low branches close to ground level, have traditionally been known as shrubs. They usually have more than one stem and these stems together are called canes, often touching the ground from all sides, forming a notable foliage. Shrubs are found in a variety of colors and with varied leaf designs. Bush, an often used word, is a synonym of shrub.


Shrubs carry not only good leafage but some of them support the same amount of flowers as well. Such shrubs are called flowering shrubs. These shrubs are aromatic enough to attract butterflies and are considered apt for household gardening. Examples of flowering shrubs are: hydrangea, honeysuckle, heptacodium, hibiscus, forsythia, fothergilla, dogwood, crape myrtle, clethra, buddleia, barberry etc.


Shrubs generally, are found to be 6 meters tall but they could differ in size. 10 to 20 cm small shrubs are known as sub-shrubs. These miniature shrubs can sometimes have non-seasional growth and can manage to survive in winter too, something that normal shrubs usually cannot do. Lhyme, cranberries, ericaceae, lavender, lerivinkle etc. are grouped under sub-shrubs.


Shrubs grow by themselves on some types of land. These lands are dry barrens but not exactly deserts. They are not good enough for the growth of green plants and trees, but intermediate shrubs can easily flourish here. Such regions of shrub-friendly lands are called shrub-lands in the technical language of Botany.


Mostly found near deserts and grasslands, they get more rain than the absolute deserts but lesser than green forests. Development of shrub-lands, to some extent, is also dependent on outer forces applied to the lands. For example, productive lands could get destroyed by natural calamities, by floods, fires etc. and can turn into shrub-lands, fertile enough only to promote shrubs.


So shrub-lands are the habitats of shrubs. Even so, shrubs do not grown on their own all the time! Shrubs can be cultivated too for mainly for decorative gardening. Such shrubs that are artificially grown by humans rather than by natural means collectively form a shrub-berry. According to novelists, shrub-berries are among the most romantic places.


Rationales Behind Giving Shrubs Some Space In Your Garden


- Do you feel you are all occupied with your business or profession and are short of time? At the same time, are you too fond of gardening to give it up completely? Well, given such a situation, shrubs are your best bet, as they are quite hassle-free and do not need much nurturing. No excessive attention is required, yet you will own a garden that is as beautiful as a carefully nurtured one.


- Some shrubs are as fragrant as flowers and help attract birds and butterflies, converting your garden into a more cheerful and colorful place.


- Your garden may look populated with the planted shrubs. As shrubs are bigger than plants and have a good foliage, they act as good padding material for parks and gardens.


- Shrubs could be put to good use inside the house to conceal unsightly corners.

Jan 1

 

Buy Cypress Gardens Tickets online, to avail the benefits of online discounts and offers. Otherwise, be ready for standing in queue in front of the garden gate. Whatever you choose remember to explore the greatness of Cypress Gardens.

 

How an idea that blooms into Cypress Garden is the story of remote past that happened 70 years ago with the vision of Dick Pope, who was imagining a vast and beautiful garden in the middle of the Florida swamp lands. Cypress Garden is open all through out the year to welcome its visitors offering endless entertainment.

Cypress Gardens Adventure Park is a theme park in the proximity of Winter Haven 20 miles east of Lakeland in Florida. The enthralling 40 rides of Cypress Gardens will sweep into the time of pleasure and joy. The rides include Sunshine Sky Adventure, Triple Hurricane, etc. Apart from these rides, the shows of Cypress Gardens like entertainment palpable in 13 shows also added the wonderful feature to the garden.

There are many arrangements for concerts and events and that includes Paul Anka, the Beach Boys, and many more special events like Blooms & Blossoms flower and gardens show, etc. Jubilee Junction is the place for fabulous food and unique shopping after visualizing the unique shows and parades that run several times throughout the course of the day at Cypress Gardens.

Cypress Gardens Tickets also allow you to stroll through the wildlife at their ecosystems by the periphery of Lake Eloise where different species of birds and animals can be found.

Further, are you looking for a place where you can find both animals and amusement Thrill Park? Busch Gardens is the right place which is really appreciable for its venue for entertainment, extreme rides and amazing animals.

Get the Busch Gardens Tickets online and start journey of your eager quest. The Rhino Rally is an off-road animal safari adventure. This ride provides spectacular views of white rhinos and other critters. Busch Garden is also known as the most beautiful theme park which offers Alpengeist, Escape from Pompeii, Apollo’s Chariot, Loch Ness Monster, and Big Bad Wolf to its beholders.

However, the Busch Gardens which is a perfect blend of 17th century atmosphere with that of 21st century developed technologies have many more things to offer as for example, the Curse of DarKastle is the most recent creation of modern technology.

Florida Attractions Tickets bring much more interesting and wonderful things to explore. So, choose the place immediately where you want to make a real merriment of your life.

Dec 31

The Loire Valley in France is a superb delight for garden enthusiasts. Not only can you admire the spectacular chateaux and sample fine French cuisine and great Loire valley wine, tourists can also marvel at some amazing gardens. The whole valley is now a world heritage site listed by UNESCO.


Chateau Villandry is a gem and a must see for any one with a vegetable patch in need of some inspiration. Chateau Chaumont on the banks of the Loire River holds a spectacular international garden festival every summer. Peony and rose lovers should visit the botanical gardens at Orchaise west of Blois.


Chateau Villandry owes its fame to the exceptional terraced gardens which sit on three levels and include a water garden, an ornamental garden and an ornamental kitchen garden. Eight gardeners work at Chateau Villandry full time, and plant about 60,000 vegetables and 45,000 plants in its gardens each year. Villandry is a dynamic place, the site of many activities such as the “Vegetable Garden Days” in September, the summer festival, special exhibits and workshops with the gardeners from the chateau.


The gardens at Chateau Villandry are an imaginative twentieth century re-creation of a 16th century renaissance castle garden. The moated Chateau dates from 1536 and had a formal garden in the eighteenth century. The existing garden dates from the years after 1906 when it was purchased by a Spaniard, Dr Joachim Carvallo.


He purchased the property and poured an enormous amount of time, money and devotion into repairing the castle. Inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement, he wished the garden to have a sixteenth century character. He created what many people believe to be the most beautiful gardens anywhere in the world.


The gardens are split into several parts: a maze made from 1,200 beech trees, a kitchen garden with aromatic herbs and vegetables, an ornamental flower garden near the castle, a children’s garden with a play area, a water garden with a pond and a greenhouse garden.


An arbour of grape vines leads to a great parterre, designed as a Garden of Music. The Garden of Love is o nthe other side of the canal. Symbolising the moods of love, it looks rectangular from the chateau but is actually trapezoid. The love garden has its colourful flowers and heart-shaped box hedges laid out with square beds illustrating “Tragic Love”, “Fickle love”, “Tender Love” and “Insane Love”. There is also the beautiful water garden with its lawns and pool of water.


But the real treasure at Chateau Villandry is the ultimate vegetable garden. It is It is bordered by espaliered apple trees, drooping pear bushes and standard roses which symbolise the monks who once tended the first medieval vegetable gardens and laid out in nine squares. Villandry is a vegetal feast, with zigzags of crazy-growing leeks, blocks of autumn pumpkins, beds of yellow and green peppers, big purple cabbages and mounds of celery all replanted twice a year with a brilliant eye for the colours of the changing seasons.


In 1934, Chateau de Villandry was designated a monument historique. It is still owned by the Carvallo family, and open to the public. It is one of the most visited castles in France. In July afer dark the gardens are lit by over 2000 candles and this beautiful vision of the gardens is accompanied by baroque music played by musicians wandering throughout the gardens.


An international garden festival takes places every day during the entire summer, on the grounds of the Chateau de Chaumont. Gardeners from all over the world produce outstanding gardens around a central theme, using nature and art together to create the contemporary effects.


Lasting six months from late April to mid-October, some 25 gardens at Chateau de Chaumont take a different theme each year – from water, vegetables and weeds to more conceptual poetry. The Garden Festival at Chaumont drawing international teams of architects, artists and stage directors as well as gardeners and landscape designers.


The theme for the festival for 2007 is mobility. Last year it was play and most of the exhibits were highly interactive and a delight to the young and to the young at heart.


The botanic park at Orchaise boasts over 2,000 plant varieties from around the world ranging from water lilies to blooming cherries. It is especially well known for its beautiful array of peonies and roses.


The Loire Valley can not help to inspire gardeners. Even Mick Jagger gyrating lead singer of the Rolling Stones, is now garden enthusiast at his preferred second residence near Amboise. He got Alvilde Lees-Milne to lay out a marvellous formal walled garden at his 15th century chateau and he has now become completely part of the garden, knowing every single thing about all the plants, the flowers, and the way the fruit trees are espaliered.

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