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December 2006 Archives

December 20, 2006

January Garden Chores

I know many of you are busy lighting Menorahs, wrapping presents and setting up Nativity scenes. But when all the egg nog is gone, and you've awakened from your long winter's nap, your plants will still need you. Here are a few things to look out for in January:

Pennsylvania Department of
Conservation and Natural
Resources Photo / Forestry Images.com
Brush accumulated snow from evergreen branches to avoid damage. The weight of the snow not only will threaten to break branches, but also might cause the entire tree to bend over. Sometimes it recovers; sometimes it spends the rest of its life looking like Quasimodo. Newly planted evergreens should be protected with burlap the first year to avoid wind and snow damage.

Houseplants need special winter care, too. The days are shorter, so even if you perch them near your sunniest window, potted plants won't get the same sunlight that was available over the summer. Be sure to rotate pots daily.

Heat from radiators and forced air systems can dry indoor air terribly. Just as we suffer more chapped lips and hands over the winter, our houseplants show symptoms as well. Run a humidifier for both your sakes.

Look at your plants. Are their leaves drooping? Turning yellow? Getting brown and crackly? Water requirements change over the winter, even for indoor plants. With few exceptions, at this time of year, most houseplants should be watered thoroughly and then not again until the soil is completely dry. And don't let leaves get dusty. Dust forms a barrier that slows the absorption of sunlight.

I disagree with the widely disseminated advice that flowering plants such as poinsettias should be kept in a cool, unheated room to prolong their bloom time. Sure, they might bloom longer, BUT WHO'S GOING TO SEE THEM? I say keep them in your main living area -- albeit away from direct heat -- and enjoy them while you can.

By now, I'm sure you've noticed the appearance of garden catalogs in your mailbox. Use this 'down time' to dogear pages and plan next year's beds. If nothing else, it helps the dreariness of winter from seeming endless.

December 7, 2006

Books for the holidays

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I've read a lot of gardening books in 2006, reviewing several of them in Newsday. Here's a list of some of my favorites for those of you looking for the perfect gift for a gardener friend -- or yourself.

I'd like to make this nice and tidy, and call this my "Top 10 list," but really, I can only wholeheartedly recommend 9. So, here's my "Top 9" list, in alphabetical order:

"A Year of Roses", by Stephen Scanniello

"American Tomato: The Complete Guide to Growing and Using Tomatoes," by Robert Hendrickson

"Gardening on Pavement, Tables, and Hard Surfaces," by George Schenk

"The Glory of Gardens: 2,000 Years of Writings on Garden Design," edited by Scott J. Tilden

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"Peonies," by Pamela McGeorge, with photographs by Russell McGeorge

"Radical Prunings: A Novel of Officious Advice from the Contessa of Compost," by Bonnie Thomas Abbott

"Seascape Gardening", by Anne Halpin, with photos by Roger Foley

"The Sun King's Garden," by Ian Thompson

"The Well-Tended Perennial Garden," by Tracy DiSabato-Aust

December 1, 2006

Geraniums in December?

I just returned from 8 rainy days in Washington state, where we were visiting my sisters-in-law for Thanksgiving. The landscape where they live in the capital of Olympia is gorgeous -- when viewed from the warmth and dryness of my car seat -- accentuated with masses of majestic Douglas Fir mini-forests. We had a lovely visit, to be sure, but the precipitation I could do without.

Not only was the weather gloomy and miserable (I now understand why Seattle is the reputed suicide capital of the country, and why it's where grunge music took root back in the '90s,) but the odd thing is the locals don't seem to care. Here's a sample conversation that took place on a particularly rainy afternoon:

Sister-in-Law One: "Hey, you wanna go check out the waterfront property we recently bought?"

Me: "But it's raining."

Sister-in-Law Two: "Aw, come on. You're such a city girl."

Me: "Um. O.K."

So we drive in TORRENTIAL RAIN to the muddy lot on Puget Sound. Breathtaking view of the snow-capped Mt. Rainier in the distance. Looks nice.

Sister-in-Law One: "Come on, let's walk around."

Me: "But it's raining."


Sister-in-Law Two: "Aw, come on. You're such a city girl."

In about three and a half minutes, I had walked the property. With no umbrella and cold, wet, muddy feet, I grabbed my youngest daughter (who was wet and whining about her new sneakers getting ruined,) and headed back to the car, fully aware that no one was following me.

Sister-in-Law One: "But don't you want to see the view from the other side?"

Me: "But it's raining."

Sister-in-Law Two: "Aw, come on. You're such a city girl."

And so it went, for the better part of the week, with me being the butt of jokes for not wanting to hike to the river or climb the mountain in the rain. I suppose if I lived where it rained for four months out of the year, I'd probably have to suck it up and go out, too. But I don't. To me, a rainy day means pajamas, a good book and a cup of tea.

I guess I am a city girl, even if I do live on Long Island.

Washingtonians may have one-upped me in the rain tolerance-department. But they can't hold a candle to New Yorkers when it comes to snow management. On our way to the airport Monday night for what should have been a 45 minute ride, we sat on the gridlocked Interstate 5 for SIX HOURS. Traffic literally was not moving. At all. It looked like a scene from one of those end-of-the-world disaster movies, where everyone in town is trying to flee and no one is getting anywhere. Cars were abandoned, a double-length bus was jackknifed, a tractor-trailer abandoned. We even saw a van full of senior citizens that had been evacuated by the fire department. People were walking on the interstate, gas cans in tow. I even got out and snapped a few pictures.

What was the problem, you ask? A quarter inch of snow. Go back and read that again. No, your eyes aren't playing tricks on you. In all fairness, there was black ice under the snow. But even so, having spent my entire life either as a passenger or a driver on the Long Island Expressway, you'd think I would have seen it all. I have never encountered such traffic.

We never did make it to the airport that night. When we finally reached an exit (at about 1 a.m.,) and made it to a gas station, we had to wait on a long line, and two of the pumps were out of gas. The porta-potty my daughter so desperately needed to use was padlocked. When we found a convenience store, the restroom lines were long, filled with folks who, like us, hadn't been able to reach the airport and with NFL jersey-attired fans who were trying to make it home from the Monday night football game.

We even saw a bearded lady. With Italian blood running through my veins, I've had the unfortunate experience of tweezing a stray chin hair here and there. That's not what I'm talking about. This lady had a full goatee. In fact, I wasn't completely sure she was a lady until she actually went into the ladies room ahead of us.

It was like being in a Twin Peaks episode.

On the plus side, when I returned my geraniums were still blooming. And beautifully. It's good to be home.

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