Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Producing More Bell Peppers and Wilting Tomato Vines


I have Cosmos, Zinias, Zuccini all sprouting. I have tons of sweet cucumbers still coming on and on and on. I bottled pickles last week! what a blast. I have basil and bell peppers still alive and about 3 straggly tomato plants. What do I do to keep the latter one alive and what do I do to maximize my bell peppers?

Kristin

Sunday, August 24, 2008

September Meeting Announcement

It’s time to start thinking about gardening again. In no time at all it will be time to start your fall garden. I hope everyone is excited about the upcoming planting season. Now, is a great time to start thinking about how you want to supplement that high grocery bill with fresh, yummy veggies. As I mentioned before, Sandy Allen and I have been taking the Master Gardener Program through the Maricopa Extension Office. We recently participated in a propagation clinic. We learned how to propagate new plants from old plants, how to start seeds, and transplant new seedlings. We want to share this information with your, and hope this will be beneficial to old and new gardeners alike. We learned some really exciting things, that will dramatically cut the costs of the plants you buy, and give you some added knowledge for a successful home garden. We are also planning to have some seeds and plants to get you started. The clinic will also be in combination with our semi-annual plant and seed exchange, so please bring any seeds or plants you want to share. Because we will need tables, and some extra room we will be holding our clinic at the church in the Relief Society Room at 10 a.m., Saturday, September 6th. I ask that those of you planning to come to please rsvp me, because we will be bringing supplies for this clinic and need to have a general idea of how many will be attending. Please feel free to invite neighbors and friends.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Low Desert Landscape Design-Intro

Low Desert Landscape Design-Intro

Low Desert Landscape Design - Introduction

Time and again I receive questions from people, who have moved from zones 6 & 7, wondering what they can plant other than a lawn will be artistically pleasing, and not emerge like the cookie cutter yardscapes peppering the valley. Replicating the practices of their previous yards of the north, new desert inhabitants run into immense problems. These visionary transplants often end up with dead plants, multiple weeds, and mounds of frustration. This common cycle of landscape habits often drives the disgruntled homeowner into planting a gravel lawn, and sowing various, colorful boulders now decorating numerous neighborhoods of the urban wilderness.

This article launches a series of articles on basic principles of design for landscapes in the low desert. Often desert dwellers like you are overwhelmed with the task of designing a new, aesthetic, and practical landscape. You journey to the bookstores with bright hopes of discovering just the right book that will give you the seeds of knowledge needed for the desert oasis. To your delight you discover there are many books that have page after page on designing a landscape. Unfortunately, after careful observation and sometimes experimentation you discover there are few books that address the unique environment of the desert southwest. You are disappointed to find that these books are geared for the northern United States. Without knowledge of the unbearable heat, short season cycles, and often severe weather patterns, you will inevitably resort to the easy, but dull solution of the gravel sod with no hope of having one living thing to occupy your outside space. Fortunately, not all is lost and there is hope for those of you longing for gratifying scenery out the front door can escape the hot, dull, infamous rock garden.

This series will give these sad landscapers renewed optimism because it will contain advice for designing your landscapes specifically for the low desert. The series will help you create a successful landscape that you will be proud to show off. I will include information to help you:
 Determine what flavor or theme you want you want your landscape to be,
 Help you assess and take full advantage of your current resources
 Establish a design that is aesthetic, and harmonious in rhythm, color and layout,
 Provide suggestions and examples of plants, shrubs and trees that work well here in the low desert

Whether you have a new home providing a completely clean canvas to work with, or a homeowner who wants to spruce up the old landscape, you will find useful information and perhaps a few new ideas to try. With these articles in hand, along with a healthy dose of imagination, your landscape will look so professional that neighbors and friends will be asking for your landscaper’s business card.