Seed selecting

Just when all the gardens have been put to bed, it is time to order seeds for the coming year. I get most of mine from Fedco Seeds, which has a great selection of heirlooms as well as good prices. Before I order, I go through the seeds I still have from the prior year […]

Continue Reading

Holiday crafts

The last virtual class on seasonal decorations that I did for my clients at @annsplaceinc I ran short of materials . . . . .for me. I had given nearly all my material on hand for this class to my clients and had forgotten to save some. I was able to scrounge up a pine […]

Continue Reading

Christmas greens

The Christmas fern is aptly named, this very green sample nestled in the leaf litter in the back. In the cold of Winter, eyes seek any type of color in the landscape and this native North American fern pops sitting among the grey, rotting leaves. Unlike the larger and more showy natives like the royal […]

Continue Reading

Merry Christmas!

Finally! The Christmas tree and nativity are up. The tree was cut a few weeks ago when snow still coated the ground. For the last five years or so, we have been harvesting our tree from the yard, where I planted a dozen Norway spruces a few years back. (The softer needled fir stands little […]

Continue Reading

Winter ready

Winter is still a few days away and the back yard is poised to accept its seasonal role. Nearly all of the leaves of the deciduous trees have abandoned their prior homes, settling down and providing a blanket for the soil. The first significant snow of the season covers the ground creating a clean, clear […]

Continue Reading

Nature’s thermometer

Though it appears that the rhododendrons are cowering, they are just reacting to this morning’s cold. At 17 degrees F, they are not the only things that appear to be shivering. Rhododendrons are nature’s thermometer as their leaves shrivel the colder it gets below freezing. There are manny reasons cited for this, but there is […]

Continue Reading

A fine meal

The garden in December continues to deliver meals. This dinner—potato-leek soup,Swiss chard-ham quiche, radish and greens salad, potato bread—came out of the garden fresh as could be. The salad was particularly amazing with new greens emerging and the radishes holding up against the daily frosts. We still have some leeks in the garden that have […]

Continue Reading

Late greens

My September seeding of claytonia (miner’s lettuce) is paying off in the cold frame as its leaves are ready to munch on. Though some of the more delicate greens are fading, this one pops back even after the coldest of mornings. I place a heart-shaped leaf into my mouth and bite down. A slight sweetness […]

Continue Reading

Christmas lights

Crisp and clear nights show off the lights we have positioned around the house. Last year, for the first time, I put Christmas lights on the greenhouse and was pleasantly surprised on its festive appearance during the night. The microgreens and rosemary bushes within its space sit transfixed by the reflective light penetrating its insides. […]

Continue Reading

Colder days ahead

Now that we have reached December, the beds have been cleaned, the bulbs planted, the flowers have faded, and the garden is desolate. Even the long persistent yellow flowers of witch hazel are gone following the examples of all other deciduous shrubs and trees. Seed heads of our coneflowers stand alone, waiting to be eaten […]

Continue Reading