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Ok, Ok, I did see the lawn creeping up on the
closet bed (I call it that because a Climbing Joseph's Coat rose hangs on an
arbor there). I did see it and I really did intend to get back out there and
yank it out. In fact, I was even going to put down some edging, but I didn't
have any... I would have to go to the store and we needed groceries.... if I
went I really should pick up them up too, but I didn't have the list ready and I
needed gas and cash and that would require a stop at the ATM and the gas
station. I also had been digging all morning and looked like it, I would want to
change, but my good jeans needed to be washed and ..... I was out of laundry
soap. Now reread this paragraph for the next 52 Saturdays and you will come to
understand why the grass, concerned only with total domination, has the upper
hand in the battle for the closet bed ...so much for good intentions.
I have been trying to get my hands on The
Well-Tended Perennial Garden for obvious reasons ever since I heard about it in
1998. Well, I have and now I must tell you you need to buy this book. The
waiting list at the library is long so my best advice is to add it to your
Christmas wish list and hope Santa has plenty. This is truly ground-breaking
information that you will refer to often. My garden has moments of true beauty,
but rarely can I string together more than a week when I am satisfied with what
I have done. In the past I have checked this off as one of the inherent
challenges of gardening and gone off to create another garden in another place
that will look pretty in July. I spend the summer moving my chair around my yard
from spot to spot looking for something that pleases me. I have discovered it
hasn't necessarily been the rules of nature or the limitations of my plants, but
my own ignorance of the plants I have tried to grow well that has frustrated my
gardening experience. As I have already pointed out staying on top of things is
not necessarily what I do best ...Ms. DiSabato-Aust has advice for people just
like me. She broadens the usual soil preparation discussion with exact
proportions and testing specifications and explains very clearly why having
great garden soil eases maintenance and helps make a beautiful garden possible.
Ms. DiSabato-Aust has spent years studying and practicing cause and effect in
her perennial garden. As a consequence she is able to tell us when it is best to
prune, deadhead, pinch back, thin, disbud, cut back and deadleaf to which
perennial to get the absolute best from our plants. Have you ever been
encouraged to prune parts of the same plant at two week intervals to extend it's
bloom time? I haven't, but what an interesting idea. There are basic discussions
of perennial garden planting and maintenance, including chapters on design, bed
preparation, planting and establishment, pests and diseases, staking, division,
and how to renovate an established perennial garden. The second section is
devoted to the various techniques we need to practice to become true artists
when we prune.
The plant encyclopedia alone is worth the price of
the book. It is an extensive catalog of most garden perennials; they are fully
described and their specific pruning and maintenance needs listed in a step by
step format. You will pull this book off the shelf and read up on every new
plant you buy! The appendices offer a month-to-month schedule of perennial
garden chores and lists of perennials for specific pruning and maintenance
requirements. All of this information is presented in a easy-going style that is
simple to read and understand.
This spring my grand-daughter and I colored
Easter eggs. They were beautiful and I wanted a special way to display them. I
found an old wire bucket, lined it with moss (the very same stuff that was
intent on strangling the life out of my lawn ...I did spread the lime shortly
afterward) and dug a shovel full of the errant grass in the coat bed that had
conveniently surrounded a blooming clump of daffodils. The dirt, bulbs and grass
went into the moss lined bucket with the Easter eggs tucked in on top. It was
both beautiful and special, Martha couldn't have planned the effect any better.
There truly is great reward in the garden for even the worst of us.
Intent on tending well, Dee
Buy
This Book
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