Friday, May 24, 2013
Friday, May 3, 2013
Garden Coaching: What is It?
Simply put, garden coaching is like any other coaching. A person with experience guides another person. It could also be called garden mentoring. Recently there has been an increase in home gardening, especially vegetable gardening. When a person is just learning or is moving to a new place, they might want someone to help figure out next steps. Whether you want a flower garden or a vegetable garden, it should be a fun process for all involved.
As a Garden Coach, I do not do the actual installations but I teach you how to develop your own garden. Here are a few types of situations that might be aided by a garden coach:
-planning a garden for a new home (or renovating an existing one)
-planting a perennial bed, a cutting garden, a cottage garden, children's garden , etc.
-improving your property if you want to put your property on the market
-analyzing what will grow best on your property, sketching a plan
-tips on what tools, soils and plants you can use and where to get them
-go to the nursery to choose plants if you wish
-starting a vegetable or herb garden
-developing a maintenance plan including teaching you how to prune, water, weed, etc.
-incorporating your goals for conservation and environmental responsibility into your garden
If you are more interested, check out my garden coach blog at gardencoachws.blogspot.com
As a Garden Coach, I do not do the actual installations but I teach you how to develop your own garden. Here are a few types of situations that might be aided by a garden coach:
-planning a garden for a new home (or renovating an existing one)
-planting a perennial bed, a cutting garden, a cottage garden, children's garden , etc.
-improving your property if you want to put your property on the market
-analyzing what will grow best on your property, sketching a plan
-tips on what tools, soils and plants you can use and where to get them
-go to the nursery to choose plants if you wish
-starting a vegetable or herb garden
-developing a maintenance plan including teaching you how to prune, water, weed, etc.
-incorporating your goals for conservation and environmental responsibility into your garden
If you are more interested, check out my garden coach blog at gardencoachws.blogspot.com
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Monday, December 27, 2010
Books and such
While the snow is on the ground, gardeners can relax from the busy times of the planting seasons. I just got my first two catalogues. Cook's Garden catalogue is a feast for the eyes. It's a good time to plan as well. I will begin to look at my notes from last year and think about how to move things around, where to start new flower beds, etc. I don't think I will do much winter sowing unless I direct sow larkspur and other hardy annuals. I will really push the envelope by planting some daffodils that never got into the ground. I planted them as late as Christmas in New York and am not sure I can get by with that here in WS. Meanwhile at the Food Bank Farm we have truckloads of leaves to get distributed into the fields in time to decompose for the spring planting.
Since January and February provide a great time to dig into gardening books, I want to remind folks to look at the book Community Garden, published by Brooklyn Botanic Garden a year ago. Hopefully, it will inspire you to look at ways to start your own community garden.
Since January and February provide a great time to dig into gardening books, I want to remind folks to look at the book Community Garden, published by Brooklyn Botanic Garden a year ago. Hopefully, it will inspire you to look at ways to start your own community garden.
Labels:
books,
community gardening,
community gardening/,
January,
Planning
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Winter Beauty Camellias
I'm introducing this series of posts on winter gardening with this most beautiful Camellia that was planted in my yard near the front door by the previous occupants. It blooms every winter. These flowers often seem "out of sync" with the rest of the landscape at this time of year but I love it. According to the NC State Extension another good choices for winter color is Camellia x 'Crimson Candles'. The new foliage is bronze- red, and the flowers bloom in Feb and March. Both these plants can withstand night temperatures in the 20s and is hardy in USDA zones 7 through 9.
Monday, August 9, 2010
Home from Hotlanta...American Commmunity Gardening Association Fabulous Annual Conference
| Participants loved to explore the gardens...this is the Dill Street Community Garden that is part of the Sullivan Community Center in Atlanta |
I haven't blogged in a while but am still on a "high" from a fabulous annual conference for ACGA and NEED to write about it because it was so wonderful. Previous conferences have been held in Portland (Oregon), Indianapolis, Chicago, Philadelphia, NYC, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Toronto, Boston, Columbus (Ohio) and Atlanta again (did I forget any?). This conference took place August 6-8 at the Loudermilk Center in downtown Atlanta.
The mood of the conference was enthusiastic, inspiring and hopeful. There was amazing energy among a truly diverse group of nearly 300 participants of all ages and backgrounds. The conference was filled with great workshops, garden tours and excellent speakers (including First Lady Michelle Obama via videotape about the White House vegetable garden and her commitment to fighting child obesity). The theme "A Holistic Approach to Building Sustainable and Healthy Communities " was carried out beautifully with an emphasis on how community gardens can be a force in preventing childhood obesity and promoting child health. Speakers and workshops gave great examples of how this is being done in schools, community gardens, food banks, etc.
Two workshops that I attended were outstanding.
| Bikes and busses were the methods of transportation to visit community gardens |
| Founder of a booming neighborhood community garden in a lot behind her backyard |
| Participant from a new citywide program in San Francisco |
The Mother Hubbard's Cupboard is a food pantry in Bloomington Indiana. Leader Stephanie Solomon led a workshop "Growing Food Access: Garden Education at the Food Pantry". Mother Hubbard sponsors four gardens which are tended by those who receive food from the food pantry. Stephanie shared great ideas for connecting families with healthy eating habits.
I left feeling in awe of how brilliantly these women are organizing truly "holistic" programs.
| Dill Street Community Garden Program of Sullivan Community Center |
| (Top)Atlanta's Community ToolBank progam that lends tools for communtiy programs (Bottom) Tool shed that has a solar panel to provide power for lights and sound systems) |
| Experienced and enthusasitc gardener tells us about her plants including this awesome Princess Amaranth |
My only regret is not having photos of a fabulous party on Saturday night at the Urban Metro Farm with every kind of southern food, a blues band and a tour of their new farm. A silent auction yielded $1500 for ACGA.
| Ursula Chance from Bronx Greenup...checking out that mulch! |
I returned home feeling renewed and refreshed. I'm inspired to keep connecting with these great people, especially those in our NC gardens and to improve our Food Bank Community Garden here in Winston-Salem. (http://www.foodbankgarden.blogspot.com/)
Thanks to the organizers and the great participants. Bobby Wilson and Kathy Walker of Fulton County Extension are the best!
For more information about the American Community Gardening Association, go to http://www.communitygarden.org/
Monday, April 5, 2010
Friday, September 18, 2009
Pollination Works!
Ilex
verticullata, a native holly, is one of my favorite plants. I LOVE IT! Anyway, I bought two. You have to have male and female to get berries. The male, quite appropriately is named 'Jim Dandy' and is very low key obviously with no berries. However, he did his work, or at least the pollinators did. The female is full of berries. In addition, and this is the really cool news, there is another very large shrub in my garden which I inherited from a previous owner. I knew it was deciduous but I couldn't figure out what it was. It was so blah that I pruned it back bigtime last spring and was even thinking of taking it down. It had flowers which were very inconsipicuous.
Now, at the end of summer, it is full of berries...amazing, my own very large Ilex verticullata, commonly know as winter berry. When everything else is colorless and bear and bleak, it is in its shining glory.
Continuing to love this tree like shrub, I'm now a total convert to the amazing wonder of pollination.
Now, rush out and get one, but make sure you get two...male and female. I love Jim Dandy.
verticullata, a native holly, is one of my favorite plants. I LOVE IT! Anyway, I bought two. You have to have male and female to get berries. The male, quite appropriately is named 'Jim Dandy' and is very low key obviously with no berries. However, he did his work, or at least the pollinators did. The female is full of berries. In addition, and this is the really cool news, there is another very large shrub in my garden which I inherited from a previous owner. I knew it was deciduous but I couldn't figure out what it was. It was so blah that I pruned it back bigtime last spring and was even thinking of taking it down. It had flowers which were very inconsipicuous.
Now, at the end of summer, it is full of berries...amazing, my own very large Ilex verticullata, commonly know as winter berry. When everything else is colorless and bear and bleak, it is in its shining glory.
Continuing to love this tree like shrub, I'm now a total convert to the amazing wonder of pollination.
Now, rush out and get one, but make sure you get two...male and female. I love Jim Dandy.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Making Our Water Garden

Richard and I put together our water garden ourselves, after much consideration of whether we could do it. Of course, getting prices from professionals gave us a pretty good idea we would have to do it ourselves or not at all. We drew our plan, had a big hole dug, got the flexible liner, skimmer box, water fall, plumbing things, some water plants ( water lilies, pickerel weed, acoris, etc.) We ordered a ton of stones and put them around the edges.
We love to sit on our deck listening to the sound of the water fall and watching the dragon flies, fish, flowers on the water lilies and anything else. There is a lot of life in a pond. We had two frog visitors but they only stayed a few days.
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Thursday, July 2, 2009
The Good, the Bad and It Depends Where You Are
I haven't blogged for a while and have a lot of catching up to do. Of course, everyone out there knows that this time of year is more doing than thinking and I have been totally immersed in the world outdoors, plus my computer died. Now I'm back in action during the middle of the day when it's just too hot to be outside in North Carolina.
I decided to write about my experience in NC vs. my experience in Brooklyn, NY. It's amazing that even though I garden in both which share Zone 7, there is a huge difference in what goes well here and there and here and there.
Comparison of specific plants that grow well for me here (in my sunny hot location) and there (in my Brooklyn shade garden). Lest you say, aha, it's sun vs. shade, I know many of these plants growing in full sun at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in NYC and Reynolda Gardens here in NC.
Shasta Daisies.....totally a winner in NC and always a failure for my in Blyn.
Hydrangeas........totally a winner in NYC and not so hot for me here in NC
Oakleaf Hydrangeas.....the MOST beautiful flowers in my Brooklyn shade garden; just planted one here in NC....we will see. After all it's a native to the south east.
Day lilies..............totally a winner in NC and not so hot in NYC, except the NY Botanical garden where they have an extraordinary day lily collection
Hostas........I guess it depends on the variety as some do well here in NC but one which was spectacular in my Brooklyn garden did not do well as a transplant here. I tried seveal times iin the shadiest part of my garden; meanwhile,other hostas are doing great. Conclusion is that it depends on the variety.
Cercis canadensis "Redbud" ....Fabulous in NC, the woods are full of them blooming in the spring; a rarity in NYC
Crape Myrtles.....Fabulous and probably over used in NC; just beginning to be known and popular in NY.. Brooklyn Botanic garden has a terrific collection.
Balloon flowers....great in NC; never grew them in NYC
Lavender....Have great luck in NC with plants I bought in Long Island; never could grow them in NYC
Nepeta....Grows well here but really falls apart when it gets hot; much longer bloom time in NYC
Echinacea....They are fabulous in NYC and I wasn't able to get much bloom until this year, 3 years after planting
Rudbekkia....Great in both places
Lilacs...Unbelievable in NYC and very rare in NC. I've seen one this season.
Why these differences....Soil is VERY different. In NC it's clay and in Brooklyn, well it has more organic material and lots more rock. In NC the winter is about a month shorter so everything is at least two to four weeks ahead. Heat and humidity....higer in NC. Amount of rain; can vary totally. This year NC is having fair amount of rain and NYC is having huge amounts of rain. When I recently visited NY I can never remember, in the 40 years of living there that the tree canopy from the air was as green and lush as it is now.
Of course, the fall leaves are another topic as they are very different in NC and NY. Will wait for that until my October report. Meanwhile Ithink I'll go have a glass of sweet ice tea.
I decided to write about my experience in NC vs. my experience in Brooklyn, NY. It's amazing that even though I garden in both which share Zone 7, there is a huge difference in what goes well here and there and here and there.
Comparison of specific plants that grow well for me here (in my sunny hot location) and there (in my Brooklyn shade garden). Lest you say, aha, it's sun vs. shade, I know many of these plants growing in full sun at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in NYC and Reynolda Gardens here in NC.
Shasta Daisies.....totally a winner in NC and always a failure for my in Blyn.
Hydrangeas........totally a winner in NYC and not so hot for me here in NC
Oakleaf Hydrangeas.....the MOST beautiful flowers in my Brooklyn shade garden; just planted one here in NC....we will see. After all it's a native to the south east.
Day lilies..............totally a winner in NC and not so hot in NYC, except the NY Botanical garden where they have an extraordinary day lily collection
Hostas........I guess it depends on the variety as some do well here in NC but one which was spectacular in my Brooklyn garden did not do well as a transplant here. I tried seveal times iin the shadiest part of my garden; meanwhile,other hostas are doing great. Conclusion is that it depends on the variety.
Cercis canadensis "Redbud" ....Fabulous in NC, the woods are full of them blooming in the spring; a rarity in NYC
Crape Myrtles.....Fabulous and probably over used in NC; just beginning to be known and popular in NY.. Brooklyn Botanic garden has a terrific collection.
Balloon flowers....great in NC; never grew them in NYC
Lavender....Have great luck in NC with plants I bought in Long Island; never could grow them in NYC
Nepeta....Grows well here but really falls apart when it gets hot; much longer bloom time in NYC
Echinacea....They are fabulous in NYC and I wasn't able to get much bloom until this year, 3 years after planting
Rudbekkia....Great in both places
Lilacs...Unbelievable in NYC and very rare in NC. I've seen one this season.
Why these differences....Soil is VERY different. In NC it's clay and in Brooklyn, well it has more organic material and lots more rock. In NC the winter is about a month shorter so everything is at least two to four weeks ahead. Heat and humidity....higer in NC. Amount of rain; can vary totally. This year NC is having fair amount of rain and NYC is having huge amounts of rain. When I recently visited NY I can never remember, in the 40 years of living there that the tree canopy from the air was as green and lush as it is now.
Of course, the fall leaves are another topic as they are very different in NC and NY. Will wait for that until my October report. Meanwhile Ithink I'll go have a glass of sweet ice tea.
Monday, May 11, 2009
My organic roses
What can be more beautiful than the first roses of spring? These blooms, photographed on Mother's Day are my gift to myself. I am trying to use all organic practices....constantly enriching the soil, mulching, using organic spray, removing Japanese beetles by hand, organic fertilizers, etc. The proof will be as the summer progresses. I also water with underground irrigation and also my rain barrel collection. All of the collected water goes into my roses. I'm in Zone 7 in Winston-Salem, NC.
More later as the summer progresses and I get more photos. For more on roses, also see the post on my friend Kay's beautiful rose garden in Raleigh, NC.
More later as the summer progresses and I get more photos. For more on roses, also see the post on my friend Kay's beautiful rose garden in Raleigh, NC.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Community Gardening Guidebook Goes into Second Printing!
Monday, March 2, 2009
Installing a Rain Barrel Step by Step
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Community Gardens Grow Healthy Food!

Sunday, January 25, 2009
COMPOSTING


Although this photo of Susan JOhnson in Brooklyn was taken last fall, it oculd have been here in Winston-Salem yesterday. It was in the mid 50 degrees and sunny. After several days of temps in the mid 50's it was a great day to work the soil Such a day gives a healthy dose of spring fever! I ventured into my garden to take soil test samples. I'm sending four to the Ag Extension Service in Raleigh (see my column on soil testing). I took samples from each of four gardens; rose garden, little forest area, perennial flower border and vegetable garden. It was great to dig in the soil. But, the real excitement came from harvesting compost! We put all our kitchen cuttings and coffee grounds (filters and all) into the compost on a regular basis. However, the fall leaves are the biggest part and I had to plow through a pile of them to get to the rich compost at the bottom of the bin. (Yes, I know I should be layering the leaves and the kitchen material to get a proper carbon nitrogen mix, but I will do that task later). I have a three level bin made of recycled plastic (purchased from Smith and Hawken) so I took off the top section and removed the contents then the second section. I got to the compost in the bottom section. Rich, finished and full of earthworms. The sight of the earthworms gave me the biggest thrill because that tells me the compost system is really working. I removed about 30 gallons of finished compost and put that into our vegetable beds (we have raised beds) as well as several large containers which I will spread into other parts of the garden. The photos are ones of the compost harvest in the Schaef Earth Garden. I will add some photos of my compost here in North Carolina asap.
Compost is the supreme soil amendment to add structure and organic material to your soil, something we DESPERATELY need with our clay soil here in North Carolina. It enhances plant growth, helps with water retention (especially to create a drought tolerant garden) and is easy to make yourself. Winter is a great time to add to the garden before the spring rush of planting.
Home composting saves money too and you know what's in it because you put it there.
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Winter Sowing Containers



I decided to see how many different kinds of containers I could use. And, I wanted to recycle as many different things as I could. Now, I look at every container to think about it's potential to plant seeds. The ones I have used so far are:
Large clear plastic container (as you put under your bed to store sweaters) with plastic baggies. I removed the plastic top but be sure to put it on and to drill holes in the top. Photo 3.
Other examples: Ice cream cartons, Soda bottles, Empty Canola Oil bottle, Styrofoam cups, strawberry container from grocery store. If you go to the winter sowing website they have more details and even more container options. Photo 2.
The first seeds that sprouted were mesclun seeds (took about ten days). The temps have been below freezing all the way up to the 50's but it doesn't seem to matter. Chard is also coming up. Don't forget to keep the containers covered with a baggie but make little vent holes.
Also, these styrofoam cups in photo 2 were cut in half and I will use both the tops and the bottoms.
Winter sowing is addictive. This is my first year and I'm already convinced it works. It's so much easier than seed starting indoors as you are letting nature take care of all the guesswork, etc. For a comparison I'm also planting seeds indoors of similar or same varieties. Will try to see what does best and is the most successful. Watch for future reports.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Winter Container Gardening

I decided to add an evergreen to the containers on my stoop when the summer and fall plants bit the dust. I figured I could move the plant to my perennial border in the spring and start all over again. I found these Dwarf Hinoki Cypress (Chamecyparis obtusa 'Golden Sprite' that were about the right size. They are very compact and do just the trick to bring some green into the otherwise bare containers.
Grasses (miscanthus zebrina)
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Kay's Rose Garden in Raleigh NC
My friend Kay has been growing roses in a lovely space beside her home with a backdrop of New Dawn's on a fence and a collection of nearly twenty varieties including St. Patrick, Touch of Class, Mr. Lincoln, Voluptuous, Mr. Lincoln, Garden Party among others. Her home is filled with vases of the finest roses and she gives away roses to friends and family. One of her rose photos was featured in the Raleigh News and Observer.
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