Check out this new fun product in our stores now!
Moss Milkshake is for anyone with a shaded area. This dry mix is a unique blend of fragmented moss plants and natural growth stimulants. Gardeners simply add water or shake out on bare soil and then water. Moss is environmentally friendly and requires no mowing, chemicals or watering once established.
Available at all Sloat Garden Center locations except for our Danville and San Rafael locations.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Sloat Garden Design Department in Marin Magazine - May Issue
An Eastern Motif
In the fall of 2009, Gloria Sanchez of Sloat Garden Center’s design department got a call from a Novato home owner who wanted to continue the Asian motif in the garden begun by her father and to integrate the three pine trees he’d planted in the front yard more than 30 years ago.
The two-story hillside home has two extreme microclimates—-a front garden exposed to deer, full sun and afternoon winds, and a fenced back garden shaded by a canopy of redwood and cypress trees.
When you think of all the beautiful Japanese gardens in foggy San Francisco, it’s difficult to imagine installing one in Novato’s hot climate. Can it work?
Gloria Sanchez: Yes, there are a lot of similarities, especially with the windswept elements. And there are a number of plants that work well —mugo pine, pittosporum, nandina.
Any challenges?
GS: A drainage canal that ran the length of the backyard! But working with a negative aspect of a site can very often make it the most distinctive part of the design. We made it into a “creek bed” by painting the exposed concrete sides with a product called Moss Mikshake to encourage moss to grow, filling the center with rocks and pebbles, and planting it with ferns, daphnes, Japanese anemones, pieris, rhododendrons and azaleas.
The mix of foliage and blooming plants really ties the space together. Finally, we placed three wooden bridges across the “creek” and added some step stones.
What about surprises?
GS: The back garden was so overgrown that our client never spent any time there, especially since she had such nice views from her upper deck. But we created a river-washed stone staircase and added a small patio in the back that now gives her a nice place to sit in the shaded part of the garden and look out over the rolling hills.
Sloat Garden Center design department, 401 Miller Ave., Mill Valley, 415.388.3754
In the fall of 2009, Gloria Sanchez of Sloat Garden Center’s design department got a call from a Novato home owner who wanted to continue the Asian motif in the garden begun by her father and to integrate the three pine trees he’d planted in the front yard more than 30 years ago.
The two-story hillside home has two extreme microclimates—-a front garden exposed to deer, full sun and afternoon winds, and a fenced back garden shaded by a canopy of redwood and cypress trees.
When you think of all the beautiful Japanese gardens in foggy San Francisco, it’s difficult to imagine installing one in Novato’s hot climate. Can it work?
Gloria Sanchez: Yes, there are a lot of similarities, especially with the windswept elements. And there are a number of plants that work well —mugo pine, pittosporum, nandina.
Any challenges?
GS: A drainage canal that ran the length of the backyard! But working with a negative aspect of a site can very often make it the most distinctive part of the design. We made it into a “creek bed” by painting the exposed concrete sides with a product called Moss Mikshake to encourage moss to grow, filling the center with rocks and pebbles, and planting it with ferns, daphnes, Japanese anemones, pieris, rhododendrons and azaleas.
The mix of foliage and blooming plants really ties the space together. Finally, we placed three wooden bridges across the “creek” and added some step stones.
What about surprises?
GS: The back garden was so overgrown that our client never spent any time there, especially since she had such nice views from her upper deck. But we created a river-washed stone staircase and added a small patio in the back that now gives her a nice place to sit in the shaded part of the garden and look out over the rolling hills.
Sloat Garden Center design department, 401 Miller Ave., Mill Valley, 415.388.3754
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
The spittle bugs have returned!
The spittle bugs have returned. Soon you will start to see globs of foam on some perennials, grasses and leafy shrubs that resembles, well, spit.
Spittle bugs are the nymphs of an insect related to leafhoppers known as frog hoppers. They hatch from eggs laid in late summer that overwinter on susceptible plant stems and debris. The nymphs secrete the froth to protect themselves from predators, provide insulation from temperature extremes and to keep themselves from drying out.
The nymphs feed by sucking the plant juices. Damage to the host plant is usually negligible and the use of sprays is not warranted. Hosing off the affected plants with water is all that is needed to control them. It takes about 5 weeks for the nymphs to become adults at which time, the “spit” will disappear. Very rarely, thick infestations can cause distortion of new growth and stunting. If so, Rose Defense or Bonide 3 Rx will bring them under control.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Add architectural interest with restios
from SFGATE.com
One increasingly popular way for gardeners to add texture and form to their gardens these days is through the use of grasses. The range of choices is extensive, but as the availability of South African plants continues to expand, adventurous gardeners are discovering a group of bamboo-like plants named restios. Members of this diverse family (Restionaceae) range in height from 4 inches to 10 feet and resemble a graceful cocktail of grass, rush, bamboo and horsetail.
In the absence of leaves, restios' vertical stems, called culms, take over the job of photosynthesis. Restios may not have leaves but they are decorated with papery leaf sheaths that cling to the culms like parchment, providing an eye-catching pattern of tan and greens, silver-grays or glaucous-blues.
Restio's petite flowers are displayed in summer spikelets and held in inflorescences at the tip of the culms. The arching seedheads, showcasing coppers, bronzes and golds, offer a soft crown to the clean vertical lines of the restio culms. The combination is both breathtaking and elegant.
One of the best and most adaptable evergreen restios is R. quadratus, featuring distinctive, thick square culms. Reaching 6 feet in height, it forms a striking clump of architectural foliage when mature. Even the young canes are attractive, featuring luscious, soft-green feathery foliage.
Restios fit nicely in a Mediterranean planting bed and can be used as a tall border or to add architectural interest. These tough, adaptable plants make dramatic potted plants and are spectacular in the margins of water features.
Restios at rest
The most widely cultivated of restios is Elegia capensis. It is also one of the most beautiful, branched in attractive whorls encircling the culms, reminding some of a more elegant horsetail. Chondropetalum tectorum features slim culms topped by spiraling, dark inflorescences. Its compact, tufted form shimmers like fiber optic reeds in the breeze. Thamnochortus insignis are tall, reed-like tussocks whose rose-colored feathery male flowers produce pollen in such large amounts that female bees hover around all day. Cannomois grandis is a beautiful, large restio whose culms have persistent reddish-pink sheaths and drooping hair-like foliage.
Cultivation
Restios are best grown in full sun in well-drained acidic soil, requiring regular water to get established then less as plants mature. Restios are used to minimal phosphorus in their homeland so use nitrogen-based amendments. Protect rhizomes from extreme cold with location and thick mulching. These are low-maintenance plants, with only the occasional cleanup needed. Mature plants can be divided in the autumn but take care to disturb the roots as little as possible. R. quadratus is hardy to 20 degrees.
Pests & diseases
Restios are generally very durable plants but can suffer the occasional mildew.
Availability
Several of the restios mentioned here will be featured at the Merritt College spring plant sale. You can find selections at full-service nurseries. To view restios in their full mature glory, check out the nearest botanical garden.
Erle Nickel is a nurseryman, gardening writer and photographer who cares for a sprawling Oakland garden. E-mail him at enickel9@live.com and check out his blog at normsnursery.blogspot.com.
This article appeared on page L - 3 of the San Francisco Chronicle
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2010/04/25/HOCO1CU15J.DTL#ixzz0mFqDCVP3
Erle Nickel
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Sunday, April 25, 2010
(Restios are available now at sloat garden center)
One increasingly popular way for gardeners to add texture and form to their gardens these days is through the use of grasses. The range of choices is extensive, but as the availability of South African plants continues to expand, adventurous gardeners are discovering a group of bamboo-like plants named restios. Members of this diverse family (Restionaceae) range in height from 4 inches to 10 feet and resemble a graceful cocktail of grass, rush, bamboo and horsetail.
In the absence of leaves, restios' vertical stems, called culms, take over the job of photosynthesis. Restios may not have leaves but they are decorated with papery leaf sheaths that cling to the culms like parchment, providing an eye-catching pattern of tan and greens, silver-grays or glaucous-blues.
Restio's petite flowers are displayed in summer spikelets and held in inflorescences at the tip of the culms. The arching seedheads, showcasing coppers, bronzes and golds, offer a soft crown to the clean vertical lines of the restio culms. The combination is both breathtaking and elegant.
One of the best and most adaptable evergreen restios is R. quadratus, featuring distinctive, thick square culms. Reaching 6 feet in height, it forms a striking clump of architectural foliage when mature. Even the young canes are attractive, featuring luscious, soft-green feathery foliage.
Restios fit nicely in a Mediterranean planting bed and can be used as a tall border or to add architectural interest. These tough, adaptable plants make dramatic potted plants and are spectacular in the margins of water features.
Restios at rest
The most widely cultivated of restios is Elegia capensis. It is also one of the most beautiful, branched in attractive whorls encircling the culms, reminding some of a more elegant horsetail. Chondropetalum tectorum features slim culms topped by spiraling, dark inflorescences. Its compact, tufted form shimmers like fiber optic reeds in the breeze. Thamnochortus insignis are tall, reed-like tussocks whose rose-colored feathery male flowers produce pollen in such large amounts that female bees hover around all day. Cannomois grandis is a beautiful, large restio whose culms have persistent reddish-pink sheaths and drooping hair-like foliage.
Cultivation
Restios are best grown in full sun in well-drained acidic soil, requiring regular water to get established then less as plants mature. Restios are used to minimal phosphorus in their homeland so use nitrogen-based amendments. Protect rhizomes from extreme cold with location and thick mulching. These are low-maintenance plants, with only the occasional cleanup needed. Mature plants can be divided in the autumn but take care to disturb the roots as little as possible. R. quadratus is hardy to 20 degrees.
Pests & diseases
Restios are generally very durable plants but can suffer the occasional mildew.
Availability
Several of the restios mentioned here will be featured at the Merritt College spring plant sale. You can find selections at full-service nurseries. To view restios in their full mature glory, check out the nearest botanical garden.
Erle Nickel is a nurseryman, gardening writer and photographer who cares for a sprawling Oakland garden. E-mail him at enickel9@live.com and check out his blog at normsnursery.blogspot.com.
This article appeared on page L - 3 of the San Francisco Chronicle
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2010/04/25/HOCO1CU15J.DTL#ixzz0mFqDCVP3
Friday, April 23, 2010
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Grow Your Own Oyster Mushrooms
New in our stores...Grow it at Home Mushroom Kits!
Harvest fresh oyster mushrooms with this Grow it at Home Mushroom Kit (uses sustainably grown and recycled coffee grounds)
• Low maintenance (mist quickly twice a day)
• Yields 1 pound of fresh mushrooms
• Grow near an open window in either indirect or direct light
• Can be kept in a fridge, freezer or room temperature closet before use
• Expect the first crop in as little as 10 days, and each subsequent crop in 10 – 14 day intervals
• Mushrooms are ready to harvest when the caps are approx 1–2" in diameter
• Oyster mushrooms are celebrated for their health benefits, and immune boosting antioxidants. Use them in salads, pastas and main dishes.
$19.99 regularly $24.99 (valid through April 30, 2010)
Harvest fresh oyster mushrooms with this Grow it at Home Mushroom Kit (uses sustainably grown and recycled coffee grounds)
• Low maintenance (mist quickly twice a day)
• Yields 1 pound of fresh mushrooms
• Grow near an open window in either indirect or direct light
• Can be kept in a fridge, freezer or room temperature closet before use
• Expect the first crop in as little as 10 days, and each subsequent crop in 10 – 14 day intervals
• Mushrooms are ready to harvest when the caps are approx 1–2" in diameter
• Oyster mushrooms are celebrated for their health benefits, and immune boosting antioxidants. Use them in salads, pastas and main dishes.
$19.99 regularly $24.99 (valid through April 30, 2010)
Earth Day is a gardener's gift to the earth.
Earth Day is a gardener's gift to the earth.
We deeply believe that gardening is good for the planet and so we urge every gardener to plant something this Earth Day...
Why? Because as you learned in 6th grade science class, through photosynthesis plants take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen - and that’s a wonderful thing.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Crazy for containers!
(By Botanical Interests Seeds)
Gardeners often ask us, "What can I grow in containers?" Maybe, the better question is "What can't I grow in containers?"With the exception of watermelons just about any flower, herb, and vegetable can be grown successfully in a container!Container plantings are handy for any gardener, because:
* They are practical for urban gardeners, apartment, or town home dwellers with limited space
* They can be moved at will for convenience or aesthetic reasons
* They can 'decorate' your outdoor space, turning a porch, deck, or patio into something as beautiful as a butterfly garden or as delicious as your own private salad bar
* They do not require tilling or weeding.
* They can be moved indoors or covered when frost threatens
* They can be lots of fun to plan and create!
For a fantastic container garden, here are some tips:
Decide if you will be starting the plants indoors then transplanting to the container or sowing the seed directly into the container. (Follow instructions on back of packet based for outside or inside planting, and be sure to thin young seedlings, so they aren't overcrowded.)
Choose the right size for the right plant:5-Gallon containers are the most versatile. They are less likely to blow over in wind, dry out less frequently, and have room for plants with deep roots. It's usually better to go larger with a container than put a plant in a container that's too small. Larger containers are also better for climates that have hot, dry summers. Click here for more tips and a list of recommended container sizes for different vegetables
Use a quality potting soil:
Good potting soil will contain ingredients like compost, perlite, vermiculite, and peat. It will have a light texture with good moisture retentiveness, good drainage ability, and not contain a lot of bark. You don’t have to completely fill a container with potting soil. The bottom third of the container can be filled with a variety of 'fillers' like broken pottery shards, rocks, gravel, or crushed aluminum cans or plastic water bottles (to be recycled later).
Provide adequate drainage: All containers need to have adequate drainage. If your container is solid on the bottom, carefully cut or punch a hole in the bottom to prevent plant roots from sitting in water and rotting. Or, you can just insert a plastic container inside that does have drainage holes. If your container is sitting on a wood deck or concrete patio, you can put a drainage dish underneath to prevent staining.
Keep it watered: Containers may need to be watered once or twice every day to prevent them from drying out. A plant that dries out and wilts may not recover from the stress. You can reduce water needs by using a layer of mulch on top of the soil and putting the containers in an area protected from wind.
Fertilize regularly: Nutrients can leach out of containers with frequent waterings. Follow fertilization instructions inside the seed packet for each variety, but apply a little more frequently for happy container plants. For chemical-free fertilizing, try seaweed extract, well-rotted manure, earthworm castings, or compost.
Don't Overcrowd: Just like in garden beds, young plants in containers need to be thinned and spaced adequately. Plants that are too close together will compete for water and nutrients, resulting in overall weak growth. (Plants that are well established with a good root system can be crowded in closer for a lush design.)
Be Creative! There's no rule that a container must only contain vegetables, herbs, or flowers. Why not mix them? Also, don't forget that vining crops like peas, cucumbers, ornamental gourds, and baby pumpkins can be grown in a container if you provide a trellis inside the container or next to it for them to climb.
Here are some fun ideas for some 'crazy' container plantings:
Hanging Basket – Cherry tomatoes. Vines will hang down over the sides.
Large Sweater boxes – Great for a hodgepodge of lettuce or mesclun
Old Buckets – 1 tomato or pepper plant. Sow cilantro around it.
Whiskey Barrels - 1 winter squash plant
An Old Boot – 1 Swiss Chard plant
A Colorful Plastic Tub – 1 cucumber plant
5-Gallon Recycled Nursery Pot – 1 tomato plant. Sow basil around it.
Wicker Basket – Line with plastic that has drainage holes cut in bottom. 1 bush bean plant or Cherry Belle radishes. (A great use for those inexpensive baskets you find at garage sales and thrift stores.)
Coffee cans – Herbs like thyme, oregano, chervil, or parsley
Large Cookie Jar – Set a plastic pot with drainage holes inside. Sow some pretty annual flowers like alyssum, bachelor buttons, flax, bunny tail grass, impatiens, lobelia, pansies, violas, or nasturtiums.
Ceramic Mixing Bowls – Use an assortment of sizes and set on a patio table. Set a plastic pot inside each with drainage holes. Grow an assortment of greens like lettuce, kale, mache, micro greens, mizuna, spinach, and watercress.
Gallon Milk Jugs – For an attractive display, cut off the top ¼ , wrap in burlap and tie with raffia or string. Grow herbs like chives, dill, or mint, veggies like arugula or amaranth edible red leaf, or ornamentals like coleus and marigolds.
Kitty Litter Tubs – 5 gallon white tubs with handles. Broccoli, cucumbers, eggplant, kohlrabi, okra, peppers, tomatoes. 1 plant per tub. Lots of options!
2-Liter Soda Bottle – Cut off top ¼. Great for herbs or a single flower like a nasturtium or snapdragon. Kids will enjoy seeing the roots grow through the clear plastic.
Chinese Takeout Containers – Grow a quick crop of micro greens.
More fun ideas include: a bicycle basket, old tires, plastic storage bins, wheelbarrows, an old bathtub, a wagon.
Gardeners often ask us, "What can I grow in containers?" Maybe, the better question is "What can't I grow in containers?"With the exception of watermelons just about any flower, herb, and vegetable can be grown successfully in a container!Container plantings are handy for any gardener, because:
* They are practical for urban gardeners, apartment, or town home dwellers with limited space
* They can be moved at will for convenience or aesthetic reasons
* They can 'decorate' your outdoor space, turning a porch, deck, or patio into something as beautiful as a butterfly garden or as delicious as your own private salad bar
* They do not require tilling or weeding.
* They can be moved indoors or covered when frost threatens
* They can be lots of fun to plan and create!
For a fantastic container garden, here are some tips:
Decide if you will be starting the plants indoors then transplanting to the container or sowing the seed directly into the container. (Follow instructions on back of packet based for outside or inside planting, and be sure to thin young seedlings, so they aren't overcrowded.)
Choose the right size for the right plant:5-Gallon containers are the most versatile. They are less likely to blow over in wind, dry out less frequently, and have room for plants with deep roots. It's usually better to go larger with a container than put a plant in a container that's too small. Larger containers are also better for climates that have hot, dry summers. Click here for more tips and a list of recommended container sizes for different vegetables
Use a quality potting soil:
Good potting soil will contain ingredients like compost, perlite, vermiculite, and peat. It will have a light texture with good moisture retentiveness, good drainage ability, and not contain a lot of bark. You don’t have to completely fill a container with potting soil. The bottom third of the container can be filled with a variety of 'fillers' like broken pottery shards, rocks, gravel, or crushed aluminum cans or plastic water bottles (to be recycled later).
Provide adequate drainage: All containers need to have adequate drainage. If your container is solid on the bottom, carefully cut or punch a hole in the bottom to prevent plant roots from sitting in water and rotting. Or, you can just insert a plastic container inside that does have drainage holes. If your container is sitting on a wood deck or concrete patio, you can put a drainage dish underneath to prevent staining.
Keep it watered: Containers may need to be watered once or twice every day to prevent them from drying out. A plant that dries out and wilts may not recover from the stress. You can reduce water needs by using a layer of mulch on top of the soil and putting the containers in an area protected from wind.
Fertilize regularly: Nutrients can leach out of containers with frequent waterings. Follow fertilization instructions inside the seed packet for each variety, but apply a little more frequently for happy container plants. For chemical-free fertilizing, try seaweed extract, well-rotted manure, earthworm castings, or compost.
Don't Overcrowd: Just like in garden beds, young plants in containers need to be thinned and spaced adequately. Plants that are too close together will compete for water and nutrients, resulting in overall weak growth. (Plants that are well established with a good root system can be crowded in closer for a lush design.)
Be Creative! There's no rule that a container must only contain vegetables, herbs, or flowers. Why not mix them? Also, don't forget that vining crops like peas, cucumbers, ornamental gourds, and baby pumpkins can be grown in a container if you provide a trellis inside the container or next to it for them to climb.
Here are some fun ideas for some 'crazy' container plantings:
Hanging Basket – Cherry tomatoes. Vines will hang down over the sides.
Large Sweater boxes – Great for a hodgepodge of lettuce or mesclun
Old Buckets – 1 tomato or pepper plant. Sow cilantro around it.
Whiskey Barrels - 1 winter squash plant
An Old Boot – 1 Swiss Chard plant
A Colorful Plastic Tub – 1 cucumber plant
5-Gallon Recycled Nursery Pot – 1 tomato plant. Sow basil around it.
Wicker Basket – Line with plastic that has drainage holes cut in bottom. 1 bush bean plant or Cherry Belle radishes. (A great use for those inexpensive baskets you find at garage sales and thrift stores.)
Coffee cans – Herbs like thyme, oregano, chervil, or parsley
Large Cookie Jar – Set a plastic pot with drainage holes inside. Sow some pretty annual flowers like alyssum, bachelor buttons, flax, bunny tail grass, impatiens, lobelia, pansies, violas, or nasturtiums.
Ceramic Mixing Bowls – Use an assortment of sizes and set on a patio table. Set a plastic pot inside each with drainage holes. Grow an assortment of greens like lettuce, kale, mache, micro greens, mizuna, spinach, and watercress.
Gallon Milk Jugs – For an attractive display, cut off the top ¼ , wrap in burlap and tie with raffia or string. Grow herbs like chives, dill, or mint, veggies like arugula or amaranth edible red leaf, or ornamentals like coleus and marigolds.
Kitty Litter Tubs – 5 gallon white tubs with handles. Broccoli, cucumbers, eggplant, kohlrabi, okra, peppers, tomatoes. 1 plant per tub. Lots of options!
2-Liter Soda Bottle – Cut off top ¼. Great for herbs or a single flower like a nasturtium or snapdragon. Kids will enjoy seeing the roots grow through the clear plastic.
Chinese Takeout Containers – Grow a quick crop of micro greens.
More fun ideas include: a bicycle basket, old tires, plastic storage bins, wheelbarrows, an old bathtub, a wagon.
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Friday, April 16, 2010
Dirt! The Movie on KQED
Dirt! The Movie: 10 p.m. Tues. on KQED
Dirt has an amazing ability to take in practically anything and end up better than when it started. You could bury the nastiest, angriest thing imaginable and, in no time at all, it's pushing up daisies.
http://www.dirtthemovie.org
Dirt has an amazing ability to take in practically anything and end up better than when it started. You could bury the nastiest, angriest thing imaginable and, in no time at all, it's pushing up daisies.
This seeming inexhaustible capacity of dirt to forgive us our sins is the root of our planet's biology. It's also the heart of a charming, if occasionally cloying, new documentary, "Dirt! The Movie," airing nationwide Tuesday as part of the Independent Lens series on PBS.
http://www.dirtthemovie.org
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
All about sunflowers
Sunflowers!
The sunflower (Helianthus annuus) is native to North America, and was cultivated by native Americans.
They are easy to start indoors and out. They need regular water and full sun. Mulch to conserve water.
Sunflowers are hungry plants; for food growth they need rich moist soil with an abundance of nutrients, but not too much Nitrogen, as this would encourage too much leaf growth, rather than flowering. Rotate where sunflowers are planted are every year. Stake the taller varieties.
Sunflowers have many uses.
To harvest the seed, protect the plant from birds, squirrels and raccoons
When the seeds are ripe, the whole head droops. Harvest the whole head and dry in the sun.
Sunflowers can also be grown as a seedling salad crop.
Another use is as a ‘smother crop”, they have been used to smother persistent weeds from fields.
They can also be used as a green manure or compost crop. They grow quickly and produce an abundance of organic matter.They make a beautiful cut flower, growing on compact, branching plants in a variety of colors. They bloom summer through fall. The following cultivars are available at the Sloat Boulevard store; Lemon Sorbet-light yellow, Ring of Fire-light yellow turning burgundy as it ages, Florenza- yellow tips with a burgundy center, Pascino Cola-the classic yellow with a dark center. Arriving soon are Claret- chocolate red, Cherry Rose-rose pink, and Sonya- tangerine!
Sunflowers are available at all Sloat Garden Center locations!
What we really need to fear about bees
No, it’s not the sting. Gardeners know that most bees are gentle creatures and, if not bothered, don’t tend to sting. The real fear is the loss of our bees…our essential pollinators. A few years ago, this story was big news, but while the media has moved on to other trendy topics, bee colony collapse continues and is getting worse. A new EPA study shows that pesticides are a huge part of the problem; this year, the extremely cold winter we had has made the situation dire. What can we do to help the bees? First, eliminate or reduce use of pesticides. Then plant a garden with nectar-rich food that will bloom from spring through summer. As a bonus, you’ll be attracting butterflies – also important pollinators that are dwindling in numbers. Provide a shallow water source and a flat rock for butterflies to sun their wings.
They gotta live somewhere!
Leave a small patch of bare ground where bees can establish their underground nests. If you find a hive where you don’t want it, find someone who will relocate it (search online for “bee rescue” and your city). Or attract mason bees, which don’t form hives. They live in holes, so you can purchase a cute mason bee house or simply drill holes in a block of wood.
Bees don’t see the red end of the color spectrum so good flower colors for bees and butterflies are white, yellow, blue, pink and purple. For spring blooming, plant Wild Lilac, Western and Eastern Redbud, Flowering Quince, Cranesbill , Lavender, Catmint, Rhododendron, Rose and Salvia. To feed our winged friends all summer, plant Yarrow, Hyssop, Anemone, New York Aster, Bluebeard , Tickseed, Foxglove, Coneflower, Potentilla, Bee Balm , Russian Sage, Black Eyed Susan, Pincushion Flower, Stonecrop, Spirea and Verbena. Butterflies especially will flock to the aptly named Butterfly Bush, and Monarchs are attracted to Milkweed.
They gotta live somewhere!
Leave a small patch of bare ground where bees can establish their underground nests. If you find a hive where you don’t want it, find someone who will relocate it (search online for “bee rescue” and your city). Or attract mason bees, which don’t form hives. They live in holes, so you can purchase a cute mason bee house or simply drill holes in a block of wood.
Bees don’t see the red end of the color spectrum so good flower colors for bees and butterflies are white, yellow, blue, pink and purple. For spring blooming, plant Wild Lilac, Western and Eastern Redbud, Flowering Quince, Cranesbill , Lavender, Catmint, Rhododendron, Rose and Salvia. To feed our winged friends all summer, plant Yarrow, Hyssop, Anemone, New York Aster, Bluebeard , Tickseed, Foxglove, Coneflower, Potentilla, Bee Balm , Russian Sage, Black Eyed Susan, Pincushion Flower, Stonecrop, Spirea and Verbena. Butterflies especially will flock to the aptly named Butterfly Bush, and Monarchs are attracted to Milkweed.
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Friday, April 9, 2010
Annie Spiegelman signs copies of Talking Dirt
Tomorrow(Saturday) Annie Spiegelman signs copies of her book Talking Dirt 10am - 12pm at our Mill Valley (Miller Ave.) location!
Syndicated eco-columnist and Master Gardener Annie Spiegelman signs copies of her book Talking Dirt which offers practical tips on organic gardening, composting and planting along with guidance and gripes on marriage, motherhood and that so-called 'having it all.'
Check out The Dirt Diva's website here: http://www.dirtdiva.com/
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Podcast of Sloat Manager Dustin Strobel on the Ronn Owens Show
In case you missed Sloat Manager Dustin Strobel on the Ronn Owens Show this morning - you can listen to the podcast here: http://members.kgoradio.com/kgo_archives/player.php?day=4&hour=11
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Sloat on the Ronn Owens show!
Want a Moss Milkshake?
Moss Milkshake at Sloat Garden Center
Just mix with water (or beer!) – it will stick to most anything, including bare soil, stone, and weathered concrete.
Hypnum moss is ground dry and then blended with a proprietary mixture of growth stimulants including powdered buttermilk, along with water retention gel and then packaged in an air-tight half gallon milk carton. Coverage rate is typically 10 square feet or more. Alternatively the mix can be sprinkled about dry and then watered in. Indefinite shelf life.
Available at all Sloat locations EXCEPT Danville, San Rafael and Pierce Street.
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Don't let container gardening box you in
When it comes to container gardening, there isn't a lot of room for maneuvering. Space is limited, nutrients are precious and planting anything that requires an extensive root system is out of the question.
Still, that doesn't mean creativity needs to be squashed. It's just takes thinking outside the box - literally. Read more at SFGate: http://bit.ly/c1rY5n
Saturday, April 3, 2010
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