Archive for July, 2006

Black Lace-A Flower That Offers Beauty and Berries

Tuesday, July 25th, 2006

Black Lace-A Flower That Offers Beauty and Berries

(NAPSI)-Good design not only makes the inside of your home more lovely, it can also take bloom in your garden. And, since plants cost a fraction of the price of new furniture, outdoor decorating can be a lot easier on the wallet. Here are some ideas you may want to cultivate.

Both interior decorators and landscapers consider size, color and texture. A good place to start is by looking at the size of the space. Dwarf plants are very useful in tight spaces, but can get lost in a lush perennial border. Curb appeal and backyard views also demand something bigger. Every garden needs at least one impressive specimen plant to anchor the landscape.

Think about color. Many people focus on flowers and forget about the months that a plant is not in bloom. Plant breeders have responded to this by producing varieties with colorful foliage for season-long appeal.

Texture is another important design element. Large leaves have big impact, while narrow or cutleaf foliage adds delicate interest to gardens. Fine or cutleaf foliage sways with the wind, a lovely effect.

For example, the new Black Lace sambucus has everything the homeowner needs for stylish outdoor spaces. Dark purple leaves provide interesting color all season long, and are a fantastic combination with popular perennials such as black-eyed susans. Like Japanese maple, its finely cut foliage makes it a choice specimen for entryways and other high-impact areas.

Black Lace offers more than color and texture. Its huge pink spring flowers will produce fall berries for jam or wine, or may be left on the plant for wildlife to enjoy. Like all well-designed products, Black Lace offers both form and function.

Best of all, this new plant is adaptable and easy to grow. It’s tolerant of most soils, even soggy ones, and will grow in sun or some shade. Six feet tall at maturity, Black Lace doesn’t require pruning, although homeowners can cut it back after blooming if desired. A full-sized mature Black Lace is an impressive specimen for either formal gardens or casual backyard scenes. It can also be grown in a decorative container for the patio or deck.

Plant breeders work hard to develop useful new varieties like Black Lace. The Proven Winners brand carefully selects the most beautiful and easy-to-grow varieties so successful gardening is easy. After all, why should fashionable landscapes be reserved for expert gardeners? The rest of us deserve good design, too. Cold hardy and adaptable, Black Lace will thrive for years. It’s an easy way to add durable style to your garden.

So are you ready to bring good design into your garden? It’s worth the effort. After all, your yard is the biggest room in your house.

Black Lace is just one of over 50 colorful, easy-to-grow Proven Winners ColorChoice varieties. They’re easy to find at your garden center-look for the plants in the white pots. To learn more, visit www.colorchoiceplants.com.

 

Black Lace has huge pink flowers that will produce fall berries for jam or wine. Six feet tall at maturity, it is an impressive addition for either formal gardens or casual backyard scenes.

High Country Gardens Introduces New Plants For 2006

Monday, July 24th, 2006

High Country Gardens Introduces New Plants For 2006

(HIT)-For Spring 2006, High Country Gardens continues its tradition of introducing unique new plants to American gardeners. The new offerings in the 2006 High Country Gardens mailorder catalog include Gladiolus oppositiflorius v. salmoneus (a gladiola from South Africa that’s cold hardy to USDA zone 5), the most cold-hardy Agapanthus ever released, and the delightfully diminutive Agave toumeyana v. bella. Also of note is a new preplanned garden called the Xeric Aroma Garden.

High Country Gardens is an award-winning source for native and adapted plants. The nationally recognized catalog specializes in easy-to-grow varieties that thrive in many areas of the country but grow particularly well in the climates of the western United States. High Country Gardens offers a wide range of perennials, ornamental grasses and shrubs, including many water-wise (’xeric’) plants that need little or no extra water once established.

To receive a free Spring 2006 catalog, call High Country Gardens at 1-800-925-9387, or order a catalog and/or view the entire catalog online at www.highcountrygardens.com.

Agapanthus sp. ‘Cold Hardy White’ #11700

Agapanthus sp. ‘Cold Hardy White’ (White Flowered African Lily)

Before ‘Cold Hardy White,’ only gardeners in tropical and subtropical climates could enjoy Agapanthus as permanent specimens in their outdoor gardens. This delightful plant is the latest example of High Country Garden’s ongoing quest for cold hardy South African perennials. A vigorous, graceful plant, White Flowered African Lily forms nice clumps of deciduous, strap-like foliage that surrounds numerous heads of pure white flowers in mid-summer. ‘Cold Hardy White’ is easily grown in full sun or morning sun with afternoon shade in average garden soils. It prefers regular irrigation and will reach 15 inches tall and 12 inches wide. Mulching heavily the first winter will help the plant establish itself and increase its future cold hardiness. Thrives in USDA zones 5-10. $7.99 each in premium 5-inch pots.

Agastache x rupestris ‘Orange Flare’ (Licorice Mint Hyssop) #11827

Agastache x rupestris ‘Orange Flare’ (Licorice Mint Hyssop)

A newly developed hybrid from the High Country Gardens xeric demonstration flower beds, ‘Orange Flare’ is a backcross between A. rupestris and Agastache x ‘Desert Sunrise.’ The resulting plant has the same highly fragrant, finely textured gray foliage of rupestris but with much larger, fuller spikes of deeply colored orange flowers. Taking after its other parent, ‘Desert Sunrise,’ the flowers have exceptionally abundant nectar to attract hummingbirds. Easily grown in well-drained garden soils with plenty of sun, Agastache x rupestris ‘Orange Flare’ will reach 36 inches tall and 18 inches wide. As an added bonus, this lovely perennial is resistant to browsing deer and rabbits. ‘Orange Flare’ is cold hardy in zones 5-9. $6.99 each, 3 to 6 plants $6.79 each, 7 or more plants $6.59 each.

Agave toumeyana v. bella (Miniature Century Plant) #12713

Agave toumeyana v. bella (Miniature Century Plant)

Many years of growing this miniature gem in the test gardens at High Country Gardens in Santa Fe has proved that Agave toumeyana v. bella is a unique gem in a rock garden. However, it was only recently that enough seed was collected of this rare, very cold hardy plant to make it available to the gardening public. The Miniature Century Plant’s thin, stiff leaves are edged with white stripes and adorned with curling white threads, which give the small rosettes an appealing tidy appearance. This tiny Agave will reach just four inches tall and five inches wide in full sun and lean, well-drained soils. It is a wonderful companion plant for xeric plants such as Echinocereus and Escobaria cacti species. USDA zones 5-10. $5.99 each, 3 to 6 plants $5.79 each, 7 or more plants $5.59 each.

Gladiolus oppositiflorus v. salmoneus (Wildflower Salmon Gladiolus)

It’s no secret that David Salman, chief horticulturist for High Country Gardens, loves cold hardy ornamental perennials from the high altitude areas of South Africa. Gladiolus oppositiflorus v. salmoneus should prove to be among the best of these South African wildflowers with its richly colored blooms, graceful three-foot-tall flowering spikes, statuesque foliage and excellent cold hardiness. Different from the very popular cold-tender domesticated Gladiolus, this unique wildflower species retains the spirit and beauty of its high-mountain home.

Plant in full sun and mulch heavily for winter in zones 5 and 6 the first couple of years to protect the bulbs from extreme cold. Mark their planting spot as the bulbs will be late to wake up after a cold spring growing season. Zones 5-9. Three-year-old blooming plants are available in 5-inch premium pots for $7.99 each, 3 to 6 plants $7.79 each, 7 or more plants $7.59 each.

Rhus trilobata ‘Autumn Amber’ (’Autumn Amber’ Prostrate Sumac)

‘Autumn Amber’ is a superb prostrate growing form of three leaf sumac originally discovered years ago in the foothills of east-central New Mexico. Blooming in mid-spring with an amazing abundance of chartreuse-colored flowers, the plants have attractive glossy green foliage that turns an amber-yellow in the fall. ‘Autumn Amber’ grows just 18 inches tall and spreads six to eight feet wide, making it a welcome groundcover alternative to creeping juniper.

This waterwise plant was developed in New Mexico at the Los Lunas USDA-NRCS Plant Materials Center and is available exclusively from High Country Gardens. ‘Autumn Amber’ grows best in full sun throughout zones 4-8. $8.29 each, 3 to 6 plants $7.99 each, 7 or more plants $7.79 each.

The Xeric Aroma Garden

This perennial garden designed by Scott Ogden and Lauren Springer Ogden exclusively for High Country Gardens brings together the pleasures of scent and color into a single space. By using a combination of fragrant flowers and aromatic plants (that release their pleasing scents when touched or brushed), the Xeric Aroma Garden will grow to create a living potpourri.

The plants of this garden are also wonderfully colorful with flowers in shades of raspberry-red, orange, yellow, blue and pink. Butterflies and hummingbirds love this nectar-rich garden, but the strongly scented foliage and flowers are bitter and unpalatable to deer and rabbits.

Included in the garden are: five plants each of Thymus sp.; four plants each of Teucrium aroanium; three plants each of Lavandula angustifolia ‘Sharon Roberts’; two plants each Origanum libanoticum, Zizophora clinopodioides, and Salvia off. ‘Minima’; and one plant each of Agastache rupestris, Iris ‘Variegata,’ Santolina ‘Morning Mist’ and Salvia x ‘Raspberry Delight.’ When fully mature, the 22 plants in this preplanned garden fill a rectangular area five feet wide by nine feet long (approx. 45 square feet.).

Plant this garden in a sunny spot with well-drained garden soil of low to average fertility in USDA zones 5-9. The entire garden and planting instructions sells for $118.78.

Stachys inflata (Shrubby Lamb’s Ear)

The beauty and unflinching performance in harsh conditions will make Stachys inflata a favorite in your xeriscape. A native of the high mountains of Iran, this small shrublet (just 12 inches tall and 10 inches wide) has bright white stems, pewter gray leaves and numerous spikes of cotton candy pink flowers in early summer.

Planted in full sun in well-drained infertile soil, Stachys inflata makes a wonderful companion plant for English lavender—creating a beautiful flowering duo of pink and blue. Zones 5-9. Exclusively available from High Country Gardens. $5.99 each, 3 to 6 plants $5.79 each, 7 or more plants $5.59 each.

Grow Your Own Potatoes And Veggies For A Wholesome, Tasty Treat

Monday, July 24th, 2006

 
Grow Your Own Potatoes And Veggies For A Wholesome, Tasty Treat

The Red,White and Blue Seed Potato Collection is a great way to grow three unusual potato varieties.

(HIT)-The Organic Potato Blossom Festival and a new line of Organic Garden Seed are among the new offerings found in the 2006 Wood Prairie Farm mailorder catalog and website (www.woodprairie.com). This year, Wood Prairie Farm is celebrating its 30th year of organic farming with a delightful variety of organic seeds for gardeners to grow plus an assortment of kitchen-ready organic vegetables, mixes and other tasty treats.

All 16 varieties of “double certified” organic seed potatoes that Wood Prairie Farm sells are organically grown right at the farm—and they are certified as disease-free by the State of Maine. For those who appreciate great-tasting organic potatoes but don’t have the space to grow them, Wood Prairie Farm sells ready-to-eat potatoes grown organically at the family-run farm in Maine.

“Fresh homegrown potatoes have a delicate taste and a pleasing texture that supermarket potatoes just can’t match,” said Jim Gerritsen, proprietor of Wood Prairie Farm. “Plus, there are so many wonderful varieties of potatoes that you’ll never see in the grocery store.”

Here are a few highlights for 2006 from Wood Prairie Farm:

The Organic Potato Blossom Festival

For the first time ever you can grow potato plants for their colorful blossoms and for the delicious tubers. The Organic Potato Blossom Festival is a unique collection of gourmet potato varieties chosen for their exceptional blossom beauty and fragrance. In midseason, enjoy nearly a month of potato blooms in shades of blue, lavender, purple, pink and white. Come harvest time, enjoy a spectacular bounty of rainbow-colored spuds.

The six different varieties of potatoes include Red Cloud, Carola, Cranberry Red, All-Blue, Onaway, and Butte. These Maine Double-Certified Organic Potatoes perfectly fill a four by four foot planting bed.

The Organic Potato Blossom Festival received an MGA Green Thumb Award from the Mailorder Gardening Association as one of the best new products of 2006. It sells for $19.95.

Wood Prairie Farm Organic Garden Seed

For the first time in its 30-year history, Wood Prairie Farm is offering a line of organic vegetable seed. Wood Prairie Farm Organic Garden Seed features varieties and quality not available from local garden stores, is open pollinated, Certified Organic, and raised by highly skilled family-scale seed operations. All 16 varieties of seeds are untreated and not genetically engineered. Each seed packet sells for $3.

  • Bean – Organic Tavera. Gourmet french filet beans or haricot verts designed to be picked before they reach 1/4 inch in diameter. 64 days to maturity.
  • Beet – Organic Scooter. A European style open-pollinated beet with bright green tops that stay green even in cool weather. Roots are round, smooth and dark purplish red. 52 days.
  • Carrot – Organic Red-Cored Chantenay. The Chantenay family of carrots goes back nearly 200 years. Highly tapered orange carrot with wonderful flavor and quality. 70 days.
  • Carrot – Organic Scarlet Nantes. Sweet with a crisp taste, cylindrical to slightly tapered roots are six to eight inches long. Exceptionally uniform strain. 65 days.
  • Lettuce – Organic Cardinale. This wine-red Batavian crisp-leaf lettuce adds attractive color and juicy crunch to summer salads. 52 days.
  • Lettuce – Organic Flashy Trout Back. A romaine heirloom with upright growth and medium green leaves with bright red splashes. 55 days.
  • Lettuce – Organic Wild Garden Spring Mix. Purple Osaka, Tres Fin Endive, Chicory,Arugula, Secret Spinach and more make this early-season salad mix a gourmet delight. 28 days.
  • Lettuce – Organic Wild Garden Summer Mix. This mix of Burgundy Amaranth, Strawberry Spinach, Forest Green Parsley and much more thrives in the warmer temperatures. 28 days.
  • Melon – Organic Delicious 51. This is Cornell University’s new powdery mildew-resistant version of the classic, great-tasting “Bender’s Surprise” cantaloupe. 77 days.
  • Onion – Organic Rossa di Milano. A rare, beautiful red Italian mid-season onion that stores well. Fine medium-hot flavor. 110 days.
  • Radish – Organic Plum Purple. Plum Purple has handscome violet-purple skin and crisp white flesh. This variety remains mild all season. 27 days.
  • Spinach – Organic Winter Bloomsdale. This delicious dark green variety is king of the “fully savoyed” spinaches. Highly uniform organic strain that is slow to bolt. 45 days.
  • Squash – Organic Black Zuchini. Dark green skins and mild flavored fruits! 55 days.
  • Squash – Organic Delicata Zeppelin. This is the best “bitter-free” strain of Delicata. Cream-colored, green-striped fruits have the sweetest, tastiest flesh you’ve ever had! 100 days.
  • Tomato – Organic Latah. An early, small (2-3″) red tomato with a good balance of acid and sweetness. The determinate bush keeps producing all summer. 61 days.
  • Tomato – Organic Una Hartsock. Abundant plum-shaped 1-2″ long fruits with juicy, semi-sweet flesh. Indeterminate. 68 days.
Complete Organic Potato Patch Kit

Gardeners who have never grown potatoes might want to start with the Complete Organic Potato Patch Kit. Included are four different varieties of Maine Double-Certified Organic Seed potatoes—early blue Caribé, popular Yukon Gold, beautiful Red Cloud and baking spud extraordinaire Elba.

Plant, weed and harvest your crop of potatoes with a rugged American-made hand hoe. Fertilize with Wood Prairie Farm Organic Potato Fertilizer. At the end of the season, collect your harvest in the Maine handcrafted wooden garden hod, and store your bounty in the mesh potato sack. The Complete Organic Potato Patch Kit, which also includes the Organic Potato Growing Guide and Potato Recipe Booklet, sells for $39.95.

Red,White And Blue Seed Potato Collection

Wood Prairie Farm offers a patriotic collection of three different 2.5 pound bags of Maine Double-Certified seed potatoes that’s sure to be a hit with any red-blooded American gardener. Included are Cranberry Red, the early-season high-yielding red potato with pink flesh, Onaway, the old-fashioned early-season round white variety; and All-Blue, the striking and beautiful blue-skinned blue-flesh late variety.

This collection includes enough seed potatoes to plant three 25-foot rows. After a fun and colorful harvest, everyone will enjoy a breathtaking red, white and blue potato salad or a rainbow potato bake-off. Recipes are also included with this collection, which sells for $28.95.

Wood Prairie Farm is a family-run organic farm in Maine known for its organically grown potatoes, grains and other crops. To receive a free catalog or to place an order, call 1-800-829-9765 or visit the website at www.woodprairie.com.