5 Easy Steps to Help in Choosing and Caring For Your Plant

April 22, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Knowledge Drop, Urban Homestead


1. Choosing the right plant: You won’t have to spend as much time caring for your palnts if you choose plants that are suited to your environmental conditions and gardening style. Browse our collection of Gifts that Grow™, and get the perfect plant shipped to your door.

2. Watering: Test the soil in your containers every day with your finger. If it’s dry an inch below the surface – water. If you can’t water your plants on a regular basis, consider self-watering containers. If you’ve got hard-to-reach plants, we’d recommend a watering wand, which has saved us from lots of stepstool time.

3. Fertilizer: Fertilizer is important. Mix a dry, time-release fertilizer into the soil when planting, and use small amounts of liquid fertilizer for regular feeding every few weeks.

4. Fighting Pests: Inspect plants regularly for fungus, insects, bugs, etc. Remove any diseased or dying leaves. Spray insects with water or other natural repellants to get rid of them.

5. Pruning: Don’t be afraid to cut or trim plants to keep their shape and encourage growth – just leave at least 2/3 of the original plant intact so it’ll have enough surface area to absorb sunlight. Pinch deadhead faded flowers regularly to encourage more blooms on annual plants. A good set of tools can make all the difference.

Keep in mind that every plant is different. Take some time to read up on your plants and learn as much as you can about their individual needs. A little time spent reading and planning now can save you a lot of time and disappointment later.


Heirloom Tomatoes – Great Tasting and Easy To Grow

April 22, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Knowledge Drop

 
 
  What’s
an Heirloom?

Modern supermarket “hybrids,” are bred for their long shelf-life,
but classic “heirloom” varieties are picked for their superior
flavors. There are hundreds of varieties of heirlooms that gardeners around
the world have carefully selected and preserved for
generations, so you’ll find much more than just red
tomatoes
you’ll
discover green,
yellow,
orange,
purple,
and even black
ones (man say these tastes best). Some will be sweet, some spicy and others
smokey; they’ll range in size from tiny cherries to giant fruit that
weigh over two pounds.
 
   
 
How
Do I Pick?


With so many heirloom varieties, nurseries and chain stores are only able
to carry a limited selection, so small gardeners have been stuck with
just a few options. Recently though, specialty
farms
have begun shipping sturdy young plants direct to gardeners.
Some even offer themed
collections
made up of popular varieties, so picking which plants
to grow is easy. You can find these collections and a huge selection of
individual
varieties
through websites like the online gardening center, Windowbox.com.
They offer a range of packs, each with a different theme, including: beefsteak tomatoes
container growers,
high yeild plants,
huge fruit plants,
Italian paste & sauce,
weather tolerant,
cherry tomatoes,
and more.
 
  From
UPS to BLT

Once you’ve got the right plants for you, it’s just a matter of
raising them. Thankfully, heirlooms are hardy (they have to be to have lasted
so long), and they’re easy to grow. Most heirlooms are “indeterminate,”
which means they grow like a vine, and they’ll produce fruit all season
long – until the first frost. “Determinate” plants are more
like a bush, and they typically produce all their tomatoes in one batch.
Depending on which you’ve selected, they’ll require slightly different
care. Basically though, with sun, water, a little fertilizer
and pruning, you’ll be enjoying delicious tomatoes all summer long
.
 
 
Where
Do I get Help?


Many tomato growers share their knowledge on the web, and this increased
communication has helped the heirloom community expand significantly.
Many sites feature growing hints and tips as well as discussion forums.
Windowbox.com offers a detailed
tomato growing
guide
(download here)
that is a great help throughout the season, and if that’s not enough,
their group of online experts
shares basic growing tips and answers specific questions.
 
 
 

Mole and Vole Control

April 21, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Featured, Knowledge Drop

mole

Natural Deer Repellent

April 21, 2009 by John  
Filed under Featured, Knowledge Drop

>Animal
Repellents

Nothing can be more
frustrating than having your garden destroyed by an
unwelcome guest.  Prevent this problem by applying
the right repellent or deterrent. Please
select  the animal you would like to deter!
Don’t see what you’re looking for?
Let us know
!

Deer Repellents That Work

Mole and Vole Repellents

Snake Away Repellent

Insecticides & Mosquito Dunks
Deer Repellents &

Deer Control


Mole & Vole Control


Snake Repellents

Mosquito
Killers & Insecticides


Get That Little Rabbit

Bird & Geese

Raccons, Skunks, Gophers

Rodent Control

Rabbit
Repellents


Bird & Geese Repellents


Burrowing Pest
Repellents


Mice
& Rat
Rodent Control


Armadillo Deterrent

Cat & Dog Repellent

Squirrel Small Critter Control


Animal Traps


Armadillo Repellents



Dog & Cat Repellents


Squirrel &

Woodchuck Repellent


Animal
Traps
>Search For
Repellent by
Animal/Insect


Armadillo Control


Beavers


Bird Repellent



Cats & Dogs


Chipmunks


Deer

Deterrent


Geese


Gophers


Mice & Rats


Moles


Muskrats


Opossum


Otters


Porcupines


Rabbit Control



Raccoons


Rats


Skunks


Snakes


Squirrels


Voles


Woodchucks


Insecticides


Ant & Roach


Beetle Traps


Slugs & Snails


Lady Bugs


Mosquito


Moths


Silverfish


Spiders


Termites

Scare Off Bambi Snake Away Mole and Vole Control Mosquito Killers
>
The Scarecrow Motion Activated Sprinkler won’t give
Bambi a heart attack, but it’ll make him think
twice about your flower bed! Great for rabbits,
dogs, and cats, too!

>
The world’s only EPA approved, university tested,
patented snake repellent!

>
Control the moles and voles, and control the grubs
that feed them!

>
Kill Mosquitos before they are old enough to bite.
Avoid the West Nile Virus!

>

Deer Control and Repellents


Rabbits Squirrels and Rodents


Snake Away Repellent


Mole & Vole Control


Goose Repellent


Armadillo & Gopher Repellents


Bird Repellents


Dog And Cat Repellents


Mosquito Killers


Animal Traps

The Hori Hori Knife: My New Favorite Garden Tool

April 20, 2009 by John  
Filed under Featured, Our Favorite Products


Evidently, this multi-use tool originated several hundred years ago in Japan. It was originally a mountain farmers tool and bonsai gardeners seem to most prevalently claim it as their own. It is said that the bonsai gardeners/farmers used to climb high into to mountains with their hori hori knives to dig promising specimens off of the rocky cliff faces. Another story that I ran across indicates that an ancient Shogun grew fearful of the farmer-warriors and ordered that all swords be confiscated from anyone who was not samurai. It was then illegal for anyone not of the sword bearing class to have a sword. In order to protect themselves, the farmers designed tools that were legal and could double as weapons.

For the garden rambo

Some folks tell us that the Japanese verb to dig or excavates is horu. The name of the knife, hori hori, is derived from the verb to dig. I don’t know which, if any of these stories is true. I do know that there are many uses for the hori hori knife. So, first, what is a hori hori knife?

It is traditionally a wooden handled, wide bladed knife made from carbon steel. The blade is between four and seven inches long and is wide. The blade is thick and concave for strength and ease of digging.  One side of the blade is smooth and sharp. The other side is serrated for sawing off those dang big roots. It is the most versatile garden tool that I own. I use it for planting, weeding, digging rows, digging out roots, digging holes for roots, cutting irrigation pipes, dead-heading, pruning, digging rows…I carry it with me all the time. When you buy one you will want to get a sheath for it and keep it sharp.

Over time, some garden genius put measuring markings on the blade of the hori hori so that you can properly space your plantings. Then they started making them out of stainless steel for those of us who are tool maintenance challenged. If you have trouble remembering where you put down your tools, you will want to be careful with your hori hori knife. I have read stories of folks who inadvertently bury their knives under plants and have to borrow metal detectors from their mother-in-law and get mercilessly ribbed at family gatherings for years to come. So, in order to avoid my ‘friends’ fate, you may want to paint the handle of your hori hori knife a bright color, or purchase one that has a brightly colored handle.

When looking for your knife, because you will use it all the time, make sure that the blade extends into the handle. If the blade is welded on to the handle, it will eventually snap off when you are using it. Spend more to get a sturdy hori hori knife and avoid buying three. The carbon steel knives will need regular sharpening. If you don’t have a whet stone, you will want to get one. I am feeling traditionalist recently and bought the carbon steel hori hori knife. Sharpening your knife yourself make you feel more connected to your tool and, as a consequence, more present in your garden when using your tool. As you use your knife more and more, you will enjoy gardening more and more.
new_plant_1-other
How should you sharpen and care for you hori hori knife? You can take it to your local kitchen store or knife shop and pay someone to do it..or you can learn to do it yourself. First you need a whetstone. You want to look for a high quality carborundum stone with a smooth side and coarse side. If you get a cheap stone, you will get mad later and buy a better stone. So skip the cheap stone and get the good one.

If your knife is dull, start with the coarse stone. This is ‘roughing’ the blade. Roughing will leave a coarse edge that will cut fibrous material but not work for fine cutting. When you prune and work with your plants, you want good, clean cuts. So, sharpen your knife all the way – two steps.

Step one is roughing. The rough, you should wet or oil your stone according to the manufacturer’s directions. Hold your hori hori knife at about 20 degrees to the stone (pretend that you are cutting a piece off of the stone and you will get the angle about right). Use consistent strokes in only one direction making sure that you keep the angel to the stone consistent. First in the coarse side, and then on the fine side of the stone. The fine side sharpening is step two.

Okay, now for the safety bit…don’t hold the sharpening stone in your hand, you will cut yourself. Secondly, if you never cut toward yourself, you can never get cut.

If you care for your hori hori knife, it will take care of you and your garden. I love mine and use it all the time.

Next Page »