… early spring. The stems stand 3 to 5 feet tall with flowers that are only 1½ to 2 inches. This is a Martagon hybrid, developed from Martagon native to Europe. Martagon lilies are well adapted …
Type: Garden Guide Plant
… The stems stand 2 ½ to 4 feet tall with 5 to 7 buds per stem and lance shaped foliage. This is a Orienpet hybrid, a cross between an Oriental lily and a Trumpet lily which combines the …
Type: Garden Guide Plant
… A single stem may grow as tall as 6 feet or more and hold up to 20 blooms. Anastasia is an Orienpet lily, a cross between an Oriental lily and a Trumpet lily, which combines the …
Type: Garden Guide Plant
… has won the North American Lily Society’s popularity poll for four years straight. Frisco is an Orienpet hybrid, a cross between an Oriental lily and a Trumpet lily which combines the …
Type: Garden Guide Plant
… altar honoring the dead. My dad was so skillful with paper. He was an accountant, so this is where I would see his artistic side. But to be completely honest, it was a festivity that I … in Mexican history and dates back to the days before Spanish conquest. According to UNESCO, it is an ancestral celebration recognized on the Intangible Cultural Heritage List. Pre-Columbian … with harvest time and the Catholic observances of All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day. Mexico is multiethnic and multicultural, and this richness has allowed diverse expressions of the …
Type: Blog
… relief. When the containers are massed together, a visually stunning color and texture story is revealed. Container #1 Mauerelli Abyssinian banana ( Musa ensete 'Maurelli') Million Kisses® … oertendahlii ) Horticulturist's tip: String of pearls grows quickly and trails beautifully—and is easy to share with fellow gardeners! Dwarf Conifer Garden At the top of the stairs to the … apartment, distill the idea of a trio all the way down to a single plant. Rosa 'Savalife' is better known as RAINBOW'S END ™ for a good reason: it combines three of the colors of the …
Type: Plant Info
… tree trunks with protective wrap in fall and removing it in early spring. If weather is unusually warm, avoid pruning trees that will "bleed," or discharge large amounts of water, such as elms, maples and birches. Prune these trees only when weather is quite cold or in summer. Immediately prune out broken or damaged branches. …
Type: Plant Info
… day, Steffen said. They hunt spiders, earthworms, and beetle larvae under the snow. Winter is a great time to observe a number of bird species at the Garden. Cedar waxwing eating … potentially fierce full-grown squirrels, Steffen said. Instead, the squirrels' chief enemy is the weather. They must huddle against winter storms in the nests, or dreys, they build from … and an observant eye. The signs of life in winter are there to see and hear. Beth Botts is a garden writer and speaker who lives and gardens in Oak Park, Illinois. …
Type: Plant Info
… or do you have to chemically support them? Does your yard buzz with activity in summer, or is the air silent and still? Does your vegetable garden produce bumper crops, or are your … and information here . Feeds a Crowd It makes sense: the nectar and pollen in native plants is highly nutritious to native pollinators. These are the plants and insects that evolved … the gardens that support them, check out this Pollinator Partnership guide . Karen Zaworski is a garden writer and photographer who lives and gardens in Oak Park, Illinois . …
Type: Plant Info
… make excellent screening for privacy, tolerate urban pollution, and can be pruned to suit the site. Large specimens lend a natural, rugged look to a landscape, where tinier species are … highly compressed cones that are often mistakenly called berries. The bark of many species is an attractive, peeling russet color, familiar to many as the red cedar found in furniture or … overhead will be susceptible to the fungal blights that can afflict some species. But there is no question about it. Junipers have suffered from overuse and underimagination. Too often, no …
Type: Plant Info