Tip #5: Do a little plant-sitter training We all know plants need regular water but did you know that when and how you water can make the difference between a healthy plant and a sad (or even dead) plant? Well of course YOU did, but your chosen plant sitter may not. Our General Manager, Liane, suggests inviting your plant sitter to come over ahead of time for a tour of the garden/house so you can show them where your supplies are kept and what needs to be watered. Depending on your relationship, you could mention that the best times to…
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JULY JOBS OUTDOOR TOMATOES I do not plant my outdoor tomatoes until June. But once they are in the ground they will grow strongly and need regular tying up. This is, of course, if you are growing cordon tomatoes rather than bush or determinate varieties. The latter can be propped up rather like an herbaceous plant rather than tied regularly in. As I tie them with soft twine I pinch out the side shoots and then water them. I do not feed the outdoor ones as our soil is plenty rich enough and they had a good mulch of compost just…
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Swansons has always appreciated our loyal customers and, in 2001, we created our very first Swan Dollars as a fun way of thanking them. Instead of the usual loyalty points program, we decided to get creative and design actual “dollars” that customers could redeem to save on their purchases. It’s now been 23 years of offering Swan Dollars. Over the years, these dollars have become a cherished part of the Swansons experience for our employees and customers alike. 2024: Swansons Nursery’s 100th Anniversary This year, we are excited to celebrate our 100th anniversary. In honor of this incredible milestone, we…
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End clamps Finally, it is time to close your system! End clamps are the simplest way to close your system by bending a drip tubing back on itself. End plugs are a more efficient component, as they also function as a water release valve at the end of your system. You can also create a looped circuit by using a tee-shaped fitting at the beginning of your circuit. SETTING UP A DRIP SYSTEM First, have a plan before purchasing your components and starting your setup. Measuring your space and sketching out a circuit is a great place to start to…
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One of the more common questions asked by newer gardeners is, “when is the best time of year to prune my __________?” The answers out there can vary from “the first hearing of tree frogs after the second full moon past the Summer Solstice” to “anytime your pruning shears are sharp.” Here in the Maritime Northwest, we recommend that most pruning be done during summer and winter, and minimize it during fall and spring, which are more sensitive periods when the sap is flowing. In warmer or colder climates (particularly where more extreme), timing recommendations may differ, depending on how…
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ROSES It is impossible to celebrate June without speaking of roses. This is their time. The revamping of the Cottage Garden into a rose garden has involved many more roses so we now have 100 shrub roses with over 70 varieties as well as a dozen climbers. Some are still very young and will need a few years to properly establish – but they still bear their lovely flowers. Many of these roses are the old-fashioned kinds like gallicas, damasks, centifolias, bourbons, albas and moss roses but I am increasingly planting English roses that are repeat flowering so the season extends…
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Flytrap / Dionaea muscipula Arguably the most iconic carnivorous plant, the flytrap (aka Venus flytrap) is the only species within the genus Dionaea, D. muscipula. It has inspired a magnificent array of unforgettable works in popular culture, from the singing, man-eating monstrosity in The Little Shop of Horrors to the deadly piranha plant of the Super Mario Bros. media franchise. The flytrap is native to bogs and wetlands of coastal North and South Carolina. Like other carnivorous plants, D. muscipula prefers peaty, sandy soils that are low in nitrogen and phosphorus. It produces a tall scape with delicate white flowers…
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April was cold and wet again, the winter’s miserable weather continuing long into Spring. But the floods – at time of writing at least – have at last abated and there is that wonderful sense of the natural world unfurling out into the light. The garden seems not have minded the endless wet and although cold for humans it has in fact been mild with little or no frost so everything is flowering at least 10 days earlier than usual – if not ever. The tulips have been fantastic and all the fruit trees seemed to blossom at once at…
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While tomatoes are more cold-hardy than squash and peppers, their health can be severely damaged by the cold nights (and sometimes days!) of a Pacific Northwest spring. Without protection, they should not be planted outdoors until night temperatures stay about 50 degrees. However, you can plant your tomatoes earlier in the spring if you offer them protection from the cold. This gives them the extra time they need to mature and produce fruit in our short Northwest summers. We recommend protecting your tomato with an insulated plant protector, a blue plastic “tent” of sorts. Fill the tubes of the Season Starter…
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It’s Spring and I know you’re ready to get out there and plant since it’s sunny (wait… now it’s cold and raining…. wait! It’s sunny again… wait… ), but some vegetables won’t be happy (and grow into incredibly prolific tomato producers – yes, I’m talking to you, tomato fanatics) if you don’t protect them until night temperatures warm up consistently to 50 degrees and above. This doesn’t mean you can’t plant them right away – you can! But you should avail yourself of several excellent tools that allow you to get them in the ground and also keep them warm…