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George’s Current Ramblings and Readlings Category

Gardens, Scenery and Food of Arizona

September 3rd, 2019

   Just because a climate is hot and dry doesn’t mean its plants are boring.    The amazing botanical world has managed to come up with a surprisingly diverse array of beautiful and sometimes curious plants that have adapted to arid environments.    We’re going to have a closeup look at it all this December […]

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Bugged by Bugs? Plant More Plants

August 27th, 2019

   I wrote a garden column for the Patriot-News a few years ago on a talk that University of Maryland entomologist Dr. Michael Raupp did at a plant conference.    He made the interesting argument that bugs are a healthy part of any ecosystem (including home gardens) and that the key to keeping them from […]

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This Plant Is Itching to Get Us

August 20th, 2019

   Plants are generally pretty docile and defenseless creations.    If your dog wants to dig up a daylily or you feel like decapitating a cabbage for dinner, there’s really not much the plants can do about it.    Then there’s Toxicodendron radicans, better known as poison ivy.    This is a plant that not […]

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Survivor Landscaping

August 13th, 2019

   Way back when I was a Cub Scout leader, we started the year by having the boys discuss what the pack’s rules should be.    The 8-year-olds’ first suggestion was, “No killing.”    I wouldn’t have thought of that, but it was definitely a good place to start.    That also happens to be […]

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“Real” Impatiens Are Back?

August 6th, 2019

   Maybe I’m a little premature, but me thinks good, old-fashioned impatiens are back.    Impatiens walleriana were our top-selling annual flower up until 2012, when a deadly downy mildew disease swooped in and killed just about everybody’s plants in a matter of weeks.    Because the water mold that causes the collapse is as […]

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Surprise Waterfalls

July 30th, 2019

   I like waterfalls.    They make dramatic or soothing landscape features, and ones like Niagara and Iguaçu are some of most impressive features on the planet.    However, I don’t care for waterfalls that materialize out of summer downpours and carry away everything in their path.    It turns out that’s the type we […]

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“Friendly” Bug Control

July 23rd, 2019

   Bugs.    We like it when those pretty little skippers and monarchs flit around the flowers.    And more people are coming around to the idea that bees are a good sign in the garden and that spiders do more good than not.    But pretty much everyone is aghast when Japanese beetles swarm […]

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I Miss My Soil

July 16th, 2019

   One thing Cristina Papson said she wished she had done before moving from Cumberland County to Florida was take a little of her garden soil with her.    It would’ve been a memento… a tangible keepsake to remind her of the many pleasant hours spent beautifying her Hampden Twp. yard.    Before my wife, […]

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The Flowery City

July 9th, 2019

   I’m beginning to think that maybe the appreciation of flowers is inversely proportional to the lousiness of your winter weather.    Boothbay, Maine, is pretty cold and icy over a long winter, but the little coast-line town has one of the nation’s best botanical gardens, the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens.      Buffalo, N.Y., […]

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The Father of Master Gardeners

June 25th, 2019

   I can’t imagine the void we’d have in the gardening world if there were no such thing as Master Gardeners.    These plant-loving, sharing-minded folks – mostly retirees – volunteer millions of hours nationwide each year answering gardening questions, teaching better ways to garden, and helping home gardeners solve their garden problems.    It’s […]

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