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George’s Current Ramblings and Readlings Category

Presenting: The Garden

July 17th, 2018

   Sue and I had a couple of hundred visitors tour our yard this past Saturday as part of a Penn-Cumberland Garden Club tour.    We didn’t go to a whole lot of extra trouble to make the yard look better than it really is. But we did do a few things ahead of time […]

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10 of the Best Variegated Plants

July 10th, 2018

   Plants with variegated leaves offer beauty all season, not just when flowers are blooming. That’s a main reason why you can count me as a variegation fan.    Although variegation can involve zones of assorted different colors, the most common blend is green and white.    Variegation isn’t terribly common in nature since the […]

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Why I Always Water New Plantings – Rain or Not

July 3rd, 2018

   The first thing I do when I finish planting any new plant is to give it a good soaking of water. Right away.    This includes when the soil is already damp and even when I’m planting during a rain, which happens a fair amount because of the limited time I often have to […]

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Invasion of the Gnats

June 26th, 2018

   They’re back… and worse than ever.    Those swarming, biting gnats have exploded in population this spring, making outdoor life miserable or impossible for anyone living within a mile or two of a central-Pennsylvania creek.    More accurately called “black flies,” this pest is one we had solved for 25 years before we stopped […]

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Pollinators: Why It’s Not So Simple as Just Planting All Natives

June 19th, 2018

Native plants help draw and feed pollinators, but that doesn’t mean non-natives are useless to wildlife.

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Time to “Make America Native Again” in the Garden?

June 12th, 2018

Here’s an article on an interesting native-plant talk by entomologist Dr. Doug Tallamy and author Rick Darke that made the case for why we should plant more native plants.

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Navigating the Native vs. Non-Native Controversy

June 5th, 2018

Native plants make good sense in the garden. But that doesn’t mean we should plant nothing but natives… or feel guilty about our peonies and hydrangeas.

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See George’s Gardens

May 30th, 2018

   If you’ve ever wondered what my yard looks like, you’ll get a chance to see it on Sat., July 14.    That’s the day of the Penn-Cumberland Garden Club’s “Plant America Beautiful” summer garden tour. My wife and I agreed to be one of the five or six residential stops on the tour, which […]

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Mulching in the Rain

May 22nd, 2018

   Forget the weather forecast if you’re wondering if it’s going to rain.    Just check if I’m planning to mulch.    Without fail, rain falls every year after the 8-cubic-yard pile of mulch shows up on my driveway.    It doesn’t matter whether meteorologists forecast rain or not. The mulch pile causes it, which […]

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Easy-to-Grow Cooking Herbs

May 15th, 2018

   You could keep paying $3 or more for a packet of fresh herbs at the grocery store.    Or you could start growing your own herbs for pennies – even fresher and at arm’s reach whenever you need a sprig or two for dinner. Most cooking herbs are easy to grow, too.    And […]

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