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George’s Current Ramblings and Readlings Category

Eat Ugly

August 8th, 2017

Just because a fruit is malformed or “ugly” doesn’t mean you can’t eat it. Don’t waste flawed produce. Cut out any bad parts and eat ugly! This post also goes into reasons why produce develops imperfections in the first place.

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Find That Plant… a Kids Gardening Game

August 1st, 2017

   Plants have a hard time competing for toddler attention.    They’re non-animated, they don’t interact (except for the touch-anxious sensitive plant), and they don’t sing, dance, or do silly things.    So when our 4-year-old granddaughter came to visit last month, I tried to think of a fun way to get her outside in […]

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HOAs and the $500 Mailbox Case

July 25th, 2017

If you live in a community with a homeowners association (HOA), maybe you don’t mind a committee of others deciding what you can and can’t plant. But sometimes, these rules get a little persnickety… like the case of the Maryland couple who spent $33,000 in legal fees on an HOA mailbox dispute. Dubbed the “$500 […]

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See Roses and Gardens for the New Year

July 18th, 2017

   It might seem a little early to be making New Year’s plans while the temperature is sweltering outside, but a July 29 deadline is coming up soon for our 6-night, 7-day trip to sunny southern California.    This trip is a Collette Vacations tour with garden add-ons engineered by Lowee’s Group Tours and me. […]

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Plants Doing Some “Catching Up?”

July 4th, 2017

  Every growing season brings some good things and some not-so-good things. So far this year, it’s been mostly good.    The end of June was especially impressive… 2 inches of rain, then four beautiful, sunny days in the 70s. It doesn’t get much better weather-wise than that for gardeners.    I’ve heard a few […]

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More Superb Home-Grown Gardens

June 27th, 2017

   One of the highlights of June is that it’s a peak month for garden tours.    In the past week, I got to see a dozen excellent home gardens in Cumberland and Perry counties – plus one under-appreciated local public garden maintained by a home gardener.    Six of the gardens were ones we […]

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Seas of veggies, tractor-following birds, and Clint Eastwood’s oaks

June 20th, 2017

   I ran into plenty of intriguing readling material last month on our Lowee’s/Collette tour to northern California. Maybe you’ll be as fascinated by the following as I was:    No-wash produce. The oceanic fields of vegetables in California’s Salinas Valley (where America gets the majority of its cool-season produce) was incredible for its scale […]

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Stake No More

June 13th, 2017

Here’s a job you can largely eliminate if you’re trying to cut work in the garden – staking perennials. By going with some of the new compact varieties that are now available or by doing a spring cutback of the floppers you already have, you can get away from the stakes, cages and rings that […]

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What If We Didn’t Have Such Wild Weather Rides?

June 6th, 2017

You can’t blame a lot of plants for not wanting to grow in central-Pennsylvania gardens. We’ve gone as high as 107 degrees in summer and as low as minus 22 degrees in winter. We can go from 85 degrees on a fall day down to below freezing the next night… and vice versa in spring. […]

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Gardens of Maine and the Canadian Maritimes

May 30th, 2017

Most public gardens are the work of wealthy benefactors or universities. Very few are started by “ordinary” people. The finest example of the latter that I’ve ever seen is the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens near Boothbay, Maine, a 248-acre waterfront gem that’s on my top 10 list of favorite American gardens. Coastal Maine has only […]

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