Monday, December 14, 2015

In a Vase on Monday: A First


I have never met Cathy at Rambling in the Garden, host of the blog meme, In a Vase on Monday. I've never participated in the meme before today, but I'm familiar with it because of someone I have met.

Everything looks as if it was created expressly for Loree's garden - the plants,
the containers, the structures... She is an incredibly talented designer.

"Careful, you could poke an eye out."

Loree Bohl, who lives and gardens in Portland, Ore., has posted her version of the meme a dozen or so times. When the Garden Bloggers Fling was held in Portland in 2014, I was privileged to get to see her garden - Danger Garden - in all its spiky glory. I've long been a fan of her blog and seeing all those glorious plants in person as well as her edgy design was one of the highlights of that trip.

I don't often cut things from my garden, preferring instead to enjoy them in their natural setting. But today, as we were experiencing way above normal temperatures for the middle of December, I got the urge to go out and cut whatever I thought might go together in a vase. On Monday.

Because I don't cut things from my garden, I'm not the most accomplished flower arranger. Those things take practice. But I'm pretty happy with how this one turned out. It even looks a little Christmas-y, though that wasn't the intent.

Red is the accent color in our kitchen and dining area. Chihuly's Burned Ikebana hangs on the wall, and photos of grandchildren Anthony and Hannah keep a
handmade angel (by mom) company on the mid-century buffet.




I worked hard to find something in bloom, impossible at this time last year, which had us with several inches of snow on the ground. Though we were at nearly 70° on Saturday and Sunday this year, it will be a couple of days yet before the fall self-seeded Calendula blooms open up.








But there were some wonderful things out there just the same. I used:

  • Panicum virgatum 'Northwind'
  • Baptisia Twilite Prairieblues™
  • Washington hawthorn (Crataegus phaenopyrum)
  • Colorado blue spruce (Picea pungens)
  • Sweet autumn clematis (Clematis terniflora)
  • Coral bells (Heuchera 'Tiramisu')


The vase is one of a set of three that I purchased at West Elm in Austin, Texas,
when Jenny Peterson and I were working our book,
Indoor Plant Decor: The Design Stylebook For Houseplants

I doubt I'll participate in In a Vase on Monday again until spring comes along and I've got something different to choose from the garden for cutting. But you can follow along at Cathy's blog here.

Thanks, Loree, for inspiring me to play.


Thursday, July 9, 2015

A Living Room Divider: Define Your Space With Plants


When Jenny Peterson and I were writing our book, Indoor Plant Decor: The Design Stylebook for Houseplants, one of the ideas we shared for using houseplants as a design element was as a room divider.

From Indoor Plant Decor: The Design Stylebook for Houseplants


The photo on page 83 of the Traditional Mix chapter shows how I used this concept in my own entry/living room. Our house was built in 1975 and when we bought it in 1977, we never gave the spindled half-wall a second thought. It's just how things were traditionally done back then.

Over the years, I came to hate those spindles. First of all, they have a colonial/Early American look to them and I'm just not a fan of that style. I knew that one day those spindles would be history, but I didn't know just what I'd do there, after their demise.

I don't remember now how the idea of putting a planter atop that half-wall came about, but my handy dandy dad constructed it and I planted it up.

That spot doesn't get the most light in the world - only indirect light from the windows in the living room - so I needed something that would do well under low light conditions.

ZZ plant (Zamioculcas zamiifolia) fit the bill. It's one of the easiest houseplants in the world, not being fussy about anything, including light and water. I planted it in 2011 and just recently decided it needed an overhaul. Most of the plants were fine, but I'd lost a few over the years, due to my truly neglecting them, as in I forgot to water them for a couple of months. (See? I'm not much different than you are!)

It was time for a change. And here's how it looks now:



Those sansevierias are stuffed in there. I wanted to put some ivy in at the base too, but there simply wasn't any room for it. There are a lot of new shoots coming up from the roots and I'll likely have to thin them at some point, but they're slow-growing so this should be good for quite a while.

Also called snake plant and mother-in-law's tongue, this succulent is known to be one that thrives on neglect, although you do need to remember to water it now and then. They prefer bright light, but will also grow in shade, making it highly adaptable as a houseplant.

Another benefit of Sansevieria trifasciata? It's one of the plants known for cleaning the air of toxins.

For more ideas on how to use plants to enhance your individual style inside your home, see our book, Indoor Plant Decor: The Design Stylebook for Houseplants.  It's available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other booksellers, as well as directly from me as a signed copy.




Friday, March 13, 2015

A Quick 4-Book Gardening Book Giveaway!


My publisher, St. Lynn's Press, is celebrating St. Patrick's Day a little early by giving away four titles from their illustrious repertoire of books. They've made it easy to enter:

Green is good. St. Paddy would agree. How are you 'greening up' the planet'?

Want a chance to win one of our books by Billy Goodnick, Jan Johnsen, Kylee Baumle, Jenny Peterson and the Editors at SLP for St. Patrick's Day? 

Simply visit our page and leave a comment about how you are 'going green' on this status. That's how we'll know you'd like to win one of the books.

Deadline to comment: Midnight, EDT, Friday, March 13th. One copy of each book will be mailed out next Monday to four 'lucky' winners!


So that's it. Just visit the St. Lynn's Press Facebook page (and "Like" it if you'd like!) and leave a comment on the status that shows these four books:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/098556220X/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=098556220X&linkCode=as2&tag=theliteraryworld&linkId=5DAGJTE4I37XYFWI
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/098327262X/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=098327262X&linkCode=as2&tag=theliteraryworld&linkId=4RMGET44FW7HI72N
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0985562293/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0985562293&linkCode=as2&tag=theliteraryworld&linkId=ZKU62IICGZZERCQS
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0985562218/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0985562218&linkCode=as2&tag=theliteraryworld&linkId=3276PO3NWJBMUQOR

If you want to check out the books further, just click on the covers above and it will take you to the Amazon page for each one. But whatever you do, you'd better scurry on over to the St. Lynn's Press page and enter to win one, because the giveaway closes at midnight EDT tonight! (Friday, March 13, 2015)


Saturday, January 10, 2015

It's Houseplant Appreciation Day! (+ a book giveaway)


Yes, it's pretty, but...
It's the middle of winter and I guarantee you I'm not doing any gardening out there in the frozen tundra right now. I know the entire eastern half of the country is shivering, but with all due respect to those of you in the south that think you've got it bad, I invite you to spend a few days with me.

It will be two more months before I can even begin to think about what I might do in the gardens outside. But I've got more than enough green going on right here in the house. Those who know me know that I live in a jungle during the cold months of the year. I haven't taken a head count of my houseplants, but it's a lot. Trust me.

Today happens to be Houseplant Appreciation Day and whether you've got one houseplant or one hundred, it's always good to be reminded of why it's beneficial to grow plants in your house (whether it's winter OR summer!).

Nothing adds a spot of color to a cold winter's day like amaryllis.
(Hippeastrum 'Temptation')

  • Plants provide oxygen. Remember those oxygen bars that were so popular back in the '90s? You could go in them and breathe super-oxygenated air and it was supposed to provide all sorts of health benefits for us oxygen-deprived humans. Well, plants take your CO₂ and convert it to oxygen, so whether it's beneficial or not, you've got fresh oxygen right from the source when you have living plants in your house. Fresh is better, right? 

  • Bromeliads like it shady when they grow outside, so they make an ideal houseplant.

  • Plants clean the air.  Certain plants are known to actually rid the air of toxins. We live with all kinds of artificial chemicals wafting through the air, coming from the carpets on our floors, cleaning solutions, and plastics everywhere. NASA conducted a study to see if plants could help rid the air in an enclosed space of various toxins and found that growing just one plant for every 100 square feet of living space could do just that. There's a long list of plants that help us in this way, but here's a list of just a few that are exceptionally good at it:

    • Peace lily 
    • Snake plant 
    • English ivy 
    • Dracaena spp.  
    • Anthurium 
    • Chrysanthemum 
Peace lily (Spathiphyllum cochlearispathum) is a real workhorse when it
comes to cleaning the air.

  • Plants relieve stress. How many of us enjoy taking a walk through a garden, through the woods, through a park, when we're stressed about something? Studies have shown that environments that have live plants help reduce blood pressure and provide a sense of well-being when compared with those that don't have them.

  • This staghorn fern (Platycerium sp.) likes it in our bathroom, where the humidity
    levels are naturally higher than in other parts of the house.

  • Plants help people work better.  Again, studies have shown that working in an environment that has live plants will increase your productivity and creativity.


    Chinese evergreen (Aglaonema sp.) in my office, as featured in
    Indoor Plant Decor: The Design Stylebook for Houseplants

  • Plants help fight disease.  Plants raise the humidity levels in the air around them, and who can't use a little more humidity during winter? Those of us who have to have our heat on during this time of year know just how dry the air can get. Higher humidity levels lessen your susceptibility to colds.
Orchids are one of the air cleaners and their beautiful blooms can last for several months.


One of my favorite houseplants (and one of the easiest to grow) is the Norfolk Island Pine. I got my biggest one a few years ago when I was participating in a program by Costa Farms. If that name sounds familiar, it's because Costa Farms is the largest houseplant grower and distributor in all of North America. Go to a big box store and you'll find that most of the houseplants offered there come from Costa Farms.

This Norfolk Island pine (Araucaria heterophylla), which isn't a pine at all,
was about two-thirds the size it currently is when I got it just a few years ago.

I was fortunate to get to see their home base in Miami, Fl., a few years ago and seeing all those gorgeous plants being grown in ginormous quantities was amazing. I learned a lot about the company and how they do things, which just served to make me more appreciative of how the majority of my houseplants get from there to here.

Now that you know that houseplants are good for you, doesn't that just make you want to run out and get one? (Or two or three?) And if you aren't really sure just how to display your houseplants, let me offer a suggestion that has lots of ideas for how to do that - my book.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/098556220X/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=098556220X&linkCode=as2&tag=theliteraryworld


Amazon chose Indoor Plant Décor: The Design Stylebook for Houseplants as one of their Top 20 Books of 2013 in its category. I'm not sure exactly what the criteria was for that honor, but co-writer Jenny Peterson and I like to think it's because it's got oodles of ideas for how to use houseplants that enhance your particular home decor style, whether it's Classic Elegance, Cheap Chic, World Beat, Peaceful Zen, Modern Eclectic, Haberdashery, Traditional Mix, or Vintage Vibe.

Enter to win a copy of Indoor Plant Décor

I'd like to give a signed copy to one of my readers, so if you want to enter to win it, here's what you need to do:

1. Leave a comment to this blog post telling me your favorite houseplant

and

2. Fill out the Rafflecopter form with your contact details so I'll know how to get ahold of you if you're the lucky winner. I'll also use Rafflecopter to randomly choose a winner.

a Rafflecopter giveaway


You have until midnight EST next Sunday night (January 18, 2015) to enter, but do it now so you don't forget! Good luck and go appreciate your houseplants! It's their day!

Instructions for how to make this succulent wreath is one of eight DIY
projects in Indoor Plant Decor: The Design Stylebook for Houseplants.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

If you would like to purchase a signed copy of my book, just click here. A link for purchasing is also on the right side sidebar on my blog. To purchase an unsigned copy at a discount through Amazon, click here.


Sunday, June 2, 2013

Lowe's Creative Ideas: Summer Bulbs Dress Up a Dry Bed


We have a section of our largest garden that has never made me happy as long as the garden has been in existence.  It's a bit of a difficult area, design-wise and being a design-challenged gardener, I just never really knew what to do there.

Then I got an idea.  Let me set the stage for you.

This area of the garden is a mixed bag.  Due to the trees getting larger, we have more shade than we used to.  Any sun that does hit part of the area is morning sun, which is actually easier to work with than if it were afternoon sun.  It's also a fairly wet area, in comparison to the rest of the garden. And it's smack dab in the middle, with no easy way to get to it to care for plants there.

So here was the plan:  Make a dry bed.  A dry bed is a little waterway, like a teeny creek, if you will, except that it's got no water.  No water until you get a major rain, that is. And then that's okay, because by virtue of its design, it can handle quite a heavy rain before flooding. All that water has a place to go!

Here's what the area looked like before I got started:


Yes, that's bare ground you see, because I just didn't know what to do with it.  It's pretty dry in this photo and you know what happens when a typically wet area with native clay soil and no vegetation gets baked by the sun - it becomes hard and cracks develop.  We have amended it with compost somewhat, but since there was no plan for planting, it got neglected.

Not only that, because nothing was planted there, we used it for walking around to get to the areas of the garden adjacent to it.  So soil compaction made things even worse.  I let the Sedum acre do its thing because well, I didn't know what I wanted to do there anyway.

So...one dry bed coming right up!

First things first - I started digging the bed, making it deeper in the middle and sloping the sides. That's to help excess water drain into this area.


Then I put a very lightweight landscape fabric down - the kind that is made of a sort of paper and very permeable, but will suppress weeds.


We live out in farm country, and the fields around us are peppered with rocks.  Every now and then, we'll take a walk out into the field with buckets and gather them up.  The farmer benefits, because those rocks wreak havoc on their equipment, and we benefit because we use those rocks in our gardens.


After a couple of trips through the corn field behind us, we had enough rocks to line the dry bed. Smaller gravel was added to fill in the spaces between the rocks.


Then, the planting.  Paying attention to what was full shade, part sun, and full sun, most of the new plantings involved bulbs.  Some Asiatic lilies were already in place, but Caladium bulbs were added across the way.  Caladiums do bloom, but their best asset is their giant foliage that comes in assorted colors and white.  I chose the white ones here for the shadier part of this garden.


I also planted Tropicanna® cannas, which are a favorite of mine, also for their foliage, but they get bright tangerine blooms later in the season too.

Dahlia Dark Angels Star Wars
It's early, and the weather has been generally cool, so the dahlias aren't
in full bloom yet.

Finally, I planted some Caladium bulbs in the center of the giant terra cotta pot and dahlias on the outer edges.  Caladiums are generally a shade plant, but they will take a little morning sun, so they should be fine here.

Another benefit of having the dry bed is that we can walk on it if we need to!  While it's not a proper path through the garden, it can function that way when necessary.

I now love this part of the garden that I used to despise.




Materials:

Landscape fabric  ($9.97)
Dahlias (3 x $7.98)
Tropicanna cannas (2 x $16.98)
Caladiums (3 x $8.98)
River rock (3 x $2.47)

Some of the materials for this project we already had, but you can find everything you need to do it at Lowe's.  See more Lowe's Creative Ideas here! And other Lowe's Creative Ideas Bloggers here!







___________________________
Lowe's Home Improvement provided me with gift cards for the purpose of purchasing the materials needed to complete this project.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Lowe's Creative Ideas: A Rainbow of Color For a Partly Shady Garden - and a Deck!


Our average last frost date here at Our Little Acre in northwest Ohio is May 15th, but it's been a long time since we've had a frost that late. This year, spring has taken its sweet time getting here, although we've had some nice weather here and there. Frost two nights in a row this week didn't make some things in the garden very happy - the gardener either.

My April Lowe's Creative Ideas project is just a bit late, due to the cold weather and a lot of rain.  It's hard to plant in mud. But finally, we got it completed! 

Sometimes I dream a little too big.  But I'm a possibility thinker and I could visualize this project.  In fact, part of it had lived in my head for a couple of years now.  A big tip of the hat to my ever-helpful husband, Romie.  Without him, most of it would not have been possible.

One of the Creative Ideas themes for April was to use colors of the rainbow.  I decided to incorporate these colors by using both flowers and hardscape.

A portion of our large garden at the back of the property has always been reserved for what I call "hot" flowers.  In the past, I'd grow colorful zinnias, cosmos, snapdragons, marigolds, and lilies.  Anything that would bring about a riot of color was fair game for that garden.  But in recent years, that has been a challenge, due to the maturing of several trees in that part of the yard and in the garden itself.  The kinds of flowers I'd always grown there needed a lot of sun to perform well.  That was Dilemma #1.

Secondly, we had made use of the trunk of a pine tree that had died, by converting it into a directional with colorful signs indicating the miles to the homes of family members.  We also put a decorative bird house on top, which the wrens always made use of.  This past year, the pine rotted to the point that it was only a matter of time before it fell over, so that was removed.  I had always loved this colorful addition to the "hot" garden, so this became Dilemma #2.

I put my thinking cap on.

I'd remembered seeing a cute set of birdhouses in my Lowe's Creative Ideas magazine awhile back, so I went to the website and found the plans.  I knew I was going to need some husband help for this, so I talked mine into making the birdhouses for me.  It didn't take him too long; I got them painted, and we put them up.


The birdhouses fit like a sleeve over 4x4s that are set into the ground.  The top of the 4x4 serves as the bottom of the nesting cavity of each birdhouse.  We made the holes 1¼-inch in diameter, so as to attract wrens and not sparrows.

This added a lot of color to the garden and I was pleased with how they looked as a replacement for the directional. 

Heucherella 'Gold Zebra'
To add more color, I planted some perennials and annuals, some of which do okay in shade.  For example, Heucherella 'Gold Zebra' has bright yellow foliage with deep red veining, and the fountain grass Pennisetum setaceum 'Fireworks' has a burgundy tint to it (more so with direct sun).

Gerbera jamesonii

The "hot" garden still gets a fair amount of direct sun on its western and northern edges at various times of the day, so I planted perennials lithodora (Lithodora diffusa 'Blue Star') and candytuft (Iberis sempervirens 'Purity').

A couple of Gerbera daisies in orange brightened things up and existing Asiatic lilies 'Matrix' and some colorful daylilies will provide some vibrant red-orange and golden yellow color as the season progresses.

The candytuft (front left) was done blooming by the time I finished the
project, but it will provide pretty foliage and occasional rebloom.

Lithodora diffusa 'Blue Star'




The second part of my plan was the one that I'd first expressed a desire for two years ago.  There's a small pond that's part of this garden and I'd wanted a deck for a sitting area next to it.  This took some convincing on my part before Romie agreed to make it.

I'd envisioned a curvy-edged deck, but when it became clear that curves were going to be much harder to execute than a deck with straight edges, I conceded to going with the simpler design.  After a geometry discussion, we agreed on a trapezoid shape for the deck.

We placed cardboard under the deck, to kill the grass.

The deck proved easier to make than the birdhouses, and they weren't difficult, so in the end, the project was pretty easy.  It just took some time and some cooperation from the weather to get it all in place.

I'd fallen in love with a yellow daisy bench on a previous visit to Lowe's, so I picked one up on my trip there to get supplies for the rest of the project.  That, I put together all by myself.  I mean, it was only a few nuts and bolts and voila!


To add some more color, I planted up one of my larger pots - bright blue! - with a braided Dracaena that I found in the Lowe's houseplant section.  I added a couple of shade-loving caladiums for red color, and sweet potato vine in a bright chartreuse.  The sweet potato vine will eventually spill out over the edge of the pot and will do fine in shade, even though it prefers sun.



I get to have my "hot" garden, even though a good deal of it is now in shade.


Supplies

Tall Trio of Birdhouses:

  • 11 - 1"x6"x8' pine boards  ($5.96 x 11 = $65.56)
  • 1 - 2"x8"x8' pine board  ($6.47)
  • 3 - 4"x4"x8' treated pine posts  ($8.27 x 3 = $24.81)
  • 1 lb. box of 6d galvanized finishing nails ($3.92)
  • 3 - 1 qt. Valspar exterior semi-gloss paint + primer in Mountain Botanical, Classic Red, and Morning Sunrise ($12.33 x 3 = $36.99)

Total cost:  $137.75


Deck:

  • 6 - 2"x4"x8' treated pine  ($3.37 x 6 = 20.22)
  • 15 - 5/4" x6"x8' treated deck boards  ($3.97 x 15 = $59.55)
  • 1 - 5 lb. box of 2.5" deck screws (Used about half of box @ $22.47)

Total cost:  $ 91.00


Plants:

  • 3 - 1 gal. Heucherella 'Gold Zebra'  (3 x $10.98 = $32.94)
  • 3 - 2.5 qt. Lithodora 'Blue Star'  (3 x $7.98 = $23.94)
  • 1 - 2.5 qt. Pennisetum 'Fireworks'  ($5.98)
  • 3 - 2.5 qt. Iberis 'Purity'  (3 x $5.98 = $17.94)
  • 3 - 1.25 qt. Gerbera daisy  (3 x $4.98 = $14.94)
  • 3 - 1 pt. Ipomoea (3 x $2.98 = $8.94)
  • 2 - 1.25 qt. Caladium 'Freda Hemple'  (2 x $4.98 = $9.96)
  • 1 - 1.25 qt. Dracaena  ($10.98)

Total cost:   $125.62

Cost of daisy bench:  $98.00

For more DIY inspiration, visit Lowe's Creative Ideas and the Lowe's Creative Ideas Creator and Influencers Blogger Network.







___________________________
Lowe's Home Improvement provided me with gift cards for the purpose of purchasing the materials needed to complete this project.

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