I will be spreading the blueberry gospel with a BLUEBERRY GROWING WORKSHOP at my farmden on July 30th, from 9:30 to 11:30 am. This workshop will cover everything you need to know to be on your way to picking your own blueberries, including soil preparation, obtaining plants, watering, fertilizing, pruning, and, or course, eating (and […]
About Lee A. Reich
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Entries by Lee A. Reich
[inter and succession planting, nasturtium, mulberries]
/3 Comments/in Gardening/by Lee A. ReichIn 1810, English essayist Charles Lamb wrote: “Nothing puzzles me more than time and space; and yet nothing troubles me less, as I never think of them.” Obviously, Charles was not a gardener. I spend a lot of time thinking about time and space in the garden, and out there this morning was particularly proud […]
[caterpillar yew, grape training, prune bay laurel]
/2 Comments/in Gardening/by Lee A. ReichThe hardest part has been getting the caterpillar to smile. This caterpillar is about 20 feet long and 3 feet high, 5 feet to the top of its antennae, and it lives near a wall along the front of my house. It’s green. It’s a yew. The caterpillar started out conventionally enough. Like so […]
[kiwiberry, corn 3, D. Austin rose]
/1 Comment/in Gardening/by Lee A. ReichA trip through Pennsylvania last week, on the way back from a lecture at the Millersville Native Plant Symposium, finally afforded me a convenient opportunity to stop in for a visit with David Jackson at KiwiBerry Organics (www.kiwiberry.com). David was not easy to find, as he’s nestled deep in the hills and back roads of […]
[poppies, hoeing]
/0 Comments/in Gardening/by Lee A. ReichIt’s poppy season! Oriental poppies and Shirley poppies and California poppies. Unfortunately, no Himalayan poppies. And no bread seed poppies, yet. Each species has similarly delicate petals, yet each species also has its own character. The Oriental poppies (Papaver orientalis), the first to open in my garden, have enormous heads of tissue paper thin […]
Have I ever mentioned my fondness for my scythe? Of course I have, but it bears repeating, now that scything season is upon us. This scythe is not the heavy, picturesque tool with a curved handle that you often see, and is best used, for decorating an outdoor wall. And it’s also not a tool […]
I broke my own rule and planted tomatoes out in the garden on May 13th. The weather was warm, the tomatoes were ready to pop out of their containers, and the bare ground seemed to cry out to be finally clothed with plants. The correct planting date for tomatoes around here is during the last […]
May 10th, an exquisite day with a slight breeze, temperatures in the 70s, and a limpid blue sky matching the blue on the backs of the resident pair of male bluebirds flitting about. What a day to be in the garden. So how come I’m not there? Because I’m building garden gates. Having recently re-built […]
(grafts, alpine strawberries, money plant flowers)
/0 Comments/in Gardening/by Lee A. ReichIt’s amazing how exciting a little bit of greenery can be. And I do mean just a little, eensy-weensy bit. That exciting greenery is in the barely expanding buds of grafts I’ve made over the past couple of weeks. Backtracking as to why I made those grafts . . . I did it to change […]
(locust, gates, corn planting)
/5 Comments/in Gardening/by Lee A. ReichMay 10th, an exquisite day with a slight breeze, temperatures in the 70s, and a limpid blue sky matching the blue on the backs of the resident pair of male bluebirds flitting about. What a day to be in the garden. So how come I’m not there? Because I’m building garden gates. Having recently […]