Monday, March 29, 2021, learn about FEARLESS PRUNING
Registration link: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_RfkO-_nJT8S-LximcfG24Q
Lee Reich, PhD worked in agricultural research for Cornell University and the U. S. Department of Agriculture before moving on to writing and consulting. He grows a wide variety of fruits and vegetables on his farmden (more than a garden, less than a farm), including many uncommon fruits such as pawpaw, hardy kiwifruit, shipova, and medlar.
Registration link: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_RfkO-_nJT8S-LximcfG24Q
Arnold’s Promise? I miss the bees. No, they’re not gone from here because of Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), widely responsible for the loss of bees. Most years, they would have been here and perhaps gone on to greener pastures by now. The bees come for my witchhazel, and the reason for their absence this year […]
It’s time to prune, and to help you, I’ll be holding a PRUNING WEBINAR on March 29, 7-8:30 EST. Learn the tools of the trade, how plants respond to pruning, details for pruning various plants, and enjoy a fun finale on an easy espalier. There’ll be time for questions also. Cost is $35 and you […]
My Sweet, Corn Spring is here this week, weatherwise, at least. Not to bring back bad memories, but with real spring just around the corner, now is a good time to revisit two or three of last year’s worst pest problems, and plan some sort of counteraction. Not that those memories are really that bad; […]
FEARLESS PRUNING WORKSHOP/WEBINAR A workshop/webinar to take the mystery out of pruning, so that lilac and rose bushes, apple trees, blueberry shrubs — all trees and shrubs, in fact — can be pruned to look their best and be in vibrant health. Fearlessly. Topics will include: •Why prune? •Tools for pruning. •How plants respond to various […]
It’s wasted effort to sprinkle dead seeds into furrows either in the garden or seed flats. Seeds are living, albeit dormant, embryonic plants which do not live forever. When you buy a packet of seeds, you’re assured of their viability. Government standards set the minimum percentage of seeds that must germinate for each type of […]
Sap Season Get your taps in. It’s syrup weather. Maple syrup. At least here in New York’s Hudson Valley, the sunny days in the 40s with nights in the 20s that are predicted should get the sap flowing. I say “should” because I haven’t yet checked sap buckets that I hung out on the […]
WEEDLESS GARDENING WORKSHOP/WEBINAR with Lee Reich, PhD, writer, scientist, and farmdener* Introducing a novel way of caring for the soil, a 4-part system that minimizes weed problems and maintains healthy plants and soil. Learn how to apply this system to establish new plantings as well as to maintain existing plantings. The principles and practices are rooted […]
I’d like to highlight, today, what makes this blog possible. First of all, it’s you, readers. The positive feedback I get is very rewarding. I’ve had great opportunities — academically and “in the field” — to learn about growing plants and caring for the soil, and have put all this into practice for decades. My […]
I Grow Taller “Make hay while the sun shines” is fine advice in its season. For winter, how about? “Prune while the snow is high and firm.” My apple and pear trees are semi-dwarf, presently ranging from seven to eleven feet tall. Even though I have a pole pruner and various long-reach pruning tools, I […]