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Take note of what's growing.
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Time to Take Some Notes 

The growing season is starting to wind down, but before we get too involved with the fall clean-up, it's good to pause and take some notes. 
  • Start with the positive: which plants do you love and which ones love growing in your yard? When a plant is in the right spot, it performs well.
  • Which plants love growing in your yard so much that maybe you should divide them and share with some friends? When a plant is in the right spot, it sometimes gets rather aggressive and tries to take over the whole garden.
  • Which plants are struggling - or where is the turf grass struggling? Is there an obvious reason and a fix? Perhaps the trees have grown up and now it is shady where it previously was not. 
  • Which plants to you dislike and need to remove? Perhaps there are some that have over-grown their space or over-stayed their welcome and need to vacate the garden.
  • How well did your container gardens grow this year? Again, some plants may have tried to take over and others may have struggled. Take note so changes can be made next spring.
  • Was your vegetable garden productive? (This was a hard year for tomatoes because it was such a cool and wet spring.) Make notes of what you liked and what you didn't - next spring you probably won't remember.
  • Are there other hardscape or irrigation problems that need to be addressed? Autumn is a good time to handle these kinds of issues. 
  • Did you change your watering schedule for the hottest days of summer? We can expect to ramp that down again soon as the weather cools this fall.
A garden is always changing and growing - which is part of the charm. It's a good idea to stop and take inventory of what's going on once in a while! If you do decide you want some new plants, my ideal is to have everything I'm going to plant in the ground by September 30th; bulbs by October 15th. This gives the plants just enough time to settle in before the soil freezes hard. Happy Gardening! 
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Even if the dog hasn't bitten and the bee hasn't stung (as the song goes), it's always nice to think on your favorite things. Here are a few of our favorites.


Stephanie's Favorite Flower:

Shrub Rose / Rosa spp.
If you have been led to believe that Roses are high-maintenance and delicate, I’d like to introduce you to some of my favorites: Shrub Roses. Shrub Roses are hardy, fairly low-maintenance and there are so many choices in color and flower shape. Typically, shrub roses grow to be about 3 to 4 feet tall and wide. They have a tendency to bloom in spurts – blooming, then resting, then blooming again. It is important to remove the spent flowers before the hips form to get another strong flush of flowers. The rule of thumb is to cut the flowering stem back to a five-leaflet leaf. In late fall, I cut mine down about ½ way to be sure there isn’t winter breakage. In the spring, I evaluate the plants and cut back the canes again depending on which canes are budding and where. Some years, deer do the spring pruning for me in mid-winter and while I don’t really appreciate that, the roses have always come back fine. Roses are susceptible to black spot virus so avoid overhead watering or over watering. Taking good care of Shrub Roses mostly means plentiful use of the by-pass pruners, but these shrubs reward the gardener with sweet-smelling flowers all summer long.

Chesney's Favorite Flower:

Tickseed / Coreopsis spp.
While there are so many different varieties of Coreopsis, they all have the same needs when it comes to growing happily. They like full sun, don’t need a ton of water, and all need to be deadheaded pretty regularly to keep them blooming all summer. The most abundant and most common Coreopsis are yellow but, that being said, there are also red, pink, white, peach, and many color combo varieties as well. Most of these varieties, like Jethro Tull’s Tickseed, Lanceleaf, or the Zagreb Threadleaf Tickseed, bloom in the summer and then rebloom again in the fall, especially if they get a good haircut after their first round of flowers. These cute flowers move happily in the wind and add a nice pop of color to any garden.

Stephanie's Favorite Life-Hack:

  • lifehack or life-hack, life hack [lahyf-hak] noun. Informal. a tip, trick, or efficient method for doing or managing a day-to-day task or activity; a hack
Have you ever woken up at night and worried that you left the water running in the garden? I have had to get up and go check because I couldn’t get back to sleep worrying that I was flooding the yard! To avoid this situation, I found this quick and easy life-hack: hair scrunchies! I put a hair scrunchie on each of my hose bibs. When I turn on the water, I move the scrunchie to my wrist; then when I turn off the water, I return the scrunchie to the hose bib. I have several spigots at my house so based on on the color of scrunchie on my wrist, I also remember where the water is running. (The greenhouse has a green scrunchie.) It even works if you have the Sundrops & Starflowers logo covering the spigot for your irrigation system. I suppose you could also use rubbe rbands but I like the soft feel of a scrunchie on my wrist and they're available at the grocery or department store or even at the dollar store for cheap.
faucet with scrunchie
We love talking about landscaping and plants! Send an email, call or text Stephanie at (970)988-3808 to chat about your plants.
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