Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Gardeners Need Gardening Gloves

One of the best things about gardening is felling warm, moist dirt in your bare hands, but you will often end up with blistered, chapped, and scraped skin. The solution to this problem is gardening gloves. The more time you spend getting down and dirty in the garden, the more you need gardening gloves. Gardening gloves will be able to ease some of the pain you would otherwise be subject to, letting you spend even more time playing in the dirt.

There are hundreds of different types of gloves on the market, and the kind of gardening glove you buy depends on the way you garden. Some gloves offer protection against specific substances or things, for example, leather gloves are not the best for working with chemicals or water. Many gardening gloves are specialized for pruning thorns, refilling gasoline tanks, or using a chain saw, while others are for general tasks such as raking, digging, and weeding.

After choosing the type of gardening glove you need, you must make sure and pick out the perfect fit. Gloves that are too big have a tendency to slip off while gloves that are too small could cause aches and cramps. Any glove that doesn't fit could defeat the whole purpose of wearing gloves and cause blistering. To find a glove with the best fit possible, try the gloves on both hands, make a fist, and imitate the movements you make when gardening. If there is no pinching or slipping and the glove is comfortable then you have found your match.

Gardening gloves can be bought in many places and are produced by many companies, causing them all to have a different quality and price. Most gloves can be washed in cool water and then air dried. There are many different types of gloves you can purchase to satisfy your varying needs, such as cotton and cotton-polyester for general-purpose chores. These are among the most popular gloves and are perfect for light chores in cool and dry weather. Leather gloves can also be used for general chores but are heavier than cotton and polyester. Chemical resistant gloves will help protect your hands against oils, acids, herbicides, pesticides, and many other chemicals. Grip enhancing gloves are designed with rubber dots for extra gripping power. Cut and puncture resistant gloves are designed to offer extra protection against sharp edges

If you are the type person that only wears gloves as an optional luxury for various tasks, you should think seriously for using specialized gardening gloves for many of the activities you will be doing outside. There is really no reason not to wear gardening gloves; they protect your hands from the elements and don't ever cost all that much.



Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Gardening books come in all different shapes and sizes and offer more information on gardening than can be found anywhere else.  Anything anyone ever wanted to know about gardening can be found in a gardening book.  Gardening books are not expensive, and will end up being worth much more than you will pay for one.  Not only can gardening books be used for personal use, they are also an excellent gift for a gardening friend.

For the beginner, gardening books are almost a necessity in starting a garden.  Books will give step-by-step instructions and easy to understand directions on how to plant a garden, from breaking up the dirt to how much water your plants need.  They will give all of the necessary details about every type of plant, such as how much light they need to survive, how often they need to be watered, how much nutrients must be added to the soil, and any other little quirks that plants have.

Gardening books are very informational and range anywhere from just a pamphlet size book with a few pages to a novel size book with hundreds of pages.  The information provided is top notch and a lot of it cannot be found anywhere else.  Books provide hints and tips on how to make your plants healthier, how to keep your garden free of weeds, and how to prevent against and fight diseases.

Often times gardening books will give readers ideas they had never thought of before.  For example, there are hundreds of vegetables and herbs out there that many people would never think of growing in their backyard, but would be very good to grow in your own personal garden.  There are also millions of flowers many people don’t think about but that are very beautiful.  There are hundreds of people that would probably trade their rose bush for an exotic flower, and with a gardening book they could read about what types of flowers are available and will grow in their area.

Whether you enjoy gardening or not, gardening books are wonderful gifts if you have a gardening friend.  It is personalized and you can give a great gift that isn’t that expensive.  You could even give it to someone who doesn’t garden.  Who knows, maybe they will be interested and decide to plant a garden.

Gardening books are excellent for any type of gardener at any level.  No matter how much gardening knowledge and experience you have, I guarantee you there is a gardening book somewhere that has something in it you don’t know.  Gardening books can be used no matter what you grow: shrubs, flowers, vegetables, fruits, and trees, even those of you who grow weeds!

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Landscape Ideas For Front Yard: Gift Plants

You've received a lush poinsettia, thriving Christmas cactus, or basket of narcissus. Is there any way to keep them growing after the holidays?  Yes.

Your first task is to keep the plants in a brightly lit room until it's warm enough to plant in your garden. If possible place them in a window that gets at least a few hours of direct sunlight a day. Don't put them on a radiator, in front of a heater, or in the direct path of the heated air flow from you furnace.

Water only when the plants are dry. Over watering is much more common than under watering and can kill a plant just as quickly. Stick you finger in the top inch of soil. If it's even slightly damp don't water. Some plants need more water than others. Obviously if the leaves are drooping water the plant.

Don't fertilize at least for the first 30 days. Many florists and plant nurseries give the plants a boost of fertilizer before they go on sale. So your potted plant won't need any for the first month they're with you. Too much fertilizer or fertilizing too often will burn the plant. Because the soil is in pot the level of fertilizers builds up. Use a fertilizer that you dissolve in water and use it at half strength every six weeks.

Plants bloom in cycles. Winter is only a normal bloom cycle for plants in tropical or warm desert climates. The odds are your plant was forced to bloom which uses quite a bit of energy. For example: narcissus normally bloom in the early spring, roses in summer and mums in the fall. Once your plant has finished blooming don't try to force more flowers with extra fertilizer or more sunlight.

Recognize that certain plants will thrive only in conditions where they would naturally grow. Poinsettias are tropical plants and won't make it through the lightest frost. Cactus need a period of dormancy caused by lack of water so if you live in Seattle the cactus will likely succumb to all the rain.

When the weather warms up and the date of the latest average frost has passed, keep the plant on the patio or entry way where it's still sheltered but can acclimate to the outside. Flowering plants need eight hours of sunlight to promote blooms, keep that in mind when you select the permanent home for the plant.

Dig a hole that's larger than the pot. Place the plant in the hole at the same level as when it was in the pot. In other words the soil mark from the original potted soil should be slightly below ground level.

Water thoroughly and enjoy.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Landscape Ideas For Front Yard: Easy Summer Flowers

Late spring is the perfect time to plant seeds for easy to grow summer flowers. The soil needs to be warm enough for germination and the spring rains will help the seedlings get going.

Summer annual flowers include zinnias, sunflowers, cosmos, petunias, bachelor buttons, balsam, alyssum, marigolds, vinca, and lobelia to name just a few.  

Flowers need at least six hours of full sun to bloom profusely. In very hot areas such as the Southwest and desert areas, afternoon shade is appreciated.

Prepare the soil by digging down at least six inches. Turn the soil over with a shovel. Add compost or well rotten manure and a time release fertilizer per the package directions. Turn the soil over again to mix in your ingredients.

If your flower bed is up against a wall or fence, plant the tallest flowers in the back, medium tall in the middle and short or spreading flowers in the front. The tall flowers can use the wall to lean on and won't shade the shorter flowers.

If your flower bed is in the middle of the yard, plant the tall flowers in the center, surrounded by medium tall flowers and then ringed by the shorter and spreading flowers.

Throw caution to the wind and plant a splashy mix of all different colors, much like you'd find in a meadow. Or plant in coordinated colors. All pastels are very pretty. Pick a two bright opposing colors like red and blue and fill in with plenty of white. Orange and purple work well too with lots of white or cream. Or pick all shades of the same color like blue and then use a pop of yellow every once in awhile.   

Plant seeds three times as closely as the seed package says. That gives you extra seedlings because you'll lose some to the birds and bugs. Cover the seeds as directed and then add a layer of mulch on top. Water thoroughly. Only water when the soil looks dry not on a schedule. Too much water can be as bad for baby plants as not enough water.

After the seeds have sprouted wait until they have at least four true leaves then thin to the desired spacing.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Landscape Ideas For Front Yard: More Tips to Grow Roses


Dead Heading
One of the benefits of roses is having lots of beautiful bouquets in the house. That's good for you and good for your roses. Flowers have only one purpose in life and that's to produce seeds so the plant can reproduce itself. Once the seeds have set many flowers, including roses, stop blooming. Remove the flowers as they become old and the bush should keep producing new blossoms.  It will help flower production if you pick blossoms in their prime as well.

Feeding and Watering

Feed your roses a slow release fertilizer per the package directions. Most roses will only need to be fed in early spring right after they've leafed out and late summer. Water well after feeding.

As we said roses don't like their feet wet so water only when the top 2 inches feel dry. Roots go down about three feet so if the top of the soil feels moist the roses don't need to be watered yet.

You can grow beautiful roses without a lot of effort.