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Pruner Maintenance: Anne Cleves Symmes, horticulturist and garden educator at Beatrix Farrand's celebrated Bellefield Garden in Hyde Park, NY, demonstrated how she keeps her pruners sharp and well oiled each Spring. First she uses the scouring pad side of a discarded kitchen sponge to rub off gummy buildup on the blades. You can also use a piece of wire wool for this. To sharpen your pruner she recommends a diamond blade, or you can use a sharpening stone or whetstone. Swipe the diamond blade or ...
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Click photos below to be taken to their source.If you aren't taken to another site then the source is Womanswork
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Womanswork has gathered our favorite garden gloves, tools and other gardening essentials for a giveaway this month! The total retail value of this giveaway is $223.40. To enter write a comment below saying you would like to win our "Think Spring" prize and you will be entered to win. It's that simple! If you prefer to enter via Instagram, find us at @womansworkco, like our post and tag a friend. You will automatically be entered and so will your friends as long as they give our post a like too! On ...
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After the blossoms on my daffodils faded this spring I decided I had too many bunched up in an area where I no longer wanted them, so I've started carefully lifting them out of the ground and moving them to a preferred location. If I wait until fall to do this I won't know where the bulbs are because their leaves will have dried up and disappeared. Step One: Dig deep and wide around the bulbs you want to move so you don't accidentally slice through them, and then replant to the same depth. Don't cut o...
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Sometimes in early Spring after bulbs have emerged from the ground and are beginning to flower, a sudden cold snap will bring temperatures down below freezing for a few days. More often than not, I’m amazed at the resiliency of these hardy plants. We are experiencing a cold scap in the northeast and we had snowfall on two consecutive nights earlier in the week in our Zone 6 region. The exact effect caused by a sudden cold snap depends on a number of different factors, including the type of plant, r...
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At this time of year a little gardening therapy can go a long way. There isn’t much that can be done outdoors where I live in Zone 6 until the ground thaws and dries out a little. But there’s plenty you can be doing indoors, and for me the fun begins with grow lights. Many houseplants need 12-16 hours of light a day to thrive, and seedlings like 16-18 hours a day. That doesn’t mean that they will die with less light, but this is the optimum. You’ve probably heard of a condition called SAD (se...
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We have a purple clematis that climbs up the south side of our screen porch. It's a summer blooming variety so I prune it in the Spring. (Spring blooming clematis are usually pruned the previous fall.) I worked my way up from the bottom, clipping off dead wood right next to emerging buds. I was wearing my Womanswork "Digger" garden gloves (in teal blue). When working with a tangle of vines and leaves and side shoots, it's easy to make the mistake of cutting vines that you wish you hadn't. I know...
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In This Issue: The Hunger Moon and Other Moons New Study Pinpoints Lyme Disease Risk Areas The Hunger Moon and Other Moons-- In The Old Farmers Almanac there is a name given to each full moon of the year. These are mostly adapted from early Native Americans who kept track of the passing seasons and tied their calendar to the full moons. I was reminded of this last week by a friend who told me we were in “The Hunger Moon”. He was helping me understand why one of our hens had been taken earli...
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[caption id="attachment_2957" align="alignright" width="300"] Spring bulbs blooming at White Flower Farm in Morris, CT[/caption] Order Spring Bulbs-- Bulb catalogs arriving in our mailboxes in September are the equivalent of seed catalogs arriving in January. They are fun to look at, fun to dream about, and a great tool for planning ahead. I buy from Brent and Becky’s, which is a third- and fourth-generation flower-bulb company in Virginia. I’ve always been happy with my purchases, and t...
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Egg-shaped pinch pots by Amanda Ann Palmer Passover table decoration from thejewishhostess.com Easter table from marthastewart.com Bleeding hearts and lilies of the valley Eggshells become votive candles on babble.com Jelly beans hot glued to tree branches on craftysisters-nc.blogspot.com Ornamental cabbage ‘Crane’s White’ on gardenista.com tradgardsflow.blogspot.se Lilac and lilac-colored eggs at architectureartdesigns.com Lily of the valley -daffodil posies, gardeni...