Produced by Nashville Public Television, Volunteer Gardener features local experts who share gardening tips, upcoming garden events, recipes, visits to private gardens, and more. Airs Thursday nights at 7:30 and Sunday mornings at 9:30 on NPT, channel 8.
Im In indiana i got one i put her to the ground in spring. I did not soak? How long does it take to flower? Its a baby its going into july. Im a gardener, trial and error girl.will it live in indiana???
So beautiful ❤️💚🧡💙🩵💚💜 so many wonderful versions Day lillies are so easy wonderful to grow I have them all over my gardens in my flower beds just by deviding them . Soooo sorry to hear about the passing of mort last October what talent theses guys have shared over the years .
I am in N. Georgia and actually bought a pak of lupine seeds last week. This was very helpful information! I have never tried planting them before so wish me luck!
Thank you--this was helpful to me! I’m in North Carolina. This year (2024) - these bugs are on two of my Crape Myrtle trees. I’m treating with a spray (don’t recall the name) and we’ve cut a few limbs. 😩 Based on what I heard in this video, we may cut more limbs. Thanks again.
My daughter lives in Bar Harbor and they grow wild there. I have always loved lupines. Thanks for the tip about soaking them for 36 hrs before planting the seeds. I put mine right in the ground. So happy they came up!
That cushion is not years and years of mold. We built a new deck in July and by October it was completely covered in black mold for which a professional pressure washing wasnt able to remove it all, and dried out the lumber of its natural oils. Our cars have permanent black spots embedded in the paint, roof shingles grow thick moss year round, and we battle slugs, spiders, termites, roaches, slime mold, carpenter ants…it takes a second job to pay to treat the issues and replace the deck furniture twice a year. Those who speak favorably of this tree does not live under one!
I love our Sugar Hackberry tree... It makes so much shade I want one on the other side of the house for more shade. I live where nobody sees my yard, so the mess is just fine!
Monarda is a bit aggressive. I pulled bushels full of it this spring. You can leave it if all you want is bee balm, but nobody wants one thing dominating their whole garden. Upside is it’s really easy to pull. Do your research before planting natives. Some you probably want to skip altogether.
I would’ve recorded what he does and him talking about it while doing it or walking through the garden and you walking with him. Talking about more than just banana.
I actually had some help controlling johnson grass with my ducks. I'd put their little pool in a patch where I knew the roots and rhizomes were, it'd get muddy, and the ducks would root them up for me. Geese helped with the above ground parts. Of course this is good if you live where you can have ducks and geese. I'm with ya on the love as a farmer, hate as a gardener. Lol.
Great informational video! Love your content and mode of delivery! Is there a schedule you follow with the different sprays - fungicide and insecticide alternating every other week? You mentioned spraying every 2 weeks to keep everything at bay. Thank you!
Funny, I just ripped out a whole bunch of creeping bellflower that's invading my garden. I found 5 echinacea that were hanging on to dear life underneath that mess.
Gosh for me its super expensive not for my budget i like flowers but this prize no for me beautiful flowers im looking another variety of flowers i just bought 2 roots at walmart cost 5.42 dollars
I live in Atlanta and will try your method. One question though, since you start the seed in the fall, will you have to harvest the seed after blooming and hold off planting until fall or will they just naturally reseed themselves?