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Archive for December 22nd, 2009

Grow Some Vegetable In Your Garden

December 22, 2009 By: Joey Simmons Category: Gardens - Vegetable

As a child, I remember many sunny summer afternoons sitting on the porch shelling more than my fair share of peas and butter beans in the deep dark heart of the old south. There were other vegetables we grew in our summer gardens that had to be picked and stored for winter but the peas and butter beans always seemed to take the most time and attention and are one of the things I sorely miss having left my home in the south for much cooler climes. One thing though, has never gotten away from me and that is the deep and abiding love I have for the smell of freshly plowed soil and the taste of vegetables fresh from the garden.

I point out the fact that my childhood favorite summer garden vegetables only seem to flourish in the south to drive home the fact that you really will need to research the vegetables you plant in your summer garden as they relate to the specific area in which you live. Not all vegetable plants are created equal in their tolerance for temperature or rainfall (or lack thereof), which could greatly impact their suitability for your particular vegetable summer garden depending of course, on where you are located.

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Annuals Dictionary: Silybum

December 22, 2009 By: Annuals Dictionary Category: Annuals Dictionary

Daisy family
Compositae
Sil-ly’bum. Annual or biennial herbs, comprising only 2 species, natives of the Mediterranean region. The species below grown as an ornamental plant for its silvery leaves. Also grown as a vegetable, since its roots, leaves, and flowerheads are edible.

Description
Leaves alternate, with white spots and veins on the upper side, the margins lobed and spiny. Flowerheads purplish, solitary and nodding. Many bracts surround the head, forming a globe-shaped receptacle.

How to Grow   (more…)

Word of the day: alternate host

December 22, 2009 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

A plant upon which a plant disease lives for only part of its life cycle, depending upon some other, and usually unrelated, plant for completing it. Common examples are juniper or eastern red cedar and apple, which cohost cedar-apple rust. The remedy is to remove one of the hosts and so break the life cycle.

Tomato Pruning, Is It Really Necessary to Prune Tomato Plants? :)

December 22, 2009 By: Brian Stephens Category: Gardens - Vegetable

The Item you are looking for has moved to the following location:

http://tomatoes101.com/?p=307

A site Dedicated to the “Almighty Tomato”

Growing Plants Indoors Using Hydroponics

December 22, 2009 By: Anne Harvester Category: Gardens - Hydroponics, Gardens - Indoors

The gardening method of growing of plants without the use of soil is hydroponics. This process is commonly used to develop fertile, healthy indoor plants as well as good quality vegetables, fruits and herbs. The plants in hydroponics grow systems absorb the needed nutrients as ions in water or in the case of aeroponics through the air. If a plant is getting the adequate amount of nutrients, then soil is no longer needed for it to thrive. This is the whole theory behind hydroponic kits. (more…)