It's become clear to me through posts and PMs that there are some gardeners here just waiting for the chance to discuss gardening!
So, I was thinking... how do you use gardening, or how does it affect you if you need a break, need some respite, need to relax, need inspiration....how do you use it as a therapy tool in caregiving?
What are your activities: Do you go out and pull weeds, read a magazine, design new beds? Look through garden catalogues? Go to garden stores?
And what interests have you added to your gardening? Visit estate or garden displays? Do you go to garden shows?
Does anyone design and plant Knot Gardens? Raised bed planters? Assistive gardens? Pollinator gardens (and have you thought of ways to help the bees and butterflies?)
Are your gardens primarily for pleasure or food, or a mix of both? Do you grow plants for medicinal purposes? Which ones, how do you harvest and process them? Any suggestions?
Do you grow plants that can be used in crafts, such as grapevines for wreaths and lavender for lavender wands? Do you make herbal products such as creams, lotions, chapstick?
What else can you share about gardening and the means in which it nurtures your soul?
The daffodils are up and will probably be blooming in 2-3 weeks. This is normal for my zone. I do not know when the Irises will bloom since I never planted them before. I am excited for both to bloom. The camellia is blooming now.
Happy gardening and hope your thumbs are green!!!
If I understand you correctly, you're going to be working in development of an ideal, more European style community that's far more progressive than most adult communities in this country. That would definitely be exciting! It sounds like an ideal job.
I wish you well, I wish you success - anyone who can handle caregiving and work on a Masters to me demonstrates a level of commitment that exceeds what most Masters candidates have to meet.
Send, I have Vinca...they do form a great ground cover, with literally impenetrable root systems once they're established. The flowers are lovely. Their invasiveness is not. I'm battling them in one area, and they've already invaded another.
Tacy, herbs can be air dried, or they can be oven dried or even dehydrated.
I usually dry mine by clipping them before they set flowers, as energy then goes into flower production. I cut an ample stem, wash them well, let them dry before bunching and wrapping the stems with postal twine or a pretty ribbon. Then I hang them upside down in an area where they aren't in bright sun. The challenge also is to keep them from absorbing dust as they're drying, so an area that isn't exposed to a lot of dust-generating activity is ideal.
That's when I wish I had a butler's pantry - that would be so perfect!
What I also used to do when I had a gas oven with a pilot light was to clean them, cut them in smaller sections (but don't strip them from the stems), put them in a glass pie plate (any other glass baking dish would work as well), then set them in the oven to air dry.
The problem now is that most gas ovens don't have "always-on" pilot lights, so there's no heat generated to dry them and they could mildew.
Sometimes I'll set them on top of the oven when I'm baking to give them a little bit of a head start, but the old pilot light heat drying method worked the best for me.
I've also read of drying them on top of a refrigerator even though there's not as much heat as there would be in an oven with an always on pilot light.
Another option is to use a food dehydrator, at the lowest setting possible, but to me there's always the risk of drying them too quickly and too much.
When they are dry, I store them preferably in darker glass bottles, or even plastic or glass jars but keep them out of the sun. Canning jars could be used as well, but again, don't expose them to direct sunlight.
What herbs are you growing?
The plant, very hardy, are called Vinca. They are also probably weeds, but pretty, inexpensive, and spread by themselves. White, pink, magenta!
Imagine, a secure environment, like the community in Denmark, I think, where the residents are free too wander as much as they like, it usually is not too much. A bingo game to check in on, a gardener to help with pruning or planting seed, a card game, an entertainer, and their own relatively private quarters to settle in when they tire. A place with reasonable property values is necessary, and a smaller community would be a requirement. It is strange but I have dreamt of such a facility for a number of years. And to have a hand in the first one in this country, unimaginable!
The blooms? One is a paperwhite narcissisis, another are the flowers on a vine, cape honeysuckle, and very soon, the daffodil will bloom. Rejuvenating themselves without help, here comes the prolific - - - forgot their little names- - - - - getting back to you on that.
If you don't mind sharing, was caregiving an issue in the interview and if so, any suggestions on how to make it an asset instead of a concern?
I'm in zone 6; hydrangeas seem to grow easily here; I see them a lot in residential and commercial settings. Just did some quick checking and learned that some hydrangeas don't grow in some zones. So if you're in zone 6, you'd have to find ones that tolerate that zone.
I hadn't realized they were that particular. I suspect a lot of that tolerance or intolerance of some zones is due to hybridization.
Send, I wasn't aware hydrangea flowers could be freeze dried; that's a new one for me. I love to see the large flowers in dried form during the winter. One of our doctors is in a facility where the front door is flanked by several panicle hydrangeas that were always stunning, whether they were in bloom or just resting during the winter. They really do provide lovely winter interest.
Weren't your bougainvillea lost because they didn't have enough time to acclimatize before winter?
Ashlynne, how large is your garden? And your greenhouse? Is it attached or separate? If the latter, do you heat it or does it get solar heat to start the seedlings?
I've always wanted a greenhouse but it really isn't feasible and I don't plan to stay in this house anyway.
See? A failed gardener!
Does anyone do indoor seed sprouting? Do you use a flora-cart or something cheaper and adaptable such as the top of a refrigerator?
I'm also looking for a good source for seeds for hydrangea and ornamental grasses. Can anyone suggest a catalogue that has these seeds (hopefully at a reasonable price)?
But the house was just taken off the market so looks very nice inside, new paint, wood floors, throw rugs for Macy. She has a hard rime on wood and linoleum floors. Nice yard, must try some tomatoes in a more humid climate. Maybe that will help my brown thumb.
Interesting topic to explore.
I've found that milkwater increases blooms, on roses and morning glories.
This boost of magnesium produces more fruit on tomatoes, peppers, and roses. They must mean more fruit and blooms.
1 tsp. Epsom Salts
4 cups warm water.
Pour on, then repeat 10 days later.
Has anybody done this, or heard of it?
How do I know right now if they will live again?
So sorry that I am a GardenFailure. I should change my avatar.
Once you transplant them outside, make sure to water so they are moist but not standing in water.
egg carton make good cells for planting seedlings. Home depot, Lowes and OSH all sell a flat that has cells for each individual seedling. All depends on if you want to spend the money or use recycled materials. Good luck to you, you are doing great.