Fotografía de autor

Steven A. Frowine

Autor de Gardening Basics For Dummies

6+ Obras 235 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Steven A. Frowine is a professional horticulturalist who grows more than 200 orchids in his Connecticut home

Obras de Steven A. Frowine

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Conocimiento común

Género
male

Miembros

Reseñas

Useful, though the chapters are in a strange order. I mostly wanted to know about perennials, soil, and watering, not tools or gear. Some good information that will be helpful in planning next year's planting.

Notes

Chapter 1: Getting ready for gardening
-Perennials usually last 2-10 years. They may start slowly the first year, developing a good root system, and grow and expand in subsequent years. You can divide them and replant well-rooted parts for a fresh start.

Chapter 2: Planning your own Eden
-Formal gardens, Asian gardens, tropical gardens (iris, phlox, delphinium, salvia), cottage gardens (roses, herbs), dry climate gardens, woodland gardens
-A garden has four major elements: floor (groundcover, soil, paving material, grass), walls (wall, fence, hedge, trellis, trees, shrubs), ceiling (sky, awning, umbrella, tree canopy, pergola), furniture (tables and chairs, garden ornaments, large pots). Tackle the four elements in this order.

Chapter 3: Getting into the zone
-USDA Plant Hardiness Zone map: http://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/ (Zone 6b)
-Check out neighbors' yards, buy local, grow native plants

Chapter 5: Growing annuals and perennials
-Last spring frost date (May 1-15), first fall frost date (Oct 1-15) (est.)
-"Don't put plants in a bed you yourself wouldn't be willing to lie on!"
-Check before buying: labels, blooms, roots, healthy appearance
-Popular hardy perennials: aster, columbine, coneflower, day lily, delphinium, mums, penstemon, peony, phlox, Shasta daisy
-Favorite shade perennials: ajuga, astilbe, bergenia, bleeding heart, brunnera, coral bells, corydalis, ferns, goatsbeard, hellebore, hosta, lady's mantle, lily of the valley, lungwort, Solomon's seal, sweet woodruff
-Favorite dry-soil perennials: black-eyed Susan, blanket flower, baptista, butterflyweed, evening primrose, gaura, penstemon, yarrow.

Chatper 6: Growing your own veggies
-Most fruiting vegetables (tomatoes, peppers, squash, beans, corn) like a sunny, open environment; plant in a south-facing spot. Put taller plants in the north end so they don't shade shorter plants.
-When planting tomato seedlings, plant them deeper than they were growing in their pot, just keep a set or two of leaves above the ground (remove the lower ones and bury part of the stem). Better stability, more roots! Water, then mulch, leaving an inch of space around the base of the plant. Protect new plants by giving them shelter (boxes, boards, lawn chairs).
-When planting seeds: "three friends" rule (3 seeds per hole)

Chapter 7: Giving plants what they need
-soil pH should be close to neutral, slightly acidic
-Water in the morning; watering at night can make plants susceptible to diseases that cause them to rot. Infrequent deep soakings are better than frequent shallow watering.
-Build a basin or dirt or mulch around each plant so the water goes into the root system and doesn't run off.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
JennyArch | Aug 18, 2017 |
 
Denunciada
jhawn | Jul 31, 2017 |
a good introduction to the growing of minature orchids
 
Denunciada
harrytheworker | Jul 1, 2008 |
a great introduction to the dummies category
 
Denunciada
harrytheworker | Jul 1, 2008 |

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