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Edition 7.14 Westwood Gardens Nursery & Garden Art April 5th, 2007

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Telephone:
(208) 687-5952

Address:
15825 N. Westwood Dr.
(behind Super 1 Foods)
Rathdrum, Idaho 83858

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Mon. to Sat. 9-6 Sundays 10-5

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Plants that are good for the sole!

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Happy Easter

Happy Easter

Easter EGG-stravaganza!

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Join the fun
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday!

Look around the nursery to find colored eggs filled with surprise savings inside!

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If you are lucky enough to have a potted Easter lily, you may wish to extend your enjoyment of its lovely blooms.

As the flowers mature, remove the yellow anthers before the pollen starts to shed. This gives longer flower life and prevents the pollen from staining the white flowers. When a mature flower starts to wither after its prime, cut it off to make the plant more attractive while you still enjoy the fresher, newly-opened blooms.

The lily will thrive near a window in bright, indirect natural daylight, but avoid glaring, direct sunlight.

Easter lilies prefer moderately moist, well-drained soil. Water the plant thoroughly when the soil surface feels dry to a light touch, but avoid over-watering. If the pot is wrapped in decorative foil, be careful not to let the plant sit in trapped, standing water. For best results, remove the plant from decorative pots or covers, take it over the sink and water thoroughly until water seeps out of the pot's drain holes to completely saturate the soil. Allow the plant to air for a few minutes and discard the excess water before replacing it in its decorative pot cover.

If you'd like to plant your Easter lilies outside, prepare a well-drained garden bed in a sunny location with rich, organic matter.

Plant Easter lily bulbs 3 inches below ground level, and mound up an additional 3 inches of topsoil over the bulb. This creates a slightly raised bed (with soil a few inches higher than the level around it) that will help with drainage and soil aeration. Plant at least 12 to 18 inches apart in a hole sufficiently wide so that the bulbs can be placed in it with the roots spread out and down, as they naturally grow. Spread the roots and work the prepared soil in around the bulbs and the roots, leaving no air pockets. Water in immediately and thoroughly after planting. Try not to allow the soil to heave or shift after planting.

As the original plants begin to die back, cut the stems back to the soil surface. New growth will soon emerge. Easter lilies, forced to bloom under controlled greenhouse conditions in March, bloom naturally in the summer. You may be rewarded with a second bloom later this summer, but most likely you will have to wait until next June or July to see them bloom again.

Another planting tip to consider is that lilies like their roots in shade and their heads in the sun. Mulching helps conserve moisture in between waterings, keeps the soil cool and loose, and provides a fluffy, nutritious medium for the stem roots. For a more attractive alternative, plant a "living mulch," or a low ground cover of shallow-rooted, complementary annuals or perennials. The stately Easter lilies rising above lacy violas or primulas are not only aesthetically pleasing, but also sound gardening.

Easter lily bulbs are surprisingly hardy even in cold climates. Just be sure to provide winter protection by mulching the ground with a thick, generous layer of straw, pine needles, leaves, ground corncob, pieces of boxes or bags. Carefully remove the mulch in the spring to allow new shoots to come up, and your Easter lilies will keep on providing you beauty, grace, and fragrance in years to come.


Columbines

By Tamara Galbraith

Need to brighten up a moist, semi-shady spot in your spring garden? Consider planting some columbines.

Columbine's Latin name of "Aquilegia" translates to "dove," and one look at the elegant, spurred wingtips of the columbine flower will tell you why.

The color range of columbines is certainly one of its biggest attractions for gardeners. You can find columbines to match almost any garden color scheme.

Even the most pampered columbines will only last a few seasons, but the trade-off in early spring breathless beauty is well worth it.

Columbines do insist on a nice moist soil. Adding a good organic amendment , such asGardner and Bloome Soil Building compost, and mulching will help the soil retain moisture.

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Go Green! Live responsibly!

Go green tip of the week:
• April is an” Earth Friendly” Month.
• April 22nd is Earth Day.
• April 27th is Arbor Day.

What do these two special days have in common?
TREES

TREES are good for the EARTH!

Let’s talk about trees:

• Planting trees remains the cheapest, most effective means of drawing excess CO2 from the atmosphere.

• In one year an average tree produces enough oxygen for a family of four, for one year!

• Shade trees can reduce utility bills for air conditioning by 15–50%.

• The United Nations has launched a campaign to get the world to commit to action and pledge and plant One Billion Trees this year! We will talk about this more in future articles. If you want to read more about this campaign now, click on this link:
http://www.unep.org/billiontreecampaign/

Until next week, be thinking about where you can plant a tree!

“The symbolism – and the substantive significance – of planting a tree has universal power in every culture and every society on Earth, and it is a way for individual men, women and children to participate in creating solutions for the environmental crisis.”
Al Gore, Earth in the Balance


(Anyone truly interested in learning about the climate change that is taking place should read Al Gore’s most recent book, An Inconvenient Truth. There is also a DVD widely available in stores now. The book is very easy to read and understand, with excellent graphs and photos. It also contains suggested little things that you can do in your everyday life to make a difference to our environment. It is an excellent book!)

triva

This Week's Question:Who first brought Easter lilies to the United States?

This Week's Prize:
A 4" Perennial plant

Last Week's Question: What is the world's most popular garden plant? (Not counting farms as gardens.)

Last Week's Prize:
Dr. Earth Rose food.

Last Week's Winner: Doris Bright

Last Week's Answer:
Roses are the world's most popular garden plant.

Winners - to pick up your prize, just bring in some form of ID and tell us you were the winner.

Roses!

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What You'll Need:

  • 1/2 cup nonfat plain yogurt
  • 1/2 cup buttermilk
  • 1 tbsp. sugar (or to taste)
  • 1/2 tbsp. chopped fresh mint
  • 1/8 tsp. pure vanilla extract
  • 1 pint fresh strawberries, hulled and sliced

Step by Step:

In a small bowl, whisk together yogurt, buttermilk, sugar, chopped mint and vanilla until smooth.

Spoon strawberries into individual dishes and drizzle with the yogurt sauce.

Yield: 4 servings

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Blooming Advantage
Proven Winners
Billion Tree Campaign

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