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Edition 7.29 Westwood Gardens Nursery & Garden Art July 19th, 2007

Contact Information:

E-Mail:
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Telephone:
(208) 687-5952

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

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

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quote of the week
Border Babies: The Back - Tall and Sassy

Who is standing high above the bright flowering faces of the garden? The "tall and sassy" guys. These plants are the ones that first catch your eye. And these tall plants in the background of your gardens may be selected from the perennial group, grasses, shrubs or small-scale trees. As you make your selection, remember — they can have the important role of creating the theme of the garden design. It could be a single plant as the focal point, one with strong architectural form or a colorful grouping that stands high above the other flowering plants in a perennial bed.

A strong focal point, such as the beautiful lacy and waterfall structure of a Japanese maple called 'Waterfall' (weeping form, 4-6 ft) is a good example of a single plant creating a garden theme. An observer will be expecting to see a bubbling stream with a waterfall directly beneath its weeping branches. The maple and the stream could be surrounded by a woodland garden of columbine, hosta and trillium. Or perhaps the focal point is created with a different tree; envision a semi-shady meadow garden with your tree surrounded with daylilies, ornamental grasses, rudbeckia and more.

Another function of the tall member of the garden is architectural interest or structure. The butterfly bush (Buddleja), flax (Phormium), or small trees are examples of structural plants, each creating a different mood or type of garden. All offer garden interest, many even in the winter.

Perhaps you have a perennial garden without a tree or large architectural plant. Height, drama, color, texture and motion can be achieved in no time if you choose from the many different tall-growing perennials such as buddleja, canna, lavatera, verbena (bonariensis), watsonia, and ornamental grasses.

Whatever your garden design and whatever the plant function that you desire, we have a large selection of "tall and sassy" plants available today. Come in and take a look!

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triva

This Week's Question: What is the only bird known that can fly backwards?

This Week's Prize: Dr. Earth Fertilizer

Last Week's Question: What did Babe Ruth wear under his cap to keep cool? (Hint: he changed it every two innings.)

Last Week's Prize: A wildflower stick filled with assorted seeds.

Last Week's Winner: Karen Tittelfitz

Last Week's Answer: A cabbage leaf

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

quote of the week

Pizza

What You'll Need:

  • 1 teaspoon active dry yeast
  • 1/4 cup warm water
  • 1 cup cold water
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 3 cups bread flour
  • 6 ounces low moisture mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1/2 cup no salt added canned crushed tomatoes
  • 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 6 leaves fresh basil, torn

Step by Step:

Sprinkle yeast over warm water in a large bowl. Let stand for 5 minutes to proof.

Stir in salt and cold water; stir in the flour about 1 cup at a time. When the dough is together enough to remove from the bowl, knead on a floured surface until smooth, about 10 minutes.

Divide into two pieces, and form each one into a tight ball. Coat the dough balls with olive oil, and refrigerate in a sealed container for at least 16 hours. Be sure to use a big enough container to allow the dough to rise.

Remove the dough from the refrigerator one hour prior to using.

Preheat the oven, with a pizza stone on the lowest rack, to 550 degrees F. Lightly dust a pizza peel with flour.

Using one ball of dough at a time, lightly dust the dough with flour, and stretch gradually until it is about 14 inches in diameter, or about as big around as the pizza stone. Place on the floured peel.

Place thin slices of mozzarella over the crust; grind a liberal amount of black pepper over it. Sprinkle with dried oregano. Randomly arrange crushed tomatoes, leaving some empty areas. Drizzle olive oil over the top.

With a quick back and forth jerk, make sure the dough will release from the peel easily. Place the tip of the peel at the back of the preheated pizza stone, and remove peel so that the pizza is left on the stone.

Bake for 4 to 6 minutes in the preheated oven, or until the crust begins to brown. Remove from the oven by sliding the peel beneath the pizza. Sprinkle a few basil leaves randomly over the pizza. Cut into wedges and serve.

Yield: 2 pizzas

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