gardenchat@hort.net
- Subject: Re: Fwd: For anyone who might be interested
- From: J* B* <g*@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2011 17:41:19 -0800
I enjoyed this show when I went several years ago. The model gardens are wonderful & the lectures enjoyable ----- Original Message ----- From: "James Singer" <inlandjim1@q.com>
To: "Garden Chat" <gardenchat@hort.net> Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2011 10:39 AM Subject: [CHAT] Fwd: For anyone who might be interested
Begin forwarded message:From: Pacific Horticulture Society <pete.pacifichort@gmail.com> Date: December 28, 2011 10:04:42 AM PST To: inlandjim1@q.com Subject: Pacific Horticulture Newsletter 12.28.11 Reply-To: pete.pacifichort@gmail.com Dear Friends and Subscribers:Northwest Flower & Garden Show: A Floral Symphony Seattle, February 8-12,2012Mark your calendars for the Northwest Flower & Garden Show in the WashingtonState Convention Center in Seattle. This show has been inspiring gardenenthusiasts since 1989 with ideas, plants, tools, and accessories for everygardening need.You may find your vibe at the Funky Junk and Living it Up features, whereyou can learn to blend art with functionality. Or maybe strolling the PlantMarket and Artists Alley is where you will find your treasures.seminars of any garden show in the world! No matter your interest or level ofThe show is renowned for offering the largest roster of free horticultureexpertise, there will be a talk that will appeal to you.Pacific Horticulture is proud to be be sponsoring Wednesdays seminarseries. Plan a stop at our booth #2411 next to the Northwest Horticultural Society booth to say hi. We always enjoy meeting our readers and friends.Make a day of it and let the symphony of floral displays get you excited forspring!For more information on the show, seminar schedules, or to purchase ticketsclick here or go to http://www.gardenshow.com/.Garden Show was this design created by the team of Roger Williams, Phil Wood,Winner of the Pacific Horticulture award at the 2011 Northwest Flower &and Bob Lilly for The Arboretum Foundation. Photograph by RGTappearing in the January 2012 issue of Pacific Horticulture, is Callistemon.Plant Portrait: BottlebrushAmong the genera highlighted in Erle Nickels article on Australian shrubs,Known commonly as bottlebrushes, these vigorous shrubs provide months of colorful flowers in California gardens, where they have been grown for acentury or more. Tough, sclerophyllous leaves help the shrubs survive drought with ease. Masses of small flowers, made up mostly of colorful stamens, wrap around the stems like a brush and provide seemingly endless supplies of nectar for hummingbirds. Other birds are attracted to the tiny insects that also feedon the nectar.California is lemon bottlebrush (Callistemon citrinus), found along miles of freeways. Some find its bright red flowers a bit harsh in the private garden.Of the two-dozen species native to Australia, the most frequently grown inThe rosy crimson flowers on a specimen in my San Francisco garden are adelight, appearing almost year-round, with a dependable display each year at Christmas. Planted four decades ago, it was irrigated in its first years buthas thrived on nothing but natural rainfall for the last thirty years. Thegrowth habit is upright until about eight feet tall, when the branches beginto droop in a graceful manner.Violaceus, which is derived from Callistemon citrinus and C. pallidus. There have never been any seedlings produced, suggesting this hybrid origin. Most ofThe name of this cultivar is uncertain, and it may actually be the hybridthe selections derived from C. citrinus are adapted to Sunset zones 8, 9,12-24, are best in full sun, and will tolerate almost any soil. Its best topurchase plants in flower at your local nursery to be sure of a color thatwill suit your garden; some species offer flowers in pinks, greens, yellows,and white. All of them attract hummingbirds.A rosy crimson selection of lemon bottlebrush (Callistemon citrinus),flowering joyously in the editors San Francisco garden in December. Photograph by RGTPlant Portrait: Mahonia x media 'Charity'Walking through the garden in the first days of winter always brings a fewsurprises. One of my favorites was seeing the sun shine on Mahonia x media 'Charity' with a hummingbird whirling around the flowers. This statuesque,evergreen shrub is a stellar specimen for the winter garden. 'Charity' has dramatic, frond-like leaves that grow in whorls along its coarsely branched stems. Great sprays of soft yellow flowers appear in winter, developing into grape-like clusters of wax-coated black berries by late summer and autumn. Its inflorescences are somewhat lax. Beautiful foliage and upright growth habitmake this hybrid mahonia a strong focal point in the garden. Plant it with Daphne odora 'Aureomarginata', Stachyurus praecox, Helleborus x hybridus,Carex testacea and Cyclamen coum.'Charity' originated as a hybrid between M.japonica and M. lomariifolia at Donard Nursery in N. Ireland. It usuallyblooms after 'Lionel Fortescue' but its flowers are not as frost-resistant asthose of 'Lionel Fortescue'.winds. Water it during summer dry spells, at least for the first few seasons. Plants respond to a March application of slow-acting, balanced fertilizer byPlant Mahonia x media 'Charity' in part shade with protection from winterproducing more flowers and deeper green leaves. To produce more basalbranches, remove new leaf buds of young plants in early spring for the firsttwo or three years.pruned. If pruned when young, the plant will reach 7 to 10 feet high and 4 to 5 feet wide. If a shorter plant is desired, it can be pruned back to a lower'Charity' is a vase-shaped shrub that can reach 10 to 15 feet tall if notwhorl of branches after flowering.but a member of the mint family (Lamiaceae) and closely related to the genus Satureja, which includes the more familiar yerba buena (S. douglasii). There remains some confusion concerning its proper botanical name: it is also knownHardy in USDA zones 7 to 9 and in Sunset zones 6 to 9 and 16 to 22. Mahonia x media Charity. Photograph by Greg Graves Plant Portrait: Micromeria vimineaMicromeria viminea, commonly called Jamaican peppermint, is not a true mint,as Satureja viminea and as Clinopodium vimineum. This shrubby perennial isnative to the West Indies and Central America (another common name is Costa Rican mint bush). Jamaican peppermint is easy to grow where temperatures do not routinely drop below freezing. My own plant, originally from a sale at theHuntington Botanical Garden, is now ten years old and has withstood slightfreezes. This species grows to about two and a half to three feet tall and has a stiff, informal, upright shape. It blooms most months of the year with tinywhite flowers that are always humming with bees.as a base for teas, mixed with ginger and sugar as a treatment for colic, and to flavor meats and drinks (it is used in Jamaica in mojitos in place of the more common mint of herb gardens). Other common names are serpentine savory,Jamaican peppermint is widely grown and used all over the New World tropicsmenta de palo, and (my favorite) kama sutra mint tree; the genus Satureja probably derives their name from satyr, as they are thought to be anaphrodisiac. On my heavy clay soil, Jamaican peppermint needs little watering(every two weeks in hot weather) and light pruning in spring to encouragefresh growth. It likes full sun and is fairly easy to propagate from greenwoodcuttings in warmer weather.Steve Gerischer, Board Member Jamaican peppermint (Micromeria viminea). Photograph by Steve Gerischer Appearing Soon in Pacific HorticultureThe cover story in the January 2012 issue of Pacific Horticulture featuresthe many species of Ribes known as wild currants on the West Coast.Outstanding garden shrubs, they are too little used, according to author PaulLee Cannon. His own love affair with the genus began a few years ago; his shady woodland garden in Oakland is now graced by many of these winter-flowering native shrubs that attract dozens of hummingbirds to the garden. Wild currants can be grown in gardens along the full length of the West Coast.Ribes sanguineum var. sanguineum White Icicle, a cultivar of red floweringcurrant introduced by University of British Columbia Botanical Garden. Photograph by Phil Van SoelenBest wishes for the holiday season and the new year from all of us atPacific Horticulture.To subscribe or donate to Pacific Horticulture, click here. To Unsubscribe from this newsletter, click here.--------------------------------------------------------------------- To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@hort.net with the message text UNSUBSCRIBE GARDENCHAT
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