Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Inviting Pollinators


Usually when August hits, I look around the garden and want more flowers. Most of the ones we planted have naturally run their course. We just don't have many late summer bloomers. Also, this year we planted an area of the garden which we had never sown before. Without much planning we planted cosmos, bachelor buttons, chammomile, sedum, catnip, and basil. It is part spillover herb patch and flowers. All summer I've been looking at this spot and imagining it as a bird and butterfly garden, full of native plants, as a place to encourage more pollinators.
So the question is, what variety of flowers do we plant that bloom throughout the season and also attract pollinators?
Answer: This site, Pollinator Partnership has exactly what I am looking for. On their planting guide page, you type in your zip code, and it gives you a free PDF to download, specific to your ecoregion. We are in the Prairie Parkland ecoregion. In addition to lots of information about the importance of supporting pollinators, understanding your ecoregion and pollinator traits, how to set up your landscape, etc., towards the end of the PDF there are charts showing trees, shrubs, perennial flowers, and vines to plant that attract pollinators. The charts also list the plant color, when it blooms, the size, soil and sun needs, and the pollinators it attracts. Bingo! Now I'm a kid in a candy shop, looking through and picking out ideas for next year. I'm glad to see we have some already on the list and hope to combine those with other native varieties to prolong the season. The pollinator.org website is a great resource, whether your garden consists of one or more potted plants or takes up your entire yard, check it out if you haven't already!

Monday, April 18, 2011

welcome

gp


hi.

welcome to tend! we're so glad that you found us.

i was all set to show you some of the spring beauty slowing coming to life in vermont, but the daffs aren't up yet and the crocuses are spent.

instead, i thought i would tell you about my go-to gardening resource. if i had to recommend one book for beginner gardeners, it would be the garden primer by barbara damrosch. damrosch writes simply and clearly and provides good information on a large variety of topics. the book starts out with the basics (how to prepare a bed, how to identify common weeds, how to start seeds), and this first chapter entitled "what plants need" should be required reading for all new gardeners.

i also like that her methods are organic; it's how we garden at home. i know if i turn to the garden primer for advice because of an insect problem, i'm not going to find information on pesticides. i like that. when ordering our seeds this year, we referenced the garden primer to see which varieties barbara damrosch suggested.

if you absolutely need color illustrations, you may need a different resource. this book features illustrations, but they are charming and work well for me. i say, if you need a second reference and want to see the plant in color, just google it.

it's truly a treasure trove of information--your one stop gardening resource. in the spring and summer, it lives on our coffee table and we are constantly reading and referencing it.

i'm sure your library will have a copy if you want to take a peek.

please check out our resources page for more gardening books and websites that we all love.