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bringing nature, nurseries and gardeners together  May 27, 2022
 
GARDEN NOTES: shop tax-free for plants, mulch, rain barrels, compost and more this weekend at the Natural Gardener. Also at 10 a.m. on June 4, visit for a free lecture on beekeeping. Register here. 
Exciting news from Cultivate, the deep south Austin mini-nursery. They have a 20% sale on all plants through Sunday, when they will close for the summer to work on moving two doors down into a much larger location. Expect a grand opening sometime in the fall. ❦
Master horticulturist John Greenlee (above) speaks in Barton Springs Nursery's garden theater at 7 p.m. on June 2. John is a specialist in natural lawns and meadows. Among his clients, the Getty Museum. $15  The Grassman Talk  ❦
Find inner peace at next weekend's ZENsational Pond & Garden tour. Saturday, June 4 - mostly Round Rock, Cedar Park. Sunday, June 5: mostly central and South Austin. Advance tickets: $20. Pond Society ❦
 
WILD NATURE IN UK CHURCH GARDENS: the biodiversity of English churchyards, untouched by the chemicals of the nearby agriculture, is being newly recognized and celebrated by many ecologists and members of the green move-ment.  Guardian ❦
 
FUTURISTIC FARMING IN LOCKHART: the first AI-assisted hydroponic greenhouse in Texas opened this spring. At Iron Ox Farm mobile robots 'ferry plant modules, to nutrient-rich watering stations tailored to each unique crop.' Their focus is on herbs and greens, but their California operation is already growing strawberries, tomatoes and kohlrabi. Austin Chronicle 
 
 
HOW TO PREPARE A NO-TILL GARDEN BED:  in this video, expert Lee Reich shows how to clean a bed thoroughly, add compost, and make it ready for some fresh crops. "Gardening isn't that complicated," notes Lee. "Just add a lot of compost and you're ninety nine percent there." Farmden ❦
 
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CENTRAL TEXAS GARDENER:  Inspired by Japanese philosophy and garden design, Rajat and Lisa Agarwal explored beyond a tiny starter pond to create a peaceful island with in-ground and above ground koi ponds. (Their Round Rock garden is part of the June 4 Pond Society tour.) PBS
    
        Amazing Comfrey 
                                 by Chris Winslow 
One interesting herb that we hear so little about is comfrey. This easy-to-grow perennial (Symphytum officinale) is from the borage family, and has broad leaves, and it blossoms with small bell-shaped, light-colored flowers.
 
It has lots of uses for the organic gardener, and also for those of us interested in botanical medicine. Organic gardeners like comfrey because its leaves are rich in plant nutrients. As it grows and mat-ures, comfrey mines a host of these nutrients from the soil.
 
You can use the herb’s leaves as a mulch, a side-dressing, make it into comfrey tea, or create a compost. Each method will provide organically-derived nutrients to your vegetables, flowers and landscape plants.
 
Comfrey is especially rich in potassium, an essential plant nutrient needed for flower, fruit, and seed production.
 
Gardeners can also use comfrey leaves in small amounts to activate compost. Its nutrients give a big boost to the process, helping to break down organic matter into rich soil amendments.
 
In the world of medicine, comfrey has been known as ‘knitbone,’ because of its ability to speed up the healing of bone fractures, bruising and cuts. However use of the herb internally is a somewhat controversial subject. The FDA warns against it due to possible liver damage.
 
Growing this herb is fairly easy. All you need is a shaded, well-drained location with plenty of compost and a slow-release organic fertilizer (blood and bone meal) to give it a start. Keep it on the moist side.
 
Your stand of comfrey can easily be increased by root division. Segments of these black, turnip-like roots can be cut and placed into the soil to create new plants.
 
Using comfrey in this way as an organic source of plant food, along with composting, brings the gardener yet another step closer to independence and self-sustenance. Happy gardening everyone! 
 
 
 
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CONTACT EDITOR DARREL MAYERS
WITH IDEAS FOR ARTICLES OR INTERESTING LINKS: 
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