tel: 512 280-1192                                            Friday, Jan 31 2014

Nursery Notes: red, white and gold potatoes 95 cents per pound.
Onion sets in. $4.00 each or 3 for $ 9.00. $1.00 off all bagged
goods. soils, mulch and compost. Strawberries:.$1.50 to $1.99. 
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Sacred Seeds Project: Program manager Ashley Glenn has set up
community gardens in isolated Peruvian mountain hamlets, remote
Cambodian villages and Native American reservations in a bid to
preserve medicinal herbs, and knowledge about how to use them.
An interview from the pages of  Organic Gardening Magazine
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  Central Texas Gardener KLRU TV Chris and Bill Reid from
Reid's  Nursery pick pollinator favorites to get the garden humming
with bees. On tour, Dani & Gary Moss rescued ravaged ground for
wildlife, and styled it up with some art. Sat. noon, 4 p.m. or Sun.,
9 a.m. www.klru
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Mark your calendars for the last weekend in February. Kevin Call-
away, a commercial grower from Hondo, will be at the nursery to
answer questions, and will give a seminar on Sunday Feb. 23 at 
2 p.m. (Rumor has it that he may be giving away some seed of a
drought tolerant groundcover tomato with currant-size fruit that he
collected in Ecuador.) 
Ten Activities for February
by Chris Winslow
 
1. Plant fruit trees. Peaches, pears, persimmons, plums, pome-
granates… and apples and apricots too. These all do well in this
area. For those with limited space, or with an appetite for novelty,
try a ‘four-in-one’ grafted apple or pear. These have four different
varieties grafted onto the same tree. If you don’t have a yard, try
a dwarf peach… easily grown in a pot or whisky barrel.
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2. Plant vegetables in kitchen garden. Asparagus crowns, broccoli,
Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, cabbage, carrots, Swiss chard, pod
peas (sugar snaps) and lettuce. Also onions, such as the white Texas
supersweet called Contessa.
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3. Plant winter-hardy herbs. Thyme, oregano, Italian and curled
parsley, rosemary, winter and summer savory, garden sage, and
chives. Herbs need at least a half a day’s sun in a well-drained
location.
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4. Plant flowers in the garden. Calendula, pansies, stock, cyclamen,
violas, dianthus, bluebonnets, nasturtium, flowering cabbage and
kale, and larkspur. For a great show, plant snapdragons now for
April and May color.
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5. Plant a rose. Besides some good old standbys like Peace, Mr. Lin-
coln, Climbing Don Juan and Blasé, there are some interesting new-
comers to look for, such as the Knock Out series, Home Run and
Belinda’s Dream. Let’s not forget our charming antique roses which
are disease-resistant, hardy, and can shower our landscapes with
the most beautiful, showy flowers.
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6. Prune your roses.  This is an activity for mid-month… around
Valentine’s Day. Please proceed with caution. Be sure you know
what kind of rose you have. Most shrub roses bloom on new wood,
so a pruning will help to force new growth and blooms. Climbing
roses, however, bloom on old wood. If you prune them, you will
remove all the flowers before they have a chance to bloom. If in
doubt, please give me a call at the nursery for some advice.
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7. Clean up the landscape. Cut back perennials and apply a mulch-
compost blend. Add green sand and sulfur to plants that prefer their
soil to be a little more acidic. Check leaves for signs of iron defi-
ciency. Light green leaves with darker veins indicate a lack of iron
that green sand and sulfur will help to cure.
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8. Control lawn weeds. Spread a pre-emergent weed killer over the
yard and water it in. We recommend corn gluten. This is an effective
organic pre-emergent that will not poison waterways and aquifers. 
If you spread it over the lawn, it will control those spring and summer
weeds before they have a chance to germinate. You can safely use
it in the garden or in flowerbeds.
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9. Maintain garden tools. Repair and clean garden tools. Change
the oil on the lawnmower, and have the blades sharpened.
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10. Garden plan. Put something down in a book, a diary, or even
on a scrap of paper that you tape to the wall. The more modern
gardener can even create some sort of a spreadsheet. This will
help you plan your weekend activities and get your plants in the
ground at the correct time of the year.
                                         Happy Gardening Everyone!
 
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