tel:  512-280-1192                                             Friday, Feb. 8, 2013
 
Nursery notes: 50% OFF ALL METAL ART - trellises, arches, pot
stands, Texas stars and bottle trees and metal animals. New shipment
in of perennials.   Corn gluten: 40 lb. bag: $49.99. For Valentine's
Day (next Thursday), give your sweetheart a heart-shaped rosemary
wreath ($24.99)... or an It's About Thyme gift certificate? 
 
Tulip-omania.  Amidst the Netherlands run stripes of colors across
the landscapes, highlighting the pretty  patchwork of their wondrous
tulip fields. Photographer Normann Szklop hired a small plane for
this shoot (from the Daily Telegraph). tulips
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Austin Rose Society will hold a rose clinic Sat. Feb 16 from 9 - 2pm
at Zilker Garden Center.  For $25 gardeners will get a year's member-
ship to the society, and lunch at the clinic. Register online or in person
at www.austinrosesociety.org . There will be speakers on care, propa-
gation, insect/diseases of rose, soil and earthkind roses.
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Central Texas Gardener (KLRU-TV): From romantic to vivacious,
match a drought-tough rose to your garden's personality with Michael
Shoup (Antique Rose Emporium). On tour, visit a healing Tranquility
Garden that brings another dimension to a hospital's healing mission.
Sat. noon, 4 p.m. or Sun.at 9 a.m.  www.klru
 
the antique mutabilis - a rose of many colors
February in the Garden
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 4 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.
 
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 super-
sweet called Contessa.

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.
 
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.
 
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 Outs, Home Run and Belinda’s
Dream. Let’s not forget our charming antique roses such as Mutabilis
(see photo above) which are disease-resistant, hardy, and can shower
our landscapes with the most beautiful, showy flowers.

 
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.
 
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 def-
iciency. Light green leaves with darker veins indicate a lack of iron
that green sand and sulfur will help to cure.
 
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.

 
9. Maintain garden tools. Repair and clean garden tools. Change
the oil on the lawnmower, and have the blades sharpened.

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!

  Visit the website:  www.itsaboutthyme.com 
  Visit the nursery:11726 Manchaca Road, Austin, 78748 
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