bringing nature, nurseries & gardeners together  Oct 13, 2023
 
NURSERY NOTES: The amazing Roots & Wings Festival —  a community wide celebration with a grand total of sixty one events — runs from Oct 18 to Nov. 5.  Check out the schedule and choose from the huge array of butterfly events, forest bathing, yoga, night gardening - and much more:  R&W 🌿 Congratulations to Texas Native Plant Society's annual award winners. Among them, Michael Eason for rediscovering the lost Quercus tardifolia (late-leaf oak) in Big Bend; Jill and Bill Neiman (Native American Seed); and Will Fleming (Lowery Nursery, Conroe). TNPS🌿
 
Learn how to prepare, plant and maintain native wildflowers and grasses from expert George Cates (above) from Native American Seed Co. at the Natural Gardener tomorrow morning (Oct 14) at 10 a.m. TNG 
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"TIME TO END THE REWILDING MENACE?" Two  people prominent in the UK media have been speaking out against the rewilding movement: "puritanical nonsense," is Monty Don's view, and Julie Burchill calls it "a menace." Learn more (and why they're incorrect!) from this fine article by Kendra Wilson. Gardenista 
 
THE QUIRKIEST LIBRARY IN TOWN: what a joy to stumble on this modified 1970s golf cart during a recent visit to Barton Springs Nursery.  It's stuffed full of fascinating gardening books which customers are free to check out and return.
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DIY SEED BOMBS: as the time for sowing wildflower seeds arrives, Keep Austin Beautiful offers this useful guide. Seed balls are a mixture of clay and soil humus or compost, and create a perfect package for a seed to take root. KAB 
 
THE AUSTIN GARDEN relies entirely on support from its  readers. Please consider making a donation of $10 - $15  a year to support this bi-monthly publication. Many thanks!  PayPal link ❦ 
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CENTRAL TEXAS GARDENERin this season premiere, visit the wildlife-friendly cottage garden of  Ashley Nava-Monteros and Carlos Monteros; and meet Sara Dykman, author of "Bicycling with Butterflies." CTG ❦ 
 
 Chief Inspector Freya examines a collection of wildflower seeds awaiting dispersal in the garden this morning
    October in the Garden
                             by Chris Winslow
 
1. Plant fall-flowering perennials  Look around and see what’s blooming this fall. Some good choices are Mexican bush sage, pineapple sage, Mexican mint marigold, Copper Canyon daisy, and fall asters. Don’t forget to check out fall blooming ornamental grasses. Tops on my list are Gulf Coast muhly, big muhly, and maiden grass.
 
2. Prepare grass for winter  Now is a good time to fertilize the lawn. Feeding now will help the roots through winter dormancy. Inspect and treat for brown patch, a disease common with cooling, moist weather conditions. This is also a good time to apply corn gluten for weed control, and to top-dress with manure-based compost. 
 
3. Plant a tree  Choose from central Texas’s great selection of native and adapted shade and ornamental trees. Plant one of the many oaks or elms for shade. Or add color to your late winter and spring season by planting a redbud, mountain laurel, orchid tree, flowering peach or pear, or a Mexican plum.
 
4. Plant a vegetable garden  Now is the time for broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, and Brussels sprouts from transplants. Easily grown from seed are collards, spinach, carrots, radishes, lettuce, mustard and collard greens, beets, Swiss chard, spinach, and turnips. Garlic and shallots (multiplying onions) can be planted now with short day onions just around the corner in November.
 
5. Plant snapdragons  These wonderful, winter hardy flowers should be planted now for a showy late winter and spring garden. They almost guarantee a Yard of The Month sign in April. Other bedding plants to choose from are dianthus, violas, pansies, stock and flowering kale, and cabbage.
 
6. Harvest basil and make pesto  Also plant some winter-hardy culinary herbs. Rosemary, oregano, parsley, cilantro, sage, thyme, and chives love winter and can provide fresh cut herbs for the kitchen.
 
7. Plant winter grass seed  If you have a bare spot or would like to get rid of a muddy patch, sow some ryegrass or fescue. Rye grass can also be planted in a vegetable garden area to provide green compost in the spring and soil aeration. Elbon rye seed can also be planted over winter in garden areas plagued by soil nematodes (a disaster to tomatoes).
 
8.  Plant wildflowers  These need to be planted in the fall. They will grow leaves and stems while the days are short during the winter and will flower in the spring as the days get longer.
 
9. Plant fall bulbs  For spring flowers, some of the best choices are daffodils, grape muscari, tulips, jonquils, ranunculus, anemones, hyacinths, and narcissus. When planting, remember to add a little bonemeal to the root zone for some slow release organic nutrition.  ❦
 
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CONTACT EDITOR DARREL MAYERS
WITH IDEAS FOR ARTICLES OR INTERESTING LINKS: 
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