Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Gift Ideas for Gardeners


The holiday season is always joyful and exciting but as we all know, it can also be stressful. Trying to come up with that perfect gift for everyone on your list can certainly add to the stress. But if you happen to have a ‘green-thumb type’ on your list, I think I can help.

Gardeners are actually very easy to buy for. Really. Think about it this way. If we’re not in our gardens, we’re thinking about our gardens. With that simple thought in mind gift ideas are easy.

Let me start with one obvious fact. A gardener can never have too many plants. So at the top of my list every year is a gift certificate to a local nursery, garden center or a mail-order company, such as Park Seed, Wayside Gardens or White Flower Farms. The wonderful thing about a gift certificate is that it takes away all the guilt of spending money on plants.

Another important fact is that we cannot garden without tools. A person can certainly get by with basic spades, trowels, pruners, rakes, hoes and forks, but there is something wonderful about the feel of a quality tool. Our local garden centers have a nice selection or look online at places like Smith & Hawkin or Lee Valley Tools. Check out these ergonomic hand tools.

There’s no question that gardening is hard on hands. Good garden gloves are always appreciated. Choose gloves that fit well and that are flexible yet sturdy. Also very much appreciated are hand care products to revive those abused hands. Crabtree and Evelyn make a variety of hand care products for gardeners. My favorite is the pumice scrub. You might also consider a microwavable hot pack to ease those sore muscles.

By the time winter arrives, we gardeners are already planning what we want to do with our gardens the following spring. Garden books and magazines help us feed our habit and provide creative ideas. Books are plentiful on a variety of garden subjects. Choose one that matches the interests of the gardener you are buying for. For example, shade gardening or herb culture. Books on garden design with large colorful pictures and good plant details are always fun. There are several good garden magazines to choose from. My personal favorite is Fine Gardening.

For those gardeners who also enjoy wildlife, you might consider birdfeeders, bird baths or whimsical bird houses.

Stocking stuffers can run the gamut from plant food spikes to seeds to plant markers to garden ornaments.

And finally if you want to spend a bit more, you might consider garden carts, garden benches or a Mantis rototiller.

Did I not say that gardeners were easy to buy for?

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Making A Case For Delayed Gratification

So, I know it's a little late for this post here in Iowa, but no self-respecting garden blogger could let fall slip by without at least mentioning bulbs. I don't care if you're a garden maven or a hermit, I defy you to look at a drift of spring bulbs in all their glory and not be impressed. Those early season blooms of daffodils, tulips and the like cheer us immensely and provide proof that winter truly does come to an end each year.

If you want to enjoy these first flowers of spring in your own garden, you need to make plans for the show now. Fall is the time to get those bulbs in the ground.

There are a few simple planting rules to follow. OK, so this first rule may seem silly, but I'll say it anyway because it matters. Plant bulbs 'pointy' side up. Planting depth should be clearly marked on most bulb packets, but a general rule is to plant them 2 1/2 times as deep as the bulb is wide.

Bulbs need at least a half a day of sun to thrive. They will get weak and spindly without enough light, so choose your site with that in mind. The soil needs to be loose and rich, so amend it with compost if necessary. Once the flowers are spent, you need to let the foliage die back naturally to build bulb strength for next season’s blooms.

If you add fertilizer at the time you plant your bulbs, be sure to mix it into the soil well so that it does not directly contact and burn the bulbs. Bone meal can be a great slow-release fertilizer for bulbs, but beware of using it if you have critter problems. Raccoons will happily dig up all of your bulbs in order to get at the bone meal. I speak from experience.

Bulbs are one case where buying the larger, more expensive ones will pay bigdividends the first year they are planted. Bulbs are actually graded, much like eggs, though most nurseries do not list grades. Look for bulbs that are large, firm and free from soft spots or other signs of disease.

A few rules of thumb for bulb design. The first is, the more the merrier. One is definitely a lonely number when it comes to bulbs. When you plant just a few in one location they become lost and look like mistakes. The smaller the bulb, the more you need. For example, ten crocus bulbs might have the same effect as five daffodil bulbs. By interspersing bulbs with perennials you avoid holes in the garden and the foliage from the perennials helps to hide withering bulb foliage.

Large drifts of the same color always look great. Repeat the drifts in odd numbers or naturalize them by planting dozens or even hundreds of bulbs in carefree, informal drifts in lightly wooded areas, lawns or rock gardens.


No garden is complete without a few spring bulbs. Do a little work now and thank yourself for it for many springs to come.