Florida Wildflowers are Putting on a Show

June 18, 2010 by Rick

The wetter than normal spring has given us a better than normal show this year. Earlier we had a beautiful roadside display of Blue eyed Grass. The ditches are now full of many other showy plants like Tickseeds and Black Eyed Susans.

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Florida Hikes will give you information on where you can go to see so many different habitats and their wildflowers. You are sure to see Florida’s Gopher Tortise on these hikes.

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Don’t forget to look up for wildflowers too. Our native oncidiums are in full bloom right now.

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Enjoy this video from The Florida Wildflower Foundation.

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Vertical Succulents are Getting Our Attention

June 8, 2010 by Rick

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We purchased these plastic containers designed to plant and hang on the wall.

We didn’t have a suitable wall so we thought using posts with the trees as a backdrop would let us view them from our back porch and place them in enough light to make them thrive.

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Much of my inspiration comes from 2 books by Debra Lee Baldwin that you too might enjoy.

 

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I rooted the succulents directly in this container in April for this early June hanging.

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With the rainy season starting we are more worried about too much water than too little. We considered a drip system for the dry season to water them. Succulents need little so little water and can go for weeks without it. I think we will determine if drip irrigation is needed before we install it. There are plenty of succulent varieties to make your own vertical garden project. Using succulents would mean the wall container doesn’t need to be very elaborate. I  think you could hang pots close together and create some interesting effects.

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The Spanish Moss hides the posts and blends in well with the moss covered plant stand holding the bromeliad planter. They are attached with 2 screws so I can take them down if we get a frost in the winter. It will be fun to watch them grow.

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Below is an inspiring video of vertical garden images to get you thinking if this is something that will help you decorate your own space.

 

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Feed Readers Make Your Web Experience Better

June 5, 2010 by Rick

The best way to get up to date on your favorite blogs and news sources is to read them all on one page in a Feed Reader. You can open one page and scan headers, text and images. If you find something that you want to read on the sites page you just click the header and it opens in a new tab.

Try it and your time on the web will be reduced and you will get much more information in the time you spend. Here is a short video that tells you how to do it in just a few steps.

 

 

Another way to speed your surfing is to install the Google Chrome Browser It is the fastest and safest browser that will not crash any system and cannot be hacked. Once installed you can click Options and select On startup open the following pages then add all the sites you check each time you log on. This way your Facebook, Gmail, Feed Reader, Bank, Newspaper etc all open in tabs.

 

Follow us on Facebook where you can learn and share and ask questions that you will be sure you get the right answer too. Sites where I can be found are: Florida Friendly Plants, Florida Gardeners on Facebook and I Wet My Plants. I hope to Friend you there.

 

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The Chelsea Flower Show

May 27, 2010 by Rick

My friend, Paige Worthy, is in London at Chelsea and shares these images for us since we cannot be there. Someday, I hope to go.


Mulch and Compost – Form and Function

May 21, 2010 by Rick

Organic matter is the secret to growing better garden plants in Florida. It is the most important component to gardening. Organic matter is leaves, wood, fiber and bark from trees, shrubs and grasses and manures and sludge and peat mosses. These break down by a process known as composting. The breakdown occurs naturally or you can concentrate and control it for your benefit. Some plants need lots of compost and mulch to thrive and others just need mulch.

You can grow a garden in the sand like the farmers do but you need chemicals to kill weeds, root pests like nematodes and grubs, plastic to prevent erosion of the sand and fertilizer and a constant supply of water and nutrients. But instead of this… If you have enough organic matter you can grow a better garden with the use of few chemicals and fertilizers and much less little water. A rich soil is full of micro organisms like good bacteria and good fungus that grow symbiotically with plant roots and make available the nutrients from the organic matter. There are also macro organisms like earthworms, good nematodes, pillbugs etc that play a big part of breaking down organic matter and making it readily available for plants to use for nutrients and protection from bad organisms. It is hard to visualize what is going on down there but the results are amazing once you see the difference yourself. Rich soils also hold onto the water whereas sand lets it pour right through.

 

Composting can be more work than you are willing to do for all the places you want to add flowers and vegetables around your home garden. An easy alternative way to garden is to focus your organic growing in a container you bury in the poor sandy Florida soil you have. We call this method Pot-in-Pot Landscaping and here are all the posted details.

Dropping in Pot-in-Pot a

Drip irrigation allows you to focus a small and appropriate amount of water to your plants so you are not wasting the resource or adding to the fertilizer runoff problems in our rivers and bays.

Pot-in-Pot Landscaping with Drip Irrigation and Eucalyptus Mulch = Success

From our Frequently Asked Questions Page

4. Why is the Riverview Flower Farm potting soil superior to other grower mixes and how does that help me garden?

Our organic potting soil is alive with beneficial organisms. It is a rich blend of compost and peat moss that allow your plants to absorb natural nutrients and water much better than light weight mixes with lots of inexpensive fillers. Salt based liquid and slow release fertilizers can be used at the labeled rate or less so you do not harm the beneficial organisms that will multiply and spread into your garden. These beneficial organisms form a symbiotic relationship with the plants root system and grow as the roots grow to protect against disease and nematodes which are microscopic root destroying worms. Adding organic matter (peat moss, compost, leaf mold, cow manure) enhances this symbiotic relationship so your plants can grow better with less salt fertilizer and less water. The labeled fertilizer rates were developed for less fertile light weight mixes. You can and should use less fertilizer when growing in a rich organic potting soil or flower bed. Spend a little more on building the soil and save a lot on the fertilizer while keeping the waste and runoff to a minimum.

 

MULCHES

Mulches are as important as compost rich soil is in having a healthy, thriving garden and flowers. Having stated that, there are many Florida Friendly Plants, Shrubs, and Trees both native and non native that do not need compost rich soil but they benefit from surface mulches. Many plants that thrive in Florida have adapted to grow with the nematodes and other soil organisms that kill vegetables and flowers.

All plants benefit from the mulches breaking down (composting) and supplying nutrients naturally. Mulches cool the soil and prevent weeds, erosion and leaching. They are more important than they look and not just for the esthetics they create.

Modern Cypress Mulches are a blend of various wood types and some cypress wood. Overharvesting of cypress trees in Florida wetlands has caused this shift in the mulch components. We are familiar with the name Cypress Mulch but in reality the amount of cypress is much lower in the bag you buy. This is a good thing because we all need to mulch and save the cypress swamps too. Feeling less guilty? A better way to mulch is to use thick layers of oak leaves which are so plentiful and then cover them with your favorite looking mulch as a top dressing.

Two other mulches are available that you can feel good about using are Maleluca mulch which is harvested from areas of the Everglades being recovered from this invasive tree and farm raised eucalyptus mulch made at a eucalyptus plantation that is continuously harvested in sections that rotate every 6 years for just this purpose. The Florida Native Plant Society has a blog post on mulch the furthers this information.

Change your life and garden for the better by discovering all the virtues of compost and mulch.

Shirley Bovshow posted MULCH 101: THE ART OF SELECTING THE PERFECT GARDEN MULCH! You will also enjoy her Garden World Report Show.

 

 

 

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Longwood Gardens

May 15, 2010 by Rick

Enjoy this beautiful garden and images from their Flikr photo pool.

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Wishbone Flower – Originated in Vietnam

May 12, 2010 by Rick

Torenia fournieri - Wishbone Flower - Summer Pansy. These durable, heat loving annuals thrive in our hot humid and sometimes very wet summers. Torenia is native to Vietnam where it is steamy hot, wet and tropical. Try these hybrids and add some blue to you Florida summer garden.

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Torenia do not like to dry out so you have to add water holding rich soil to your bed and top it with a thick layer of mulch to keep the soil cool and prevent evaporation.

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Try our Pot-in-Pot method for sure success and then you can swap them for more color with ease when that time comes.

Optimal Light:

Sun – Part Shade
Mature Height:
1ft-2ft

Light Range:
Full/Part Sun
Mature Spread:
1ft-2ft

Soil Moisture:
Well-drained to Wet
Soil Texture:
Any

Salt Tolerance:
Low

Florida Native:
No
Florida Region:
N,C,S

Drought Tolerance: 
Low
Hardiness Zone:
9-11

Season of Color:
Year-round

Florida Home Depot Garden Centers are having an incredible sale right now on beautiful gallon annuals. Check them out now for the best value on color of the season. You won’t be disappointed by their performance.

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Farm fresh delivered to frequently to your Florida Home Depot.

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Butterfly Beauties

May 8, 2010 by Rick

This group of butterfly photographers have captured Florida butterflies exceptionally well. See if you agree with me. 

 

 

At EPCOT this week we visited the popular butterfly garden and butterfly pavilion where visitors walk among hundreds of butterflies and learn about their life cycles and the Florida Friendly Plants that attract them with their nectar, pollen and tasty leaves for their larvae to consume.

 

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These topiaries are better than signs to direct you to the butterfly garden.

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Florida Friendly Perennials are the main draw for the butterflies.

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Children enjoy the Fairy Garden adjacent to the butterflies and call the names of each of the fairies that are well positioned in floral displays for photographing memories.

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Melampodium – a Tough Florida Friendly Annual

May 5, 2010 by Rick

Melampodium paludosum is one of the most resilient warm season annuals you can grow that will last through the summer. If we have a very wet year, slugs can be a problem for some annuals that you need to treat with a safe organic slug bait containing iron phosphate (Sluggo Snail & Slug Bait). It works! You can also use stale beer in a saucer that attracts them and then they fall in and drown…or something. Melampodiums are one of the Top 20 Florida Friendly Annuals and can reseed so you may be able to keep a crop of them going for years. They grow in varying amounts of sun to partial shade and flower continuously.

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Florida Home Depot Garden Centers are having an incredible sale right now on beautiful gallon annuals. Check them out now for the best value on color of the season. You won’t be disappointed by their performance.

 Unbelievable Value at Home Depot 5

Melampodiums and other gallon size warm season color plants and perennials are on sale at an unbelievable price. The Home Depot is making them available to you at values never before seen. These are all top quality items and quality you won’t find at Wal-Mart or Lowes. See it for yourself.

 

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St Bernard’s Lily a Tough Grass Like-Plant

May 1, 2010 by Rick

Saint Bernard's Lily - Anthericum saundersiae. This grass-like plant has long, narrow leaves that are dark green forming a clump with upright arching leaves.

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Showy white flowers with yellow stamens persist throughout the year. Give it well drained soil and it grows to 3 feet or less. We have found that if you cut it to the ground every other year it sprouts back rejuvenated and to a similar size quickly. Use it as a 'THRILLER' in the center of a large combination planter for a long lived and trouble free focal plant. Mass plantings are very attractive especially when they are flowering heavily.

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Clumps are well behaved and dependable. St Bernard’s Lily can thrive on rainfall alone once it is established. It will grow rapidly and flower more with some irrigation and fertilizer if you feel the need.

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Anthericum tolerates a fair amount of shade and will grow as a companion to shade lovers like Impatiens and Persian Shield. Here is a link to the Top 10 Florida Friendly Shade Tolerant Plants.

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