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Finding Tips And Guides For Gardening

A lot of garden tips and advice arrives to us on some hard-to-read, garden blog with a beastly background, pop up ads, advertisements littering the text and cheesy midi music playing in the background. It's enough to send any serious gardener to the book store to find an appropriate tome instead. However, every once in awhile, you can find an excellent website dedicated to answering gardening questions and providing insightful advice, hints and ideas for creating the perfect garden, whether for fruit, vegetables or flowers. One such site is www.gardenguides.com.

You may be wondering about the beautiful gardens that win garden contests or you might be looking for a gardening video to show you how to plan and create your own dream garden. At www.gardenguides.com, you can read about orchestrating the perfect garden lighting, about installing proper drainage and about integrating walkways or artwork into your cozy backyard habitat. You can read about a number of different garden styles, including Alpine, Cottage, English, French, Family, Forest, Fragrant, Japanese, Kids, Zen and more. You will also learn about landscaping, creating edible gardens, planting flowers or creating water gardens. You will gain insights on how to attract butterflies, birds and helpful insects, while keeping pests out. You can also learn how to garden by color, light, season or type of space.

Other garden tips revolve around plant species and varieties. Beginners may want to read about getting started with perennials or annuals. For instance, if you click on the tab for perennial flower gardening, you'll learn how to choose the right flowers, how to plant and grow them, how to cut and dry them, how to prepare the perennials for winter, how to propagate and troubleshoot them, and you'll get lists of perennial flowers and plants. Visitors to the site can read about rose gardening and caring for cacti, or read up on spreading moss and ivy covers. Even if you're just curious about planting some new grass, you'll find valuable information here.

In addition to providing you with great garden tips articles, you can also check out some of the resources that www.gardenguides.com has compiled for you. For instance, you can type in your city, state and country to find a local Garden Walk or Botanical Garden nearest you. You can look up regional growing guides to let you know what works best in your geographic area. You can look up bulb stores, nurseries and landscapers in your state. You can also read about the latest gardening tools for composting, fertilizing, mulching, plant supports, soil tending, seeding, watering, tilling and enjoying your garden.

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Winter Plants To Grow In Your Garden

Winter may seem an unlikely time for trees, shrubs and garden plants to bloom, but you can still see a few if you do your research and plant right. For instance, a gardening expert may recommend trees like the Acer palmatum dissectum, which blooms red, yellow and orange in Pennsylvania's late Novembers, or red, yellow and orange blooming shagbark maples. The oak-leaf hydrangeas (also called "snow queens") are good plants that love hot summers but survive hardy northeast winters too. They can be red, purple or white. The enkianthus usually turns bright red in the winter and azaleas can be bright red, yellow or pink. The helleborus and aloha rose are two exotic-looking flowers that can hold a vivid bloom against the white winter snow as well. Read on for more gardening information because if you know what to plant and how to plant, you can have a thriving winter garden.

During the winter, you may also want to add late growing plants to the mix. You can plant ornamental cabbages that come in stunning foliage colors such as yellow, lilac, deep purple, white and pink. This heath is the hardiest winter flower, as it's able to withstand temperatures as low as -25. Parsley survives from May through November. From June through November, you can harvest broccoli, chard and kale. Beets can even be harvested into December and potatoes can be dug up from July into December. Starting in August (through November), you can harvest broccoli raab, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, rutabagas and turnips. Starting in August (through December), you can harvest leeks, pears, carrots and winter squash. September through November, you'll gather your pumpkins, shelling beans and celery root. October through November, you'll pick fennel and from October through December, you can gather cranberries and parsnips. Mushrooms can be cultivated year-round. Home vegetable gardening is not only enjoyable when you see the fruits of your labor, but it's also practical because you can feed your family, while saving hundreds at the grocery store.

To help your garden plants withstand colder temperatures, you should mulch well (about 4 inches deep) in the fall. Reduce watering a month or so before the first frost to prevent over-saturation. After a few hard freezes, you should then water well to provide moisture to help the plants go dormant. If there are sudden freezes, extremely cold weather or if you're dealing with young plants, then you may need to cover your new shrubs with a burlap sack or an old sheet. It's best to avoid direct contact between the fabric and the foliage, so add taller stakes to your garden supplies list, as these stakes will hold the cover up and away from the delicate leaves.

It's recommended that you plant your gardens full of four seasons worth of flowers and garden plants. Some people create special gardens set aside for cutting if they enjoy beautiful flowers indoors but don't want to sacrifice the beauty of their main gardens. Using a blend of foliage, berries, flowers and shrub branches can add texture, height and dimension to any year-round garden.

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