Garden Musings: October Morning
Sun rising. Watching its light move down into the forest, touching earth, I am touched, enlivened, inwardly aware Of the collaboration of sun/warmth/wind/water Summoning life on our planet … now …


Sun rising. Watching its light move down into the forest, touching earth, I am touched, enlivened, inwardly aware Of the collaboration of sun/warmth/wind/water Summoning life on our planet … now …

Linda Cornish Blank shares great tips on moving houseplants back indoors after a summer outside.

Native plants may be best suited to environmental conditions and provide critical support to wildlife. Some categories of natives may fulfill these functions better than others. An important consideration in selecting native plants is whether to purchase so-called “straight species,” the forms that are found naturally in the wild, or cultivars, plants that have been produced by horticulturists through selective breeding for certain ornamental traits.

Summer is waning or fall just beginning and our gardens are awash in the bright and muted colors of asters, goldenrods, lobelias, pink muhly, sages, turtleheads, and zinnias, and with due diligence, relatively free of creeping weeds. But then you return home from a weekend getaway and find some stout, green, budded stems of notable height rising above the flowers in your perennial bed or butterfly garden.

A society grows great when old men (and women and children) plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit. There are lots of ways to grow our tree canopy; this article describes just a few ways we can get involved.

Studies have shown that the particular selections gardeners make can have a tremendous impact on the diversity of life in our yards. Years of observations and research by University of Delaware entomologist Dr. Douglas Tallamy and his assistants have revealed that certain species of native plants, which he terms “keystone plants,” are especially supportive of a garden’s food web.
