Photo courtesy doityourself.com |
Colorado Master Gardener Volunteers gardening and blogging in Jefferson County Colorado. We work at the CSU Extension Office at the Jefferson County Fairgrounds. Call 303-271-6620 or e-mail your questions to mastergardener@jeffco.us
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Tuesday, January 31, 2017
The Myth of Paper-based Sheet Mulches by Donna Duffy
Friday, January 27, 2017
Tuesday, January 24, 2017
Try Amaranth in your Garden by Vicky Spelman
Matthew Blair, Researcher at Tennessee State University in a Field of Amaranth
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If the popularity of quinoa has taught us anything, it's that people are increasingly open about exploring grains besides the familiar wheat and rice. Now, researchers at Tennessee State University are hoping consumers are ready to give another ancient grain a try: amaranth.
Amaranth was revered by the Aztecs in Mexico. Today in the U.S., it's mostly grown in people's backyards or on research farms, like an experimental field at Tennessee State University.
Some of the amaranth there looks like corn with a colorful, flowery plume on top. Others are more like shrubs. Matthew Blair, an associate professor at TSU, is leading a team of researchers in evaluating dozens of varieties. Amaranth is a grain that thrives in high temperatures, is largely resistant to drought and is seen as a heartier crop than corn. "We all know how fast corn grows in the summertime," Blair says. "Well, amaranth can grow equally fast, or faster."
Saturday, January 21, 2017
Here They Come...Seed Catalogs! by Donna Duffy
Photo courtesy treehuggers.com |
Friday, January 20, 2017
URGENT: 2017 Spring Gardening Symposium Change of Location
Join us at the "Taj" for the 2017 Spring Gardening Symposium! |
It's not too late to register or find a friend to join you! Click here for the registration link. What a great way to spend a cold January day!
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Nature's Beauty: Hoarfrost by Donna Duffy
Photo courtesy Colleen Hart, The Weather Channel Facebook Page |
Sometime this winter, you may be fortunate enough to see hoarfrost in your landscape. But look quickly, because it will disappear with sunlight.
According to the Old English dictionary (c. 1290), hoarfrost is defined as "expressing the resemblance of white feathers of frost to an old man's beard." No, this isn’t frost on performance-enhancing drugs, but it can be quite different from your normal frost! Colleen Hart of The Weather Channel provides the following facts about hoarfrost.
Sunday, January 15, 2017
Protecting Perennials in the Winter by Donna Duffy
Rudbeckia, photo by Donna Duffy |
Thursday, January 12, 2017
Symposium Sneak Peak: Companion Planting by Dustin Foster
An example of trap cropping, photo courtesy organicfarmingblog.com |
Separating the facts from fiction when it comes to companion planting can be tricky. There are many “old wives tales” and practices learned from grandparents and parents. Some actually, if not accidentally, have some scientific truth to them and some, not so much. Once such scientific concept is called trap cropping. Although it may not have been known as that back in the day, it is a scientifically proven companion concept.
Monday, January 9, 2017
Symposium Sneak Peak: Plentiful Container Vegetable Gardens by Jennifer Verpraskus
Photo courtesy harvesttotable.com |
Friday, January 6, 2017
Symposium Sneak Peak: Dreaming of Tomatoes by Sharon Tanaka
Photo courtesy gardeningknowhow.com |
Monday, January 2, 2017
Symposium Sneak Peak: The 10 Easiest Vegetables to Grow in Colorado by Amy Bubar
Photo courtesy extension.unh.edu |
The vegetable gardening season is over for most of us. And with winter just beginning, it might feel like next season is an eternity away. But the truth is that it’s never too early to start planning next year’s garden. In fact, now’s the prefect time to get started.