Saturday, September 30, 2023
Thursday, September 28, 2023
Ants and Aphids Have Each Other's Back by Angelica Elliott
Photo: Pexels |
Late last summer, something
strange caught my attention while weeding around a Cosmo plant. I noticed a
black blob on the plant's main stem. As I got closer to inspect, I realized it
was a thick colony of black aphids (family Aphididae), and from my experience,
where there are aphids, there will likely be ants.
Monday, September 25, 2023
Simple Propagation From Cuttings by Jeffrey Blake
Photo: dreamstime.com |
Last season, a neighbor brought over a basket of herbs and vegetables including some very fresh Rosemary sprigs. Since I like to grow my own herbs, I immediately took a 4-5 inch section of a Rosemary sprig and prepared it to propagate in my garden. Now I have a healthy plant in my raised bed – that I use when cooking. And now this season, I have been looking for opportunities to create a few more Rosemary plants. I am sharing here the steps I took to propagate a cutting from my new plant. You can use these generic steps to propagate almost any plant that doesn't have a woody stem.
Thursday, September 21, 2023
Preparing For Winter by Gregory Engel
Pexels: Richard Fletcher |
The end of summer is approaching and we're already experiencing cooler days and cooler nights. Flashes of yellow are appearing in the Linden tree outside my home office window and I'm busy harvesting the vegetables. Just as we plan next summer's garden during the winter, perhaps even begin seedlings inside while there is snow on the ground outside, we need to begin to prepare our garden spaces for winter as the harvest winds down and we move into fall.
Tuesday, September 19, 2023
Are you ready for next year's hail storms? by Terry Rintala
All photos by the author |
If you have lived in Colorado for any length of time, you most likely have been in or around a hail storm.
Thursday, September 14, 2023
Protecting New Plants from the Summer Sun by Sue Parilla
Photo: Sue Parilla |
I had a few clusters of winter sown Aquilegia caerulea or Rocky Mountain columbines that I had not yet planted. I knew they were crowded in their current container and wanted to get them in the ground.
Thursday, September 7, 2023
Composting with Worms: Vermicomposting by Sue Zirbes
Photo: Pexels: Sippakorn Yamkasikorn |
When I was in Germany, I watched my family deposit their food waste in special buckets that were collected and used for community composting. It’s nice to know that food waste is going back into food production. One convenient method to do this with your own food waste is to have a worm bin in your garage. It’s easy to do and it’s not even smelly. Your worms will eat the food and process it into worm castings (poop) you can use to compost your garden. The garage is a good home for your operation because the worms need to be shielded from the cold.