Monday, August 3, 2020

Bumblebee Nests by Vicky Spelman


Bumblebee Nest
Photo: Vicky Spelman

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Helpful Toads In Your Home Garden By Joyce D’Agostino

Photo: Joyce D'Agostino 


This spring as I was moving around some bags of soil in my garden, I found a large toad that was hiding beneath a bag. I almost missed seeing it since its color blended in very well with the fallen leaves and gravel to make it almost unnoticeable.

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Summer Dragonfly Activity By Joyce D’Agostino


Photo by Joyce D'Agostino

You may have noticed them – large flying insects that look like miniature airplanes traveling back and forth through the air. Their size and shape may make some think that they could be an insect that could be harmful to people but in fact Dragonflies are very active and important insect predators and are not found to be harmful to humans. They prefer to spend a lot of their time catching flying insects including ones that are annoyances to humans such as houseflies and mosquitos. 

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Carol Mackie Daphne shrub by Steven White

Courtesy Plant Select

The Carol Mackie Daphne (Daphne x burkwoodii ‘Carol Mackie’) shrub is an outstanding eye catcher in any landscape.  It is so delicate looking that it doesn’t appear to be a plant that does well in Colorado. 

Monday, July 20, 2020

5 Steps to Vegetable Garden Hail Recovery By: Julie Echter

Photo Edamame: Julie Echter

There is nothing more rewarding than starting a vegetable garden and watching your tiny seedlings grow into beautiful, fruiting plants. You’ve spent months preparing your soil, planting, pruning, fertilizing, and watering. Everything is looking great and you are just about to harvest your first couple veggies… then the hail storm hits. What do you do now?

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Staying Alive By Nancy Shepard


“Staying Alive” is a Bee Gees song most recently popular for its use in CPR training. The beat is supposed to be the frequency of chest compressions you use when trying to save someone’s life. If it only took a song to resuscitate some of what I thought were dying plants.

Monday, July 13, 2020

The Wonderful World of Insects by DelanceyPlace

From the book:  Buzz Sting Bite

When we gardeners talk about beneficial insects, lady bird beetles, and parasitoid wasps are on the list.


Sunday, July 12, 2020

Friday, July 10, 2020

Three tips to pick out a sweet watermelon by Mary-Leigh Meyer Texas A&M AgriLife Extension

Courtesy Pixabay
<<A good watermelon is a staple, healthy summer snack, so it is important to know how to pick one, regardless if you are at the grocery store or the local farmers market.

When it comes time to pick the perfect melon, people often make their selection based on three characteristics: presence of seeds or lack thereof, size and ripeness.
Determining ripeness requires some knowledge; how can you pick a ripe watermelon?

Tip 1: Find the yellow belly, or the field spot
Courtesy Pexels
Other than cutting open a watermelon to see the inside, the field spot is perhaps the best indicator of the ripeness. This spot on a melon shows where it was laying on the ground while attached to the vine.

Courtesy Pixabay
If the watermelon is ripe, the field spot should be a large, yellow patch on one side of the melon. If it is ripe, the color should be a creamy, almost butter-like yellow. The bigger the yellow belly and the creamier the color means the more time the melon spent ripening on the vine. However, if the spot is smaller or looks more white than yellow, then the melon may not be as ripe.

Tip 2: Tap the underbelly and listen for a deep sound
Another way to find a ripe watermelon is to lightly knock the outside with your knuckles. A ripe melon will have a deeper sound, as opposed to an over-ripe one that will have a more hollow or flat sound. A duller, more hollow sound can mean the flesh is starting to go soft and spoil.

Tip 3: Look for a dull and heavy watermelon
Although it may not be the most photogenic nor the easiest to carry to your car, the best watermelons will be dull in appearance and heavier than the rest. A shiny melon indicates the insides are under ripe.

On average, a watermelon is 92% water, which makes them so juicy. A heavier melon likely holds more water, which will make it juicier.

This year’s off-the-charts watermelon quality and sweetness may be the best news you will hear all day.>>

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Deadheading Myth by Bec Wolfe-Thomas / The Garden Professors

Photo: Bec Wolfe-Thomas
"Tis the season that posts about deadheading start to show up. The myth is that you need to deadhead spent blooms to get the plant to re-bloom. The theory people apply is that the plant will put all its energy into seed development and won’t bloom anymore because it no longer needs to for reproduction. This is false, plants are either genetically predisposed to re-bloom or they are not. To what degree they re-bloom also relates back to their genetics. It is a trait that plants are bred for.


Monday, July 6, 2020

Chelinidea vittiger aequoris nymph by Kimberly Sheahan

Photo: Kimberly Sheahan
Photo of adult cactus bug by Lyle Buss, University of Florida
I love this time of year because my xeriscape yard is in bloom.  I recently signed up to be a citizen volunteer for the Native Bee Watch (you can check out more information here if you’re interested https://arapahoe.extension.colostate.edu/nbw/#theproject).  As part of my new interest in bees, I’ve been photographing them as they pollinate the cacti in my yard. Today I noticed something odd on one of my opuntia sp. pads (prickly pear), it looked like it had a weird growth of extra spines.

Friday, July 3, 2020

Celebrate 4th of July with Plants by Pam Hill

Courtesy: Good Earth Plants

This Fourth of July is the 244th anniversary of the day in 1776 when the Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence.  The first organized celebration with fireworks followed in Philadelphia in 1777 and continued through the 19th century, though the date did not become an official federal holiday until 1941.