Showing posts with label herbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label herbs. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Growing Organically Is Looking Up!

The Living Towers Farm
As you drive down the hill to the Living Towers Farm, turning a wooded corner, you don't know quite what to expect. Seeing the greenhouse was the logical assumption for growing vegetables and herbs organically, but what was unexpected was walking into the screened nursery and realizing it's a small world!  Looking down the towering rows, I felt like I had been transported to EPCOT, Disney's Experimental Prototype Community of Tommorrow!  At EPCOT you can take the boat tour, Living with The Land, and see hydroponic vegetables, fruit trees, herbs, and flowers growing up to the sky, symbiotic aquaponic farming, where fish and plants live harmoniously.  There's a good explanation for the similarity:  the creator of the vertical towers, Tim Blank, was head horticulturist and researcher at EPCOT's The Land for 12 years.

Hydroponic Boat tour, The Land, EPCOT 2013

At the Living Towers Farm, over 5,000 plants grow in a 2,200 square foot prototype of futuristic food production where everyone will be able to harvest enough food to feed their family, even in a small space.

The product for growing vegetables, herbs, and flowers is a tall, expandable, cylinder with a 20 gallon reservoir that pumps mineral-infused water over the plant roots on a time schedule that is set by the owner.  Starting off with seedlings, this oxygen-rich process will boost the growing time for the vegetables and herbs so that within weeks you have fully mature plants ready to harvest.  Powerful side benefits of no weeding, tilling, kneeling, or sweaty-dirty clothing, as well as knowing where your food comes from and how it's been grown are attractive to those wanting a more health-conscious diet.  Living Tower's Tower Garden TM 's motto is "the world's first plug and play vertical garden."

Living Towers Introduction.with Dr. Jan Young, ND, CBE
 

One complete Tower Garden TM can be purchased for $525, or in payments of $45 a month. The entire kit includes:
  • (1) Tower Garden vertical aeroponic garden tower
  • Seeds for growing gourmet lettuce, cherry tomatoes, beefsteak tomatoes, basil, and cucumber
  • Seed starter enviro-dome
  • 20 rock wool seed starter cubes and net pots
  • Pump, timer and drain tube
  • Tower Tonic Mineral Blend plant food (1 qt each)
  • pH test kit and 1 bottle each of pH+ and pH-
  • Measuring cup
You have your choice of seedlings when you visit their online store.

I think my husband would love to have two Tower Gardens for his birthday! Have a look at the harvest-ready Tower Gardens TM  vegetables and herbs that you could be eating tonight at your table.

Tuscany Kale, Nasturtiums, Cherokee Lettuce

Bibb Lettuce, Italian Parsley


Herb Towers

Bibb Lettuce Towers

Basil Tower

Nasturiums

Eggplant and Zucchini

Parsley

Kale, Swiss chard, Eggplant

Eggplant


Swiss Chard

Green Kale

 
Used all your Chives? No worries - they are already growing back!
 
 
Eggplant
Zucchini buds, flower, and fruit
Zucchini flower
Strawberries
Tuscano Kale
 
Strawberries Towers

 

Would you like a Tower Garden TM? Contact information :
 
Living Towers Farm
19621 Lake Lincoln Lane
Eustis, FL 32736
352-357-4453
 
info/livingtowers.com
 
Open Tuesdays and Thursdays 10am - 6pm.
 
 
A big hat/tip to Dr. Young, Jason Lucas, Greenhouse Manager, and Tracy DeCarlo, distributor of Tower Gardens TM. 

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Need Clean Water? Use Herbs

Freshly harvested cilantro
Plants having multiple uses is nothing new to science, turning corn into ethanol, the perennial foxglove into digitalis for heart conditions, and indoor plants cleaning the air of toxic gases, are a few examples.  Now college students at Ivy Tech Community College, in Lafayette, Indiana, along with students from Universidad Politecnia de Francisco J. Madero in Hidalgo, Mexico have been studying one of my favorite herbs - cilantro - as a water filter for contaminated water.

Using a process called bioabsorption, the two colleges successfully collaborated on a research team to confirm using cilantro to capture heavy metals will remove lead and nickel from polluted water.  Douglas Schauer, lead team member, says that the "ground-up cilantro can be inserted into a tube into which water is passed through. The cilantro allows the water to trickle out but absorbs metals, leaving cleaner drinking water. Dried cilantro can also be placed into tea bags that are placed in a pitcher of water for a few minutes to suck out the heavy metals."

Other possible bioabsorbant herbs include dandelions and parsley.

Read the entire article.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Tropical Nursery is Paradise For Gardeners


What a gardner's treasure trove! The Community Garden Center is a must visit and visit often resource. Marvin and Terri Pinder, 2nd generation growers just don't sell perennials, ornamental shrubs, tropical fruit trees, herbs, and vegetables, the Pinder's educate by example, living and growing everything they would love to have in their landscape. Visit Pinder's Nursery at 5500 Sw Martin Hwy, Palm City  (772) 781-8085.
 
Pennisetum purpurea 'Princess Caroline'

Sun-loving bromeliad hanging basket.

Coleus 'Redhead'

Succulent Container Garden

Plant-filled Victorian Terrarium keeps caterpillars happy.

Plants from the ground to the sky.

Thousands of plants, flowers, herbs, fruit trees, and garden accessories.

Floriferous front entry.

I can't believe how wonderful the ambiance was at Pinder's Nursery! Marvin and Terry and their staff are enthusiastic and gardening experts to help anyone who wants to create their own outdoor living room or edible Paradise. If you're in the area, please stop by. I guarantee that you'll leave with a wonderful plant or two.

They even have fairies wandering among the plants.  Will post those photos as soon as I'm sure the fairies don't mind. Click to see all of the Pinder Nursery photographs.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Don't Try This At Home

Caveat: My anecdote today has more than a few garden-variety lessons and plant tips. Please don't try this at home unless you are willing to do it correctly.

My husband stopped by Habitat for Humanity ReStore off Orange Blossom Trail yesterday on his way home from work.  The minute he got home, he couldn't wait to tell me about the twenty-some plants available that had been donated to Habitat for Humanity by a local nursery.  They were beautiful 10 gallon and 35 gallon camellias.  What? Landscape plants at Habitat for Humanity? Expensive 10gal and 35gal camellia standards at Habitat for Humanity?  I wanted one...or two...or three.

We stopped by a day later and as we pulled into the parking lot, my husband said, "Oh they're gone already." I knew it! I should have dropped everything and went yesterday to get them!  All we saw were these huge nursery pots and nothing in them.  Well almost nothing, just potting soil.

We parked and went up the ramp to ask about the camellias.  As we walked up, we noticed there was an old, dinged up, white, van.  Full of plants.  I thought to myself, those look like ligustrums crammed in between the two sets of backseats from the floor to the ceiling and over the seats.  No, they were camellias.  Hmmm, they must have bought the last two or three camellias. 

A worker came out of the open front entrance and started shaking her head. 'They were supposed to take the pots and soil, too,' she said perturbed.  I asked if they were all gone and if they really were 10gal and 35 gal camellia standards.  She nodded yes.  Dangit, I wanted one!  She was not a happy camper since they did not have any way to dispose of huge amount of soil or the leftover pots.

I went inside to see the price and saw on their chalkboard that they were selling them at $35 for the 10gal and the 35gal for $55.  What????  The size and quality of the camellias I would estimate at a retail nursery would have been $50 - $70 for each of the 10 gallon camellias and around $150 for each 35 gallon camellia standard.  The HOH prices were unbelievable and they were sold.

I continued to talk to the employee about the camellias and found out that whoever bought the camellias was supposed to take the entire soil and pots with them.  The camellias had been ripped out of their pots. HOH doesn't have the means to take care of landscaping, especially plants the size of small trees or clean up a messy parking lot.

I then noticed right next to the soil-filled pots, a van crammed full of ALL of the camellia standards from floor to ceiling. They had forced all 21 - 22 large camellias into this vehicle on top of each other without the rootballs!


A woman approached us and in faulty English with a thick Caribbean accent said that she and her husband had bought the plants (she didn't know what they were called) for her son's front yard and didn't have any way to get the entire nursery pots and trees home.  The woman and her husband were driving to Wedgewood, a community outside of Cocoa Beach with them. Both the employee and I thought out loud without thinking. "They're not going to make it."  She looked confused and asked what we meant. I began asking her specific questions about her yard. (Gardeners out there will know what I mean...)
  • Do you have full sun or shade?   (Full sun)
  • Do you have sandy soils or acidic soils?  (Sand, near Cocoa Beach)
  • Do you have an irrigation system?  (No)
Oh, dear.  This woman had bought all of the camellias and ripped them out of their pots with hardly any roots, stuffed them in an un-airconditioned van on top of each other and had to drive  about two hours home and the plants weren't going to get in the ground today!

Camellias, whether they are japonica or sasanquas, on a good day, nicely established in their pots, and planted correctly, need:
  • Full or partial shade
  • Acidic soils
  • Amended with lots of organic material soils
  • Lots of water to get established.
  • Mid-to no salt tolerance.
  • Planted in the fall and winter.
These camellias were going to be planted in poor sandy soil, in full sun, with no irrigation, and only a partial root system with possible salt spray and/or saltwater in the middle of summer.  And I bet the unknowing homeowner will plant them with fertilizer.

What will probably happen to the camellias is that overnight and for the next two weeks, they will lose all their leaves and buds. It won't be a pretty sight and the homeowner will probably think they are dead and throw them all away.

The cost?!! This couple might have spent over a thousand to thirteen hundred dollars for these beauties! I say might because I didn't ask HOH if they gave her a cut rate since she was supposed to take all of them and soil and pots at one time.  But HOH usually dont cut their rates because they have everything at such a low price already.  Still, even if the 22 plants cost her $30 apiece, that means $660.  And these camellias don't have a good chance at making it.  And I wanted one....

The woman asked me to write instructions on the back of a worn half envelope for her son.  She was taking the mistakes of what her and her husband had done calmly.  I would have been crying.  Maybe she didn't understand what she had done or what the HOH employee and I were telling her so that the plants would survive.

Water is going to be critical if these camellias are to survive. They will need 30 gallons or more every day for at least two to three weeks in our Florida summer heat, if  there is no rain.

So here's my tips for buying plants. 
  • Know the name of the plant.  Write it down.  Research it.
  • Know what a specific plant needs to survive.
  • What the sunlight, soil moisture, pH conditions it needs.
  • Have the conditions the plant needs to survive or create it with right locations, soil amendments, watering care, and fertilizer after it's established.
  • Make sure the weather/seasonal temperatures are not stressful if you don't have automatic irrigation on the plant.  Fall is a better time to plant camellias.
NEVER:
  • (Do not) Pull a plant out of its rootball or out of the soil the roots are planted in.  Pot or not.
  • (Do not) Think you can handwater a shocked plant (recently dug up and roots cut) enough. 
  • (Do not) Plant, or transplant, prune heavily, and fertilize at the same time. Wait until you see new growth and you'll know the plant is happy enough and established to handle the stress of fertilizer.
  • (Do not) Cut both the roots and foliage at the same time.  Too much stress. See the previous tip about new growth.  That's when you can prune the foliage.
TIPS:
  • Yes, sometimes Habitat for Humanity ReStores get landscaping donations.  Stop in on a regular basis and see what they have!
  • Habitat for Humanity ReStores are great places to find inexpensive pots and china to repurpose for plants that you give as presents.  Most people donate sets of cups, bowls, or plates when they get a crack in them, break or lose one.  A set of three unbroken and in perfect condition cups will make an excellent size for threesome of matched pots of herbs for a windowsill. 
  • I'm planning to use the three Renaissance-themed coffee cups for little bonsai 4-inch rosemary or olive trees. The cracked herb soup bowl will make a gorgeous saucer underneath a planted pot on my front porch.  The large round cup will make an excellent mini-planter of indoor plants for an office desk or for a windowsill African violet get-well gift. The cost of all six pieces? $4.00 and your donation is going for a good cause! I even left the bowl's 'Minnie Pearl' price tag for 50 cents on.
It's always a serendipitious moment when you find a bargain or great plants at a cheap price.  But don't waste them just because you are getting a bargain.  Make wise landscaping decisions and you'll have a beautiful landscape and more money to buy more great plants.

P.S.

I'll post the Renaissance cups when I get them planted.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Basil Spots

With my mindset lately, when I saw the subject line on Chris's (a loyal listener of In Your Backyard heard on My790am.com) email, I thought to myself, "Oh no, Chris has melanoma..."  Thankfully, Chris does not but his basil isn't feeling well lately.





Here's his question: 

I planed sweet basil (from __________ )  about 3 weeks ago.  Looks like I am doing good, but I noticed some brown spots.  The soil was amended some with compost and ______________ soil for vegetables and flowers. The plant did stress/droop within the first week of initial planting, bounced back up after watering but is doing good now.  Watering is done by hand now at the base of the plant.
 Are the brown spots normal?  Due to fungus? Nutrition deficiency?
 
Thanks, 
Chris

Chris, good question and the photograph helps answer the question.  Your basil definitely is suffering from Colletotrichum disease.  The disease is identified by the black spots, black haloed rings, and black stems. It occurs when there is a combination of high humidity, lack of air circulation, and the plants are watered often. You will want to get rid of the basil plants that are affected and plant another herb or plant in that location.

When you use plant with soil amendments, especially ones that hold water well, gardeners can overwater plants.  Always check the soil before watering to ensure that you really do need to water.  Never water the soil if the ground is wet, cool, or damp.  Twice a week watering should be enough for amended garden beds in full sun.   Space plants far enough apart that they have plenty of air circulation. 

Thanks for writing Chris!
Teresa

 

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Making Your Bath More Luxurious

Creeping Rosemary, Rosemary officinalis 'Prostratus'

Studies have proven that not only is working in the landscape good for your mental health,  but you can also relieve stress and help your skin with the herbs grown in your garden. Taking a steamy, relaxing bath every night, especially after digging in the dirt all day, is part of my "getting ready for bed" ritual.  Adding different plants, herbs, and flowers can be added to your bath to help clean, soothe and revigorate your skin and bath recipes are easy to prepare. 

You can use fragrances you enjoy the most singularly or combined with other herbs. This is where a little bit of this and some of that works for anyone.  You can be as creative as you like.  Add ground oatmeal to your herbal concoctions to help defoliate dried skin cells, soothe irritation, and reduce inflammation of sunburns and insects bites.
Warning:  Check with your doctor before ingesting any herbs for medicinal purposes.

Flowers, foliage, roots, and seeds that can be used in your beauty routine:
  • Artemesia ~ Baths
  • Basil ~ Baths
  • Catnip ~ Potpourri, baths
  • Calendula ~ Astringent, highlights hair
  • Chamomille ~ Astringent, highlights hair
  • Comfrey ~ Reduces skin irritation and inflammation
  • Dill ~ Baths, facials
  • Elder ~ Baths,
  • Eucalyptus ~ Baths, facials
  • Fennel ~ Astringent, baths
  • Geraniums, Wild ~ Astringent, baths
  • Hops ~ Baths, soporific
  • Hyssop ~ Cleanses pores, used with thyme and rosemary in baths
  • Jasmine ~ Baths, muscle relaxant, relieves inflammation
  • Juniper berries ~ Baths
  • Lady's Mantle ~ Astringent, baths
  • Lavender ~ Baths, used as a vinegar helps oily skin
  • Lemon Balm ~Astringent, baths, skin
  • Lemon Verbena ~ Energizes
  • Marjoram ~ Energizes
  • Mints ~ Baths
  • Oatmeal, Baths, soap, facials, cleanses pores
  • Oregano ~ Baths, muscle relaxant
  • Nettle ~ Baths, hair conditioner, facials for oily skin,
  • Parsley ~ Facials for oily skin, hair rinse for dark hair
  • Peppermint ~ Astringent, freshner and energizer
  • Rose ~ Astringent, skin hydration
  • Rosemary ~ Baths, soaps. energizer, facials for oily skin, hair rinse for dark hair
  • Sage ~ Astringent, baths, muscle relaxant, conditioner for dark hair
  • Rose Geraniums ~ Baths
  • Thyme ~ Antiseptic, baths, energizes
  • Valerian ~ Baths, soporific
  • Violets ~ Soaps, Facial steams
  • Willow ~ Baths, relieves pain and inflammation, muscle relaxant
  • Yarrow ~ Astringent, baths, facials for oily skin
Combine your favorite herbal scents with oatmeal or powdered milk in a muslin  or cheesecloth bag, tied with rubber band or pretty ribbon.  Place in your bath water as it fills or hang from the bath faucet to allow the warm running water to release the fragrances.

To make an infusion for your bath: Mix 4 cups of boiling water with 4 tablespoons of fresh or dried herbs and flowers, soak for 20 minutes, then strain through cheesecloth or sieve.  Add to bath water. For hard organic materials such as bark, seeds, and roots, boil ingredients for 20 minutes then strain.

Mexican Sage, Salvia longistyla
Here's a great recipe for adding Kama Sutra mint potion to your bath, courtesy of our friends at Top Tropicals Nursery.
Harvest 1 cup of fresh leaves. In a large thermos, mix the leaves with 4 cups of boiling water and. Seal the cap tightly and let sit for 24 hours, then pass the decoction through a sieve, squeezing the most you can out of the leaves. Add juice of one freshly squeezed lemon to the mint concentrate - it is an essential part of the recipe that keeps active ingredients of Kama Sutra Mint at most effective level and helps making your skin smooth and velvet. Add 1-2 table spoons of your favorite bath gel, stir. Fill a bath with cool or slightly warm water. Add mint/lemon potion.

References:

Culbertson, Molly ed.. Book of Herbs. 1st. Des Moines, Iowa: Meredith Corporation, 1994.

Tolley, Emelie, and Chris Mead. Gifts from the Herb Garden. 1st. New York, New York: Clarkson N. Potter Inc., 1991.

Top Tropical Nursery, Retail Garden Center located at 300 Center Road, Ft. Myers, Florida  http://www.toptropicals.com/

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Leu Gardens Plant Sale Spectacular

The annual spring plant sale at Leu Gardens, in Orlando, never fails to be spectacular.  We went with wagon in hand looking for a plant we couldn't live without.  Hundreds of people were there, scooping up plants as fast as they could because if you blinked, someone might buy the plant you were looking at.  On sale were tropical fruit trees, ferns,  succulents, roses, herbs, orchids, flowering tropical and subtropical shrubs and trees, and many more types of plants.

We were able to get nice international variety of herbs:  African blue basil, French thyme, Spanish lavender, dill fenneleaf, pennyroyal, lemon-scented thyme, chives, extra triple curled parsley, and Foresteri rosemary ,that I'm going to add to flowering containers, while Tony found 'Window Box Roma' tomatoes, cubanelles, serrano 'del Sol', and banana peppers for his raised vegetable beds.

I was going to be stalwart and not buy anything else, but I eventually succumbed to getting Kangaroo Paws, Macropidia fulginosa an unusual Australian  xeric native in full bloom and a lovely  'Green Velvet' Alocasia, Alocasia frydeck. 


Kangaroo Paws

My determination to not buy any more plants was easy to keep under control through most of my search until I came to the Orlando Area Rose Historical Society's boothAntique roses are great to grow in Florida with very low maintenance, no pest - no disease issues. Depending on the variety, they can bloom over and over again all year round.  Reading the sign's descriptions, one caught my eye:  "Heavily fragrant, long-lasting pink cabbage roses." I fell for the 'Duchesse de Babrant' tea rose.  Into the wagon it went with my other terrestrial indulgences.

Another unique find was a bamboo obelisk that folded up easily.  Tony was adamant that the $15 cost was a bargain for all the details, material, and labor involved in making it.  We'll use it to allow our beans to grow up.  

Unusual plants and finds were the 'Mammalaria plumosa' and Episcia  cupreata 'Pink Brocade' hanging baskets, terrariums with fluttering butterfly devices, pvc bird garden accents and wrought iron plant holders.

Great start to our spring garden.




Episcia cupreata 'Pink Brocade'


Mamallaria plumosa

www.huntcountryiron.com

All three wrought iron pot holders are connected at bottom.

PVC Pelican and heron garden art

Leu Gardens Plant Sale Vendors

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

What Do I Do With My Chives?



A timely gardening question about harvesting chives from an "In Your Backyard" listener:
Hi Teresa,

I have a question. My chives are doing well, however I need to do something with them. Can I freeze them or what should I do to keep them. Them are already budding and I think it is time to trim them out.

Thanks,

Ted via email
Dear Ted,

The best way to keep chives is freezing them as they lose their taste after drying. After cleaning them, wash and pat dry with either paper towels or cloth. I prefer paper towels. Bunch the chives together and slice with a sharp knife. You can use a cookie sheet lined with paper towels to spread the chives on and then place in the freezer. They will freeze quickly. I put them into a freezer bag marked with the date on it. They will be good for six months. I use them with potatoes, stews, soups, salads, eggs, breads, biscuits, cream cheeses and dips.

Here are some easily printed tips on storing herbs from Cooks Illustrated (my favorite cooking magazine) and Freshness Farms.
Hope this helps, Ted! Thanks for writing and listening to "In Your Backyard."

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

In Your Backyard - Fungus Gnats

Growing a herb garden indoors, or any plants for that matter, doesn't keep them from having pest problems. Somehow insects find their way inside. Visible signs of small flies flitting between the leaves when you put your hands near the herbs means that fungus gnats have found your planters. Overwatering and soil contamination are the main reasons that the little pests feel comfortable.  They lay their eggs in the wet soil and when they hatch, the decomposition provides lots of food for them to thrive.  Once you see the flies, you need to get control quickly. If you are vigilant, you will see the flies before damage to your plants and roots occur.


What should you do? First, if its herbs and you want to use them in your cooking, you don't want to use any insecticides that will contaminate the plants.  Make sure your plants are in the right location where they get enough sunlight and good air movement. Stop overwatering and only water soil when its perfectly dry to the touch. Don't let the water sit in the pot liners.  Try using the yellow sticky boards that will collect them as they unknowingly get stuck when they fly close by. Change out the sticky boards when full and replace until they are gone.  You may even want to change the soil out to get rid of any larvae.


Darkwinged Fungus Gnats , Lycoriella spp. and Bradysia spp., Sciaridae,
Credit: Lance Osborner, University of Florida/MFREC