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Hometalk is where people share and help with everything home & garden

Hannelore P

Winnabow, NC
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About Me:

flower gardening, watercolor painting, the environment, the arts,


Recent Activity


  • Placing birdhouses off the ground is key to keep predators away from them. Do a little research as to the types of birds in your area to ensure you find a house that will work for them. 1
  • Small birdhouses can be placed on small metal or wood post or hung for depending on how you want them to appear in your garden. Yard Envy has a lot of choices on housing, posts, and information on what kind of house will work for you.
  • Multiple birdhouses can add a splash of color and depth to your garden. You must make sure the birds that would reside in this type of house will get along though! No one wants a feathered quarrel. 4
  • Home made posts can let you add even more character and color than traditional store bought designs.
  • Copper top houses are great for warmer climates as they keep the inside temperature pretty stable. Make sure your birdhouses have easy cleaning capability as well. You need to clean them each season to ensure new guests will arrive.
  • Keeping some birdhouses directly out of the garden and in a more natural setting adds to the charm along with helping birds to feel more secluded and safe.
  • Bright colored flowers attract some species of birds and having a house mixed among the taller colorful flower bed will ensure a beautiful view for your new feathered friends.
  • You can use older styles and home made birdhouses as well to add character to your buildings, fences, and walkways.
  • See 5 more photos

Placing Birdhouses in the Garden

It's that time of year where we all start working on our garden. A garden isn't complete without the fluttering of bright colored birds. Attracting birds to your garden is key for having ...»
that peaceful "nature" feeling when you walk outdoors. Placing birdhouses strategically around the property will ensure a variety of birds enter your garden.

Diana Haynes
Diana Haynes Gainesville, GA
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  • Hannelore P
    Clipped on Mar 28, 2013 to Backyard Escapes
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  • An old Goodwill knife is another fabulous way to mark a plant with personality
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Tutorial for Original and Unique Plant Markers

Tammy@Deja Vue Designs
Tammy@Deja Vue Designs Amherst, TX
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  • Hannelore P
    Liked on Mar 28, 2013
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Decorate With Blue

BrightNest
BrightNest Denver, CO
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  • Hannelore P
    Liked on Mar 22, 2013
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  • beautiful bedrooms
  • Dressing table makeover- before and after

How to Save a Dressing Table from the Blahs by Repurposing Some Old Curtain Rings

A few weeks ago I was working on my master bedroom curtain makeover. While I was working on that project, this project was born. The idea came about as I was removing the old curtain rings and wondering how I could reuse those rings. One thing led to another and my dressing table got this makeover using those rings. The total cost of this project was $17. I'm super happy with ...»
how it turned out and especially because I got to repurpose those curtain rings into something else, all for under 20 dollars. #MyCurrentProject

For full story including tutorial, click on the link:

http://www.lilikoijoy.com/2013/02/operation...

3 Hours 17 Moderate
Sharon @ Lilikoi Joy
Sharon @ Lilikoi Joy Mukilteo, WA
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  • Hannelore P
    Commented on Mar 22, 2013
    I have some curtain rings I wanted to use. Your project is my inspiration!
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  • http://homewardfounddecor.blogspot.com/2013/02/lighten-up.html
  • http://homewardfounddecor.blogspot.com/2013/02/lighten-up.html
  • http://homewardfounddecor.blogspot.com/2013/02/lighten-up.html

Lighten Up with Old Glass Lamp Globe Decor!

Last fall, I shared my original idea of making pumpkins from old glass lamp globes (the kind you find on porch and hall lights). Now see what I do with them in the spring! ...»

Finding new uses for old materials is something I love - even more so when I can re-use an item in many different ways all year long. My blog post today shares a new idea for using glass lamp globes in a floral tablescape that bridges winter and spring. If you are #Itching4Spring, visit the HOMEWARDfound blog!

This post also re-caps the ways I have used them for winter, holiday, and fall decor, including a link to my fall 'Glass Globe Pumpkins' tutorial.

10 Minutes 5.00 Easy
Debi Ward Kennedy
Debi Ward Kennedy Irvine, CA
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  • Hannelore P
    Liked on Mar 22, 2013
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  • Decor Ideas
  • Finished egg wreath with adorable burlap bow!
  • these are the supplies you will nedd to create your own.
  • Wrapping the moss is a little tricky, so take your time!
  • Little details like speckling your eggs make a huge impact on the finished product!
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How to make a Faux Robin's Egg Blue Wreath #Itching4Spring

Don't you just love spring? Well we sure do and this little Robin's Egg Wreath is just perfect for both Easter and Spring. What a welcoming way to invite your guests into your home! We ...»
would love to show you how to create your own... {click on the link for the full tutorial} #Itching4Spring

Bonnie & Trish {Uncommon Designs}
Bonnie & Trish {Uncommon ... Lexington, SC
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  • Hannelore P
    Clipped on Mar 22, 2013 to Backyard Escapes
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Canada Blooms and The Home Show

Debbie Borthwick
Debbie Borthwick Canada
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  • Hannelore P
    Liked on Mar 22, 2013
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  • Beautiful plants!
  • Line your path - or even create your path - with recycled glass bottles turned upside down. 15
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Take the {repurposed} Path Less Traveled

Re.Create Design Co.
Re.Create Design Co. Sweden
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  • Hannelore P
    Liked on Mar 22, 2013
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  • Weed Free gardens produce higher yields
  • Cover crops keep the soil from eroding and weed seeds from finding a home 2
  • Bare soil is an invitation for weeds and weed seeds to find a home.
  • A weed free garden is a healthy garden
  • Walking rows can be kept free of weeds without tilling by using mulch 2
  • The joy of fresh produce from the garden
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6 Tips To Eliminate Weeds In Your Garden!

Weeds. The enemy of gardeners the world around! They are responsible for choking the life from vegetable and flower gardens, while stealing life-giving nutrients away from our plants. ...»
Weeds are also the reason many gardeners throw their hands up by mid-summer and call it a year.

It simply doesn't have to be that way. In fact, some of the most time-consuming chores we have been led to believe help with gardening and weeds - are actually the main culprit to creating more! Simply by eliminating those weed promoting practices, and replacing with a few time and labor saving methods - you can all but eliminate the issue of weeds in your garden.

We spend no more than 10 minutes a day handling all of the chores in our garden - including weeding - and that's not a misprint! The first step is realizing that eliminating weeds in a garden is a process and not a one time thing. But don't let that scare you - the process is simple and leads to a productive and beautiful garden in a fraction of the time.

Here are six ways we keep our garden weed free - and fun to be and work in!

TIP 1: Eliminate Bare Soil From Your Garden And Beds

Bare soil is at the root of most weed problems. Bare soil is an open invitation for blowing weed seeds to become established. By using mulches and protecting the soil, you can cut the potential for future weeds dramatically! We use a combination of mulches in our garden space to keep it covered. Straw and shredded leaf mulch in the walking rows, and a 2 to 3 inch mulching of compost right around our plants.

Just remember - open space is an open invitation for weeds and soil erosion

TIP 2: Resist the Urge to Dig and Till Your Soil:

This is the biggest time-saving AND weed saving tip we can give. Stop tilling the garden! In the time it takes a person to till between the rows of a garden the same size as ours, we have finished our 10 minute gardening work day, grilled out for dinner and are sitting on the patio enjoying a cool beverage! And while working that extra time tilling - that person also just replanted tens of thousands of weed seeds that will germinate in the coming weeks.

Tilling simply takes all of the weed seeds that are laying on the surface, where they may never germinate, and plants them into the soil. Tilling over time also can destroy your soil's structure, but when it comes to weeds - it's a prime reason gardeners have to spend so much time trying to eliminate them. It takes time, gas, and is a never-ending chore. Instead - heavily mulch your rows with grass clippings, straw, or shredded leaves - they keep weeds to a minimum and help add vital nutrients to the soil as they break down.

We believe in this one so much we actually have an entire post dedicated to it: Why Not To Use A Rototiller.

TIP 3: Don't Over Hoe Your Row

Here's another long time garden chore that used to take hours in the garden - and should take only minutes. Using a hoe to loosen the surface soil around the base and root zone of your plant is a great weekly practice. It provides air to the plant's base and allows nutrients and water to more easily reach the root structure. But that is the extent of what is needed - just a 3 to 5" light hoeing of the perimeter soil around the base of each plant. Leave all of the other space in your planting rows alone and simply mulch it! Over-hoeing creates the same issue as tilling - planting above ground weeds seeds back into the earth. All you need is a light hoeing immediately around the plants - it saves tons of time and labor, and eliminates replanting weed seeds.

TIP 4 : Start Practicing The Art Of Cover Crops:

Start cover cropping this fall. Cover crops really help eliminate weeds over time by protecting your bare soil over the late fall, winter and early spring months. They have obvious benefits to helping your soils vitality, but they also help to form a barrier for blowing seeds to enter and lay in wait. After a season or two of cover crops - you will be amazed how little weeds actually even appear in your garden. You can find more about cover crops here : Cover Crops In Your Garden.

Tip 5 : Keeping The Weeds Out Of Walking Rows:

Keeping weeds out of the walking rows between your plants is just as important to the health of your garden as it is the look. The answer - Mulch - Mulch and more Mulch! We use whatever we have on hand. Straw and shredded leaves work great to create a thick 3 to 5" covering between our planting rows. From time to time a few weeds will start to pop up - and we simply pull them on our daily trips through the garden. If they become thicker - we simply take the weed eater through the garden and mow them down to the grown and reapply a few more inches of mulch. It immediately looks great again and stays that way for weeks. It's so much quicker and better than tilling up that soil between your rows!

TIP 6: Practice The 10 Minute-A-Day Philosophy

I think there are a lot of skeptics when we say we spend only 5 to 10 minutes a day in the garden for maintenance. However, that is one of the biggest secrets to maintaining a weed free garden - actually spending that time in the garden each day! This may sound a bit crazy, but 10 minutes of daily work is not the same as spending 70 minutes once a week in the garden.

In fact, there is a huge difference between the two. If you let the garden go for more than a day or two - weeds and the problems they bring multiply and magnify. Roots get deeper, spread and multiply, and suddenly you feel overwhelmed. What takes 10 minutes one day can suddenly take 4 to 8 hours when it has been neglected for a week or two. And guess what? It's not fun anymore at that point.

We head into the garden every day and walk the rows. If we see a weed around a plant, we pull it as we go. Usually, once a week we will spend the time hoeing the area only around the plants - once again - the process just takes 10 minutes to do the entire garden. Another day, we spend the time putting down some extra compost mulch around the plants or straw or shredded leaves in the paths. That's it.

So there you have it - how we keep our weeds and workload to a minimum. And remember the reason most of us garden in the first place - to eat healthier and get a little exercise. This is a perfect 10 minute workout every day!

Happy Gardening! - Jim and Mary

If you would like to receive our DIY & Gardening Tips every Tuesday – be sure to sign up to follow the blog via email in the right hand column, "like" us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter

Old World Garden Farms
Old World Garden Farms Newark, OH
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  • Hannelore P
    Liked on Mar 19, 2013
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  • These photos were taken in mid-April 2012, here in southern New Jersey. The electric blue is a welcome jolt of Spring color in my front garden!
  • A baby Monarch butterfly kept me company while I was planting a new patch of Lithodora. I love having butterflies around all Spring, Summer and early Fall enjoying our flowers!
  • This is what a typical Lithodora plant will look like at the nursery. You can read lots of specifics about this plant in my blog post.

Lithodora: Evergreen and Electric Blue Radiance

So many of you enjoyed my post about Candytuft, that I'm sharing another plant recommendation for your gardens: Lithodora. I had never heard of Lithodora before we moved here to our ...»
furrever home, and in fact when I first saw it at a garden nursery assumed it was the annual flower Lobelia. I was told by the nursery that Lithodora can handle our hot and humid southern New Jersey Shore Summers, that it will bloom profusely all Summer long, and that it was an evergreen perennial. That was in 2008. Now that I have the hindsight of the past several years, I can share with you the realities of what this plant does and doesn't do. Some of my observations differ from the experts, or at least the experts that told me about this plant! (There's more pictures and details in the blog post, just click the link below.) #itching4Spring

Easy
Laura, The Shed blog by Pet Scribbles
Laura, The Shed blog by P... Little Egg Harbor, NJ
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  • Hannelore P
    Liked on Mar 07, 2013
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