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

Gardening

Gardening

44370 Followers | 10300 Posts

Gardening is one of the hottest topics on Hometalk. Whether you're gardening as a profession, or as a hobby, you'll find awesome gardening inspiration on Hometalk. Do you need to identify a plant? Post a photo of it, and a gardening expert will be able to identify it for you. Is your garden blooming in a spectacular way? Share the joy with fellow gardening buffs. All garden talk is welcome on Hometalk; so whether you're planting a flower garden, looking for green gardening tips, or researching the perfect gardening tools, you've come to the right place.



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  • My Prickly Pear is ready to bloom again.
  • It also has lots of near ripe fruit on it, which I plan to try to eat.

Gardening: Ants on My Prickly Pear!

A friend noticed some tiny (sugar) ants on my Prickly Pear then told me they would kill it. They are not easy to grow here and I really don't want to loose it. At this time it also has ...»
fruit which I'd like to eat. So I'm looking for a way to rid my plant of ants without poisoning my fruit. Anyone out there have a solution?

Donna Shipley-Richie
Donna Shipley-Richie Mckinleyville, CA 8 hours ago
3 Comments | Post Comment | 52 Views
  • Carleen V
    Carleen V 3 minutes ago
    ants don't like chili powder. I would dirt them with it.
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  • Good landscaping turns your home into a show-stopper.
  • Recycled fence and spindles for potting bench
  • #1 - Use as many free materials in your landscape as you can. Every part of the world has at least one thing in abundance that you can use for free, be it gravel, rocks or stones; wood, pallets or pine needles; dumpsters, landfill sites or Craig's List and Freecycling networks as cheap sources for repurposed items. Find out what's in your own neighbourhood or town and use it!  I've used my local freecycling network to find plants and shrubs for free. I got a whole lilac hedge that way, it really works!!
  • #2 - Beg for plant divisions or cuttings from family, friends and neighbours. Anyone who has perennials , bulbs or tubers will have to be dividing them up every so often and will be happy to let you have the extras. 1
  • #3 - Look for local gardening clubs, they usually have plant sales once or twice a year to raise money for the club and you can get beautiful plants for much less than gardening centers sell them.  Plus you know they will survive in your climate because the local gardeners have grown them.
  • #4 - Watch for end-of-season sales.  You can pick up loads of plants at a discount from department stores that have seasonal garden centers.  That's where you can pick up your trees and shrubs for less and save big!
  • #5 - Grow your own plants from seed.  Some plants are super simple to grow, you can even just toss the seeds out in your garden at the right time and they'll grow well.  Hardy geraniums, sunflowers and pansies are easy to start from seed.  Poppies and cosmos are good examples of seeds you can just sow directly in the garden.  Opium poppies can even be sown while there is still snow on the garden!
  • #6 - Grow plants that self-seed or spread easily.  Examples are creeping thyme, culinary thyme, Johnny Jump-ups, Ladies' Mantle, campanula, euphorbia, lamium, bugleweed, poppies and bee balm.  I don't quite understand the desire for growing borderline plants in the garden.  I personally don't want to drag some plant kicking and screaming into my garden, I'd much rather have ones that are happily growing and flowering and self-seeding all over.
  • See 5 more photos

6 Ways to Landscape Without Breaking the Budget

I'm back to my first love these days - gardening! I love being in the garden, digging, planting, sowing and enjoying. This house will be the 6th that I've landscaped and because I always ...»
seem to buy houses that have no landscaping, I have learned how to do it on the cheap.

Here are some of my best tips: .

#1 - Use as many free materials in your landscape as you can. Every part of the world has at least one thing in abundance that you can use for free, be it gravel, rocks or stones; wood,pallets or pine needles; dumpsters, landfill sites or Craig's List and Freecycling networks as cheap sources for repurposed items. Find out what's in your own neighbourhood or town and use it! I've used my local freecycling network to find plants and shrubs for free. I got a whole lilac hedge that way, it really works!!

#2 - Beg for plant divisions or cuttings from family, friends and neighbours. Anyone who has perennials , bulbs or tubers will have to be dividing them up every so often and will be happy to let you have the extras.

#3 - Look for local gardening clubs, they usually have plant sales once or twice a year to raise money for the club and you can get beautiful plants for much less than gardening centers sell them. Plus you know they will survive in your climate because the local gardeners have grown them.

#4 - Watch for end-of-season sales. You can pick up loads of plants at a discount from department stores that have seasonal garden centers. That's where you can pick up your trees and shrubs for less and save big!

#5 - Grow your own plants from seed. Some plants are super simple to grow, you can even just toss the seeds out in your garden at the right time and they'll grow well. Hardy geraniums,sunflowers and pansies are easy to start from seed. Poppies and cosmos are good examples of seeds you can just sow directly in the garden. Opium poppies can even be sown while there is still snow on the garden

#6 - Grow plants that self-seed or spread easily. Examples are creeping thyme, culinary thyme, Johnny Jump-ups, Ladies' Mantle, campanula, euphorbia, lamium, bugleweed, poppies and bee balm. I don't quite understand the desire for growing borderline plants in the garden. I personally don't want to drag some plant kicking and screaming into my garden, I'd much rather have ones that are happily growing and flowering and self-seeding all over.

The best part about rampant growers and self-seeders is that every year, you can dig up the extras and sell them at a yard sale to make some extra cash for the landscaping items that you can't get for free.

Hope I've been able to give you at least one tip you can use. Happy gardening!

#landscaping #gardening #Maygarden

Anne @ DesignDreams by Anne
Anne @ DesignDreams by An... Canada Yesterday
29 Comments | Post Comment | 13136 Views
  • Anne @ DesignDreams by Anne
    Anne @ DesignDreams by An... 6 minutes ago
    Jami @ An Oregon Cottage ...»
    I adore reseeding plants!! and spreading plants, and rhizomes and naturalizing bulbs... the more the merrier!

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  • Hanging Mason Jar Succulents
  • Adding summer to the family room
  • Layering seashells on the base gives great drainage & adds a summery touch.

Hanging Mason Jar Succulents

I'm getting ready for summer and this project was a great way to bring the green indoors with a little bit of the beach too. ...»

Here's what you need:

Hanging Mason Jar (you can find the tutorial to create these on the link below)

Tiny Seashells

Potting Soil (I used one made for palms and cactus)

Succulents

I used the mini seashells as my base layer. Succulents don't like to sit in water, so you want something at the base to drain into... I thought with summer coming shells would be perfect!

Next a layer of potting soil.

Finish with your choice of succulents. I scored a 4 pack on Lowes clearance for only $1.

Lightly water about once a week, unless it's in a really warm space.

Domestically Speaking
Domestically Speaking San Jacinto, CA 15 minutes ago
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  • We made and planter 6 flower boxes across our front porch.
  • One box done, 5 more to go!
  • We hung them so the elk can't reach them. 1
  • Looking out into the yard.
  • Close up of the #maygarden on the front porch.
  • Stacks of cedar.
  • See 3 more photos

May Flower Boxes Across Our Huge Front Porch Makes Me Happy!

Finally made flower boxes for the front porch and I didn't realize how happy they make me! I'm spend all day out on the porch, eating, napping, working on the laptop, talking on the ...»
phone. Love the curtained off feeling the flower boxes give. Best room in the house! More photos on the website.

Jeanette Country Design Style
Jeanette Country Design S... Payson, AZ Yesterday
5 Comments | Post Comment | 352 Views
  • Jeanette Country Design Style
    Jeanette Country Design S... 32 minutes ago
    Thanks Kim. If you ever find yourself in Payson, please stop by. We can sit on the porch with ...»
    a cup of tea or glass of wine.

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Gardening: My pomegranate tree is being attacked by ants!

I love looking outside and seeing how well our pomegranate tree is dong this year. We've raised it over the past 6 years from a tiny sapling and now it's producing some beautiful fruit. ...»

But the other day my daughter came running inside screaming, "The patio is swarming with ants!" I went out to see what was going on and I see a ton of ants making a line across the lawn and headed directly for the pomegranate tree. They were climbing up the trunk and crawling all over the leaves! By nature, I'm the "live and let live" type when it comes to insects outdoors. So I left them alone, assuming they could do no harm. But this morning I noticed that many of the tree's leaves have shriveled up and I'm afraid that ants will kill the tree or at least ruin the fruit.

Does anyone have any information that can help me?

First of all, why are the ants suddenly attacking this tree?

Can they do real damage?

If so, what is the simplest way to get them to stop and keep them off of the tree?

I prefer a natural remedy to using chemicals, but if only chemicals will help I'm willing to go that route.

Yair S
Yair S Yesterday
7 Comments | Post Comment | 226 Views
  • Marian A. Fischer
    Marian A. Fischer 2 hours ago
    Read the other day on Home talk that you spray the "scout" ants as they first appear--on the ...»
    patio/porch before they get to the tree with Windex-type cleaner, so don't know why this wouldn't work for ants on porch and then into tree. I don't remember what I did years ago to get rid of aphids and it wasn't a chemical--maybe a dish soap spray to the tree. Good luck. Agree with the neem oil biweekly idea, too.

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  • This is what it looked like when I first transplanted it. It's about 1 1/2 inches taller now and has more leaves on the top. But not much growth to the "trunk".

Gardening: Silver Maple Sapling.

I had a silver maple sapling come up in one of my flower baskets when I brought them inside last fall..It stayed alive in the basket all winter and even had 2 little leaves on it. This spring, I transplanted it in a 5 gallon bucket making sure to get all of the roots even the tap root. It's doing wonderful and now has at least 10 leaves on the top of the "knitting needle" sized stem (or should I say trunk?). It's definitely getting taller but I'm not seeing much growth in the ...»
circumference. Is there something I can do to help it along? I really don't want to lose it as it's an offspring of a very large Maple we recently had to cut down due to disease. Thank you for any advice you can give me.

Donna N
Donna N Weatherford, OK Yesterday
8 Comments | Post Comment | 156 Views
  • Nancy Hand
    Nancy Hand 2 hours ago
    Donna, by the fall it should be big enough to handle the winter. You might want to protect the ...»
    roots until you plant it in the ground. It sounds like your doing all the right things. Maybe give it something to eat. :) any all purpose fertilizer will be fine! I love maples myself! :)

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Garden

Salustia Barrera
Salustia Barrera Anaheim, CA 2 hours ago
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Garden

Salustia Barrera
Salustia Barrera Anaheim, CA 2 hours ago
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Gardening: What is This Orange Fuzz on My Apple Tree?

It is also on a couple of pear trees.
Kathy
Kathy Gig Harbor, WA 20 hours ago
9 Comments | Post Comment | 162 Views
  • Town Pride Lawn Service
    Town Pride Lawn Service 2 hours ago
    Cedar apple rust and it has nothing to do with iron on the water. Usually it is on leaves and ...»
    fruit, but could be opportunistic in your area or conditions. It's a sick little relationship between cedar and apple trees. Here's the technical info from Cornell U.. http://www.nysipm.cornell.edu/factsheets/tre...

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  • Succulents are a perfect plant for this kind of project.
  • My hypertufa planters from previous post
  • I used Playtex gloves as my mold
  • And florist wire wrapped around a pencil to make these cork screw things to use as "rebar" in the fingers
  • I slid the cork screws into the fingers and filled the glove with the hypertufa mixture
  • And after 7 days of curing, we have a hand
  • See 3 more photos

Can Someone Give Me A Hand?

I've been dying to try my hand at one of the hypertufa hand planters again this year. Last year I tried one and half my fingers fell off, so pretty much anything would be an improvement. ...»
Doubling the amount of Portland Cement in my normal hypertufa recipe plus adding the "rebar" appears to have made all the difference. My hands came out perfectly and are hard as a rock. Or cement.

The recipe for hypertufa can be found on Hometalk on this post - http://www.hometalk.com/1285023/making-light... or on my blog on this post - http://www.houseofhawthornes.com/2012/05/mak... .

House Of Hawthornes
House Of Hawthornes Columbus, OH 6 hours ago
1 Comment | Post Comment | 113 Views
  • Kathe With An E (Kathe)
    Kathe With An E (Kathe) 2 hours ago
    Super cute!!
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