To Save or Savor?
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
1d ago
What shall I do in the garden today? It’s May, so there is quote a lot to do in the garden. Weed, cut back, deadhead, trim, edge, mow, plant, and plant some more. There is no end to the choices of what I should do to save this garden from becoming a wilderness But at the same time, there is much to admire and enjoy—to savor—like the ‘Bartzella’ peonies in bloom. Their blooms are big and spectacular but also fleeting. I’m grateful the flowers don’t all open at the same time. While some buds are still swelling, the first bloom has already shattered and dropped all its petals. One certainly unde ..read more
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Garden Fairies Now Want…
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
1w ago
Garden fairies here! We are garden fairies and we have done an outstanding job this spring getting some of the violas to self-sow a bit around the garden. Like this little cutie amongst the sweet woodruff. We told Seedy and Soddy when they decided on that spot that it would soon be surrounded by sweet woodruff and eventually disappear, but they said that was okay, they put another one in the lawn. “The Lawn!” cried out SweetPea MorningGlory. “Carol is going to mow right over that little flower, and that will be the end of that.” But Seedy and Soddy felt sure she’d see it, and of course she di ..read more
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How to Spot Hard-to-See Weeds in Your Garden
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
2w ago
Weeding is a necessary task for every gardener, especially in the spring, though summer and fall have their weeding moments too. But in the spring, amongst the emerging foliage of perennials, in plain sight in the vegetable garden beds, and along every path, you see weeds everywhere. But sometimes, oftentimes, weeds are tricky little plants to see. They hide. They nestle in with other plants making them hard to spot. But there is one sure way to spot a weed you missed after an afternoon of weeding when you were sure you’d pulled every weed around. And that is to put on your “nice” clothes, th ..read more
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Gardener Math: Important Updates
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
3w ago
I have two important updates to the information I’ve previously shared about Gardener Math. I thought of one of the updates when I was shopping for furnace filters at Menards. I have one of those furnaces that uses a big four-inch thick filter that is good for six months. I also pay property taxes every six months, so to remember to change the filter. I do it when I send off that big check in spring and later in the fall. It’s almost time to send that check/change that filter, which is why I found myself at Menards. “Wouldn’t hurt just to take a quick look at the garden department,” I told my ..read more
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Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day – April 2024
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
3w ago
Welcome to Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day for April 2024. Here in my USDA hardiness zone 6b garden in central Indiana, we are in the season of violets! The wild violets, primarily Viola soraria, are blooming here and there throughout the garden, and I am happy to see them. I am pro-violets! I let them grow and bloom and set seed and spread themselves throughout the garden. Some gardeners might think I’m crazy to do that, but I’m fine with that, too. I have several other violets for bloom day, including the first blooms on Viola soraria ‘Freckles’, which I grew from seeds I got from Hayefield Seed ..read more
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Winter Was Kind…
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
1M ago
WInter was kind to the pansies I planted late last summer! Wait, check that! The pansies persevered through the punches of winter, and came back to bloom in the spring. Or maybe I’m just an exceptional gardener who knew exactly what to do to nurture these pansies through the winter so when spring arrived, they’d perk up and bloom again. However it happened, some of the pansies I planted late last summer survived the winter and are once again blooming. A nice, unexpected treat because most of the time, pansies do not survive the winters here in my garden. But every once in a while, we have a m ..read more
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‘Tis the gardening season
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
1M ago
That grape hyacinth… it’s a spreader. I have proof in my own garden. Is that bad? Not for me, it’s not. And every Easter when my sister sees it, she asks me what it is, says she likes it, and I make a mental note to get her some. Which I will dig out of my own garden. It’s a spreader, after all. In fact, I think I’ve dug it up in previous years and planted some in her small condo garden. I’ll ask her to check and see. Anyway, this post isn’t really about too much, other than I wanted to say… Every garden is unique, but gardening is universal. Please quote me on that. And please notice that I ..read more
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An Apple a Day!
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
1M ago
It was a busy week last week, with preparations leading up to the big family Easter Egg Hunt and then the actual hunt, which we had late Saturday afternoon on what turned out to be one of the best days you could ever hope for when hosting such an event at the end of March. So that is why I am just now posting some very big news after not posting much on my blog last week. I finally have permission to make public the results of some plant breeding that I’ve been working on here in my garden. With the help of several researchers, I am now able to have an apple a day, picked right from my own ap ..read more
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Pansy Rescue!
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
1M ago
I was at the greenhouse a few weeks ago and noticed a rogue pansy amidst a flat of ‘Beaconsfield’ pansies. Instead of picking out that one plant, I plucked the flower and showed it to the owner. Doh! I should have bought the plant. Anyway, she watched for it to rebloom and set me a picture a week or so of one in bloom. I asked her to hold it for me. Then on Sunday, she texted me a picture of the whole flat. There were at least four more rogue pansies. I told her I would buy them all. I would rescue them. And that’s just what I did earlier today. I bought six rogue pansies, perfect for plantin ..read more
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Seed Packet Poetry #2
May Dreams Gardens By Indygardener
by Carol
1M ago
Today’s seed packet poetry is from a set of vintage seed packets, year unknown. I’d like to guess these packets are vintage 1950s but someone will likely say they are from the 1960s. I am still getting used to the idea that something that was around when I was a kid is now considered “vintage.” Recalling from the first post about seed packet poetry, here’s how the poetry is written. Find some seed packets… old ones, new ones, any ones. Look at the descriptions on the back. Then find a few phrases that you like and make a poem out of them. For no particular reason, for the first poem, I picke ..read more
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