My name is Susan Singley and I am the Assistant CSA coordinator at Grant Family Farms. Lise asked me to write a guest entry about Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) to help
Thursday
Community Supported Agriculture Keeps Food Local
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Lise Mahnke
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6:53 PM PERMALINK
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Labels: Sustainability
Tuesday
Solitary Bees to the Rescue
Happy Earth Day! I had a great time celebrating early with the Denver Botanic Gardens at the Sustainability Fair. Welcome new readers and thanks for taking time to check out Dry Ideas. Please feel free to leave comments as the spirit moves you.
My talk went well, but by far the biggest hit was the Solitary Bee House I built from scrap lumber I had in my yard. Stay tuned for instructions on how to make your own Bee Boudoir just in time for the busy bee season. Solitary bees have no hives and make no honey, but they are champion pollinators, native to our region but also well adapted to imported forage crops like alfalfa and many of our ornamental landscape plants. You'll know when one of the species--the Leafcutter Bee--is around because they cut near perfect 3/4" diameter circles out of the edges of leaves. Some of their favorite landscape plants are lilac, redbud, and roses. They don't harm the plant, they just strike lightning fast leaving their own sort brand--a Zorro style slash (circular in shape).
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Lise Mahnke
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11:54 PM PERMALINK
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Labels: Wildlife
Thursday
Visit Dry Ideas at Sustainability Fair
Denver Botanic Gardens hosts a sustainability fair this Sunday April 2o from 9 to 5. I'll be there to talk to people about this blog along with some great landscape contractors like Art of the Land and Eco-savy. At 11:30, I'll be giving a talk on "Five Steps To Sustainable Gardens". There will be speakers on a wide variety of "green" subjects throughout the day, as well as, booths with information ranging from household cleaning products to solar to worm composting in the high desert. There will be garden tours and a probable visit by the Bag Monster. Entry is included with the price of admission, so come on down and greenify while you peruse all the bulbs and early spring plants in bloom.
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Lise Mahnke
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11:36 PM PERMALINK
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Labels: Sustainability
Tuesday
April Garden Blogger's Bloom Day
I was out of town last weekend and returned to a landscape of swollen buds on all the spring flowering trees. Today, while I was learning about insect scatology, temperatures of over 80 degrees and a warm, constant wind, coaxed the ornamental pears (Pyrus calleryana ‘Chanticleer’) into full bloom. A rapid change in weather is supposed to bring snow tomorrow---ahh, springtime in Colorado!
Last month I completely forgot that this is the season for one of my favorites--hellebores. This genus of plants is native to lime soils in Europe and Asia. Lime increases the pH of soil and we have high pH soils, so I suppose that is why they thrive here. I have several different species--all of which are in "bloom" now. Hellebores are members of the buttercup family which makes sense when you look at the flowers.Lenten Rose (Helleborus orientalis), shown below in the next two photos, starts blooming in March. Honey bees love it--they co-evolved in their native Europe and hellebores bloom at a time when fewer species are blooming.
The next species, Helleborus foetidus, sometimes called Stinking Hellebore (though I have never noticed an odor) or Bear's Claw is a fantastic plant. This plant is a truly xeric plant for me in shade and where it grows in near full sun, does happily with over spray from the lawn sprinkler. It is evergreen, has a wonderful palmate leaf , and a chartreuse panicle of flowers. It's not long lived, but reseeds readily--not obnoxiously--so it will multiply if you leave the seedheads long enough to allow reseeding.
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Lise Mahnke
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10:01 PM PERMALINK
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Labels: My Garden
Friday
In the Garden
I've been a pruning fool lately. My partner chipped a mountain of branches for me and my payback was to fill the bin for them way above the top, plus create more piles--caught short of being dispatched to the bin--when my daughter performed a necessary intervention. I was in a low sugar stupor when she found me and led me back inside. It happens every spring when I suddenly panic that the garden won't be "ready" in time--in time for what I do not know. It will take me a month or so to get back in the groove, but eventually I will have settled on a comfortable gardening uniform made up of various hats, a stained vest with pockets full of bits of old plastic, dirt, and broken irrigation parts, and old sneakers with grass seed crudely woven into the laces. I'll remember to drink plenty of liquids, take a break for something to eat before I become comatose, and dowse myself with sunscreen. I'll begin to move with more ease as I work through the stiffness that winter invited into my joints and muscles. But chances are my daughter will still find me at the end of the day lost in my thoughts, wandering through the garden stooping to pull at a plant that has chosen to make itself at home just in the exact spot where I do not want it to be. I'm eagerly anticipating weather that is warm enough to sit in the rain and weed. We all do outrageous things to accommodate our passion for gardening. My most extreme act for the love of gardening was to put up flood lights so we could continue gardening long after the sun set. What's your most extreme act in the name gardening?
Thank you to my daughter Ana for her "April Cat" drawing.
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Lise Mahnke
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12:01 AM PERMALINK
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Labels: My Garden

