Orange, Ca
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Orange County
Farm Supply
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SEPTEMBER |
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PLANT VEGETABLES:
As summer crops fade, plug in winter replacements. From seed, sets, or transplants, your choices include beets, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, chives, garlic, leeks, lettuce (loose-leaf and head), onions, parsley, peas, radishes, spinach, Swiss chard, and turnips. For salads, sow seeds now of arugula (roquette), chicory, endive, Oriental broccoli, and mustard and turnip greens.
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Be a Guest Gardener:
Gardeners love to learn from other gardeners "over the fence." We would love to include a tour and/or an article from one of our readers!
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HOURS
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Saturday
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Closed Sundays
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Quotation of the Week:
"A garden is a grand teacher. It teaches patience and careful watchfulness; it teaches industry and thrift; above all it teaches entire trust. "
— Gertrude Jekyll |
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By Tamara Galbraith
Want to add some "wow!" as well as some "rrrowr!" to your fall landscape? Put a tiger in your garden.
Tiger Eyes™ Sumac (Rhus typhina Bailtiger) is a relatively new plant, as it was introduced to the gardening industry by Bailey Nurseries Inc. of St. Paul, Minn., in 2004. But don't cringe when you see "sumac"; this tiger needs nearly no training. A staghorn-leafed non-invasive variety, Tiger Eyes™ grows into an upright rounded shrub about six feet high and wide, and is extremely slow to spread.
Every part of this lovely plant is eye-catching, from the fuzzy, purplish-pink stems to the jagged-leafed yellow-green foliage that puts on a show most of the year. In late summer, the chartreuse coloring gives way to yellow, then a burning orange, gold and scarlet in fall.
Tiger Eyes™ is not picky about soil or sun conditions -- mine loves its spot in heavy clay and part sun -- and it is hardy to USDA zone 4.
This tough tiger is also both heat- and drought-tolerant once established, making it a near-perfect choice for gardeners who love fall's brilliant colors. |
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By Tamara Galbraith
The temperatures are getting cooler, and your herbs are slowing down. Time to harvest, enjoy...and prepare for next season where possible.
Pull off and dry all the leaves you can from parsley, French sorrel, coriander/cilantro, and basil.
For woody perennial herbs such as thyme, rosemary, lavender, savory, and tarragon, don't cut too much off. A few sprigs is okay, but discontinue heavy pruning of woody herbs 45 days before you expect the first fall frost.
To overwinter non-hardy herbs indoors, dig up the plants about a month before the first fall frost. Put each one into a pot that's slightly bigger than its rootball, and then let them rest in a partly shaded outdoor location for a week or so. Then move them into deeper shade for another week to get them ready to come indoors. (Chives are an exception, however; leave them outside to enjoy a little of winter's brisk temperatures before potting up and bringing in.)
Whiteflies and spider mites can be a problem for indoor herbs. Spray with an insecticide, such as Green Light Spinosad, and try to increase the humidity around your plants, either with the use of a pebble tray or spray plants often with a mister to increase humidity.
In warm climates, fall is a great time time to plant cool-season annual herbs like mustard, calendula, and arugula. Some, like Giant Red Mustard, make glorious ornamental winter plants in milder climates too, even if you don't want to eat 'em.
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Turbocharge Your Compost Pile |
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By Tamara Galbraith
Early fall is a great time to finally put that compost pile to good use. Sprinkling compost on flower beds, vegetable gardens and yes, even your lawn gives plants of all kinds a nice boost, while also enriching the soil and encouraging earthworms and other beneficial insects.
But what if your compost pile looks less than ideal as you turn through it? Is it basically just a pile of dried leaves? Or is it smelly, wet and slimy? Luckily, with a few tweaks, it's pretty easy to turn that nasty pile into a productive and valuable landscape additive in just a couple of weeks. Here are some tips:
* If your pile seems dry and is only made up of leaves, you need to add some water to it as well as some "green" material.
The best green material is grass clippings. Have you let a bag of grass sit around in the sun for a couple of days? It gets really hot and really stinky, right? But in the compost pile, the high nitrogen content of grass reacts with "brown" carbon-rich material -- like leaves -- to quickly turn into fluffy black gold.
Other good "green" materials include kitchen scraps (fruits and veggies) and used coffee grounds.
* A compost pile should never be smelly. If it is, it's most likely too wet or has too much "green" material, which generally contains more water. This situation is also easy to fix: add chopped leaves, sawdust or old potting soil.
Also, to speed up the burn in your pile, be sure to poke and turn it often to allow oxygen to move within the pile and moisture to be distributed evenly. Once it's cooking properly, there will be a noticeable heat difference, especially at the middle of the pile...which can also double as a nice hand-warmer on a chilly autumn day!
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September Is the Time To: |
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In the Kitchen Garden:
- Hoe regularly to keep down weeds.
- Lift onions and shallots as they become ready.
- Continue to thin vegetables sown earlier.
- Give plants that need a boost a dose of a quick-acting fertilizer, like Gro-Power Plus..
- Sow cabbages for spring use.
- Pinch out the growing tips of runner beans when they reach the top of their support.
- Pay regular attention to outdoor tomatoes.
- Continue to harvest herbs regularly.
- Summer prune cordon and espalier apples if you have not already done so and if shoots are mature enough.
- Tidy up summer-flowering strawberries. Cut off old leaves and unwanted runners, remove straw, and control weeds.
- Protect fruit against birds if they are troublesome. A fruit cage is ideal.
The Flower Garden:
- Dead-head plants in borders and containers regularly.
- Feed plants in containers to keep the blooms coming.
- Hoe beds and borders regularly to keep down weeds.
- Take semi-ripe cuttings.
- Clip beech, holly, hornbeam and yew hedges, and most evergreen hedges, if you have not already done so.
- Plant spring-flowering bulbs.
- Take fuchsia and pelargonium cuttings.
- Sow hardy annuals to overwinter .
- Plant lilies.
- Clear summer bedding and prepare for spring bedding plants.
- Continue to watch for pests and diseases on roses and other vulnerable plants.
- Disbud dahlias and chrysanthemums as necessary.
- Lift and store dahlias after the first frost.
- Lift and store gladioli and other tender bulbs, corms and tubers.
- Take in tender aquatic plants from the pond if frost is threatened.
The Greenhouse and Conservatory:
- Bring in house and greenhouse plants that have been standing outdoors for the summer.
- Sow spring-flowering plants such as cyclamen, schizanthus and exacum.
- Clean off summer shading washes.
- Repot cacti if they need it.
- Check that greenhouse heaters are in good working order. Arrange to have them serviced, if necessary.
- Pot up and pot on seedling pot-plants as it becomes necessary.
- Plant hyacinth for early flowering under glass.
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Recipe of the Week: Mango Macadamia Crisp |
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What You'll Need:
- Filling:
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons cornstarch
- 4 cups chopped peeled ripe mango (about 4 pounds)
- 3 tablespoons fresh lime juice
- 2 teaspoons butter, melted
- Cooking spray
- Topping:
- 1/3 cup all-purpose flour
- 3 tbsp granulated sugar
- 1-1/2 tsp brown sugar
- 1/2 tsp ground ginger
- 3 tbsp butter
- 3 tbsp chopped macadamia nuts
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Step by Step: |
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Preheat oven to 400ºF.
Combine 1/4 cup granulated sugar and cornstarch, stirring well with a whisk.
Add mango, lime juice and 2 teaspoons melted butter, and toss gently to combine.
Place mango mixture in an 8-inch square baking dish coated with cooking spray.
For topping, lightly spoon flour into a dry measuring cup, level with a knife.
Combine flour, 3 tablespoons of granulated sugar, brown sugar and ginger, stirring well.
Cut in 3 tablespoons butter with a pastry blender or 2 knives until mixture resembles coarse meal. Stir in nuts.
Sprinkle flour mixture evenly over mango mixture.
Bake at 400º F for 40 minutes or until browned.
Yield: 8 servings.

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