It Might As Well Be Spring
Greetings!
Here we are in February and we still have this incredibly mild weather. Could this end up being the year that winter forgot? Whoo-hoo!
It is a little worrisome, hearing readers reports that roses, perennials, and others are sending out new growth. They wonder what they can do and the easy answer is: "Nothing."
Just keep your fingers crossed or light a candle in a cathedral somewhere and hope that we don't get a sudden deep cold snap that damages these vulnerable plants.
Also, stay away from the pruning tools. Pruning tends to stimulate new growth in plants. If they are totally dormant--the way they normally would in an Iowa February--it would be fine. But with this iffy weather, it might tip the balance and encourage them to send out new, tender growth that would be easily zapped by cold.
In the meantime, let's all enjoy this fabulous weather!
Happy balmy gardening,

Veronica Lorson Fowler
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Much Ado About Zones I was probably as glad as anyone to see the revised map from the U.S.D.A. that slightly changes the zones to reflect warmer winter temperatures recently. Granted, in the grand scheme of climatology, it takes into account a short period of time (50 years), but I'll take what I can get. It puts most of Iowa now firmly in Zone 5 instead of half of it being in Zone 4. Keep in mind that all it will take is one really cold winter to kill an in-theory Zone 5 plant, but this does mean we can plant those marginally hardy plants with more confidence. And hey, if this means I finally have a shot at growing a peach tree in Ames, I'm celebrating. Click here for the revised map. And click here for a really good, detailed article explaining what the zone change really means.
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Be My Facebook Friend!
The Iowa Gardener now has a Facebook page! I've been busy posting photos of my garden, so please "friend" me by clicking here and check them out. If the link doesn't work for you, just go to Facebook and type "Iowa Gardener" into Facebook's search box. I'll be posting regularly with my favorite garden tips and hints, so I hope I can be the best value-added Facebook friend ever! |
Enjoy Butterflies, Flowers, Music
If you love warmth, light, flowers, butterflies, and beautiful music, please join me Sunday, February 26 at the Reiman Gardens. I'm helping to organize the Ames High Academic and Arts Booster Club Student Music Showcase in Ames.
We'll have six very talented student musicians--Ames is blessed with some amazing ones! There will be a small strings orchestra, a cello ensemble, two harpists, and more. Best of all, all high school students and younger get in free. We'll have cookies and you can stroll through the butterfly house and conservatory as you enjoy the music.
Adults (18 and up if not in high school) are $7 with an advance ticket, $8 at the door. Seniors 65 and up are $6 with an advance ticket, $7 at the door. As always, ISU students with ID and CoHorts get in free. Click here for details. It's a great family outing that will blow away any cabin fever.
If you'd like to purchase tickets in advance, just send a check (no cash, please) for the correct amount to The Iowa Gardener/Reiman Tickets, 1031 Ridgewood Ave., Ames, IA 50010. I'll have your tickets waiting for you at the door. Bonus: First order for tickets that we receive will be FREE (up to 6 tickets). We'll just return your check with the tickets. |
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Garden Quote:
"Winter is the time for comfort, for good food and warmth, for the touch of a friendly hand and for a talk beside the fire: it is the time for home."
-- British poet Edith Sitwell
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Upcoming Garden Events
There are a ton of good garden events coming up. Click here for a fairly extensive list. Our top pick for the month:
Friday, February 9 - Monday, February 12
Iowa Events Center, Des Moines
Stroll and visit booths of more than 400 home and garden suppliers. Live gardens, a "live orchid tower," speakers, experts available, Iowa wines to sample, plants to buy. Admission $11 for adults ($9 online), $4 for ages 7-12; 6 and under are free. Find out more or buy tickets by clicking here.
If your garden group has something to put on our events schedule,
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Garden To-Do List
For a printer-friendly version of this list, click here.
Pore through catalogs, garden books, web sites, and magazines to plan for spring. Put your ideas into a garden notebook, made from a three-ring notebook, with pages for notes and photos, pocket folders for articles and notes and a zip pocket to hold spring receipts and plant labels.
Make on-line and mail-order purchases early. Supplies of popular items tend to start running out in March or so, especially this year when vegetable gardening promises to be popular once again.
Take inventory. Look over your supplies, fertilizers, potting soil, soil amendments, and other garden materials and stockpile now. You'll be ready to go once the spring rush hits.
Tidy up and organize your garden supplies. Wash up pots. Use hot soapy water and rinse so the pots are set for spring planting.
Start seeds of parsley, onions, perennials, and other slow-growing plants. Don't start other seeds too early (follow label directions or read up on them on line). If you do, they'll languish indoors too long without the powerful natural sun and get leggy and diseased. The vast majority of seeds should be started 6 to 8 weeks before your region's last average frost date. For Iowa, that means starting seeds in March. Click here for a month-by-month listing of what to plant when in Iowa.
If houseplants are struggling, it's probably time to pitch them and replace. Otherwise, give them a good rinse, trim off brown or problem parts, and top off the soil with fresh potting soil.
Avoid fertilizing houseplants this month. With less daylight, their need for food is less.
If you've forced bulbs they're probably ready to take out into light and warmth now. Once the bulbs have sent up shoots a half to one inch high, take them out and put them in the sunniest, brightest spot possible.
Inspect any stored bulbs or corms. If you dug up any last fall to store over the winter. They should be firm and healthy looking. If they're shriveled or mildewed, toss them.
Force flowering branches in a couple of weeks. Once spring-blooming branches start to develop tiny buds, cut them and bring them indoors for forcing. These include forsythia, redbud, pussy willow, crabapple, and more. Just soak the branches in a tub of cold water for a few hours. Then arrange in a vase and watch them open over the next several days.
Consider a cold frame. Build it now and you can start radishes, spinach, and lettuces in a few weeks.
How's your mower? If you didn't get it tuned up last fall and the blade sharpened, do it yourself now or take it in before the spring rush.
Same for any shears or other sharp cutting or slicing objects, including spades and hoes. If you haven't already, invest a few bucks in a sharpening stone. It makes all the difference. Click here to learn how. It's easy after you do it once or twice.
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