Covering Ground

  

    1.800.672.4964      

 

www.groundcovertogo.com

 

   October 14, 2011     

 

 Availability 

    

    Perennial Pipeline  

 

Contact Us 

 

 

1.800.672.4964

 

www.groundcovertogo.com 

 

 

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Pup of the Week

Makenzie
Makenzie & Millicent
 

 

Makenzie is one cute little pup package! A Wire-Haired Doxie/Terrier Mix weighing about 20 lbs. at 10 months of age. Makenzie and his litter mate, Millicent, made the trip to LA from Kern County Shelter on a bus filled with rescues, and we are very glad they did. Both are adorable, happy, playful angels, and we are hoping they find a new home together.

 

You can find out more about Makenzie and Millicent and our other dogs by giving us a call at 310-860-0171 or sending

us an e-mail or visiting Bill Foundation

Thought

For The Day 

 

 John Betjeman

 

 

Childhood is measured out by sounds and smells and sights, before the dark hour of reason grows.
 
~John Betjeman, Summoned by Bells

 

Your Turn

 

 

Black Mondo 10.14.2011
Black Mondo

 

"they (Black Mondo)arrived this AM....

I am extremely pleased with the plants....

they are absolutely gorgeous and in great condition....

thanks."

  

 

"Hello,

Somehow I got on your email list, probably at a Landscapers' expo or something. For months I deleted it without opening it, but then one day I decided to open it, (probably because I wanted to see plant pictures.) Anyways, I read your blog and enjoyed it, and since read the blog each time and enjoy it. Just thought you should know." 

 


 

Starter Plug of the Week

 

Alcea rose annua Spring Celebrities Crimson
Alcea rosa annua
 Spring Celebrities Crimson

 

 

Perennial
 Pipeline
 

 

Buddleia 'Flutterby Petite Tutti Frutti'
Buddleia 'Flutterby Petite Tutti Frutti'
Echinacea 'Solar Flare'
Echinacea 'Solar Flare'

   

These plants are delivered on company trucks within a 300 mile radius of Baltimore, or palletized freight for larger orders or greater distances. 

 

 

Featured Plants

 

Blue Star Creeper 10.14.2011
Blue Star Creeper

 

Oborozuki
Acorus Oborozuki

 

These crops are looking exceptionally chipper this fall.  Just give us a call and we will get them in your hands in 48 hours or less! 

 

Oh Very Young
Oh Very Young - Cat Stevens  (cover by TheLivingroomSinger)
Oh to be young again!  No one says it better than 
Cat Stevens.
 
  Performed admirably here with beautiful imagery  by YouTube unknown.
 
 
The Scent of Youth

 

Baseball Team

 

Since Major League Play Offs are now settled and The World Series is close upon us, I would like to share a very nice article that should resonate in the heart of any Baby Boomer who ever played sandlot baseball in the 50s and 60s.  If you've ever used a brick for first base, a tree for second, or a trash can lid for third, you might just recognize yourself in this article. With grateful appreciation to the author, Dan Baker, editor of The LaGrange Daily News, LaGrange, GA, for granting permission.  Enjoy.

 

There's something about the smell of a new baseball glove that takes me back decades, back to my first glove and my introduction to baseball.

 
When I was 7, I decided I wanted to play baseball, so my folks bought me a glove. It was nothing out of the ordinary, and it never did get a good pocket. But it had that wonderful new-glove smell, it was mine and it was my ticket to baseball.
 

Every summer in the late 1950s and early '60s, the kids in our neighborhood would play ball at Irwin's field, so called because it was beside Irwin Hattaway's house, although it didn't belong to Irwin or his mother. I don't know who owned it, probably someone who lived out of town. It was just a vacant lot on the corner in a residential section, perfect for a ball field with enough trees around the edges to provide some shade while you were waiting you turn at bat. It even had a backstop of sorts, rigged out of some heavy fence wire and boards. The lot was about four times as long as it was wide, so one player could pretty much cover what was the outfield by standing in center field. But none of that mattered - it was a place to play ball.
 
And we didn't dare hit the ball across the street beyond third base. The man who lived in the house there was known to be a grump and keep baseballs that wound up in his yard.
 
Early each spring we'd get lawn mowers out of my dad's dirt-floored garage and cut down the weeds and vines which had threatened to take over our field after winter was over. A hard morning's work was enough to get it into decent shape, although foul territory remained a vine-covered jungle where a ball could be lost forever.

Most summer afternoons would find eight or 10 kids around, enough for a game. We'd ride up on our Columbia bikes with the big balloon tires, gloves hooked to the handlebars. Someone would bring a bat or two, and there was at least one baseball with the seams reasonably intact.
 
We'd choose up sides, letting the two best players pick. You could
Baseball glove
always tell how you were rated by your peers. If you were one of the first ones chosen, you were pretty good, at least from the crop of talent available that particular day. If you were picked near the end, you were either young or a girl. Oh, yes, we had girls playing. Not every day, but often enough. And this was years before women's rights were heard of. It's true that when a girl batting got two strikes on her, a boy would take her last strike while she ran the bases. But other than that condition, girls were welcomed to play.
 
In fact, one girl, Linda Prince, had one of the oddest
hits I've ever seen. Linda was two or three years younger than most of us and was no Babe Ruth at the plate. But one day while she was batting, she swung way too early. The momentum of her swing caused her to pivot completely around, whereupon the bat hit the ball, which by this time had finally arrived. She made it to first safely.
 
Our parents never had to look far to find us during those hot summer months - we were playing baseball.
 
We played ball at Irwin's field until we got too big - big enough to hit the ball over the fence fastened to the old chinaberry trees out by the unpaved street beyond the outfield. Our interests changed, and baseball was no longer the consuming passion it once was. The vines and weeds took over the field again, as though we had never played there. I passed by the lot a few years ago. It's still vacant, with no hint of its former use.

 

Now here I am 50 years later, pushing a buggy filled with motor oil and a filter through the automotive section of a big-box store. I pass the sporting goods section and pause. There before me is a rack of baseball gloves. Gloves signed by Nellie Fox and Luis Aparicio are nowhere to be seen, replaced by models of newer stars. But one thing hasn't changed - the smell of new leather baseball gloves.

I pick one up while no one was looking and slip it on my left hand. The touch of smooth leather against fingers is wonderful, even to one who qualifies for senior citizen discounts. The glove is a bit stiff, perhaps, but much better than the ones I had as a young boy.

Then, without embarrassment, I hold the glove to my nose. That new-glove smell, that smell from 50 summers ago, is there. Suddenly, in my mind, I am a kid back at Irwin's field. At the crack of the bat, I'm racing over the tangle of vines in extreme right field, snaring a streaking ball one-handed, then firing the ball to second base to double off the runner.

It's amazing how the smell of the good baseball glove can make an average player great, at least in his mind.

  
 
Fun & Games
Sigmund Freud
Jumble Word
 

WIN AN I-PAD!!!

 iPad

All who participate

will receive a coupon for

$10 OFF their next groundcover order

 for $100 or more AND

 be entered in a drawing

for an I-PAD (to be held

 just in time for Christmas)! 

 

A new puzzle will appear every week and you will receive a $10 Coupon AND be entered in the drawing with Each Order!

 

Submit Your Answer for Jumble Word Here

 

 

CLARIFICATION

 

I have been asked a couple of times lately if you must purchase plants in order to be included in the drawing.  That WAS the original intent, but since I did not make that clear enough, here is the way it will work: 

  • All who participate in our Jumble Word game will be entered ONCE (no matter how many times you participate).
  • All who participate in our Jumble Word game will receive a $10 Coupon towards purchase of 4" Groundcover each time you participate. 
  • All who USE their $10 Coupon will be entered EACH TIME THEY ORDER, so obviously, their odds are enhanced. 
  • Promotion ends with Drawing 12.19.11. 

Please feel free to email or call

if you have further questions.

 

 

 How 'Bout Them Apple$

  

 

Winter Creeper
Euonymus coloratus 'Winter Creeper'
 

Ironically, last week as I was putting together an article in tribute to Steve Jobs, we received a very nice order for Euonymus Coloratus, booked to ship to the San Francisco area.  This past Monday, I received an email requesting that we hold off on shipping for a few days as it turns out the plants are destined to be installed on the Apple Computer campus. The company had some more memorial services planned, and they want to wait a few days before resuming the landscape project. 

 

So the ripple effects of this amazing man's success continue to stimulate the economy, even in his absence. Thank you Mr. Jobs!
 

Maybe next week I should do a spot on Bill Gates or Warren Buffett.