March 2013
Vol 2, Issue  11


Garden Notes
Garden Notes Logo Bird


Greetings from Christianson's!

 

"Every spring is the only spring,
a perpetual astonishment."

-  Ellis Peters

 

Sometimes there are no words. Sometimes there are not enough words. When it comes to describing the arrival of spring - in all its green, earthy lusciousness - it's both. Spring is like a dear friend, beautiful inside and out. She's indescribable, yet we still try.

 

And there's my dilemma. What original thought can I offer here, in this little space, that will capture the essence and sweetness of spring? For inspiration, I've been strolling through my garden, walking the rows at the Nursery, tromping through the forest, and driving across the fields of Skagit Valley. And the result? My field work is muddled with springtime nostalgia, and now my head is spinning.

 

All I can say for certain is that the natural world is waking up and coming to life, and so are we. Millions of little miracles are happening right under our feet and over our heads, and the energy of all that life is bubbling around us. For us gardeners...well, springtime is ridiculously exciting. Novice gardeners and seasoned sages are lining up together with equal measures of wonder and twitterpation. We're like a bunch of nervous relatives hovering in the wings, waiting for the baby to be born so we can finally see it, hug it, and know that it's real.

 

And why is that? Why does the arrival of spring still feel so exhilarating every year, especially for gardeners? I think it's more than the sum of her sensory delights and rejuvenating attributes. It's that gardening allows and inspires us to use our Beginner's Mind.

 

Take me, for example. After 22 years of gardening, I still consider myself a novice gardener, a rookie with a lot to learn. Yet feeling like a beginner does not diminish my enthusiasm in the least - in fact, just the opposite. In the gardening part my life, I am free to try new things, discover, learn, create, make mistakes, trust my instincts, be a rebel. I'm not sure why, but I'm not at all concerned with perfection or mastery in my gardening (not so true in the rest of my life). My garden is my own little Petri dish. As long as I'm not causing plants and animals to suffer, what happens there is a grand experiment I do for my own pleasure.  

 

Experiencing life, or parts of our life, with Beginner's Mind is such a gift. It can come when we're gardening, or in some other way, but however it happens, we can all cherish the joy that overtakes us when we are doing what we love. Celebrating this season of new life brings us to life.

Happy March! 
 

 


Eve Boe, Garden Notes Editor     

 

  

 

In This Issue
The Garden in March
Seasonal Specials
Staff Picks
Upcoming Events
Spring Class Calendar
Fresh Ideas
Closing Thought
Quick Links

Garden Notes: All past issues

 

2013 Rose List

 

Garden Gazette: Feb - March 2013

Garden Gazette: Nov 2012-Jan 2013 
Garden Gazette: Archives  

 

Christianson's Nursery & Greenhouse 

 

La Conner Chamber of Commerce  

Mt Vernon Chamber of Commerce

 

Where To Find Us

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15806 Best Road

Mount Vernon, WA  98273

www.christiansonsnursery.com

 

360-466-3821

1-800-585-8200

 

Spring Hours Begin March 1

Open Daily 9 am - 6 pm

 

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from 9 am - 5 pm 

 

 

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in Skagit Publishing's

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2010, 2011 and 2012 

 

NW Flower & Garden Show

"People's Choice Award 2011"

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The Garden in March
by Rachel Anderson

Yup.  It's still cold and it's still gray.  As I write this, a stiff wind is blowing icy cold and the clouds are marching in as though to permanently occupy the sky.  But, as I observe my garden from the cozy comfort of my living room chair, I see signs of spring all around. Crocus and Iris reticulata have been blooming for a week now, and the daffodils are up, perky and budded.  The birds have begun to return and their song is already cheering the bleary mornings.  Yup.  The days are mostly still painfully gray, but I know,  just as all gardeners know, that the days are lengthening, buds are swelling, and spring is on it's merry way.    

 

In the ornamental garden: 

  • If you haven't already ventured out to remove the old stalks of perennials, then on the next goodish day make time to do so.  This very simple task really helps to banish the bare wintery look and give a sense of tidiness and a good fresh start to the season.  Think of it as spring cleaning for the garden.
  • On the subject of spring cleaning, pull any weeds that have had the audacity to grow and thrive over the winter.  Some weeds (especially the ones I call pop-weeds because of the seeds' ability to pop explosively throughout the garden-and into your eyes if your hovering nearby) have no problem growing through the winter.  Also, dandelions are already showing up with tight little flower buds nestled in the crown.  Oh boy.  Weeding season.  Yea.
  • Fertilize Rhododendrons,  especially if they're fairly new to your garden.  Use a specific rhododendron/azalea fertilizer which helps to provide the right PH level. If you know your soil is acidic or slightly so already, then an all purpose slow release fertilizer is just fine.  If you don't know the PH level of your soil where your rhodies are planted, then test your soil.  The Nursery carries an easy to use test kit, or you could send a soil sample to a lab to have a complete analysis.  Generally, with rhododendrons you want to fertilize in early spring when the flower buds begin to swell, and again at leaf emergence-usually late May early June depending on the variety.  Not sure how to identify a flower bud vs. a leaf bud?  A flower bud is big and fat and full of flowery potential.  A leaf bud is slim and narrow, full of...leafy potential.  Or, you could ask one of us at the Nursery to show you the difference.
  • March is the last call for bare root trees, shrubs, and berries.  At the beginning of April we pot them all up and the prices go up, so seize the day and buy bare root in March!
  • Wrap up your fruit tree and rose pruning.
  • Shear your hedge.  If you've got a row of yew or boxwood or emerald greens planted as a hedge, now is a great time to prune or shear them to keep their dense uniformity.
  • Our spring bulbs are in at the Nursery.  That means dahlias, lilies, gladiolas, begonias, and more!  We also have organic seed potatoes, garlic, and shallots.
  • There are a few tough annuals that can be directly sown into the garden, such as calendula, sweet alyssum, breadseed poppies, larkspur, love-in-a-mist, and sweet peas.  Don't forget the sweet peas!

In the veggie garden:  

  • Remove straw mulch from asparagus and garlic.  Look for the beginnings of asparagus spears and the tips of garlic.  At this point, the straw will only harbor slugs and snails, which nobody needs.  
  • Prune and thin out unproductive raspberry canes. 
  • Sow peas and other cool crop veggies if you haven't already done so.  Plants like radish, arugula, parsley, cilantro, spinach, kale, and swiss chard can all be sown directly into the garden in March. 
  • Plant potatoes.  St. Patrick's day is a good general rule of thumb for us in the Pacific Northwest. 
  • Sow seed indoors for tomatoes and peppers.  With supplemental heat and light, they'll be ready to plant out in May assuming the weather is good.

There's an awful lot to be excited about this time of year and the anticipation is perhaps the most delicious part of it all.  I find myself taking slow walks around the garden, looking for points of new growth on herbaceous perennials and swelling flower buds on shrubs and trees, looking most of all for the signs that tell me that a new emergence is happening and that a new season is upon us.

 




Rachel has been gardening since childhood, thanks to her mom, and has been part of the team at Christianson's since 2002.  She's a Certified Professional Horticulturist with a passion for roses and vegetable gardening.  Rachel and her family enjoy gardening together and now share their urban garden with a menagerie of ducks, chickens, two cats, and a dog.
   

Seasonal Specials

MARCH HIGHLIGHTS

  Ribes Sanguineum 'Pokey's Pink'(flowering currant)
Spring flowers in pots 
Tulips, daffodils, hyacinths, muscari (grape hyacinths), dwarf iris,
anemone, primrose, hardy cyclamen, and much more!

   

Spring Bulbs

Dahlias, lilies, gladiolas, begonias, and more!

We also have organic seed potatoes, garlic, and shallots.

   

Veggie Starts

 Lettuce mixes, spinach, mesclun mixes, peas, beets,
Swiss chard, sprouting broccoli,artichokes...the list goes on!  

 

'Start Your Garden' Supplies:

Seed-starting supplies, great selection of fertilizers, and kelp meal!  

 

Rhododendrons 

hundreds of varieties to choose from,

including new varieties and some old favorites too

  

Evergreen and Deciduous Azaleas 

2" plant starts for spring basket fillers 

Flowering Currants 
 

 

SPRING SPECIALS 

 

March 2 and 3

Hellebores - 20% off

Huge selection of our favorite winter-flowering perennial

 

March 1 - 14

Bare Root - 20% off already low bare root prices

Includes fruit, flowering and shade trees, berries, lilacs, and hydrangeas.

Don't miss out on the larger bare root blueberries we have in stock - they'll be

producing berries in only 1 -2 years!

 
 Reminder...bare root season is over at the end of March
 

March 15 - 31

Camelias - 20% off

Winter and spring flowering beauties - many in bloom!

 

April 1 -14

Magnolias - 20% off

Blooming trees with white, pink, purple or yellow flowers, including evergreen varieties

 

April 15 - 30

Rhododendrons and Azaleas - 20% off

Thousands to choose from, including evergreen and deciduous azaleas

 

Staff Picks

Kris Moe, with one of her favorites, Drimys lanceolata
This month our 'Staff Picks' come from Kris Moe. Kris is in her fourth year at Christianson's and coordinates our classes and our Garden Gazette newsletter, the sister publication to Garden Notes. Here are some of her thoughts and top picks:

It's fun to find interesting topics and speakers for our classes; it takes me back to what I did for years, which was working as a newspaper reporter and editor. Then I started studying horticulture and - just like half the people in this business - flirted with the idea of starting my own propagation nursery. I'm relieved to say I came to my senses and instead came to Christianson's!
 
The plants I was going to specialize in were evergreen shrubs with great texture to use in year-round containers. Some favorites - available at Christianson's - include:
  • Drimys lanceolata: Striking red/pink stems, glossy green leaves, an upright habit.
    Vaccinium glaucoalbum 
  • Vaccinium glaucoalbum: Cute, rounded leaves of powdery blue (tinged red in winter) with red stems; the plant stays under 1' for me and drapes over the container's edge.
  • Berberis x stenophylla 'Corallina': Forest-green needle-like leaves; coral-pink buds openingto cheery yellow-orange flowers that smother the short, mounded shrub in spring.   
  • Nandina domestica 'Filamentosa' (a dwarf,threadleaf type): A lovely feathery look with leaves that often have shades of red, gold and green at the same time.
The first two plants on that list I first saw at Heronswood Nursery, which renowned plantsman Dan Hinkley founded with Robert Jones on the Kitsap Peninsula in 1987. Heronswood is a nursery no longer; a fascinating future is ahead for it with its new owners, the Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe. Dan now gardens at his Windcliff home and consults with Monrovia for new plant introductions.

Dan Hinkley will be speaking at Christianson's on
Saturday, June 22, at 1:00 pm
This talk is presented in partnership with Monrovia.
Along the lines of texture in containers, I'm also excited about our speaker the next day, Sunday, June 23, at 1:00 pm: Karen Chapman, co-author of the new book, 'Fine Foliage', will be demonstrating two large container designs, one for sun, one for shade. She'll be talking under our big tent on the lawn behind the Schoolhouse, so there's plenty of elbow room for her to mix and match plants.


Final picks:
Hydrangea quercifolia
'Little Honey'
  • Hydrangea quercifolia 'Little Honey': This small shrub is absolutely aglow with chartreause-yellow leaves in my part-shade garden. 
  • Dicentra spectabilis 'Gold Heart': Golden leaves also perk up this shade-lover well into mid-summer, with sprays of perfect, pink heart-shaped flowers. 
  • Muck Boot's "The Daily" garden shoes: My must-have footwear (available at our Garden Store).
Do you have ideas for classes or speakers?
Please email them to: kris.christiansons@gmail.com 
Upcoming Events

March 2 and 3:
A Fascination for Hellebores:
Seventh Annual Winter Festival
 
  • A representative from Skagit Gardens will be at the Nursery to talk about all the exciting new varieties of hellebores
  • The artwork of Richard Nash will be featured, including his  wonderful hellebore drawings
  • Spring botanical displays will be on display to delight and inspire you
  • Entries to our 'Winter Gardens Photography Contest' will be on display in our Schoolhouse throughout the weekend.
 
Special Presentation...  
Saturday, March 2, at 1 pm
Guest Speaker Marianne Binetti will be presenting
"Hot Hellebores and Other Cool Plants for Early Color"
 
Reservations are required for this complimentary event

  

AND COMING UP IN LATE MARCH

 

Friday, March 29, 7 pm
The Drunken Botanist: Plants that Create the World's Great Drinks
A special event with featured author Amy Stewart
In the Readings Gallery at Village Books in Fairhaven
1200 11th Street, Bellingham, WA 98225
  

 

John Christianson will be heading up to Village Books for this special event with author Amy Stewart, who will be talking about her new book The Drunken Botanist.  John will introduce cocktail-friendly plants from our Loghouse plants selections. There will also be plant samples from the "Drunken Botanist Plant Collection" and participants will have the chance to win door prizes!

For more information about this event, contact Village Books at 360-671-2626 or visit their website. To learn more about The Drunken Botanist, visit Amy's website

 

 

TULIP SEASON HIGHLIGHTS

 

April 5 - April 28: 
Art at the Schoolhouse
Open daily from 10 am to 5 pm

Weekends in April:

Judy and Annie's Philly Sandwiches & Crepes

 and Iversen's Espresso 

 

  Saturday, April 27

American Rhododendron Society Flower Show

10 am - 3 pm 

  

 Full details about all of these events can be found on our website   

  

   

'Big Tent' Events Coming in June!

Saturday, June 22, at 1 pm:
 
 Dan Hinkley presents "New and Exciting Plants for the Pacific Northwest"  
Presented in partnership with Monrovia 
Reservations required:  $5

Sunday, June 23, at 1 pm:  
Karen Chapman, author of the new book Fine Foliage,
presents "Container Creations" 
Reservations required:  $5

Saturday, June 29, 9 am to 6 pm:  
A Rosy Day Out: Tenth Annual Rose Festival 
With Keynote Speakers and long-time 'rose buds': 
Ciscoe Morris & John Christianson
Complimentary event (no reservations required)

Visit Ciscoe's website 


Full details about all of our classes and events can be found on our website 

 

For reservations, please call us at 360-466-3821 or 1-800-585-8200

 

Spring Class Calendar

Saturday, March 2 

Marianne Binetti: Hot Hellebores and Other Cool Plants for Early Color 

1 pm (reservations required - complimentary)

  

Saturday, March 9

Cass Turnbull: The Overgrown Garden 

11 am - noon (reservations required - $10 class fee)

 

Sunday, March 10

Rose Pruning with John Christianson 

1 - 2 pm (reservations requested - complimentary)

 

Saturday, March 16

Yoga for Gardeners 

11 am - noon (reservations required - $5 class fee)

 

Sunday, March 17

Spring Walk with John Christianson 

1 - 2 pm (reservations requested - complimentary)

 

Following the Spring Walk, plan to have 'Tea at the Granary' at La Conner Flats . Please call 425-765-0046 to make your tea reservations ($21.95 per person)


Saturday, March 23

Landscape Staging
for Selling or Living

Grafting Tomatoes

11 am - noon (reservations required - $5 class fee)


Sunday, March 24

Landscape Staging for Selling or Living

1 -2 pm (reservations required - $5 class fee)

 

Saturday, March 30

Veggie Gardens from Scratch, Part 2

11 am - noon (reservations required - $5 class fee)

 

Saturday, March 30

Along the Primrose Path

1 - 2 pm (reservations required - $5 class fee)

 

 

 

For class reservations, please call us at 360-466-3821 or 1-800-585-8200

 
Fresh Ideas

Here's an assortment of fun ideas for March.  Simply click on a photo you like and it will take you to the website that provides all the 'How To' instructions. We hope you enjoy these fresh ideas and if you try any of these projects, please let us know how it goes!
Build a low tunnel floating row cover to
protect plants from frost

Make a bird bath with a grapevine wreath, terracotta saucer, and rope








 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

Hanging rain boot planters
 

 

Make your own twig arbor
DIY gardener's bucket

 

 

 

 

 

If YOU have a favorite gardening tip or fresh idea you'd like to share in Garden Notes, please email your submission to eve.christiansons@gmail.com and put 'Fresh Ideas' in the subject line of your email.  You are also welcome to send your submissions to us at:  Christianson's Nursery, Attn Eve Boe, 15806 Best Road, Mount Vernon, WA, 98273. Be sure to include your contact information (name, address, phone and/or email address) and please print clearly.  If your 'Fresh Idea' is selected for publication, you will receive a $20 gift certificate to Christianson's.

 

Closing Thought...


Nearly everybody gets twitterpated in the springtime.

You begin to get weak in the knees. Your head's in a whirl.

And then you feel light as a feather, and before you know it,

you're walking on air. And then you know what?

You're knocked for a loop, and you completely lose your head!"

 

- Friend Owl to Flower, Thumper and Bambi in Walt Disney's 'Bambi', 1942

 

Garden Notes Editor:
Eve Boe, Public Relations
Christianson's Nursery & Greenhouse
360-466-3821