Welcome!

I’m Dee Nash, a native Oklahoman, and I’ve gardened here since my teens. I know from personal experience how challenging our prairie climate can be.
But my blog isn’t just for Oklahomans. Gardening can be challenging in other climates too. So, I share how to garden wherever you grow.
Enjoy the garden you’ve always wanted!
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Hey there! I’ve moved my blog to Substack. You can find the archives below and CLICK HERE to visit my Substack.
Garden Bloggers Bloom Day February 2013
The pansies and violas all look a bit tattered after the small snow we had a couple of days ago. Although this Garden Bloggers Bloom Day is not as blooming good as last February, we need this cold snap to delay bulbs and fruit trees from flower. Apple and peach blossoms haven't broken yet, and I'd rather they wait. I don't want ornamental fruit trees. I enjoyed dripping peaches and crisp apples last summer and fall. If they bloom this early, we are almost assured of getting several more freezes. Keep your fingers crossed. Next week, with all of its highs in the 60s looks like fun, but believe me, it's not good for our plants. We need the garden to wait. Bulb foliage is way up, and the pansies and violas are already singing a sweet February tune. My hellebores entrance me. I know I say this every year,...
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True love for Valentine’s Day
A pair of Northern Cardinals rest on the rose arbor. I caught these two Northern Cardinals, male and female, posing two days ago. They make beautiful "love birds" on a cold and snowy day. For more information about the Northern Cardinal, check out the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's wonderful website. There is everything from spring behavior to nesting and feeding sites. By the way, the Audubon Society and the Cornell Lab sponsor a backyard bird count each year in February. In winter, I often find ten or twelve Cardinals sitting on the arbor near my bronze, five-tier No-No feeder. Over a year ago, the makers of the No-No feeders sent me one for review, and I wrote about it on a Lowe's post some time ago. Cardinals do love black oil sunflower seed. However, we use a feed similar to this Songbird and Cardinal Preferred Blend Bird Food because it attracts many...
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Burning questions about growing vegetables in Oklahoma
Basil and chard I saw planted for fall in an AZ garden. Hi Winter Weary Gardeners! I've been perusing search terms on my blog stats for the past week, and it seems like you're interested in three things: 1. Best vegetables to grow in Oklahoma. 2. Will anything grow in Oklahoma? I had to laugh. That's a great question. I like to think so, but 2011 and 2012 were enough to try a gardener's soul. 3. Do David Austin roses grow in Oklahoma and the hot and humid south? This is a compilation of several questions all revolving around David Austin roses. I've grown them for many years, and they like the east side of my house best so far. I do live out in the country so when it's cold here, it's really cold with only trees to block the wind. A couple of years ago, I tested three new cultivars in my garden, and here are...
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Winter walk
This morning, I found it hard to wake from a long and pleasant dream concerning seeds. When I stepped outdoors, teacup in hand, the low was 25F. Yesterday, it was fifty something, maybe 52F. That's life on the plains. One day you're up, and the next you're down--sometimes in the same day. After I ran Bear to school this morning, I rushed home because there was good frost everywhere. I do love frost as the sun comes up. Everything sparkles. Go on, winter garden, sparkle while you may. Pretty soon, all this brown foliage will be cut down for new grasses to emerge--new life to begin. I am ordering seeds with trepidation because of the last two years of heat and drought, but I'm also trying to maintain calm and serene with whatever comes. I can't control the weather, but I can enjoy a gift, this morning of diamonds in...
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