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!
How can I help?
Garden Coaching

Achieve the garden of your dreams!
Speaking

I’m speaking again and would love to visit!
Blog Updates

Follow me to Substack for the latest from RDR!
Podcast

Listen to the Gardenangelists podcast!
RDR Blog Archive
Hey there! I’ve moved my blog to Substack. You can find the archives below and CLICK HERE to visit my Substack.
Wild and wooly garden days
Ajania pacifica (Pacifica Mum), one of the last blooming plants in the garden. I'm working on a talk I'm giving to my local daylily group this weekend. When they asked me earlier this summer, they said I could talk on any subject I wanted--a dangerous proposition for someone so talkative to be sure--but I appreciate their confidence. Talks take a lot of time and thought before coming to fruition. Echinacea purpurea, which now reseeds throughout the garden with Hemerocallis 'Thunder and Lightning' You see, I'm not all about daylilies at my house. I love so many plants, and the sweet genus Hemerocallis only blooms so long. We need other plants to fill our days and garden beds when daylilies don't bloom. You can insert any other group of plants for which you have a passion. I've come to realize, after indulging in way too many love affairs with various genera, it's...
Read More
Plants that inspire passion, Part II
Leaves are falling outside my kitchen window, and the wind is blowing them across the lawn these last warm days. Last week, I talked about plants that inspire passion in my garden. The post was too long--even for me--so I broke it into two parts. The green chairs in our front lawn surrounded by leaves. We're supposed to have a cold front come through tomorrow. In autumn and later winter, cold fronts push out of Canada or across the Pacific and eventually confront the plains. Some of the Canadian Express types are very strong. Because of Hurricane Sandy stirring up the jet stream on the eastern side of the U.S., Oklahoma has had wonderful weather, and every blue sky reminds me of the devastation. As someone who has watched her state deal with the aftermath of wildfire and tornadoes, my heart is heavy. If you want to help, consult your...
Read More
Wildflower Wednesday: Chipola River daisy
Coreopsis integrifolia, Chipola River Daisy. Like a lot of my other unique plants, I bought this from Bustani Plant Farm. Although they no longer ship, I've linked to other nurseries that do. My excitement over this new-to-my-garden wildflower knows no bounds. Coreopsis integrifolia, Chipola River daisy, a/k/a fringe leaf tickseed and Chipola dyeflower, is very rare, but it has been found from southern South Carolina to north Florida. Its common name hails from the Chipola River that runs through three counties in Florida. Can you see the tiny ant on Coreopsis integrifolia, Chipola River daisy? I bought my plant from Bustani Plant Farm, but I also found it sold by High Country Gardens and Woodlanders. As Lazy S Farm says, this plant is the "equivalent of the little black dress." It goes with everything, and it is a hardy perennial that has stolons (horizontal above-ground shoots), but I'm assured by plant...
Read More
Plants that inspire passion, Part I
Rosa 'Skyrocket' at the end of the season. It grows next to a rain barrel. Roses. I dearly love them, but I must be honest. The last few years haven't been kind to roses in the Sooner State. The summer of 2012 wasn't nearly as bad as 2011, but it was bad enough. Before September, the last rain we had was in early June, and it was only a trickle. Like the rest of the central U.S., we suffered under the unrelenting sun. July 2012 was our 6th driest. Rosa 'Julia Child,' a Floribunda. Mine has never really taken off. However, fall is always her best time of the year. So the roses are under tremendous stress as are the daylilies. Established daylilies, though, bounce back quicker even if they go completely dormant, but I must be careful of those that were planted in the spring. They are most likely...
Read More