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!
Featured posts
A bowl of blooming amaryllises and more for Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day
Hello friends! For you this month, I have…
Continue Reading A bowl of blooming amaryllises and more for Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day
Letting the garden grow
As I’ve been garden coaching so many of…
The bones of the garden
The wind is blowing, and leaves are falling.…
Zinnia favorites
It’s probably no surprise I love zinnias. I…
Ten easy flowers to grow in Oklahoma
Zinnia angustifolia x elegans 'Profusion Apricot.' In this photo, the weather has cooled a bit and given the zinnia its pinker color. I haven't done a ten easiest in awhile, so I thought I'd update us all with flowers instead of veggies. I get a lot of searches from folks who want to know how to garden in our very tough conditions, and I'm here to help. Some of these flowers may not work in every situation, and in some states may even be aggressive or invasive. Not so here. It is a testament to our tough growing conditions that there isn't a large invasive plant list in Oklahoma. Pink garden phlox with black-eyed Susans (rudbeckia) Rudbeckias in all their forms. The easiest one to grow is R. fulgida var. sullivantii 'Goldsturm.' It was selected as the Perennial Plant of the Year in 1999 and with good reason. It is...
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A bit of cloud in the red dirt sky
I wasn't going to write this post because I believe you'd rather not hear me whine. However, Non-gardening, best friend (NGBF), Aimee, convinced me you might need to hear when I'm feeling a bit blue too. She planted tomatoes and herbs yesterday by the way, and they are in beautiful colored pots. Go Aimee! Beyond the norm, I've been sprucing up because several Master Gardeners are coming to visit on their way to Bustani Plant Farm next Wednesday. Bustani is about forty-five minutes from here. What I see in the back garden makes me very unhappy. With the crapemyrtles now Mini-Me sized, and several of the roses removed because of rose rosette, and others only eighteen inches tall from the extremely cold winter we had, the garden looks, well . . . very young. There are naked arbors everywhere. I may be forced to remove 'Cl. Pinkie' who has only...
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A tumble down the daylily rabbit hole
It is an established fact I have too many daylilies, hemerocallis, for those who like a little Latin sprinkled about like good compost. As one friend said with some derision after visiting my garden, "They are an obsession." Yes, they are. A sweet-faced obsession. H. 'Karen's Curls' who doesn't have strong scapes, but just look at that face. Last summer, I went with two friends, Laurie and Stephen to St. Louis for the AHS regional meeting. You couldn't travel with two nicer friends, and we met up with our local club there. While I was snapping pictures, I didn't realize it, but like Alice in Wonderland, I slipped and slid down the daylily rabbit hole. Carol from May Dreams Gardens reminded me of these dangers as she wrote about rabbit holes last week. I took hundreds of photos, and one day a couple of weeks ago, I went over to...
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A visit to the Garden Home Retreat of P. Allen Smith
A few months ago, I was asked if I'd like to visit Little Rock and P. Allen Smith's Moss Mountain Farm, a/k/a the Garden Home Retreat. How could I refuse? So, this week, I drove five hours (after my airline canceled my flight), and I joined a group of bloggers who visited. A lot of writers have asked me why only certain bloggers were invited. I suppose we were a cross-section of the country in region and style. There were even behind-the-hand hints that we were being used. I found none of that on my visit. As at the GWA annual symposium, there were sponsors. The trip was paid for through them, but there were no restrictions on what we were to write. I believe we were asked because Allen is launching a new blog and television show, Garden to Table. He also sent us his latest cookbook, P. Allen...
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