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.
An invite to a special garden party
As a member of the Oklahoma Horticultural Society and a tour volunteer, I'd like to personally invite you to the 2010 Garden Tour for Connoisseurs, to be held this Saturday, September 18, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. If fantastic gardens aren't enough to bring you, think about the all the good you'll be doing by purchasing a ticket. The tour is the OHS's biggest fundraiser and helps support their scholarships for deserving horticulture students. The tour gardens for this year are: Barbara & Melvin Thompson: This is the garden where I will be volunteering. If you get a chance while visiting, please come up and say hello. Although it is a new home, visitors will encounter specimen evergreens, deciduous trees, along with easy-care shrubs and perennials. There is a large ‘Tuscarora’ crapemyrtle (Lagerstroemia indica) an Amur maple (Acer ginnala), along with assorted deodor cedars (Cedrus deodara) ‘Electra Blue’ ‘Blue...
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Garden Bloggers Bloom Day: cool morning sweet relief
Opening the doors to the back deck this morning, I encountered the sweet relief of autumn. As anyone who attended the Dallas GWA symposium can attest, summers in the south can be brutal. Yesterday, in Ft. Worth, several of us trudged around gardens while the sun beat down upon us. Temperatures increased to nearly 100F, and I watched the folks from Canada nearly melt. In the middle of Dallas traffic, I began my three hour journey north to Oklahoma, and as I crossed the Red River, I rolled down the window and took a deep breath of home. Oklahoma is part of upper south, and we feel Autumn enter a month before our Texas friends. In fact, storms are flirting with southern Kansas, and our upper northeast corner, in which sits Commerce and Miami, may get rain. My family called me in twice in Dallas, and with excited voices, said...
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GWA stop one: the Dallas Arboretum
Not hurricanes, nor heat and tired feet could stop us from our appointed rounds as we spent the afternoon and evening touring the Dallas Arboretum. The clicking of hundreds of cameras and the collective oohs and aahs resounded everywhere. As we entered, I was struck by the precision of pumpkins on the march. They were also floating in fountains and made into a gazebo for kids to play in. Speaking of children, the arboretum is getting ready to build an entire new children's garden which will also focus on helping children learn about gardening while they play. I am always excited about anything which involves kids and gardens for I think they were made for each other. As I wandered throughout the sixty-six acres, around a corner here, and up a stairway there, I was struck by the color. We often hear the word "breathtaking," but the autumnal finery was...
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Dear Friends and Gardeners, Labor Day, September 6, 2010
Dear Carol, Mary Ann and all of our gardening friends, This is our last letter for the season, and it's a good thing because I don't have much to report. The chickens jumped up in the garden and ate my cantaloupe, so today is cleanup day in the potager. (Oh dear, that rhymed. I apologize.) I'll pull up all the tomato vines, the okra and other summer vegetables while leaving annual herbs, like basil, until frost for the pollinators. Vegetable gardening is funny in Oklahoma because you never know what you'll get. I had so many tomatoes, cucumbers, green beans, peppers and potatoes, summer living was sweet. I thought for sure I'd also be awash in melons, but because they didn't flower until the heat hit, I only had a few and didn't get to eat those. Silly chickens. From the look of these vines covering the walks, I should...
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