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…
And they’re off! Daylily love at the Regional
When I tweeted about returning from St. Louis's Region 11 meeting, Snarky Vegan said "Sounds like they were racing daylilies! The Daylily Regional. ;-P" Don't know the cultivar, but doesn't it look great next to the rooster? In a way, they were, or at least we were racing to see them all. AHS Region 11 comprises Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma, and the regional is held annually in one of the locales. I've helped with ours in Oklahoma City, and it was a relief to go somewhere else and enjoy their volunteers' hard work. H. 'White Magician' Gossard 2007 Hemnuts from all three states converged, visited beautiful gardens, and bought PLANTS! H. 'Catfish Bob' Schulz (1993) with a visiting honeybee I bought a few new daylilies and a couple of flats of other things myself. We're a month ahead of St. Louis, and they had lots of beautiful offerings left over...
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Dear Friends and Gardeners, June 28, 2010
Dear Carol, Mary Ann and all of our friends, I waited to post my letter after I had a chance to get out to the potager and see what was ready. The squash bugs ate all but one group of squash plants because I wasn't here to watch and squish them everyday. There's only so much one can ask of her husband. I planted the last group of squash later than the others, and in a different bed. I think the squash don't know where it is. Sssh, don't tell them. Then, yesterday, Bear hurt her foot on a rusty nail while swimming in the lake behind our house. Needless to say, she's had a tetanus shot and is on an antibiotic. That took half the afternoon and evening. Summer in the country, it's not for sissies. As to everything else, here's the harvest. I picked five cups of green...
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So you say you don’t like orange? Or red? Or fuschia?
Orange plants aren't very popular at flower shows. For that matter, the brightest blooms are often shunned by the best of gardeners and landscape designers. Like Rodney Dangerfield, they get no respect. Pick up any garden book, and you'll probably read words like "garish," "too bright," "taudry" and "overstimulating." Often, I've wondered why? You know I love England, probably the Britannia of 1890, but still . . . . The gardens, the tea, the scones, and since I'm really sore from moving a huge daylily clump and planting a tree, let's be honest, the servants. What I could do with a small staff, but I digress. Although I adore English cottage style, I can't fathom using only pastel plants. Christopher Lloyd did champion hot colors in many of his books and part of his garden, but I don't see much emulation of it in English gardening magazines other than an...
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Wildflower Wednesday: Sabatia campestris Nutt.
Always a day late and a dollar short, my Wildflower Wednesday post is on Thursday. While Gail, Carrie and I took photos of the roadside prairie meadows near RDR, we noticed a small pink flower in abundance. Neither one of us had ever seen this tiny and intense flower before so we literally ran back to the house to look it up. As always the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center came to our rescue. If you are ever in Austin, make a date with the Wildflower Center. I did, and it remains one of my favorite garden destinations. This little beauty is Sabatia campestris, or as it goes by its common names, Texas star, Rose gentian, Meadow pink, Prairie rose-gentian, or Prairie sabatia. I don't think I've ever seen a prettier wildflower, and there are many blooming this time of year around these parts. Sabatia campestris is a two inch...
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