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.
Dear Friends and Gardeners: a postcard from tornado alley
Hi Carol and Mary Ann, The weather was so exciting (as in bad) yesterday, I forgot to write. We had a cluster of tornadoes in central Oklahoma with more than twenty touching down. Sadly, six people perished. After writing those words, gardening seems superfluous, but I do have some thoughts about my garden which relate to the weather. Before yesterday evening, our spring was slow starting and very cool. Then, suddenly, May began and storm season with it (which isn't unusual). The first and second weeks of May are always the most dangerous for tornadoes in Oklahoma. You may remember the deadly storm from May 9, 1999, as the most recent bad outbreak. If you haven't seen enough national footage, here's some on our local television station. For everyone who wondered about me, my family is all fine. We live north of Oklahoma City between Edmond and Guthrie. My mother...
Read More
Peony Impact
Never underestimate the power of the well placed peony. Paeonia is from the god Paeon, the student of Asclepius, Greek god of medicine and healing. I find them to be visually healing, don't you? I often wonder why these beautiful plants fell out of favor. Was it because they only bloom once a year? You can now get Itoh (intersectional) peonies which bloom later in the summer giving you a more staggered bloom time. I'm thinking about adding one to my collection, but they are still very pricey. From Harvey Buchite for the American Peony Society, who explains them better than I: "Intersectional peonies are derived by crossing peonies from one section of the genus Paeonia with those from another. There are three sections in the genus Paeonia, and within at least the Section Paeon, a great diversity in species. It is not very likely that all intersectional peonies will...
Read More
Best and easiest vegetables to grow in Oklahoma
Part of the potager in with Berried Treasure strawberries, leaf lettuce and chives. What are the best and easiest vegetables to grow in Oklahoma? First, growing anything in Oklahoma is a dare. You never know if spring will suddenly end, and hot weather will linger for days, or if a hail storm or a tornado will foul up your spring planting. Oh, and God bless the freakin' deer, raccoons, rabbits, and squirrels. What they don't eat, they dig up and tear apart. Now, with those caveats aside here are the best and easiest vegetables to grow. Here are my best and easiest vegetables to grow in Oklahoma. Lettuce. Sow seeds directly outdoors at the end of February, and you should have success. Spinach isn't always so accommodating. I find it's easier to grow in the fall vegetable garden. Lettuce also grows well in containers, so if you have even a tiny...
Read More
Dear Friends and Gardeners, May 3, 2010
Carol from May Dreams Gardens (Zone 5), Mary Ann from Gardens of the Wild, Wild West (Zone 6) and I decided, last year, to exchange letters from our vegetable gardens. We had so much fun we’re continuing the tradition this spring and summer. We hope to give everyone an idea of how gardens grow in three different USDA hardiness zones. I garden in Zone 7a, where we're having the best sort of spring. Good Morning Garden Buddies, What a fine morning it is. The sun is shining, and it's a brisk 47F, but I read the temperature will be climbing to 79F by this afternoon. My friend, Katie, is coming by to get some of my overflow, and I'm going to photograph her garden for the Lowe's blog. She's turned a small urban yard into a natural haven for birds, butterflies and all of God's creatures. The bok choy is...
Read More