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.
New seeds for the new year
I’m in my fifteenth year of writing this blog, and I hope you’re still interested in my new seeds for the new year. Carol and I are going to talk about our seed orders on the Gardenangelists next week, but if you want to listen to this week’s episode, it’s all about gardening stories. Now about those new seeds I'm excited about the dwarf sunflowers in the potager. I hope it works as I see it in my mind's eye. So far, I've ordered from three different places. Let's start with my Botanical Interests seed order. Carol Michel and I are affiliates of Botanical Interests, and I appreciate their business model. My seeds came very quickly too. 'Phyllis' marigolds are another happy flower I started from seed last year. My favorite plants from Botanical Interests last year were my 'Phyllis' marigolds. I saved seeds from these so I don't need...
Read More
Soup and bean obsessed
I know soup and beans have very little to do with gardening, but with the cooler weather, I am soup and bean obsessed. Yes, it's warm and horribly windy in Oklahoma today, but that's because a cold front is trying its best to shove warm Gulf air out of our fair state. The cold air will win, so tomorrow, you might become soup and bean obsessed too. If so, you came to the right place. Ch ch changes . . . When our youngest daughter, Claire, moved out in August, I took a break from cooking from scratch for a few weeks. At the end of that break, I could no longer remember how to cook especially for only two people. It's been a learning curve not to make too much food. I felt like I lost my cooking mojo, and since cooking is a huge part of my creative...
Read More
December is a busy garden time
Ever since we returned from Portugal last month, I've been swamped. December is a busy garden time of year. November is pretty busy too with Thanksgiving and such. Then, I caught a cold, and I'm finally recovered. Although my garden may not seem busy in December, it really is. Spring-blooming bulbs need to be planted sometime in December. I'm planting spring-blooming bulbs in the perennial beds and blowing out the oak leaves. We also work to get the leaves off of the front fescue lawnette. It's important to remove oak leaves from the garden because, unlike less fibrous tree leaves, oak leaves mat down when it rains, cover emerging plants, and suppress seed germination. I love using shredded oak leaves as mulch on top of my garden beds, but I have so many leaves I can't use them all. This is the sidewalk border. You'll see it with flowering bulbs...
Read More
My tropical plants are all tucked into the greenhouse
The cuttings and tropical plants I want to save are all tucked into the greenhouse for winter. The cuttings will root and continue to grow until they lose the light. After the winter solstice, the plants will patiently wait as the days lengthen to grow again. It's a cool process to watch each year. I just have to keep everyone alive until spring. I love this photo of the greenhouse. I was walking the pasture and caught it just right with the pink muhly grass and that cloudy sky. It says everything about how I feel about the greenhouse. It's an ark in my garden holding some of my most precious tender plants. Temperatures were way above normal until a few days ago. Large thunderstorms swept through our region, and a cold north wind barreled into the state. However, daytime temperatures are still in the 50s. Nighttime temps have been...
Read More