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…
Fairy Gardens, Examiner.com and More
I mentioned in a previous post that Iseli Nursery gave us five dwarf conifers to take home. If you'd like to see what I did with part of mine, please head on over to Oklahoma Examiner.com. I don't know if I mentioned it, but I now write as the Oklahoma Gardening Examiner three times a week. I try not to repeat myself, so the material you read on there should be somewhat different. Also, those articles have a different voice than my writing on here, which is more about my personal garden journey. Thanks for reading, and I'll try to have a new post up on RDR in a day or two. HH and I are going to the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve tomorrow. Can't wait to tell you all about it. Meanwhile, I'm headed outside on this most beautiful of fall days to eat my lunch. Want to join me? ...
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Ready for More Terra Nova Goodness?
How about some 'Tomato Soup' with that 'Mac 'n Cheese'? I had so many photos and thoughts yesterday that I've decided another Terra Nova post is in order. Cindy from My Corner of Katy's comment about her bad luck with certain Echinacea cultivars made me think about something Dan Heims said about the orange, yellow, red or peach Echinaceas. He said that those which have E. paradoxa parentage have a tendency to bloom so hard they simply bloom themselves to death. He suggested cutting the first blooms of these cultivars and using them as cut flowers, so that the plants develop basal shoots and ensure their continued growth. I wanted to be clear on this so I contacted Janet Egger at Terra Nova, and she wrote "This will reduce the stress on the plant, and it will put more energy into the root system rather than trying to make seeds."...
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The Gardens and Gifted Imagination of Terra Nova
After Iseli, we boarded our buses for Terra Nova Nurseries in Canby, Oregon. If you've ever purchased an unusual Heuchera like 'Mahogany' or an Echinacea like 'Pink Double Delight' (both favorites in my garden) you've probably bought one hybridized by Terra Nova. While we were there, the botanists/biologists explained how they create the test tube babies which become such unique varieties. It was quite a flow chart. The nursery is way out in the country, but still located on a very busy street. One of the employees joked that traversing it was a trial before employment. If you made it across, you were in. We all laughed as we jogged through traffic to get to the display gardens. In the photo above, you can just see the road behind Echinacea 'Tomato Soup' which is behind Coreopsis 'Autumn Blush'. Courtesy of Terra Nova, here is a closeup of 'Tomato Soup' which...
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Garden Bloggers’ Muse Day–October
"She had only to stand in the orchard, to put her hand on a little crab tree and look up at the apples, to make you feel the goodness of planting and tending and harvesting at last. All the strong things of her heart came out in her body, that had been so tireless in serving good emotions." - Willa Cather from My Antonia I just realized I didn't link back to Carolyn Gail at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago, who makes Muse Day possible. Please visit her for more poetry (and prose) on the beginning of Autumn.
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