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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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.
Plants of the Cherokee and a road trip through the Cherokee Nation
Bill and I took a trip to Cherokee country on Tuesday. A map of Oklahoma's diverse tribal lands. Oklahoma may be one state, but we are many nations as Travel Oklahoma puts it. Every corner of Oklahoma is not only diverse in its topography, soil and weather, but also, in its people. Because of our history, we have native peoples from all over the United States. Oklahoma is home to thirty-nine American Indian tribes. The Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek, Choctaw and Seminole tribes, often called the Five Civilized Tribes in historical documents, were removed to Oklahoma from the southeastern U.S. Other tribes, like the Cheyenne, Comanche, Apache and Arapaho, made Oklahoma their home long before. Bill and I drove through the eastern part of the state on Cherokee tribal lands. If you look at the bottom of the red section in the map above, we were in Sequoyah County in Sallisaw where...
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Visiting a good blogger friend
Life is full of serendipitous moments. You answer a call out on Twitter, and suddenly, you're having coffee with some of the nicest Oklahoma bloggers out there. A year or two later, you ask one of them, a gardener, if she'd mind you taking photos of her. You've become good friends through Facebook, Twitter, email etc., and she says yes. Marie next to her garden. So, lucky me, I got to visit Marie's animal menagerie and veggie garden. Where else would guinea hens, chickens, a gaggle of geese, a beautiful paint horse called Chanta, a blue and gold Macaw named Pacino and a teenaged buffalo named Chunk-Hi, but called Chunk, all live happily together? At the Lazy W Ranch, of course! Marie is supremely good at keeping everyone happy. Marie with Pacino, the Macaw, who is love with her. There are even llamas, a mommy, a daddy, and baby makes three....
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The Beautiful Edible Garden and a giveaway
A garden arbor and border designed by Star Apple. Photo courtesy of Ten Speed Press. I've been writing a book on edibles so I've been trying not to read anybody else's while I'm working on mine. However, I was walking through Barnes & Noble, where I saw The Beautiful Edible Garden: Design A Stylish Outdoor Space Using Vegetables, Fruits, and Herbs, by Leslie Bennett and Stefani Bittner. Some books just touch your soul. This one was a combination of good sound advice on growing vegetables and ornamentals along with gorgeous photos. Leslie and Stefani are co-founders of Star Apple Edible & Fine Gardening where they combine elements of good garden design with edible and ornamental plants. I think any vegetable garden is a beautiful thing, but there is that moment when everything starts to look ratty. By crafting a garden with good bones, you can alleviate this problem at least...
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Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day July 2013
It's a soggy Bloom Day here in Oklahoma. I can't believe I just wrote those words. The last three years have been nothing but drought, but this year is a whole different animal. I hear from my friends in Seattle that they want their cool rainy season back. I promise we'll only use it a little while. From the forecast, I think this will be the last of the rain for several weeks. How about some containers for Bloom Day? Helen Weis from Unique by Design told me to take pictures because I rarely do. I guess I always see my containers in a state of flux, and I am never very pleased with them except at their beginnings and their finale. When Helen visited last week, she also gave me a few pruning tips for containers. Basically, you must prune some things to give other stuff sunlight to grow....
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