$$parm1$$ Can’t view the images? Click here to see them. If you would like to change or edit your email preferences, please visit your |
||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||
|
Dear $$firstname$$,
After a harsh winter, it’s nice to finally be spending evenings and weekends out on the patio rather than cooped up inside the house. And while my outdoor to-do list keeps growing, I fully intend on spending these first warm days just soaking up the season. I hope you are doing the same in your backyard. This month, we’re excited to announce a new contest, that allows all Club members to be eligible to win a garden shed from Lifetime Products valued at $1,199! To learn more about Lifetime Products, click here. If you received this newsletter from us, you’re automatically entered in the contest, but feel free to forward this to your friends so they can sign up and enter the contest as well! If this newsletter was forwarded to you, please use this link to sign up for yourself.Happy Spring! READ ON TO DISCOVER...
Plant of the Month Allium Botanical name: Allium species Yard Smarts Flour Power
Question of the Month Family Flower Melinda: Known as Texas plume or scarlet gilia (Ipomopsis rubra), this biennial makes a nice addition to a naturalized planting area or perennial garden. During its first year, the plant grows only 3 inches tall and produces no flowers. The next year, however, it stretches toward the sky and reaches a height of 6 feet. The long orange-red flower spikes provide color throughout summer. Grow in full sun and well-drained soil for the best results. Because it’s a biennial—flowering only in its second year—sow seeds several years in a row to ensure colorful blooming plants each summer.
Plant Power! Many gardeners feel adding specific plants to their gardens helps ward off uninvited guests. If you find yourself with creepy company that just won’t leave, try adding some of these plants: Aphids: Anise, catnip, chives, coriander, eucalyptus, fennel, garlic, larkspur, marigold, mint, mustard, nasturtium, onion, oregano, petunia, sunflower For more about garden pests, click here. May Regional Checklist
Late spring is a busy, yet joyful and exciting time for gardeners. The soil has warmed up, spring rains help relieve you of watering chores and plants are exuberant in their growth. To manage all this activity, you have to be proactive. Effort put forth now means less work later…allowing you time to enjoy the bounty of the coming summer. ![]() Frugal Gardener Tip of the Month Practical Plant Markers Current Needs We are searching for tried-and-true tips from longtime gardening friends and relatives. Remember to send along a photo of the gardener you admire! Click here.
Step Back to the Victory Era! The editors of Reminisce magazine bring you Reminisce Through the Decades: The 1940s, a 6-hour-plus, three-DVD set of real-life stories from the ’40s! For more information, go to www.reminisce.com. If this newsletter was forwarded to you, please use this link to sign up for yourself. If you do not want to receive further editions of this Garden Club Newsletter, please use this link to unsubscribe. To learn more about Reiman Media Group’s use of personal information, ![]()
|
|||||||||||
© Copyright 2008 Reiman Media Group, Inc. |