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View from Federal TwistRamblings of a 'New American' Gardener
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Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener
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Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener
View from Federal Twist: January 2013
http://federaltwist.blogspot.com/2013_01_01_archive.html
View from Federal Twist. Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener. Saturday, January 26, 2013. View from Federal Twist has moved. View from Federal Twist has moved from Blogger to WordPress. To reach the new View from Federal Twist, click on the following link:. When you reach the new site, you will see this banner:. If you access View from Federal Twist through a reader, RSS feed, or subscription, please use this new url:. Posted by James Golden. Links to this post. Wednesday, January 23, 2013. Another vi...
View from Federal Twist: Ready for fire, but ice instead
http://federaltwist.blogspot.com/2013/01/ready-for-fire-but-ice-instead.html
View from Federal Twist. Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener. Thursday, January 17, 2013. Ready for fire, but ice instead. Just reread Tom Stuart-Smith's The Barn Garden. Acer palmatum in ice with background grasses. Small pond brimming full with rain. Salix alba 'Britzensis' being trained as a pollarded specimen. Three large Salix sachalinensis 'Sekka' covered in ice behind grasses and bedraggled Filipendula remains. Marc Rosenquist's bronze amid the ruins. River birch looking toward woodland garden.
View from Federal Twist: November 2012
http://federaltwist.blogspot.com/2012_11_01_archive.html
View from Federal Twist. Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener. Wednesday, November 28, 2012. Just turning from . Just turning from Chanticleer's Tea Cup Garden, a small gem-like courtyard behind the smaller of two residences at this amazing garden outside Philadelphia . But details aside, is this magic? Posted by James Golden. Links to this post. Sunday, November 18, 2012. New thresholds, New anatomies. A vast hurricane passed through. Like we've never seen before. Since these trees formed the southern...
View from Federal Twist: Early burn, stone wall redo, resilience
http://federaltwist.blogspot.com/2013/01/early-burn-stone-wall-redo-resilience.html
View from Federal Twist. Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener. Wednesday, January 23, 2013. Early burn, stone wall redo, resilience. I burned the garden last weekend. With the mild winter, I thought the plants were waking far, far too early, so I burned before too much growth emerged. I usually do this early to late March. This was the earliest burn ever. In another week or two the view will be much better. Empty, at least. The plants that didn't burn I'll chop down next weekend. I burned this area too...
View from Federal Twist: Garden Diary: 2008 Overview
http://federaltwist.blogspot.com/2009/02/garden-diary-2008-overview.html
View from Federal Twist. Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener. Sunday, February 01, 2009. Garden Diary: 2008 Overview. From the nadir of the gardening year, here is the story of the 2008 garden at Federal Twist. This post is my continuing garden journal for 2009, and I'll be adding comments, criticisms and plans for the future. (All the photos in this post are also available in a slide show at the upper right, top of page. When I get time I'll add captions.). Rime frost in early February. Ligularia jap...
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the clay garden: August 2013
http://theclaygarden.blogspot.com/2013_08_01_archive.html
Country living in a council flat. The moths are back. I think this is a Jersey Tiger moth. Whatever he is, I like him. And he likes our Buddleia too. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Amateur gardener, amateur photographer, and some time TV producer, growing my own in the inner city. The Greatest flower show on earth. Our side border, or as we call it - the border of death. A Peaceful bit of Peckham. Decking - better in black. The moths are back. Plants are the Strangest People. The Patient Gardener's Weblog.
the clay garden: May 2013
http://theclaygarden.blogspot.com/2013_05_01_archive.html
Country living in a council flat. Down the garden path. Path as it is - concrete and straight. Boring. I have a dilemma. I'm taking the next week off, and one of the many things I plan to do is dig up our old garden path, and put in a new one. I think I'm going to make it a brick one to match the house. I realise it's going to take me a lot longer than I think. And I think it's going to take me quite a long time. I'm in two minds - a curved path following roughly the same route? Subscribe to: Posts (Atom).
the clay garden: The Greatest flower show on earth...
http://theclaygarden.blogspot.com/2011/06/greatest-flower-show-on-earth.html
Country living in a council flat. The Greatest flower show on earth. That said, the gardens are supposed to be inspirational, not models for what to do at home, and they have definitely provided food for thought. I did love the wilder, mixed planting look, and can feel an overhaul of our lacklustre perennial bed coming on. I also came away with some new plants that I absolutely loved:. Like a pink cow parsley, but perennial. Again - pink flowers, but mostly green, and so pretty. I so want a Mulberry tree!
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A Requiem for Mr. Diggy | A Thistle in My Sensitive Area
https://athistleinmysensitivearea.wordpress.com/2013/01/21/a-requiem-for-mr-diggy
A Thistle in My Sensitive Area. Man vs. Nature vs. Local Bureaucracy. The Second Life Contest. The Man Behind the Tree →. A Requiem for Mr. Diggy. January 21, 2013. Mr Diggy as he appeared in his youth. Way back when I bought my Practice Home, twenty years ago, I went to my local highfalutin’ nurseries and asked the experts: what are some plants that can tolerate full sun, full shade, lots of water, but also drought conditions? If there is anything good about owning 50,000 square feet of glacially-scoure...
the clay garden: Your Inner Monkey
http://theclaygarden.blogspot.com/2014/04/your-inner-monkey.html
Country living in a council flat. The latest documentary I directed and produced is airing on PBS this evening. It's all about the science of why you look the way you do. Plus it's got monkeys. lots of monkeys. If you're in the US, please tune in! Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Amateur gardener, amateur photographer, and some time TV producer, growing my own in the inner city. The Greatest flower show on earth. Our side border, or as we call it - the border of death. A Peaceful bit of Peckham.
the clay garden: A Peaceful bit of Peckham
http://theclaygarden.blogspot.com/2011/06/peaceful-bit-of-peckham.html
Country living in a council flat. A Peaceful bit of Peckham. Some friends took us to see Choumert Square. As part of the National Garden Scheme. Today It's a little hidden gem tucked away in the heart of Peckham, South London. The 'square' is actually a single private street lined with a patchwork of tiny front gardens. Each is very different, but every one is thoughtfully planted and beautiful. Joan - who greeted pretty much every visitor and told them a bit about the 'square'. 6 June 2011 at 18:45.
the clay garden: Month by Month
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Country living in a council flat. So here's my garden. All of it - the good bits and the bad. As the months go by I'll post a new photo of each area below. It will get more interesting I promise! February - winter veg still there, new season garlic and overwintered broad beans in already. March - Kale flowering, potatoes in, still a bit bare though. June - growing like crazy! Courgettes coming up on the far right. Strawberries cropping nicely. October - I missed September! Veg Patch and rose border.
The Field of Gold: Growing Shade. Vines on the Pergola.
http://thefieldofgold.blogspot.com/2011/07/growing-shade-vines-on-pergola.html
The Field of Gold. A small piece of land, set in the dramatic landscape of Central Otago, New Zealand. 30 July, 2011. Growing Shade. Vines on the Pergola. The story 2009 through to 2015 and continuing. Great beauty is one thing. But the Iron Pergola along the north side of the house also has a practical use. It provides important climate control. Maximum warm sun into the house in winter is important. Summer provides a fierce challenge, so shade and shelter is necessary. Growth was even better. Two m...
The Field of Gold: Evening light on the coast
http://thefieldofgold.blogspot.com/2013/08/evening-light-on-coast.html
The Field of Gold. A small piece of land, set in the dramatic landscape of Central Otago, New Zealand. 16 August, 2013. Evening light on the coast. The Field of Gold is about 200 km from the coast. That's as far as you can get from the coast in New Zealand. But down on the coast Doggie still needs his exercise and we were walking one evening in a place where cars are excluded. Right at sunset the light came in sideways. The illuminated dog himself. The pole on the headland is our turnaround point. In bot...
The Field of Gold: Miners Lettuce. Food of the gold rush.
http://thefieldofgold.blogspot.com/2012/11/miners-lettuce-food-of-gold-rush.html
The Field of Gold. A small piece of land, set in the dramatic landscape of Central Otago, New Zealand. 08 November, 2012. Miners Lettuce. Food of the gold rush. As I cut through the pine shelter belt I came across this. A plant I did not expect. Miners lettuce, a native of northern California. A little stranger plant. Not where it was expected to be. So I got down for a closer look to see what it was. Miners Lettuce! What was that doing just here. So healthy and strong. Doing well this little plant.
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View from Federal Twist
View from Federal Twist. Ramblings of a 'New American' Gardener. Saturday, January 26, 2013. View from Federal Twist has moved. View from Federal Twist has moved from Blogger to WordPress. To reach the new View from Federal Twist, click on the following link:. When you reach the new site, you will see this banner:. If you access View from Federal Twist through a reader, RSS feed, or subscription, please use this new url:. Posted by James Golden. Links to this post. Wednesday, January 23, 2013. Another vi...
View from Federal Twist
View from Federal Twist. View from Federal Twist. Ramblings of a "New American" Gardener. Resilient planting design for public urban spaces by Giacomo Guzzon. January 21, 2018. Sloterdijk intermodal station, the site of one of Ton Muller’s major public planting designs in Amsterdam (described below). Here is Giacomo’s report on what Ton is doing across the Channel. A pedestrian lingers in the generous herbaceous plantings between a bike park and the rail station. This rather simple planting is more easil...
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