Den Pflanzenkatalog der Baumschule Dietrich erhalten Sie für eine Schutzgebühr von 3 Euro in unserer Baumschule – gedruckt und mit 144 Seiten.
Der ultimative Gartenplaner fürs ganze Jahr Wenn die ersten Schneeglöckchen zu sehen sind, können Sie mit diesem cleveren Gartenbuch Monat für Monat alle Gartenaktivitäten in Ihrem Zier- und Nutzgarten planen. Welche Arbeiten sind wann zu erledigen? Wann ist die beste Zeit zum Pflanzen, Säen und Schneiden? Anschauliche Schritt-für-Schritt-Anleitungen, Fotostrecken und ein praktischer Pflanzenkatalog zeigen, wie Sie den natürlichen Rhythmus des Jahres optimal für das Gärtnern ausnutzen. Kompaktes Gartenbuch zur optimalen Gartenplanung Wer clever plant, kann das ganze Jahr über wunderschöne Pflanzen im eigenen Garten genießen. Während Sie beispielsweise im Mai empfindliche Pflanzen vor Spätfrost schützen sollten, wird es im September Zeit Frühlingszwiebelblumen zu setzen. Mit diesem umfassenden Gartenratgeber lassen Sie Ihren Garten von Januar bis Dezember von seiner besten Seite erstrahlen: . Leitfaden fürs Gartenjahr: Kompetente Tipps und praxisnahes Wissen zeigen Ihnen, was Ihr Garten jeden Monat benötigt. . Anschauliche Schritt-für-Schritt-Anleitungen unterstützen Sie jeden Monat bei der Gartenarbeit und machen auch komplexe Gartenarbeiten leicht verständlich - wie z.B. die Anlage eines Frühbeets oder den Bau eines Stangenzelts. . Umfassender Zierpflanzenkatalog: Auf 64 Seiten erhalten Sie nützliches Wissen zu Aussehen und Besonderheiten sowie Hinweise zu Standort, Pflege, Blühzeit und Kombination der Pflanzen mit anderen Arten und Sorten. Richtig gärtnern zu jeder Jahreszeit - mit diesem Gartenratgeber erzielen Sie jeden Monat optimale Ergebnisse für Ihr eigenes grünes Paradies!.
Najkrajšie letničky a trvalky vhodné do tieňa
… ein Sammelsurium für alle, deren Hobby das Blühende und Grünende ist. Wer gern seine eigene Garten-Chronik führen möchte, hat mit der Gartenbox die Möglichkeit, dies ganz individuell zu tun. Auf 160 Karteikarten kann man einen eigenen Pflanzen-Katalog erstellen, Aufgaben notieren, die zu einer bestimmten Zeit erledigt werden müssen und Notizen quer durchs Gartenjahr sammeln (die Monats-Karten reichen für insgesamt 5 Gartenjahre). In den beiliegenden Samentüten wird für die zukünftige Saison gesammelt. Das Innere der Box kann in zwei Fächer unterteilt werden – so lässt sich alles noch besser sortieren. Wer gern ein Etikettenschild an seiner Box hätte, kann dies im Shop dazu bestellen https://www.etsy.com/de/listing/616266346. Außerdem erhältlich sind Klebeetiketten und Verschlussklammern für die Samentüten (jeweils 6 im Set) www.etsy.com/de/listing/1167712034. –––– INHALT · 100 Pflanzenkarten · 60 Monatskarten · 18 Samentüten · 10 Registerkarten (zum selber Beschriften) –––– MATERIAL Box mit Deckel ca. 11,5 × 14,5 × 16,5 cm (B × H × T), MDF, Unterteil gewachst, Deckel farbig lackiert oder bezogen Registerkarten ca. 9 × 13,5 cm (B × H), farbig, 350 g Recyclingkarton Ausfüllkarten ca. 9 × 11,5 cm (B × H), Offsetdruck, 300 g Recyclingpapier Samentüten ca. 9 × 11,5 cm (B × H, geschlossenes Format), Offsetdruck, 120 g Offsetkarton –––– … weitere Artikel rund ums Thema Garten: SAMENTÜTEN www.etsy.com/de/listing/645646678 SAMENTÜTENBOX www.etsy.com/de/listing/630990114 SET aus Verschlussklammern und Etiketten www.etsy.com/de/listing/1167712034 –––– Lieferzeiten: – innerhalb Deutschlands: 1-2 Tage ab Zahlung – in das EU-Ausland: 3-6 Tage ab Zahlung – Lieferzeit in die USA und Kanada: 3-10 Tage ab Zahlung Details zu Wideruf und weitere Infos sind unter AGB & Widerrufsbelehrung zu finden.
85 Days | This orange fleshed melon first joined American seed catalogs in 1920. 2-3 Lb. melons grow on a prolific blight resistant vine. One of our first “modern” cantaloupes, and finally back in our catalog. Vigorous, prolific plants bear medium-sized, roundish luscious fruits with heavily netted and medium ribbed skin and thin rinds. Green Thumb Tip Melons love heat. Sow seeds outdoors in 12" diameter hills after danger of frost has passed and soil has warmed. Space hills 6' apart in all directions. Seeds will germinate in 4-10 days. Can also be started indoors 2-3 weeks before last frost. These seeds are saved year to year by our mini farm & cleaned and packaged on farm. 12-24 seeds per pack, these plants are pest resistant.
Voor mij zal het sierlijke stipa tennuissema oftewel vedergras altijd verbonden blijven aan mijn bezoek aan Hummelo, toen de tuinen van Piet Oudolf nog golvende hagen hadden en de kwekerij in vol bedrijf was. Onlangs was via de website van Galery Hauser & Wirth de documentaire Five seasons van Thomas Piper te zien. Hij portretteert
Looking to create landscapes with the quality and vitality of wild meadows, James Hitchmough — professor of horticultural ecology at Sheffield University — began creating "synthetic" meadows from seeds. Hitchmough found inspiration in the woodlands and meadows he experienced as a child. The trimmed hedgerows and manicured flower beds of the suburbs were no match for the deeper emotional resonance he felt in the wilderness. Hitchmough's interest in ecology, design and management of herbaceous vegetation began as a graduate student in the 80s. More recently, he and his colleagues at Sheffield are discovering ways of creating landscapes that are compatible, more sustainable, require less maintenance, and are more resource efficient. The context for much of this work is public greenspaces in towns and cities as well as restoration ecology in prairies and grasslands. Hitchmough's work often re-interprets the natural environment through the use of semi-natural vegetation and the introduction of exotics. In a time when consensus is otherwise trending toward a return to natural plantings and native species, Hitchmough's work is not without controversy. Sowing seed in situ creates a spontaneous and rhythmic interplay in the planting "design". In the high summer blooms can be spectacular. Throughout the growing process Hitchmough may still experiment by "tweaking" and "rejiggering" the plantings. The result: Previously undiscovered new forms of planting design. But even design has its limits. Meadows, like any natural environment, are subject to the dynamics of natural selection and competition. When meadow and prairie gardening began as a trend in the 80s it soon foundered as no one at the time fully understood the competitive ecology of such landscapes. Through Hitchmough's and the work of others, breakthroughs have been made in meadow ecology and understanding which plants make the optimum alliances. As a result of these successes, Hitchmough's seed mixes are now being marketed for institutional use through Sheffield University. Meadows can function as a natural weed management systems through the self-seeding and spreading of the plants. Hitchmough's creations tend to be denser and more diverse than their natural ancestors. Aesthetically, though, there are limits: "Visual impact is much more dramatic with 20 rather than 60 species" he says. “Seed allows you to plant far more species per square metre and then let natural selection do the rest.” Above, a Hitchmough prairie near Chicago. "[Meadows can be] a bit like a soap opera... It's good to think of the plant species as actors in a play... who's coming, who's going, who's dying, who's still there in the end... That's what ecology is about." Perhaps in the end, nature, through natural process, may be the best final arbiter of how the garden should be. No matter: However the journey unfolds, the spoils are always for the eye. Above, an ecological restoration project in Rhodes, South Africa.
Côté Maison Design lève le voile sur les photos gagnantes du Concours International de la Photographie de Jardin 2014 (IGPOTY), catégories Plantes, Flore et Faune. Autant dire des captures uniques du microcosme de jardin, la beauté singulière d'une fleur et d'un instant animal...
Santa Fe horticulturist and owner of Waterwise Gardening, David Salman, has long been a horticultural pioneer introducing a number of new natives and Old World plants into cultivation. He has especially nurtured a long-time interest in western native plants in his attempts to bring more regionally suitable garden plants into our gardens. One such success story is his introduction of Agastache rupestris (Licorice Mint Hyssop) in 1996. Purchasing a few seed packets in the early 1990's of this unfa
Eine Gartentreppe bauen ist eine perfekte Lösung, wenn das Gelände in Ihrem Garten steil ist. - 95395
Goldenrods burst into sunny bloom as the days grow shorter, saving their fireworks for the season when asters and jewelweed grow riotously here in the Nort
On met le cap sur le sud ! Lavande, pin parasol, olivier... Découvrez les arbres, arbustes et fleurs à planter pour avoir un jardin méditerranéen.
The first thing that strikes me on entering garden designer Beth Chatto's gravel garden in Essex early in the morning is the scent of herbs. Thyme? Marjora
Lest hier, wie sich eine Familie nach ihrer Rückkehr aus Amerika einen Traum erfüllt hat. Naturnaher Garten im modernen Farmhaus-Stil!
Landscape and garden designer Luciano Giubbilei finds a new creative retreat in the former home of a Mallorcan country potter
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Die Birnenmelone ist ein neues Fruchtgemüse mit dekorativen hellgelben Früchten mit auffälligen, violetten Streifen. Der Geschmack erinnert an Melone und Birne. Die etwa pflaumengroße Frucht wird wie eine Kiwi ausgelöffelt. Pepino Copa® ist frostempfindlich und liebt einen warmen, geschützten Standort. Die frostempfindlichen Pflanzen können wie Tomaten aufgeleitet werden. Die aus Saatgut vermehrten Pepino-Birnenmelonen erhalten Sie als Jungpflanze. Die Pflanze ist zur Lieferung ca. 2 cm hoch, der Wurzelballen ist ca. 4 cm lang. Die Lieferung erfolgt ausschließlich vom 09.-13.04.2024. Nach Erhalt der Pflanzen müssen diese in größere Töpfe gepflanzt werden. Unsere Empfehlungen finden Sie am Ende dieser Beschreibung. Erst nach Ende der Frostgefahr Mitte Mai können die Pflanzen ins Freiland gesetzt werden. Eine ausführliche Pflanz- und Pflegeanleitung finden Sie in unserem Download-Bereich.
Explore KarlGercens.com GARDEN LECTURES' 191548 photos on Flickr!
Carta da parati strada italiana n. u60588 - comprare nel negozio online Uwalls. Materiali ecologici. Prezzi contenuti. Consegna rapida in tutta Italia
Studio Cullis Ltd. is an ambitious London-based garden design and landscape architecture studio founded by George Cullis. The practice has built a reputation for delivering calm, thoughtful and understated spaces for our clients.
Bücher zählen bis heute zu den wichtigsten kulturellen Errungenschaften der Menschheit. Ihre Erfindung war mit der Einführung des Buchdrucks ähnlich bedeutsam wie des Internets: Erstmals wurde eine massenweise Weitergabe von Informationen möglich. Bildung, Wissenschaft, Forschung, aber auch die Unterhaltung wurde auf neuartige, technisch wie inhaltlich revolutionäre Basis gestellt. Bücher verändern die Gesellschaft bei heute. Die technischen Möglichkeiten des Massen-Buchdrucks führten zu einem radikalen Zuwachs an Titeln im 18. Und 19 Jahrhundert. Dennoch waren die Rahmenbedingungen immer noch ganz andere als heute: Wer damals ein Buch schrieb, verfasste oftmals ein Lebenswerk. Dies spiegelt sich in der hohen Qualität alter Bücher wider. Leider altern Bücher. Papier ist nicht für die Ewigkeit gemacht. Daher haben wir es uns zur Aufgabe gemacht, das zu Buch gebrachte Wissen der Menschheit zu konservieren und alte Bücher in möglichst hoher Qualität zu niedrigen Preisen verfügbar zu machen.
Hello everyone! This post is the second post in what I've decided will be a 3-post series. I would have had this one done sooner if I'd planned on doing that from the beginning, but, I tried to shove it all into two posts, and quickly realized I just had too many photos...and the post would have been ridiculously long...so, there you have it. On with the show! Starting where we left off, this pic is probably from June...things are starting to fill in nicely. After a few people commented on it, I realized I never actually listed the plants used for this project, let's rectify that now! Here we have one of my favorite new plants over the past few years, Anemanthele lessoniana, along with Libertia perigrans...which, I realized as soon as I planted them, were a bit too similar to be used right next to each other. The Libertia was an impulse buy, however...I've actually decided that although I like it in theory, it just doesn't work here. I think you need a large-ish patch of them to really make an impact. Two garden stalwarts, Calamagrostis 'Karl Foerster' and Echinacea 'Magnus'. I sort of go back-and-forth on 'Karl Foerster', thinking I would love that space for a "more interesting" grass, but 'Karl Foerster' is so beautiful throughout the seasons, that just when I think I'll replace it, it looks so good, so "right" that I love it again. It's just so valuable at providing structure and contrast in my garden. Of course, Echinacea I just love beyond all reason, so I always have some...they are so perfect, elegant, honest. And of course, where Scott gardens, there will be Agastaches! In these front parking strips alone there are 4 different varieties of Agastche. Above we have both 'Golden Jubilee' and 'Purple Haze'. I just fell in love with this tiny groundcover last year, Acaena purpurea. Sadly, it wasn't super happy in my garden. I can't tell quite yet if it's where it's planted...or the dog pee. I'm leaning toward dog pee. Another Agastache, 'Blue Blazes'. I planted some of these in my back yard two years ago, and last summer I found out that they get WAY bigger than I thought. I forget, sometimes, that here in Portland, things just tend to get bigger than they are supposed to...like 20-30% bigger. I'm experimenting this year with aggressive cutting back on these, if they still swallow up their neighbors, I may have to move things around a bit. Here's a plant that was completely new for me last year, Eryngium yuccifolium, which has the awesome common name 'Rattlesnake Master'. I'd seen it in numerous Piet Oudolf plantings...and you know me, if Oudolf says jump, I say 'How high'! On the right is Molinia 'Skyracer', which I absolutely fell in love with after seeing it a few years earlier at Wind Dancer Garden in Salem. It looks humble here, but in mid-summer it erupts with tall, elegant stems of dark, almost-black blooms. Another grass I tried for the frist time, and fell in love with last summer, Muhlenbergia rigens, aka Deer Grass. I enjoyed the regular Knautia macedonica in the back yard so much last year, but really like having some variation in coloring when I comes to flowers...so was thrilled to find some 'Melton Pastels' last year. This is a crazy-tough plant and blooms forever. I'm hoping that with more sun in the strips, these won't get quite as tall as the ones in the back yard. Panicums just may be my favorite family of grasses, depending on the day you ask me. Tough, dependable, beautiful. This is a new variety I tried on a whim, 'Huron Solstice'. You can't tell in this picture, but as the year progresses, it becomes a riot of color. Another Panicum, with a habit as different from 'Huron Solstice' as you can imagine. While 'Huron Solstice' is more arching and fountain-like, 'Northwind' is strictly upright. If you are looking for an alternative to Calamagrostis, give this a try. Yet another Agastache, 'Desert Sunrise'. I love this particular Agastache...for its foliage as much as for its flowers. Another stunning grass, Schizachyrium 'Blue Heaven', which I absolutely adore. Lately, I don't seem to be able to have a garden without at least a few Sedums...here we have 'Matrona' and 'October Daphne'. As you can see, but the end of July, things had pretty much started to take shape. I can't take too much credit...things just seem to WANT to grow in Portlands mild weather. As usual, it helps that our spring lasts until July, so plants have a good, long time to settle in before the drought of summer sets in. Mid-July is such a great time here in Portland. It's usually not too hot yet, and everything is still fairly green and fresh. The days are long and the rest of summer stretches out before you. Of course, the flip side to summer in Portland is that the rain just STOPS. No rain for 3 or so months isn't exactly ideal for most plants. Luckily, the drip system we installed makes watering easy. Since these plants were all newly-planted, I watered fairly regularly until about the middle of July, then started to taper off, watering only when something looked stressed. Generally, I'd water once a week or so...and this coming year, I'll probably only have to water every other week...perhaps less. Planting tough, drought-tolerant plants definitely makes sense in a parking strip. Here is the Muhlenbergia rigens again, starting to bloom...I just love it! Tall grasses are irresistable to cats, I think they are channeling their inner lion, just waiting for the next gazelle. I'm still not used to how quickly plants grow here in the PNW. As summer wore on, Panicum 'Huron Solstice' started its show...merely a rehearsal for what was to come. If there is such a thing, I'd say my garden typically "peaks" in August. While, in my mind, August is still high summer, the light definitely starts to change now...with morning and evening light having a warmer, mellower tone. Even in these newly-planted parking strips, everything seemed to be rushing to bloom. Looking back at it, I can hardly believe that whole area was just lawn a few months ago! August also marks the point at which the warm-season grasses start blooming, here we have Panicum 'Northwind' And here are the impossibly delicate stems of Molinia 'Skyracer', which is almost impossible to do justice in a photograph. While obviously limited in size, at moments like this, the parking strip garden succeeded in my goal of creating a micro-meadow. Here, at the end of August, I'm going to wrap up this post, the next post will cover Autumn through spring, bringing us full-circle for the year on this project. BTW, happy first day of spring!