| I picked the first asparagus spear this week! |
Year: 2013
Want to Grow a Possum?
“The other day I generously shared a gardening tip for growing a container cat. Today’s tip is for growing a possum in a bag of potting soil. Simply sow possum seeds in the bag (no need to poke drainage holes or even water–in fact, do not poke anything!). Wait several weeks and CAUTIOUSLY check on the bag. You should find a fully grown, albeit grumpy possum who resents being disturbed and does not wish to vacate said bag. Then, just buy another bag of potting soil and let him have this one. And that concludes today’s Helpful Gardening Tip.”
It’s good to know how to grow a possum!
Visit Jody’s Facebook page for her farm.

It’s Farm and Garden Tour Season
more information.
Boyle Garden Center at 842 West Liberty Street in Sumter on the day of the
tour. Don’t forget the Sumter Iris Festival, one of SC’s oldest festivals, featuring Swan Lake Iris Gardens in Sumter, May 24-27. Visit http://www.sumtersc.gov/ for more information. I hope to go to this festival for the first time this year.
for more information or call Dan Tye at (919) 542-2402.
too, with information available on the Carolina Farm Stewards website. I went on the Upstate Farm Tour a couple of years ago and enjoyed seeing the farms as well as purchasing produce fresh from the farm.
Start an Herb Garden This Spring
week to purchase some salad greens, I stopped in front of the packets of fresh
herbs. Many years ago, I purchased some
fresh herbs from the grocery store in my desperation to try a special recipe
during a time I was without access to a garden, but most of the time I rely on
dried or fresh herbs from my garden.
couple of stems of basil 4 inches long, using fresh herbs in the quantity I
like to use them is expensive.
Exceptions are fresh cilantro and parsley; stores sell rather large
bunches of these herbs for a dollar or two, and because our heat usually makes
the cilantro bolt to seed before tomatoes are ready to make salsa, I buy it at
the store.
call for fresh herbs, or if you do buy the expensive packets of herbs that
cannot actually be fresh by the time they reach the grocery store, try growing
your own herbs. Many of the dried herbs are
products of China. No matter how small
your garden, it is easy to grow your own for fresh consumption and to dry some
for use the rest of the year.
herbs, even if you don’t have room for anything else. I used to have an herb garden, but now I mix
the perennial herbs in with my flowers and shrubs and I plant the annual herbs
in rows in the vegetable garden. They
are easy to grow, and with the exception of mint, behave themselves. Mint needs the confines of a pot to contain
the runners; if you ignore this advice, you will battle the runners for the
rest of your gardening career. My mint
is not in a pot, and we fight.
once it decides it belongs in your garden, it does not require
maintenance. In the winter or early
spring, tiny beautiful purple blooms attract honeybees. Rosemary likes hot dry sites; my mother has
tried for years to find some shrub that will grow across the front of her brick
home that the afternoon sun bakes all day; rosemary thrives where many other
shrubs have died over the years.
waterings, but I don’t let it dry out so much that it begins to wilt. Many plants tolerate this treatment, but
rosemary does not. Rosemary will also die
in soggy soil. I have killed many more
rosemary plants than have lived in my yard, but because I persevered, I have
several healthy, trouble-free plants. If
you kill rosemary in one place, move it somewhere else until you find a good
spot. If a friend has an established
rosemary bush, ask him or her to reach under the bush and remove some baby
rosemary plants that have rooted from the mother plant for you.
| In the upper right corner, you can see the exuberant basil mixed with the crowder peas at the end of the summer. |
likes conditions similar to rosemary’s preferences. My mother has a patch of sage growing in the
same baking sun the rosemary likes that is older than I am, but she gave me
several starts of her sage before I got one to grow in my garden. Using my own sage in recipes instead of that
jarred “rubbed sage” is worth the trouble.
Thyme and oregano like more consistently moist, but not soggy, sites.
