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Hot Gardens Newsletter  
November & December 2005

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Let's Pretend.  In Fall we can pretend we live in benign climates that allow us to grow traditional flowering annuals, such as pansies.  In fact, our mild Autumn weather is almost a second Springtime, especially for gardeners who live at lower elevations in the desert with warm winters.  Plant pretty annuals like carpets in empty flower beds to replace any perennials that die back.  Or fill pots on your patio to overflowing.  At higher, cold-winter elevations they may only last a few weeks, but what a lovely indulgence!

  Perennial Favorite.  A reliable and prolific bloomer in a desert garden in winter is the Salvia leucantha, the Mexican Bush Sage.  It is a super-tough plant with tall spires of purple or purple and white flowers that stay in bloom through December.  Cut it back to about 8 inches high in January and it will re-grow and bloom again in March.

It It Tulip Time?  Plant bulbs, rhizomes and corms soon to assure yourself of Springtime flowers.  Freesia and Iris are two of our favorites.  Both require little water and no attention.  The incredibly fragrant Freesia dies back to the ground after blooming; the Iris keeps its leaves and provides an upright structural element in a garden border.  If you already have Iris, split and replant the rhizomes now for double the flowers next year.  About tulips:  yes, you can plant the bulbs, but they really love a damper, milder climate -- like the Netherlands.  You may be much better off planting bulbs native to South Africa, such as the freesia-like Tritonia or the Watsonia borbonica, which looks like a miniature gladiolus.  The low-growing Babiana is a Sub-Sahara native also worth considering as an edging plant.  It looks somewhat like a crocus and does well in a desert garden.

Bird Flu Caution!  While there has not yet been a reported case of bird flu in the United States, there has been in South America and, apparently, among racing pigeons in Canada.  So, if you find a dead bird in your garden, do not simply pick it up and toss it in the trash.  Leave it where it is and call your local health authority to find out what steps you should take.  Be sure to keep your pets away from any dead birds.

It Goes Without Saying -- but we will say it anyway:  add organic mulch to your flower garden borders now to protect your plants for winter and improve the soil.

Go to our Newsletter for November 2004  or November 2003

 

 

 

 

 

 
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