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Starre V.'s Twitter Updates

How to easily upcycle your clothes- fun videos to show you how (skirt to a dress and belts to necklaces) http://tinyurl.com/yljjvgy 9 days ago
@ecosalon's coverage of Rachel Avalon's PGS win with quotes from the judges about Rachel (including mine) http://tinyurl.com/ykcsp2k 9 days ago
Green Spaces NY Launch: A Place for Ecopreneurs · Eco-Chick http://bit.ly/3PtRw6 10 days ago
The latest DIY reuse project How To Make a Coffee and Egg White Facial Mask by @CanarsieBK on @Greenopolis http://bit.ly/48qKOk 10 days ago
Behind the Scenes at Project Green Search model competition (from the judge's perspective): http://tinyurl.com/yf6ddza 10 days ago
 

The time to plant tulip, iris, a...

Posted Sep 13 2008 6:42pm

tuberose.jpg

The time to plant tulip, iris, and hyacinth bulbs is past in much of the country, but spring planting is right around the corner. Gladiolas, tuberoses, and dalias will be ready to add to your garden, and virtually thumbing through garden catalogs online is a great way to beat the winter blues.

This past fall I ordered from Old House Gardens, the well-known, well-loved and very favorably reviewed mail order bulb company. The reason they merit mention here is because they specialize in antique, heirloom and endangered bulbs. The variety of their flowering bulbs is amazing, and they give you a run down of where and when the bulb was originally planted. Some of their bulbs are from lines that started as early as the 1200’s, though the most antique selections tend have the most limited availability.

If you want a unique garden, as well as one that preserves old lines of flowers, heirloom bulbs are the way to go. And to learn more about human beings’ connection with flowers, read the “Tulip” chapter of Michael Pollan’sThe Botany of Desire for enlightenment.

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