Please click here to read newsletter if not displayed below: http://www.greenarrownurseries.com
Green Arrow
Edition 8.12 The Interactive Garden Gazette March 20, 2008
FREE
Coupon
coupon

3 day forecast

weather forecast

North Hills
Weather Courtesy of:
weather sponsor


NORTH HILLS
Newsletter
Subscribe Now:

Click here to subscribe, unsubscribe, or change your address.

sponsor

sponsor

sponsor


links
Links to
Our Recent Galleries:
 
Advertised Specials
 
Aloe Vera
Angel Trumpet
Avocados
Azaleas - Shade
Azaleas - Sun
 
Bird Baths 20% Off
Bird Feeders and Foods
Blueberries
 
Books
Bougainvillea
Boxwood
Brazilian Sky Flower
Bromeliads
Butterfly Bush
 
Caladiums
Camellias
Citrus Trees
Clivia - Yellow
Cocoa Mulch
Coleus
 
Conifers
Cultural Information
 
Daylilies
 
 
Employment
 
Erosion Control
Jute Netting
 
Fertilizers -Garden
Bandini
Best
GrowMore - Organic
Miracle-Gro
Osmocote
Schultz
Whitney Farms - Organic
 
Fertilizers -Lawn
Bandini
Best
Marathon
Miracle-Gro Lawn Food
Organic
Scotts Lawn Pro
 
Fountains 20% Off
Al's Garden Art
Avilas
Brandelli
Trevi Fountains
 
Foxglove
 
Fruit Trees
 
 
Garden Clogs – “Sloggers”
 
Garden Edging
Suncast
 
Gazebos
 
Glove Selection
 
Hanging Baskets
 
Herbs
Hibiscus
 
Hines Growers
Clematis "Raymond Evison Series"
Daylilies “Gala”
Hibiscus “Bahama Bay”
Hydrangeas “Halo”
 
House Plants
 
Insect Controls
 
Ironite
 
Irrigation
Champion Brass Sprinkler Systems
RainDrip Drip Systems
 
Kangaroo Paw
 
Landscape Rock
The ROCK
 
Magazines
 
Mail Boxes
 
Maples
Japanese
 
Mist Systems
Mist & Cool
 
Monrovia Growers
Free! Educational Brochures
Knock Out Roses
Topiaries
 
Morning Glory
 
Orchids
Cymbidium Gallery
Food by Grow-More
 
Palm Trees
 
Passion Flowers
 
Patio Furniture
 
Planting Mix (Farmer's Organic)
Plumeria
 
Pottery Selection
Designer
Selection at Store
 
Proven Winners Flowers
 
Redwood
Arbors
Containers
Fountains – Barrel
Potting Tables
Trellis Selection
Yard Art
 
Repellents – Animal
 
Roses
Bush Type
Care Information
Care Products
Easy Care
Flower Carpet Roses
Knock Out Roses
Miniature
Tree Roses
 
Shade Cloth
 
Snail and Slug Baits
SOD - Marathon
 
SOIL - Amendments
Kellogg's
Farmers
Miracle-Gro
Sunshine Peat Moss
 
SOIL – Planting & Potting
Miracle-Gro
Uni-Gro
 
Soil - Softeners
Steer Manure
Step2
Stephanotis
 
Tomatoes
Tomatillo
Topiaries
 
Trees
Shade
 
Tropicals
 
Vegetables
 
Vines
Flowering
 
Passion Flower
 
Water Gardens
Water Garden Plants
 
Water Garden
Products
Laguna
 
Water In - Soil Softener
Weed Control - Non Selective
Ortho
Round Up
 
Weed – Preventers
 
Wild Flowers
 
Yard Art
Pink Flamingos

time to:

March

PLANT CITRUS: When danger of frost has passed, it is safe to plant citrus. You can now see the years-best selection of lime, lemon, orange, tangerine, tangelo, and grapefruit trees in both standard and dwarf sizes.

 


Be a Guest Gardener:

Gardeners love to learn from other gardeners "over the fence". We would love to include a tour and or an article from one of our readers!

Drop us an email!

sponsor

sponsor

sponsor

sponsor

sponsor

nursery

nursery

nursery

nursery

nursery

Click to Print
Guest Gardener
Amazing Azaleas

Azaleas are easy to love. Their amazing flowers put on an incredible display of color every spring like clockwork, helping to herald the coming growing season. Whether in a formal or a woodland garden setting, azaleas make a great addition to any garden. When these plants are in full bloom, it's almost impossible to see the foliage underneath.

For centuries, azaleas were grown only in Japanese gardens. But then native species were discovered in North America and eventually types from both countries found their way to Europe. Deciduous species (Exbury hybrids) are primarily from North America, while evergreen species (Belgian, Southern Indica, as well as Girard and Satsuki hybrids) are from Japan and Europe.

Azaleas are versatile and can be used in almost any spot in the garden provided they have good drainage. While Belgian, Girard and Kurume hybrids prefer partial shade in the afternoon, Exbury hybrids, Southern Indicas and Satsuki hybrids can be grown in full sun in all but the hottest areas. Azalea flowers come in almost every color shade imaginable, and the bushes range from dwarf shade varieties of 2-3', to the sun lovers that can grow from 4-8' high and wide.

Homeowners in mild climates can select almost any species of azalea for their garden. But in colder areas, Exbury hybrids and some of the newer winter-hardy hybrids should be used. They also reward gardeners with good fall colors in shades of orange and red. Many have sweetly-scented blooms. If you are short on space in your landscape, consider planting azaleas in containers to add another dimension to your garden.

Azaleas grow well in evenly moist and slightly acidic soil. They perform best when the soil is amended with peat moss or an acid planting mix like Whitney Farms Azalea & Camellia Planting Mix before planting. They also like to be fed every few months with cottonseed meal or an acid plant food such as Whitney Farms Azalea & Camellia Fertilizer. We recommend feeding from the end of the blooming season through early fall.

Azaleas don't require much pruning if the proper varieties are selected for the desired mature size. If occasional pruning is needed to control size or wayward branches, prune from one month after the blooming season has ended through August. Pruning any later can remove the new blooms that are starting to set for the following spring--these can start as early as September.

Whether pruned formally into shapes or left natural to blend in with the local surroundings, azaleas make a wonderful addition to any garden, with their extraordinary offering of beautiful spring flowers.

special
special
special
special

Rose Slugs

rose

Spring is just around the corner--or so we hope. We all look forward to spring and all the freshness, the new tender foliage, and the beautiful flowers. Even just thinking of that first bloom from the rose bushes in the garden brings happiness to our hearts and smiles to our faces. But spring brings something else to our gardens that winter has minimized. Insects.

Beginning this year, we would like you to consider a new approach to your gardens and all the living creatures that dwell there. That approach is tolerance and integrated pest management. Agriculture uses the term "agricultural entomology," which applies an economic threshold--the point when it becomes more economically necessary to save a crop than to do nothing. That point is reached only when, without action, the entire crop could not be saved. But we're talking about our gardens, where the issue is actually more aesthetic than economic.

Our gardens are living ecosystems. You are probably unaware of much of that ecosystem , but it is integral and important, nonetheless. Use of pesticides is an escalation to the maximum sentence for an insect that is considered a pest. That pesticide may kill your pest, but it will also kill beneficial insects indiscriminately. And some of those beneficial insects are actually predators for the very pest you are targeting. Unfortunately, pesticides kill them all. So find out who your garden friends are, discover what they like to live on, breed on and feed upon. Add those plants to your garden, offering a welcome mat to the beneficial insects--and observe the decrease in the pest population, right before your eyes. There are many beneficial insects in your gardens. Ladybugs and their larvae are common, and so are the green lacewing larvae. Today, learn a new approach to the rose slug. He'll be in our gardens before we know it, if he isn't already.

slug

The rose slug is a sawfly larva (note - that means that its presence will be a temporary one). In your garden, this variety of sawfly, actually a tiny wasp, is one of your garden friends. Once it becomes an adult it likes to feed on other soft-bodied insects and, like the bee, acts as a pollinator. So as an adult, this insect is a beneficial one for humans. Here's the rub--its larva, the rose slug, is seemingly the rose lover's worst enemy! Or is it the rose leaf lover's worst enemy?

The American Rose Society website informs us: "Rose slugs are the immature stages of primitive wasps called sawflies. Rose slugs look more like caterpillars than slugs. They are not slimy and do not have rasping mouthparts like true slugs. The young larva begins feeding as a skeletonizer on the underside of the leaves and as it matures, it chews large holes on the leaves."

Recommended control: rose slugs look like caterpillars but they are not; consequently insecticides for caterpillars, such as Bacillus thuringiensis, will not kill them. If there are only a few rose bushes infested with the rose slugs, pull the leaves off and kill any larvae found on the upper or lower surfaces of the leaves.

Just about any contact insecticide labeled for use on roses will kill the rose slugs. Try to use the least toxic one possible, because you don't want to kill beneficial insects in your garden. Spray oil products such as Green Light Rose Defense are the least toxic, but still effective when sprayed directly onto the rose slug. You should also spray the soil under the rose bushes, as the larvae pupate in the soil prior to overwintering. If the damage is very widespread, chemical control may be indicated. We recommend Bayer Shrub & Tree Full Year Insect Protection.

Every year, we all face a "crop" of rose slugs in our rose gardens. Spring will soon be upon us, and only time will tell what this year brings us. Many of us are huge rose lovers and have many shrubs and climbers in our gardens. But one comment we would like to make to those of you who are "zero tolerant" of the little guy chewing at your rose leaves...most of us aren't growing the rose for its leaf. We don't cut the rose from the bush, throw out the rose and rose buds, and put the leafy cane into a vase. Your rose shrub will be able to continue to photosynthesize with fewer leaves, or leaves with holes. Keep this in mind when you are making a decision about the IPM (Integrated Pest Management) level of rose slug control in your gardens. Remember that the adult sawfly is a beneficial insect.

special
special
special
special
special
special
special
special
special
special
special
special
Article Picture

Are you considering a new landscape for next year? If you're tired of your old garden look or have a brand new yard that needs landscaping, consider our team for all of your design and installation needs.

Green Arrow Nursery Consultants are experts in landscape design. We know which plants grow well in our area, and our design team is knowledgeable in all of the latest plant introductions and landscape techniques.

We work with you to design and create a look that is unique for you and truly reflects your needs and desires. But many people make the mistake of contacting us in spring when we are already booked up for most of the year. It takes time to design a landscape plan for your home, and we invite you to plan ahead and let us design your landscape plan now so we can add you to our work schedule when the weather warms in spring.

Give us a call today at (818)894-8306. We're here to make sure all of your garden dreams come true!

Article Picture
Green Arrow Nursery

IN THIS ISSUE

*** Click to enlarge images and open galleries. ***
Fragrant Rosemary

Perhaps one of the most versatile plants available for home gardens is the fragrant rosemary. A plant that dates back to ancient Roman times, rosemary remains as popular as ever due to its intensely fragrant foliage and bright, vivid blue flowers.

The foliage can add flavor and spice to cooking as well as aroma to potpourri and beauty to flower arrangements.

Rosemary plants are evergreen, and are not only attractive to look at but also easy to grow. They tolerate poor soil conditions, are very drought and heat tolerant once established and require only occasional feeding to keep them happy. They prefer full sun but will tolerate partial shade locations as well.

Rosemary are generally divided into two different plant types--upright and trailing.

Upright varieties have rigid upright branches with aromatic needle-like leaves. Most upright varieties can grow up to 4-6 feet high and half as wide. They can be placed as individual specimens or used to create beautiful low to medium-sized hedges.

Trailing varieties create a beautiful flow of fragrant foliage that forms an attractive carpet that can cascade from a container or rock wall. Trailing varieties also look great in rock gardens. These ground cover types generally grow 1-2 feet tall and can spread as much as 6-8 feet wide, if left untrimmed.

Rosemary plants are also are excellent for slopes and useful in erosion control.

Consider adding some rosemary plants to your garden. You'll love the fragrant foliage, as well as the butterflies and hummingbirds the beautiful blue flowers attract.

Garden Primer

How often should I feed my lawn?

Answer:
We recommend feeding lawns every two months during the growing season. You can start off by applying a lawn food in late winter to early spring that contains a pre-emergent herbicide to help prevent crabgrass and other weeds from germinating.

After that, switch to a complete lawn food like Scott's Lawn Pro.

If summer weeds become a problem, apply a weed and feed fertilizer like Scott's Turf Builder 2.

Make sure to give your lawn a final feeding in fall, before it goes dormant, to keep it green through winter. If a lawn goes into the winter looking yellow, you won't be able to green it up until temperatures warm up again.

Click to print this article.


IN THIS ISSUE

*** Click to enlarge images and open galleries. ***

 

featured quote

FEATURED QUOTE :

"To create a garden is to search for a better world. In our effort to improve on nature, we are guided by a vision of paradise....This hope for the future is at the heart of all gardening."
- Marina Schinz

LOOKING FOR OUR NORTH HILLS LOCATION?
map
10 Minute Szechuan Chicken

Make your own take-out with this quick and easy dish! Feel free to spice it up by adding your own hot sauce.

What You Need

  • 1 tablespoon corn oil
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 2 boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1/4 cup soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar
  • 1/2 red bell pepper, julienned
  • 1 carrot, julienned
  • 1 small zucchini, julienned
  • 1/4 cup chicken broth
  • 1 tablespoon light brown sugar
  • 1 bunch scallions, cut diagonally into 1-inch pieces
  • Hot cooked rice

Step by Step:

  • Heat the oils in a wok over high heat.
  • Toss the cubed chicken breast in a bowl with the cornstarch to coat.
  • Add the chicken and minced garlic to the wok and stir-fry until the chicken is lightly browned.
  • Add the remaining ingredients except the scallions.
  • Cover and cook for three minutes.
  • Add the scallions.
  • Cover and cook for two more minutes.
  • Serve with hot cooked rice or fried rice.

Yield: 4 servings

print

print this click here for a printer-friendly version of the articles