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Stories Tagged - Gardening

Courtesy Trail Appliances.
News

June 01, 2017 | Donna Balzer

Forest in a pot

Growing trees and shrubs in pots around your condo or townhome deck saves space, money and time

For Mike in Lethbridge, it started as a rescue operation.

He found dead-looking shrubs in the garbage behind stores and homes. He revived them, not as full-sized trees, but as miniature, windswept versions of their bigger selves.

His rescues became bonsai, and he built a delicate forest of trees in tiny pots.

Before I met Mike, I had never seen a crabapple or potentilla in a bonsai pot.

Why bother with bonsai? While a crabapple tree at 10 metres tall is a big tree, a 60-centimetre version in a bonsai pot is the perfect size for a patio. And the brilliant red crabapples, 1.5 centimetres across on a full-sized tree, are still the same size on a bonsai version of the same tree.

With an overhanging roof for seating and barbecuing, a simple shed was transformed into a comfortable back yard retreat. Donna Balzer / For CREB®Now
News

May 18, 2017 | Donna Balzer

Back garden oasis


There is no need to leave town with a garden retreat in your back yard


Together with her husband Bruce, Linda converted a back yard shed into a retreat – a cabin retreat.


"You gotta have a cabin in the back yard," said Linda, my neighbour.


Tiny changes in elevation and orientation can alter the microclimate of a garden. Donna Balzer / For CREB®Now
News

May 04, 2017 | Donna Balzer

Shelter from the storm


Avid gardeners should consider elevation, climate and soil before buying a new home


As many Albertans know, we can get some really nasty hail storms. Years ago, when we lived in Airdrie, my kids got pelted by golf-ball-sized hail walking back from school. They survived, but my garden wasn't as lucky; the hail had stripped leaves off trees and pummeled my native orchids into the dirt. After nine years in Airdrie, it was the final straw. We listed the house and moved back to Calgary.


Thankfully, garden enthusiasts can now look up factors that impact their garden, such as elevation, before buying a house. Other factors that affect a garden, like soil and microclimate, can be changed, but elevation is fixed. If you are a gardener looking to buy or sell in a satellite community, here are some gardening tips to consider:


Photo by Donna Balzer / For CREB®Now
News

April 20, 2017 | Donna Balzer

A place for plants


By following three simple rules, you can keep your apartment plants happy and healthy


They say you should raise a plant before you raise a pet – it's a warm-up activity. At the very least, tropical plants are easier to take care of, and cheaper too.


Apartment-ready plants, typically in four inch (9 cm) pots, are available at most grocery stores. At that size they're not a big financial or emotional investment. Plus, tiny tropical varieties are just so cute. Before bringing home a baby houseplant, however, it's important to think of the light and space you have available in your apartment.


A simple windowsill is all that is needed to grow delicious, fresh herbs, like basil. Photo by Donna Balzer / For CREB®Now
News

April 27, 2017 | Donna Balzer

Kitchen herbs


Grow your own herbs and inspire your next culinary creation


Is there a shortage of basil at the store? No problem. Frost in the garden? No worries. Basil and other herbs are always in season and at your fingertips when you grow them right in your own kitchen.


A herb garden in the kitchen is amazing. And if you're the family cook or aspiring chef, you already know that fresh herbs bring meals to life. With a little space and the right kit, herbs practically grow themselves. Or, if you prefer a low-tech approach, even a modest a windowsill can suffice.


The Environmental Working Group says conventional potatoes have more pesticides by weight than any other fresh food. Getty Images
News

March 30, 2017 | Donna Balzer

Potatoes for every appetite


Simple to grow, potatoes are a good starting point for people interested in growing their own produce


Like blaming the dog for eating your homework, John Mills was blaming his tractor for missing my interview call.


"I had to duct-tape my tractor radiator back together to get it working," he said.


Mills, a fourth-generation farmer from Bowden, Alberta, is still using the same tractor his father bought second hand when John was a boy. His father started growing potatoes commercially in 1987 for the french fry market. Mills now grows 45 different kinds of potatoes, including the traditional Russet Burbank french fry potato.

Naturally black in colour, and high in carbon, biochar is charcoal used as a soil amendment. Increases soil fertility of acidic soils. It also aids in soil retention of nutrients, which stay in the soil instead of leaching back into the ground, causing pollution. Photo by Donna Balzer / For CREB®Now
News

March 16, 2017 | Donna Balzer

From oil to soil


Boost your soil, save your back and protect the environment this spring with biochar


Al Chomica, formerly from Calgary, is explaining to me over the phone how biochar, a new garden product he is testing, holds both minerals and soil life firmly. He has been making biochar for years, but this spring he is excited to try a new commercial source.


Biochar, a natural long-lasting form of soil humus, is created from burning organic matter in a low-oxygen environment. It is not wood ash. It is the hard part left over after the fire. Chomica says it stockpiles food in the soil, saves your back and will improve the world.


Getty Images
News

March 01, 2017 | Donna Balzer

Grass for Roscoe

Even our feline friends enjoy the taste of freshly grown greens

"Hey guess what Anne? I grew some cat grass for Roscoe!"


I was calling my friend ahead of my flight to Calgary and was just so excited. In just five days the cat grass seeds I'd planted had sprouted in their little four-inch pot and were now ready to eat. It was a special treat I was hoping my friend's cat would enjoy.


News

Feb. 07, 2017 | Donna Balzer

Even plants need a spa day

How to freshen up houseplants in the shower


newDonnawebDo you have a layer of dust on your indoor plants from the pre-Obama era?


As the sun shines on my plants, I can see it's been too long. If I can write my name on the leaves in dust, I know it's time to send my greenery to the shower.


Light levels are so low in February in Calgary that any extra interference, like dust, slows houseplants down and blocks the already limited light. If leaf tips are browning or whole leaves yellowing, the plant is probably cutting its losses by getting rid of the lazy leaves that are too shaded to give back.


In nature, regular rains wash leaves clean, but in your apartment or house, plants need a helping hand.


Once picked, tomatoes don't tend to last long, unless you've got the right variety.
News

Feb. 16, 2017 | Donna Balzer

How much would you pay for a home grown tomato?



Hamlet tomatoes don't come cheap, but store well

My daughter was the first to notice I paid $12.95 for Hamlet tomato seeds.

And as she looked over my shoulder at the price, I was embarrassed. I admitted I ordered them without price checking and I wondered: would these seeds really be worth three times the price of every other seed?

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