Your cart is currently empty!
Cyclamen Plant Care For Winter Colour
Cyclamen are beautiful plants that are beloved around the holidays. Indoor cyclamen plant care is quite different from other houseplants.
Your cart is currently empty!
The rose I went for is the one I know as Frontenac. I brought a four-cup measuring cup with me and filled it with rose petals. My first batch of rose petal jelly is ready to eat.
Greetings fellow gardeners,
Oh, my goodness it is hot and dry. Hopefully, the temperatures will go down to normal soon and we get some rain. So many of my plants are blooming right now, which is lovely, but the heat makes the blossoms end quickly. Irises, roses, and peonies are flowering fast and then gone. Lower temperatures should slow things down.
Early Monday morning I walked to the back of my property where huge thorny roses grow against the fence. The rose I went for is the one I know as Frontenac. I brought a four-cup measuring cup with me and filled it with rose petals. My first batch of rose petal jelly is ready to eat.
It is a good time to take a walk around your garden and see what is going on. Last fall I tried layering bulbs in a large pot. I have been hoping for some sign of flowers, but so far all that has emerged is a few blue alliums. The red orach I seeded over the surface has done well and is ready to eat. I planted a tomato in the center and some purple alyssum to show off the colour of the orach. When my orach reaches about four feet, I can cut it and harvest the leaves, or I can harvest the leaves as I want them. I usually pull off a few leaves for every salad, chop them and enjoy their rich spinach taste.
I checked on the cool crop planter and it is doing well. The radishes are huge and need to be thinned. The peas are starting to climb, as is the spinach and the Swiss chard is happy. I need to fill the little bee-waterer every day because there is a red squirrel that continuously sucks the water out of it.
Although we have hot weather, I still have plants that need to get planted. I have several peppers that will be potted up and placed here and there. I don’t want a concentration of peppers as I am trying to avoid pests. The Queensland Blue squash I planted in the hügelkultur are doing well. I cut the bottom out of some pots and planted them into the ‘pot sleeve’ so they could have a concentration of nutrients. I am planting the rest of the squash there as well, and those roots can work on mixing up the components of the hügelkultur.
There are several Kevin tomatoes that need to be planted. One of my too-many cats, Kevin, has a problem with labels and reaches through the netting to pull out the labels and hide them. Last year he did that with my zucchini and cucumber seedlings, and this year I find myself with many unnamed tomato seedlings. A friend is coming by this week as she enjoys working in the garden and I have more than enough goutweed that needs to be destroyed. It is a very productive time.
Keep watering and feed your tomatoes once a week; you do not want blossom-end rot. If you are using a commercial tomato food, follow the directions carefully or you may burn your plants. I’m going to enjoy my rose petal jelly.
Enjoy your week. Judith.
Contact Judith through her Website https://www.lapisdragonarts.com/
Logging in to comment gives you more features, but it is not required.
Cyclamen are beautiful plants that are beloved around the holidays. Indoor cyclamen plant care is quite different from other houseplants.
The Hairy Beardtongue is a tough, small, easy-to-control plant that does not spread widely, with attractive and delicate blooms.
One of the best ways to maximize a small garden is to take advantage of the vertical space that you do have.
Choose the right plants for your monarch butterfly garden. If you feed them plants they like, they will pollinate your entire garden.
Discover why birds love berried shrubs for winter – Winterberry, Mountain Ash, Cranberry, Coralberry, Tartan Dogwood, Snowberry, Serviceberry, Chokeberry and Elderberry – to provide essential nutrients, calories, and visuals your garden needs!
GardeningCalendar.ca gets some funding from advertisers. If you click on links and advertisements at no cost to you, the site may receive a small commission that helps fund its operation.
© 2025 J&S Calendars Ltd.