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Godless in the garden

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Godless in the garden

Welcome to gardeners, growers of veggies, fruits, flowers, and trees!  

Welcome  backyard hen enthusiasts, worm farmers, beekeepers & composters!

Location: Planet Earth
Members: 140
Latest Activity: 12 hours ago

Welcome to Eden!

If you like to dig in the dirt, plant & prune, grow food & flowers, or sit and watch as someone else does your landscaping, you'll find something here to discuss!

Selected topics, in no particular order:
Moon Phase Widget here. Moon phase topic here.
What's your gardening style?
Frugal gardening.
Backyard Chickens here. here. here. here.
Growing Fruits
Wild Parsnip - It can burn skin.
Why buy locally-grown plants?
Squirrels.
bees.
Cheap gardening.
Buy locally grown plants to prevent blight transmission here.
Grow lots of fruits in a small space, by backyard orchard culture.

Discussion Forum

Sweet alyssum to fight aphids

Started by Ruth Anthony-Gardner. Last reply by Randall Smith yesterday. 1 Reply

Front yard gardening. Edible Estates.

Started by Sentient Biped. Last reply by Randall Smith on Thursday. 2 Replies

Tin can alley

Started by Randall Smith. Last reply by Randall Smith on Wednesday. 3 Replies

Do Earthworms Reduce Slug Damage?

Started by Sentient Biped. Last reply by Randall Smith on Tuesday. 4 Replies

Compost

Started by Joan Denoo. Last reply by Sentient Biped May 4. 2 Replies

Assisted Migration Adaptation Trial

Started by Joan Denoo. Last reply by Sentient Biped May 1. 1 Reply

May is Garden for Wildlife Month!

Started by Steph S.. Last reply by Sentient Biped May 1. 1 Reply

What's Growing in My Florida Garden

Started by Dominic Florio. Last reply by Idaho Spud Apr 22. 17 Replies

Brochures: Beneficial Insects

Started by Joan Denoo. Last reply by Steph S. Apr 21. 2 Replies

The Frugal Gardener

Started by Sentient Biped. Last reply by Sentient Biped Apr 16. 10 Replies

Sentient Biped's Garden Blog. Happy to add a different feed if there are suggestions.

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Comment by Chris Breman on January 8, 2013 at 6:00am

You make me jealous, Dominic! Such beautiful plants! We have a rainy winter with high temperatures (10°C), it's so warm that the birds are starting to sing already. The garlic I planted in October didn't even stop growing, but even so, I have to wait six weeks more before I can start sowing.

Comment by Sentient Biped on January 7, 2013 at 11:22pm

I mean Paradise!  Inept fingers on keyboard.

Your description of the ficus, also interesting.  I've seem photos of ficus taking over Mayan temples, and Angkor Wat.  

File:Thomson, Angkor Wat.jpg

Comment by Sentient Biped on January 7, 2013 at 11:15pm

Dominic, love the Orchids!  Paraduse!  But it's the tomato in season now that makes me salivate.  Garden of Eden.  Thanks for posting!

Comment by Dominic Florio on January 7, 2013 at 10:06pm

Currently happening in my Florida garden.

Comment by Joan Denoo on January 7, 2013 at 4:42pm

I wrote to Great Garden Plants and Stepables.com for "tread-able" or "step-able" plants and received this answer:

Isotoma or Blue Star Creeper: 

https://www.stepables.com/5/Isotoma_fluviatilis_Blue_Star_Creeper.html

https://www.stepables.com/scripts/prodlist-plants.asp?palntingCatId...

and 

Sedum rupestre ‘Angelina’

Angelina Stonecrop
USDA Zone: 3-9
Plant number: 1.485.430

A terrific low evergreen groundcover for sunny areas with poor dry soil. This forms a trailing mat of succulent golden-yellow leaves. Clusters of yellow starry flowers appear during the summer. When planted in containers or on a wall this develops a beautiful cascading habit. Plants may be pruned back at any time if they get too large. Foliage sometimes develops beautiful amber tones in the autumn and winter. Does well in large rock gardens where the plants can be given room to spread. Best with occasional to no foot traffic. Drought tolerant. Registered with COPF: royalty required for propagation.

http://www.perennials.com/plants/sedum-rupestre-angelina.html

Some of these don't seem to be very "tread-able" to me, but at least it is a list of some possibilities. 

Oh, 6" of new snow since last night, and temperature 36 degrees F. now. Flooding and mud will be next. Spring is going to get here! Hopefully the snow will remain in the mountains for our summer water source. 

\

Comment by Joan Denoo on January 7, 2013 at 12:28pm

Chris, aren't natural processes grand! All the beauty, bounty, energy that exists in and on Earth, and much of it we don't even see. Just now we have 6 new inches of snow since last night and the temperature rises to above freezing as I type. OH DEAR, we are going to see the power of flooding water soon. 
The Spokane River exists because of a fault line that was cracked open because of volcanism, then the Ice Age filled it with ice, the river gorge deepened and widened because of Ice Age floods, and now we have a  beautiful river cascading through our city. It is time to go to the river and hear, feel, and see the forces of nature at work. 

Comment by Joan Denoo on January 7, 2013 at 12:20pm
Amer, what a lovely thing to say. Yes, we in the USA do not understand the power of myth in your country. My perception is that myth as history or sociology or philosophy is a wonderful thing. When it gets tangled in with government it corrupts both.
Wherever I lived or travelled, I always tried to get away from tourist places and walked the streets of Istanbul, east and west Berlin, Kenai Alaska when it was still a fishing village, and Baturiti Indonesia, and many points in between. Having those splendid experiences taught me how many USA citizens hold a provincial view life.
Amer, I am grateful for people such as yourself who are willing to share experiences and beliefs. We need you.
Comment by Joan Denoo on January 7, 2013 at 12:08pm

Dominic Florio, I agree, the tree reclaimed its rightful place and your words perfectly state the important point, nature overcomes buildings made by humans in the end. I wonder how Trump Tower will look when nature takes over once again 

Comment by Dominic Florio on January 7, 2013 at 10:46am

In Fort Desoto Park, Florida, a ficus had grown over the fort and over the path to the otherside.  I was in awe of it as I always am with strangler figs/banyans and their relatives.  Then during a visit, I saw that the tree had been removed.  There was a sign explaining that the fort was in danger of eventually being destroyed by the tree.  I would love to see a sign there that states, "This is the site of Fort Desota, which has returned to nature and been replaced by this beautiful tree."

Comment by amer chohan on January 7, 2013 at 6:57am

  and put away old myths and delusions. 

Joan! living in the society like mine, one can't get away from the myths. It comes in so many unaviodable forms. It is even the part of curriculum I teach. Even while saying hello and goodbys.

Wether you have noticed or not there are not many active non-Americans on Nexus. Reason for my hanging on is that it is only place for me where I can get away from the Myth arround me. I am personaly thankful to you because you are the person who is making this hanginging about easy.

 

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