All My Friends are Flowers

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The Resurrection Fern

January 24, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

I love houseplants in the winter.  There’s something about greenery indoors in the middle of a bleak January that eases my cabin feaver.  Many housplants {especially ferns} help purify and clean the indoor air.  Clean air is hard to come by this week due to the Utah Valley inversion.  When I look out my window at the hazy smog I feel some comfort in the fact that I have a few housplants working to rid my air of the toxins creeping in from outside. Yes, I love housplants in the winter, but my love for housplants is seasonal.

I can’t stand having houseplants in the summer. When the garden is producing delicious leafy things, when the perennials are in full blossom, and the patio containers have verbena trickling down their sides I have little tolerance for indoor plants.  This might seem ungrateful, considering all they did for me over the winter, but its the turth.  My plants indoors can feel neglected since I’m spending most my time outside deadheading and fertilizing.  So I usually gather up all my housplants and move them to the shadier parts of my yard. The lucky survivors of a few cool september nights have the luxury of being invited back in for the winter {providing they bring no insects or pests with them}.

There is another solution for my seasonal need for indoor green.  How about a plant you can kill near the end of March when the tulips begin to bloom and revive in October when you’ve trimmed your last perennial to the ground.  Impossible you say?  Let me introduce you to the resurrection fern.

This fern, native to the southeastern United States and Africa, is a remarkable little plant.  Its name is derived from its ability to survive very long periods of drought.  This fern is an epiphyte or an air plant, which means it gets nutrients and water from the air.  You can set them in a dish of water and within minutes they’ll start to open their fronds and turn green.  A constant supply of water will keep them happy and thriving.  As their water supply dries out they begin to curl and turn brown once again. 

I like to keep mine on my coffee table.  There’s no conversation piece like a plant that cant be killed.  During the summer months I store it carfully in a dry, dark place and bring it out agian in winter for some air-purifying greenery.

I found mine at a local specialty nursery, Cactus and Tropicals in Salt Lake City, but you can also order them online.  You can also find them on Amazon sold in different sizes and varieties. 

Filed Under: Here's How, Houseplants, Uncategorized

Early Blooming Spring Perennials

January 7, 2013 by Lacey 1 Comment

The holidays are finally over.  I dont know what it is, but leading up to Christmas I can’t get enough snow.  I think that chilly days are festive and that evergreens look majestic next to skeleton-like maples.  But come the 26th the Christmas tree cant come down fast enough and I rush to my mailbox every afternoon to see if the Burpee catalog has arrived.  My feelings about snow go from festive to tolerant, as I remind myself that the snow showers of January and February provide for luschious July gardens. 

In anticipation for a spring that will come, I’ve compiled a few of my early spring favorites.  These are the resiliant few that can withstand the sometimes frigid Utah spring nights.  I’ve put them outdoors in early March and had great success {as well as much needed outdoor color}.  A word of warning: although the plants themselves can withstand  very cool tempuratures, night time frosts can damage the colorful blossoms.  By covering blooms with a frost cloth, towel, or sheet, you can keep the frost from settling on the blooms. 

All My Friends are Flowers
Favorite Hardy Early Blooming Perennials

1) Bellis or English Daisy {Bellis perennis}

picture found here

This daisy comes in solid or mixed colors and works well in containers or beds.

USDA Zones: 4-8
Height: 6-12”
Width: 6”
Sun: Full Sun
Bloom Time: early-mid spring, early-mid fall

2) Rockfoil {Saxifraga x arendsii}

picture found here

USDA Zones: 4-8
Height: 6-8”
Width: 6-9”
Sun: Full Sun
Bloom Time: early-mid spring

3) English Primrose {Primula vulgaris}

picture found here

USDA Zones: 3-9
Height: 6-8”
Width: 6-9”
Sun: Full Sun
Bloom Time: early-mid spring

Looking for more early spring color?  Click on a picture below to check out other All My Friends favorites!

 
 

Filed Under: Perennials, Uncategorized

Gifts for the Gardener- Our Christmas Wish List!

November 29, 2012 by Lacey Leave a Comment

Its that time of year when we put down our trowels in favor of ribbon and wrapping paper.  As the old addage says, its better to give than to recieve, but all the same we’ve compiled a Gifts for the Gardener wish list full of things we love {and might just give to ourselves}. You can check out all of our favorite gifts, as well as find the links for the items below,  here on our Pinterest Gifts for the Gardener board.  Stay tuned and check the board often as we’ll be adding our favorites to it all december long. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fall Fertilizing

October 24, 2012 by Lacey 1 Comment

I woke up this morning to a steady drizzle, the slushy kind that’s halfway between snow and rain. The mountains are covered in clouds and I’m sure that the rain down here in the valley has found success as snow up there.  The weather combined with my case of the sniffles is a reminder that warm, sunny afternoons are behind us and we have a long, cold winter ahead. 

Fall is the time to prep our gardens for an eventual spring. Planting tulips, pruning shrubs, and mulching perennials are a few important steps to ensure a successful spring.  In addition to perking up planting beds, fall is a wonderful time to prepare your lawn for a quick green up in spring.  

Heat, insects, and disease all take a toll on grass during the growing season.  During the cool fall months, grass recovers from the stress of summer.  After a late fall fertilization the grass is able to store carbohydrates.  This stored energy in the stems and stolons helps promote shoot and root growth in the spring.  Applying 1lb of Nitrogen for every 1000 square feet of lawn at the end of October or early November will increase this energy storage. 

Filed Under: Feed Your Garden, Uncategorized

Quotable

October 19, 2012 by Lacey Leave a Comment

fall quotes, quotes about fall, allmyfriendsareflowers.com

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Relax A Bit. . .

October 8, 2012 by Lacey Leave a Comment

I love this time of year. The air becomes crisp and the sun sets a bit earlier allowing me the pleasure of lighting the tiki torches in the yard and turning on the little outdoor lights that seem to twinkle as the branches sway in the canyon breeze.  One of my favorite sights is making the bend towards home and seeing the lights on the side of the house through the garden gate.  It beckons me to the backyard  and urges me to forget chores that need attention.  Often I ignore its pleading and tend to the children’s homework and finishing up dinner dishes.  But most evenings I try to find a moment or two to spend out back listening to the soft flowing water in the fountains.  In years past my husband has told stories to the children as they stretched out on the trampoline looking at the stars.  The backyard is our haven and has been the place of barbecue’s,  football dinners, teenage parties, sandcastles and beach ball volleyball.  It’s a place made and remade and has provided an arena to teach the children how to work.  It’s a place filled with hard work and laughter and most recently a place where my 13 year old plays with his dog.  (That throws a whole new twist on the expectations for the yard.)
hammock, fall, dogs, relaxing, allmyfriendsareflowers.com

  It’s a great time of year.  The hard work of grooming the yard is over, it’s the time to relax and enjoy your efforts.  Sit out back and look at the stars, lay in the hammock, play with the children or tell them a story as you gaze at the stars. Enjoy the haven you have created.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Happy Birthday Kate. . .

October 5, 2012 by Lacey Leave a Comment

fall quotes, relaxing quotes, Louis L'Amour, quiet moments, garden

Filed Under: Uncategorized

How-to: Wooden Fall Pumpkins

October 4, 2012 by Lacey Leave a Comment

We don’t claim to be crafty, but as promised here’s the tutorial from yesterday’s post…

Wooden Fall Pumpkins

Fall Crafts, Wooden Pumpkins, Pumpkin Crafts

When we say we don’t “claim to be crafty” we mean that we had to laugh out loud when we made a “materials” list.  The fact that we even own a small pair of pliers actually makes us a bit giddy.  Now, we will confess that we have hopes of being crafty, so why not start with old wood you can find along the roadside? And let’s face it, spray painting is a basic human gift right? (duct taping your shoes back together also qualifies as a basic human gift 🙂
These pumpkins are a super easy way to bring a little fall into your home.  We’re using them everywhere.  Bigger sets are great for front porches {paired with hay bales & dried corn stalks}or try smaller sets in your living room. 

Fall Crafts, Wooden Pumpkins
Materials (Laughing)
  • old wood + smaller branches for the pumpkin stems
    • we used log rounds & 2×2’s
  • sandpaper
  • orange spray paint
  • needle nose pliers
  • florist wire
  • wood glue

We decided to make a set of 3 pumpkins with a large, medium & small.  We measured ours so that the smallest was 1/3 the size of the largest and the medium double the size of the smallest.   Of course you can cut these by hand (argh) or you can find a neighbor with a nice big saw and trade cookies for cuts.

Fall Crafts

After the pieces are cut, sand down all surfaces.  This removes most of the dirt from these old pieces of wood and smooths the surface for painting.  For our square pumpkins, we sanded down all  sharp edges as well as the corners a bit to give the wood a more rustic feel. This step also serves as a bit of an outline for the  pumpkins, giving them dimension.  Using an electric sander speeds things along, but regular sandpaper works just fine too… after all there are only so many plates of cookies to go around.

Fall Crafts, Wooden Pumpkins

Spray paint the wood pieces on a sheet of newspaper.  Remember to spray at a steady pace to avoid drips.  The pumpkins might need one or two coats.  Try to avoid a windy day or at least avoid spraying near other things that you do NOT want to be orange.

Fall Crafts, Wooden Pumpkins
Fall Crafts, Wooden Pumpkins

While the pumpkins are drying, make some curly-q pumpkin vines using  pliers and the florist wire. Twisting the wire around a dowel or pencil makes for nice, tight, circular curls.  Make sure to leave enough wire at the end so that it can be wrapped around the stem securely. (note the black paint on Lacey’s thumb?  That is a clue that we tried a little something with black paint and we were craftily unsuccessful)

Using wood glue, attach a small branch to the top of the pumpkin.  Be patient, the glue takes a few hours to dry completely.  (for those of you who are slightly impatient go ahead and warm up the hot glue)  After the stem is glued to the pumpkin and has dried completely, don’t be afraid to go over the edges and corners with a sander to expose the wood below.  This will give the pumpkins a more rustic/antiquey feel.  Attach your wire vines and voila–cute fall craft accomplished!

Pumpkin Crafts, Fall, Wooden Pumpkins
You just can’t go wrong with old wood and spray paint.  Didn’t they turn out cute!  Your turn.

Filed Under: Here's How, Uncategorized

Garden Quotes

September 14, 2012 by Lacey Leave a Comment

garden quotes, autumn quotes, horowitz

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Peach Blueberry Crumble

September 6, 2012 by Lacey Leave a Comment

I have a friend named Karen.  Karen is quite a gardener both in vegetable gardening and in flower gardening.  She works hard every summer to make her home a luxurious experience for the eye as well as the palette.  This year her hard work paid off again but it paid off big for her neighbors and friends and I count myself lucky.  You see, Karen is off to South Africa for 3 weeks and that just happens to coincide with peach season in her lovely backyard.  I was happy to receive the call from her just before she left town telling me I could come over in about a week’s time and pick peaches. I will freeze a few, have canned a few jars of peach syrup, plan to bottle several jars of peach halves and today I made a peach crumble.  Actually I made one yesterday as well and I will most likely make another tomorrow.  You simply cannot get enough of peaches when they are in season.

Cobblers Crisps Crumbles allmyfriendsareflowers.com

I have several great crumble/crisp/cobbler recipes but this one is easy, petite and delicious.  If you are lucky enough to be the proud owner of 7 or 8 peaches preheat the oven and call your hubby and tell him to stop for a half gallon of vanilla ice cream.  You will be so glad you did!  Thanks Karen!

peach blueberry cobbler crisp crumble allmyfriendsareflowers.com

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Printable Pattern & Tutorial

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All My Friends are Flowers

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