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News stories tagged with "gardening"

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Making the most of flower boxes and urns
(05/14/12) Boxes and pots offer a great chance for small-scale and perfectly located flower gardening. Cooperative Extension horticulturist Amy Ivy has tips on how to assemble and maintain successful containers, including how to recycle potting mix from year to year. She talks with Martha Foley.

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Keeping those hanging flower baskets so colorful
Hanging baskets. Source: http://www.freefoto.com
Hanging baskets. Source: http://www.freefoto.com
(05/07/12) Sunday is Mothers' Day, and maybe you're thinking of one of those hanging flower baskets as a gift. Cornell Cooperative Extension Horticulturist Amy Ivy has some tips for buying and maintaining the "wow" factor for hanging flower baskets.

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The challenge of growing fruit
(04/30/12) The North Country climate isn't great for fruit trees. There are lots of apple orchards on Lake Champlain, particularly, but insuring a good apple harvest can be a challenge for the home gardener.

Cornell Cooperative extension horticulturist Amy Ivy has tips on other crops for home-grown fruit: berries.

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Gardening Call-in with horticulturist Amy Ivy
Amy Ivy (left) talks with Martha Foley. Joel Hurd fields callers in the control room.
Amy Ivy (left) talks with Martha Foley. Joel Hurd fields callers in the control room.
(04/25/12) Co-operative Extension horticulturist Amy and Ivy and Martha Foley share tips, trials and suggestions for the gardening season with callers from around the region.

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Another way to give seeds a head start
(04/23/12) The snow and cold rain today are a disappointing sort of counterpoint to this season's early warm spells. True, we need the moisture, but lots of gardeners will be looking closely to see what the consequences are for perennials that have gotten ahead of schedule, or the extra-early seedlings in the vegetable garden.

And who ever knew there were so many azaleas and forsythia bushes in the North Country? This year they are all blossoming, it seems: a rare show indeed. What happens to them? Cornell Cooperative Extension horticulturist Amy Ivy advises gently knocking the snow off those flowering shrubs if you can.

And she tells Martha Foley her technique for giving flower and vegetable seeds just a little boost on the window sill, instead of just planting them directly.

SPECIAL NOTE: join Amy and Martha Wednesday morning at 11 for a live call-in...all about your yard and garden. 11 a.m., April 25.

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Multiple-bin method solves a compost problem
Community compost educator demonstrates a multi-bin system. Photo: Red58bill via Wikipedia Commons
Community compost educator demonstrates a multi-bin system. Photo: Red58bill via Wikipedia Commons
(04/16/12) Compost is a prized commodity among gardeners. It seems like there's never enough compost to go around As perennial beds and vegetables plots are prepped for the season.

Martha Foley has been making her own compost for years and years, but this spring found things hadn't "worked" over the winter as planned. Cornell Cooperative Extension horticulturist Amy Ivy walked us through her own strategy: two or even three bins.

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Conditions good for early garden chores
Just the thing for attacking those chores brought on by April showers, an umbrella hat—in camo. Source: meanandgreen.com
Just the thing for attacking those chores brought on by April showers, an umbrella hat—in camo. Source: meanandgreen.com
(04/09/12) Showers today will be welcome for gardeners who've planted spinach and other early season crops. In fact, it's a good time for a lot of early garden chores in the flower garden too. Amy Ivy shares her list with Martha Foley.

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Timing is trickier than ever for pruning
(04/02/12) There's a sweet spot, time-wise, for pruning shrubs. And the unusual warmth last month made finding that perfect time trickier than ever. Cornell Cooperative Extension horticulturist Amy Ivy explains when, whys and hows to Martha Foley. She's got tips on the proper tools this week, too.

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Early days in the garden; be easy on the soil
Mechanical tilling can put too much oxygen into the soil too soon. Try turning with a fork instead.
Mechanical tilling can put too much oxygen into the soil too soon. Try turning with a fork instead.
(03/26/12) Amy Ivy and Martha Foley talk more about early season gardening chores. This morning, perhaps the very earliest, as Amy shares ways to prepare and preserve your soil. Amy recommends keeping tilling to a minimum.

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Now is not the time for lawn care
(03/19/12) A string of unusually warm, even hot, weather this week may bring the green back into many North Country lawns, but horticulturist Amy Ivy says it's simply too early for raking and reseeding, and far too early for feeding the grass.

She had plenty of tips, including new restrictions on using phosphorous, in her conversation with Martha Foley this morning.

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Blog posts tagged with "gardening"

A jump on Spring

Amy Ivy and I talk today about satisfying that itch to rush the gardening season. It's always there, as the days...[more]

200 years of McIntosh apples

McIntosh may be one of the better-known apple varieties in the Northeast. (Maybe of the world?) But did you know...[more]

Hello? Hello? Can you hear me?

This week, three call-in programs coming your way. All very different, all–of course–incredibly...[more]

Rhubarb, too

Rhubarb season always reminds me of an elderly neighbor when I was a child. I grew up in central Minnesota, about a...[more]


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