by angela@diggingbliss | Jun 7, 2006 | Uncategorized

This gorgeous warm green pot was on sale at Bushnell’s. The plants are from Bushnell’s and Capital (Sunrise). As is my way, I bought a little bit of this and a little bit of that and didn’t even decide what was going in the pot until I got home.
The problem was, everything I held up to the pot at the nursery looked good. That’s the blessing… and curse… of a green pot.
— Ornamental millet (Pennisetum glaucum)
— purple Angelonia
— Heuchera ‘Key Lime Pie’
— red celosia
I like the way the red celosia plays off the crimson blotch on the volunteer orange nasturtium.
by angela@diggingbliss | Jun 7, 2006 | Uncategorized

I’m thinking… sliced and sauteed in a little olive oil with salt and cracked pepper.
The variety is a bush type called ‘Gold Rush’, by the way. These zukes are in a half-barrel, which might account for their earliness. I’ve also had a major veggie garden epiphany recently– if you want bees in your vegetable garden, plant lavender! My lavender plants are like one giant beehive right now and yes, I do happen to have blooming lavender right next to my squash plants.
by angela@diggingbliss | Jun 6, 2006 | Uncategorized
As an avid fan of homegrown tomatoes, I’ve been blogging a lot lately about this season’s garden, which so far is doing much better than last year’s. I think it’s because we’re finally getting some heat! Last summer brought late rains and unseasonbly cool weather. My tomato plants responded by putting out lots of foliage and hardly any fruit.
While my garden as a whole appreciated the cool temps. and extra water, some of my warm-season crops, which require sufficient heat for proper growth and development, seemed confused. Especially the tomatoes. Tomatoes won’t set fruit if they experience too many consecutive days of cold (nighttime temps are critical, apparently) or heat (above 90 degrees). Last summer gave me new empathy for cold-climate and coastal gardeners. Sure, I poke fun at coastal growers struggling to grow tomatoes, but that’s mainly sour grapes since I’m firmly established in middle age and no matter how much wishin’ and hopin’ and wishin’ and hopin’ I’ve done, I still don’t own a quaint coastal getaway home. They do. All year long.
Do you think coastal residents fantasize about buying a place in the sun? You betcha. You see we want it all, and frankly, there’s nothing wrong with that. Life is to be lived to the max.
by angela@diggingbliss | Jun 6, 2006 | Uncategorized
I was at Capital Nursery on Sunrise Blvd. this Sunday and was thrilled to see they now carry Annie’s! The display is just northwest of the cash registers, next to the annuals. Check it out next time you’re there!
by angela@diggingbliss | Jun 3, 2006 | Uncategorized

‘Tiffany’

‘Munstead’ lavender