Tag Archives: Gardening

Trees And Flowers Attracting Birds Through All Seasons

The trees that produce fruit or seeds which are useful in attracting birds include the apples, cherries, mulberries, mountain ash, Intwthornes, crabs, hack-berry, sour gum, buckthorne, box elder, birches and hollies. Many of the annual and biennial weeds of the garden and the borders of the flower beds produce the greatest crops of acceptable food for the seed-eaters. Evening primrose, fox-tail grass, lamb’s quarters, ragweed, mullein, goldenrod and sweet clover, retain their seeds and are strong enough to project through the snow. Juncos, tree sparrows, goldfinches, siskins, purple finches, and redpolls enjoy these seeds.

For those who can’t permit themselves to let the last crop of weeds grow along with some late lettuce, salsify, turnips and broccoli for the birds, it is possible to substitute some flowers from the same or similar plant families for the same purpose. You can plant some extra sunflowers, zinnias, coreopsis, bachelor buttons, cosmos, amaranths, love-lies- bleeding, prince’s feather, China aster, California poppies, forget-me-nots, blessed thistle, tarweed and portulaca.

It would also help reduce the cost of your winter feeding if you planted a corner of your garden with some of the grains which can be left to ripen and serve as automatic feeders. Those most suited for the purpose are common millet or barnyard grass, Hungarian and Japanese millet, canary grass, buckwheat, red clover and sunflower.

Since cover can often be supplied by the same plants which produce food, such as red cedar, arborvitae, yew, bittersweet, etc., we should use such dual purpose plants as much as possible. When extra cover is desirable, evergreen trees and shrubs, and shrubs or vines which make thick tangles, especially those like hawthorne, blackberry and honeysuckle, should be chosen.

In order to provide a year-round balance to attract birds at all seasons, flowers should also be planted for the hummingbird-trumpet creeper, bee balm, tiger lily, salvia, hollyhock, cardinal flower, scarlet runner beans, fuchsia, pea tree, phlox delphinium, columbine, gladiolus, canna, azaleas, weigela, nasturtium and jewel weed. The horse-chestnut is also a favorite tree of the hummer.

 

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Organically Eliminate Unwanted Garden Pests

Organic pest control treatments in the garden are an important step towards reducing the hazards of commercially produced pesticide products. Chemical pesticides can be highly detrimental to humans, causing all sorts of diseases and health problems. The are also harmful to the air, water, soil, plants, and animals around us.

Those who choose to use organic pest control treatments in their garden embrace various methods of companion planting or make use of natural pest repellants. With the prolonged use of organic treatments, you not only protect the desirable species in your garden like butterflies and bees, but you also protect plants, humans and pets from unintentional harm.

When you use organic treatments (such as using neem, predatory nematodes or fungal biological control agents), you greatly enhance the richness and overall health of your garden soil. Organic treatments in the form of fungi work in harmony with your garden environment and most significantly with the garden soil.

Fungal biological control agents work to improve many elements of your garden, such as the soil constitution, availability of sunlight, water availability and nutrient supply. When all of these factors are optimally available, fungal biological control agents are best able to enhance the richness of your soil and offer protection against dangerous pests.

When you use predatory nematodes in your garden, you encourage the presence of helpful insects in your garden, while you successfully control unwanted garden pests. Nematodes, which are a major part of organic treatments, do not become pests in your garden as their survival is dependent on the availability of pests that these treatments target. So, the moment those unwanted pests are gone, your nematodes are also gone! Now, don’t you think organic treatments for pests in the garden are the safest option for controlling unwanted pests?

 

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