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Monday, December 23, 2013

LandscapExperts Tip of the Week, December 23

Keep cut Christmas trees watered in order to keep the needles hydrated and slow down needle drop. Add a little bleach to slow bacterial growth, and some corn syrup to make up for sugars lacking due to decreased photosynthesis, plus a little vinegar to buffer the solution.
  1 gallon water
  1 Cup corn syrup
  4 teaspoons chlorine bleach
  4 teaspoons lemon juice or vinegar

Adding a cartoon for dog lovers: 

Monday, December 16, 2013

LandscapExperts Tip of the Week, December 16

Garden Tools make G-R-E-A-T gifts, or put tools that you have been meaning to try on your own Wish List. Choose some ratchet loppers or try a bulb-planting trowel or new snips or a turn table for floral arrangements from the garden.

Monday, December 9, 2013

LandscapExperts Tip of the Week, December 9

Cut red berried branches of Holly and shiny Magnolia leaves to add to Holiday wreaths and mailbox swags. Keep in mind not only the branches but the shape of the remaining plant. Prune to an outward facing bud, and try to choose branches that are crossing and rubbing other branches, thus both 1. harvesting berries for holiday trim and 2. shaping up the plant for good growth in 2014.  

Monday, December 2, 2013

LandscapExperts Tip of the Week, December 2

It's not too late!
Take advantage of end-of-season markdowns on Spring-flowering bulbs. While the ground is frozen in the whole Northern U.S., metro-Atlanta soils are cooling down to the perfect temperatures for bulb planting. Be sure the bulbs you purchase are firm, solid, seem heavy for their size and have no spots or fungus lesions, then plant, with the depth corresponding to their size.

Monday, November 25, 2013

LandscapExperts Tip of the Week, November 25

Let your neighbors do the work, then collect those paper recycle-bags filled with pine straw from the curb and use the FREE MULCH to protect your perennial beds. Collect paper bags full of leaves to make leaf mould -- turns into rich, dark brown woods soil and is ready in a year.

More about Leaf Mould here: http://apps.rhs.org.uk/advicesearch/profile.aspx?pid=478 

Monday, November 18, 2013

LandscapExperts Tip of the Week, Nov. 18

Squirrel-proof a post-top  bird feeder by removing the top and bottom lids of an extra-large juice can, slipping it over the pole and wiring it in place. The blasted squirrels cannot get their arms around the can or get a grip on it. If the squirrel does stay on the post it ends up inside the can.

Monday, November 11, 2013

LandscapExperts Tip of the Week, Nov. 11

Add a post-top bird feeder to the patio. To create a removable, winter-only, pole-mounted bird feeder that can be easily be removed in the summertime, first create a telescoping base. Select a 2-foot length of galvanized pipe wide enough to accept the pole for the bird feeder. Install the pipe vertically in the soil next to the patio and fix it solidly with poured concrete.

During the feeding season, the pole-mounted bird feeder is slipped into the pipe base in the ground. When summer comes, remove and store the pole feeder but keep the pipe clear with a rubber bathtub plug over the opening.