The
Big Dipper Farm News-ette
is an occasional gardening e-newsletter for discussing
new plant introductions, gardening tips, quotes, poems,
‘things-to-do-in-the-garden-now’, seminar reminders and
much more. Don’t forget the
Web Specials
at the bottom! It’s free, kept private, spam-less and
fun! Garden On!
-Deidre Finley, Big Dipper Farm
When Summers blue sky fades
to grey and swiftly ends the shortening day,
When coldness takes the flowers away, I’ll dance the
dance of Winter!
-Lucy Burrow
In addition, consider ‘The
Gift of Plants.’
Just choose the plants you want for your loved one and
we’ll send a greeting to them with the list of plants
that you have given them. They are shipped in the Spring
according to their growing zone.
A
lovely thing about Christmas is that it's compulsory,
like a thunderstorm, and we
all go through it together. - Garrison Keillor
Winter Garden Idea – This looks
very cool!
Do you have any of those old power pole glass insulators
that many of us collect? Lay a string of green wire
Christmas lights through the garden and put a blue or
clear insulator over each of the lights and slightly
cover the wire with compost or soil. Blinking or not,
this is just magical at night! Do this for your holiday
party night and your guests will be standing in the
garden for a while.
God gave us our memories so
that
we might have roses in December.
- J. M. Barrie
Save Big $$ - Special Newsletter Offer
on Gift Certificates!
Gift Certificates mean never having to
say you’re sorry.
Let your
favorite gardener get exactly what they want.
See Gift Certificates
Whenever man comes up with
a better mousetrap, nature immediately comes up with a
better mouse.
–Luther Burbank
My Mighty Oak – My Big
Dipper Farm Hurricane Recovery Garden
My daughter sent me
one of your hurricane gardens after Ivan destroyed most
of the trees near my home. It cheered me enormously at
the time. Here's a photo of one of the plants that was
in the garden--that tiny little tree is well on its way
to becoming a mighty oak!
Hurricanes may batter us, but
can't stop renewal. I smile every time I look at it.
Thanks for your thoughtful approach to gardening, and
for the good humor in your newsletters.
Regards, Ginger W – Pensacola, FL
Kissing under the Mistletoe
In Norse mythology, mistletoe
is rooted in the myth of Balder, the god of the summer
sun.
Balder dreamed he was going to die. His mother Frigga,
the Goddess of Love, became distraught when she heard
this and asked the air, fire, water and all the plants
and animals to spare her son.
But Loki, the god of evil, found one plant she had
overlooked - mistletoe - because it didn’t grow in the
ground. He made a poison arrow of mistletoe and tricked
Balder's blind brother into shooting Balder through the
heart.
The sky darkened and all things in earth and heaven wept
for the sun god.
Frigga cried tears that
turned into white berries on the mistletoe plant. When
she kissed her dead son, her kiss reversed the
mistletoe's poison, and he came back to life.
She declared that anyone who walked under a tree where
mistletoe grew should receive a kiss and no harm should
befall them. Thus mistletoe became a symbol of love and
good luck.
We have fresh, beautiful bundles of Mistletoe are tied
with a ribbon and ready for your doorways or for a
charming gift when making your visits this holiday
season. These sprigs have the traditional white berries
left on and are nice and large, not like the grocery
store twigs. The wonderful Norse legend of why we kiss
under the Mistletoe is sent along for all to enjoy.
Let the kissings begin!
See the Mistletoe
When the bold branches
Bid farewell to rainbow leaves -
Welcome wool sweaters.
-B. Cybrill
Fireplace season is back!
A part of Winter that I look forward to along with hot
cider, the first snow flurries and Christmas Parties!
Here’s something fun to try:
Collect those Pinecones. Pinecones are great to burn in
your fireplace, for a quick added glow. They can also be
treated to burn in a few different colors.
Soaked in:
copper sulfate - will glow green
potassium permanganate - for purple flames
calcium chloride - for orange flames
If you don’t have the time to make
your own, we have them ready for you, along with natural
Fatwood fire starters. A welcome luxury when the
firewood is a little damp. The perfect gift for the
‘Firetender’ of the house!
See the Fatwood and Color Cones
...a garden is like life:
something is always doing well, something is struggling,
something is being born anew, and something is dying.
-Edith Reed
Garden Story
Contest Winner !!
We
received some wonderful ‘Sentimental Plant’ stories and
we enjoyed them all! They remind me that gardening is a
pastime often involving many members of a family. It
bridges generations together with lifelong memories and
traditions that are passed down. Thank you all so much
for sharing your stories. It was very difficult to
decide on one.
The
$50 gift certificate goes to Diana Weber for her story
from Alaska:
When I moved to Alaska from the
Northwest long ago, I was dismayed to find that most of
the plants I loved did not grow here. Hybrid teas, no
way. Camellias, in your dreams. Hydrangeas, well, maybe
if you put it on a south wall and mulched it with straw
and prayed every day to the garden gods, you would get a
scraggly survivor next spring. So when it came time to
plant my first Alaskan garden, I was at a loss.
One day, I phoned my mother back in
Bellevue and told her I was working on a rock garden. I
had figured out that Artemisias, lady's mantle, and
Lewisias would be OK. Lily of the valley and ferns would
be a good backdrop. But I needed a little color and
more, I wanted fragrance, that hard to find commodity in
a far north garden. My mother did not say much, but I
knew she was thinking.
And then the package arrived UPS.
The letter in the package said, "These are from my
garden and I think they will live in Alaska. They lived
through the toughest winters we had in England during
the war." They were pinks, simple, fragrant pinks and
the loveliness of them brought tears to my eyes. I
planted the little plant in my rock garden, giving it
the best sun and drainage I could.
My mom was right. The pinks thrived
that season and many thereafter. Every time I walked
past them, I thought of home and remembered all the
times I had picked a bouquet of pinks and Sweet Williams
as a child. I thought, too, of the home my mother had
left behind in England when she married my GI dad. That
little plant was a link with home and my history, my
family's history, and it meant a great deal to me.
Today I understand a lot more about
Alaskan gardens and take pleasure in building a
perennial garden that may not be the same as at home,
but still very beautiful. I love the pinks best, though,
and when the snow falls, I am already looking forward to
seeing them next spring.
Diana Weber - Anchorage, AK
Thanks
for the quick delivery of the lilacs I ordered from you.
The front of my house will be a riot when they grow
larger.
I wanted to tell whoever filled the order that the gift
of the Ky. Colonel Mint
was more appropriate than they realized because I am
originally from
the bluegrass of Lexington, Ky. and my jewel of a
husband, who died in 2005, was a Ky. Colonel.
Strange how things work.
Thanks for everything. Patricia R. - Big Stone Gap,
Virginia
Being in Western Washington,
we’re used to the rain, but no one here can remember a
November like this one. The wettest in recorded history.
We have neighbors here on Green Valley Rd whose old
farmhouses had water in them.
Heavy rainfall is one problem
but standing water is even worse.
Watch for standing water in your
perennial beds and be especially vigilant with new
gardens installed this year. A low spot or any pooling
may have to be corrected quickly before your new plants
die. This includes trees, shrubs & perennials. A trench
to drain off surface water may be enough for now but be
sure to raise the elevation of the area as soon as
possible.
Certain types of perennials are
more easily lost to drowning and rot than to severe
cold. Full sun lovers like Lavenders, Echinacea,
Poppies, Crocosmia, and many with silver or hairy
foliage will die a quick death when left in standing
water for very long.
So when the clouds part, be sure
to take a walk around the garden.
In response to a challenge
to come up with a line using the word 'Horticulture,’
Dorothy Parker said,
"You may lead a whore to culture, but you can't make her
think."
Naturally Native
– American of the Month
Mahonia nervosa –
Has a number of common names: Longleaf Oregon Grape,
Cascade Mahonia, Dwarf
Oregon Grape, Dull Oregon Grape
One of our NW native treasures.
Can tolerate any light level but when growing in full
sun, the fall colors are scarlet, burgundy & plum.
Bright yellow flower clusters are followed by waxy blue
berries. The flowers are an impressive element of color
contrast against the foliage in late spring. Beautiful
serrated, glossy green leaves are evergreen. Deer
resistant, a good food source to both hummingbirds and
songbirds and drought tolerant. A very nice shrub and a
Great Plant Pick as well!
Zones
5-9 Height 2’ From full sun to shade
See the Mahonias
The clearest way into the
universe is through a forest wilderness.
-John
Muir
Things
to do in the Winter Garden:
- Drain and store hoses
carefully to avoid damage from freezing. (I always
forget at least one) Protect built-in sprinkler
systems, cover faucet heads, prepare the lawnmower
and other garden equipment for winter storage. Get
all the clay pots pulled in and be careful that
freezing water doesn’t break your birdbath.
- Now that you can see them
again, this is a good time to look at your edging,
rock walls & bed borders to repair, re-align or
expand. It’s much easier when the plants are down.
- It’s also a good time to see
some spots for a few more evergreens or for some
shrubs & small trees with nice winter interest like
red & yellow twig Dogwoods, Contorted Filbert or
twisted Japanese Maples. Of course, the
winter-bloomers like Witch hazel and the evergreen
Hellebore are a must-have in every garden.
- If your area doesn’t get
insulating snow on your garden, mulch your plants
with a couple inches of good compost and leaves,
clean straw or pine needles.
- Cut back unsightly perennials
and pull the last of any tattered looking annuals,
vegetables & herbs to add to the compost heap.
- Make a snow angel.
O, wind,
If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?
-Percy Bysshe Shelley
Gardening
in Decline? Share the wealth of gardening.
We truly love our
customers and sometimes they unexpectedly brighten our
day.
Hello,
May I help you?
Hi I just got my plants from you…
… Ok, is anything wrong?
No, well the plants are nice but
there’s a problem with the planting instructions. You
guys could make this a lot easier you know.
… Oh, I’m sorry, what’s the
question?
Well it doesn’t say here if I
should take them out of the plastic bags before I plant
them.
…………………. Yes… you would want to do
that.
Oh no, (sigh) Ok
thanks…click.
We
all started somewhere.
Do your part to bring someone new to gardening. Just one
every year. A co-worker, a neighbor, a grandchild, your
mail carrier that always pauses to admire your garden.
When someone compliments your garden offer them a
division and some help to get started with their own
little paradise. It can seem very intimidating to
someone that has never planted anything before.
The numbers show that gardening
is slowly declining. Could you imagine having no garden
at all? Spread the wealth! Invite a non-gardener into
your garden. Surprise someone with some seeds or a plant
from your garden.
Or perhaps a
Gift Certificate from a mail order
nursery. *grin*
The only way I survive winter
gardening withdrawal is loitering on
great websites like yours--but then I end up buying more
plants... That
variegated lemon tree already sounds pretty tempting.
But no, I must be
strong--the variegated tropical ginger is already
claiming half the living
room, and the dog seems a bit nervous about all the
sudden greenery looming
over her cushions. Enough...for now, perhaps.
Thanks again for a fine site, and an email newsletter I
look forward to
reading each month. And next spring? My credit card
and I will return.
Yours, Linda F. - Columbus, Ohio
What
do you get if you divide the circumference of a pumpkin
by its diameter?
Pumpkin pi.
Monthly Web
Specials
Orders placed on or before December 10th
will get the special pricing on the following plants.
This is regardless of whether it’s a current (ship now)
or a Spring order! Spring shipping schedule is on
the policy page. If you want Spring shipping, say so in
the comments box at the end of checkout.
Japanese Beech Fern - Thelypteris decursive-pinnata
Go to
Deciduous, vigorous spreader and an excellent choice for
a groundcover. Beautiful, lush, bright light green
foliage produces a graceful form. Produces large
colonies in moist or dry shade. Popular for shaded rock
gardens and naturalizes in mixed woodlands. Evergreen
along the gulf coast. Vigorous growth is produced on
short runners so invasiveness is easily controlled. syn.
Phegopteris. Full or part shade. Zones 4-10 -
Height 12-24”
Reg $6.99
Now $3.99
‘Coral Princess’ Cape Fuchsia - Phygelius 'Croftway
Coral Princess'
Go to
New! 'Croftway
Series'. A beautifully exotic salmon color with a touch
of yellow. From a new British breeding program that has
produced a significantly superior Phygelius. The
principal improvements are to habit with a compact and
bushy growth, a resistance to overhead watering damage
and a far greater bloom density. A long bloom period and
great staying power from May to October. Full sun to
part shade. Zones 7-9 - Height 18-36”
Reg $6.99
Now $3.99
Oh, beautiful at nightfall
The soft spitting snow!
And beautiful the bare boughs
Rubbing to and fro!
But the roaring of the fire,
And the warmth of fur,
And the boiling of the kettle
Were beautiful to her!
-
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Ah…
Those Heavenly Hellebores… The
Final Encore of the Gardening Year
An angel, legend has
it, took pity on a little shepherd girl who had
nothing to give to the Infant Jesus in his
manger. The angel handed
her a weed, but first transformed it into this
beautiful flower of winter.
The Christmas Rose, Helleborus
niger
Finally, with another year of
gardening done, some feel Nature saved the best for
last. Helleborus.
Some of these fascinating
perennials start blooming as early as November. Others
around Christmas as it’s common name implies, ‘The
Christmas Rose’. Some are blooming at Lent, ‘Lenten
Rose’. Wonderful colorful flowers at the most
challenging time of year!
Happy in part shade but in Northern
climates can do quite well in sun. Performs best with
good air circulation.
Deer-proof, slug-proof, evergreen and flowers in the
dead of winter. What more can you ask? This
evergreen has beautiful flowers that range from white to
pink, purple to chartreuse, red to nearly black. Both
single and double and many new Picotee’d and Anemone
forms. Hellebore
foliage looks great in the border almost year-round.
Beware, once bitten by this wonder of winter you will
never escape the need for more. They are an absolute
must for every gardener.
See the Hellebores
There is a
privacy about it which no other season gives you... In
spring, summer and fall people sort of have an open
season on each other; only in the winter, in the
country, can you have longer, quiet stretches when you
can savor belonging to yourself.
-Ruth
Stout