Spring break > Award Winning Shade Garden Plant

Award Winning Shade Garden Plant


 by: Doug Green

The 2004 Perennial Plant of the Year was Athyrium niponicum ?Pictum? or Japanese Painted Fern and this plant deserves to be in all shade gardens.

This hardy fern grows twelve to eighteen inches tall and slowly multiplies to form a large clump twenty four inches across. The fronds are approximately eighteen inches long and are a soft-grey metallic colour with hints of red and blue.
The centre stem is red so the contrast is excellent.
It is a lovely plant preferring partial shade rather than deep shade.
It does best with regular watering rather than dry soils.
The Japanese painted fern is native to Japan, Korea, China and Taiwan and once you see it unfurling its metallic grey frond in early spring, you?ll be a convert and want a bit of the oriental influence in your garden.
This fern colouring lends itself to being an excellent contrast plant to other shade perennials such as Hosta and the new gold coloured Carex ?Lemon Zest?.
Mature plants can be divided every three to four years to provide extra plants for zealous gardeners.

There are several new varieties of Japanese painted fern that you might want to search for at your favourite garden centre.
?Pewter Lace? has metallic pewter to mint-green fronds (two toned) with red stems and extremely lacy foliage. I saw this plant last year and I can tell you it will wind up in one of my garden containers this spring to fill a contrast plant role.
The second new introduction is ?Ursula?s Red? and this variety has large silver leaves but the centre of each leaf is flushed with wine-red colour in the spring.
It is a gorgeous fern.

When you add the award-winning ?Pictum? to the garden mix, you have an difficult choice to make.
Which one to grow?

About The Author

Doug Green, award-winning garden writer answers gardening questions in his free newsletter at http://www.gardening-tips-perennials.com.



How to Choose a Log Bunk Bed

How to Choose a Log Bunk Bed


 by: Cari Haus

So you?ve got the perfect little log cabin, or chalet by the lake, or just want a country touch to your home. You want a log bunk bed, or two, but don?t know where to start. And they don?t carry them in your downtown furniture store.

Not to worry, there are plenty of options available on the Internet. There are loft log bunk beds, twin over twin log bunk beds, full over full or even twin over queen. I haven?t seen a twin over king yet, but really the Amish can make any size you want. A lot of college students who looking to build an inexpensive loft bed might find an Amish loft bunk bed to be just the ticket, and some of them come with futons under them, too.

There are federal regulations regarding bunk beds, so you?ll want to make sure that whatever bed you choose meets the regulations. We?re talking safety here, and things do happen. But you certainly wouldn?t want a bed that doesn?t meet the...

How to Choose a Log Bunk Bed
Spring break > How to Choose a Log Bunk Bed

Spring Flower Gardening

Spring Flower Gardening


 by: Linda Jenkinson

Spring is the time when nature and your garden awakes and comes alive after the long winter. That first spring flower or that first green leave is the sign that winter in coming to an end and that a new growing season has arrived.

Spring and Flower gardening is almost synonymous. Spring is the time to interplant perennials, shrubs, roses and plant or transplant your annuals.

It?s time to shape up your soil, loosen the mulch around your plants and prune your early blooming shrubs. Rake and remove leaves and debris from your garden. Without a good planting medium your flower garden will never be at its best.

Perennials will save you a lot of work in your flower garden. So keep perennials high on your list. These hardworking beauties eliminate yearly replanting and will still give you that spring and summer color that you are longing for. It?s best to choose varieties that don?t need a lot...

Spring Flower Gardening
Spring break > Spring Flower Gardening