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A Hunt for the Endangered Garden Gnome


A gardener near Marysville wrote and asked me where she could find a nice (2ft) garden gnome as a Christmas gift. She hasn’t been able to find any at local nurseries. I have to say… I can’t recall seeing any garden gnomes at Sacramento nurseries either! Where have all the garden gnomes gone? Have they all been liberated? If anyone knows of a good local source for tall garden gnomes (2 ft. is tall for a garden gnome, right?) please comment!

I suggested she try Eisley’s and Emigh Hardware, since they tend to sell “folksy” garden decor. Think of any other good places for her to try?

I did find some good online sources. I haven’t ordered from any of them before, but these were top Google results so you can assume they’re not fly-by-night gnome sellers.

http://www.kimmelgnomes.com/

http://www.garden-gnomes-need-homes.com/

http://www.onlinediscountmart.com/garden-gnomes.html

http://www.cleanairgardening.com/gardengnomes.html

Fans and foes alike, you might be interested in the George Bush gnome from BushGnome.com. Only $29.95. Comes in traditional, military, patriotic or original (Texan) dress. Original’s my favorite, in case Santa’s reading this. I also have my eye on the $500 Accessory Contest prize.

First Frost Advisory


My fingers are numb as I type this. Our first frost advisory of the season has been issued (Thanks, Cheryl). Since our area is a little marginal for citrus, I felt the urge to cover my young orange, lemon and lime trees with Agribon row covers, which can protect down to about 6 degrees F. I also covered my succulent pots and, dang it, should get out there and cover my hot peppers, basil and tomatoes. Yes, I still have hot peppers, basil and tomatoes!

If you don’t have row covers, use sheets, plastic tarps, canvas tarps… even Christmas mini lights.

How to make a Pumpkin Squirrel Condo

1. Be a squirrel.
2. Chew hole in side of pumpkin.
3. Devour contents of entire pumpkin.
4. Move in.

A friend sent me some cute pics of a squirrel making a home in someone’s front porch pumpkin. I decided to Google the phenomenon and learned it’s apparently somewhat common. I have 3 uncarved home-grown pumpkins out front just begging for squirrel tenants!

Link 1
Link 2
Link 3
Link 4 (this one includes a video clip)

Back from Mendo… again


I just returned from another little Mendocino getaway. Mendocino always leaves you wanting more. There’s so much to do, so much to see, so much to eat, and never enough time to do it all. This time I happened to be there during the annual Wine and Mushroom Festival. I was also really lucky to be able to go on a mushroom walk led by two California mushroom experts, Taylor Lockwood and Charmoon Richardson at Van Damme State Park. The walk was great… a little too drizzly to bring my camera, but exciting nonetheless. These guys are as nuts about mushrooms as I am about plants! It’s always great to encounter passionate people. On the walk, they pointed out the complexities of distinguishing edible mushrooms from poisonous ones. You really have to know your stuff if you’re going to cook and eat wild mushrooms. I think I’ll stick to mushrooms grown in captivation, thank you very much. The idea of dying while lying in the wet woods clutching a frying pan just doesn’t hold much appeal for me. A mushroom photo expedition on the other hand…

I stopped by the Mendo Bot. Gardens nursery and gift shop and left with a few plants and a book. The plants weren’t anything I couldn’t get locally or in the bay area, but that’s no excuse for not buying the following:

  • Mexican lobelia (Lobelia laxiflora)— It was blooming near the demo garden and I couldn’t resist bringing one home. They supposedly tolerate extreme abuse and are attractive and hummer-attracting.
  • Chondropetalum tectorum (aka a “restio”)– I finally couldn’t talk myself out of its exorbitant price and I only want one. Ever.
  • Anemanthele lessoniana (syn. Stipa or Apera arundinacea)– because I killed the ones I bought at Annie’s Annuals. Know when they died? This fall, immediately after being divided! They looked utterly dividable at the time, so I don’t know what to say…

As for the book… I asked the salesperson manning the front desk if they had any books about the gardens. What she produced was an HGTV book called Flower Gardening… Bring Home the Secrets of Great Gardens. It profiles not just the Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens, but twenty North American public gardens and includes expert tips from the gardens’ caretakers. Plenty o’ color pics too.

Ooh, and from Highway 1, I spotted tree dahlias (Dahlia imperialis) in bloom at Heritage House. I couldn’t resist pulling over to snap some pics of their spectacular dahlias. If you’re into movie trivia (I am)… you should know that this romantic inn happens to be where Alan Alda and Ellen Burstyn filmed Same Time Next Year.




Garden Artistry

If you’re like me, you’d rather visit a postage-stamp sized garden with really cool plants and art over a meticulously coiffed estate garden any day. What I seek in a garden is unusual plants (or usual plants used in an unusual way), art, a sense of humor, wonder and personality… and a healthy dose of disorder. Uh-oh… did I just describe myself? Don’t answer that.

As for art, I’m not referring to the fancy schmancy repro greco-blecho kind. Don’t get me wrong… estate gardens are attractive and impressive in all their grandiosity… they just don’t float my boat. They impress too easily. They buy your affections.

I happen to be more impressed by a garden’s ingenuity and daring rather than its financial means. I want to see what kind of garden you can make from a hand-hewn sculpture piece or a broken dish or a piece of scavenged driftwood. And plants. Plants from friends, plants rescued from the sale table at Target, plants you splurged on at Annie’s Annuals. Plants you actually planted.

Two garden artists whose work I admire are Keeyla Meadows and Marcia Donahue. Both are East Bay artists. I will probably never be in a position to buy one of Keeyla’s gazillion-dollar sculptures, but maybe a pot… someday. And a bench. And a little table.

A lot of really inspirational garden artists and nurseries call the East Bay home– Keeyla, Marcia, Berkeley Hort, Annie’s Annuals, The Dry Garden, Planet Horticulture and more. Perhaps it’s the mild and mellow climate that nurtures this brand of horticulture. Whatever it is, I love it. I aspire to it. I am inspired by it.

The following books help to illustrate my kind of garden: