January 2004
Turn your Christmas
tree into a giant birdfeeder. Stake the tree securely. Collect
large pinecones and place peanut butter between
the scales. Roll the cones in birdseed. Attach the cones to branches
with wire.
Make a bird feeding area on a backyard tree. Take a spatula
and
spread a patch of bark with peanut butter. Sprinkle birdseed on
the
peanut butter.
Follow these cold weather bird-feeding
tips to attract
birds to your yard.
- Place birdfeeders where you can see the birds.
- Mount birdfeeders
on poles or wires at least five to six feet above
the ground.
- Cover for the birds such as trees and shrubs should
be within five
feet of the feeder.
- Provide birds with high-energy suet feeders.
Suet feeders can be made from beef suet or lard mixed with
birdseed, oatmeal, and cornmeal. For a variety of easy to make
suet
recipes call 773-233-0476.
- Provide a water source for birds
in the winter. Keep the water from freezing by using a water
heater available at many garden centers.
Carefully place shoveled snow over perennials. Snow will insulate
the plants from cold temperatures. The temperature below the snow
increases by 2°F for each inch of accumulation. Do not use
snow that has salt in it.
Remove snow from evergreens to avoid damage to branches.
Brush snow off with a broom using an upward sweeping motion.
Inventory all garden tools. Have shovels, spades and hoes sharpened.
Apply boiled linseed oil to wooden handles. Spray paint handles
with
a bright color to make them easy to find in the garden.
Adding wood
ash to your garden soil will raise the soil pH. Add no
more than the equivalent of a 5-gallon pail each year.
Turn houseplants on windowsills 180 degrees after every watering.
This practice will prevent that stretched out to the sun look.
Prepare and plan for the upcoming growing season by checking out
my
five favorite gardening web sites.
University of Illinois Extensionís Hort Corner
http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/hort
Now really, did you expect some other web site? The Hort Corner
is
an easy to navigate, well-organized site with a wide variety of
horticultural information. Selecting Trees for Your Home will
help
you find the right tree for your yard. The Bug Review allows you
to
control insects inside and outside your home. Ask the Expert allows
you to ask an Extension horticulturist a gardening question. There
is much more information on this site about perennials, annuals,
roses, vegetables, bulbs, water gardens, strawberries and Christmas
trees.
The Gardening Launch Pad
http://gardeninglaunchpad.com
If you ever wanted a good starting point for gardening information
this is the place. The Launch Pad has thousands of links divided
into well-organized categories from African violets to Xeriscape.
A
retired garden center coordinator from Austin, Texas, started
the
site.
The Web Garden at Ohio State University
http://webgarden.osu.edu
This award-winning site has a little bit of something for every
gardener. A plants fact section has over 260,000 pages of
information. Also on this site is a database of images of ornamental
plants, turf, plant diseases and insects. Two hundred gardening
how
to videos and over 600 commonly asked gardening questions make
this
site a must visit.
Consumer Horticulture from North Carolina State University
http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/hort/consumer
This is one of the more comprehensive horticulture sites on
the
Internet. It has over 4,000 fact sheets on specific plants
including
images, cultivars and cultural information. Five thousand
links to
horticulture related web sites organized into 50 categories
and 100
fact sheets on growing vegetables, flowers, houseplants,
trees and
shrubs provide a gold mine of information for gardeners. Gardening Resources at Cornell University
http://www.hort.cornell.edu/gardening/index.html
This is a fairly new and evolving site with a flower and
foliage
plant database, vegetable gardening guides and lawn care
videos and
calendar. |