Sunday, July 1, 2018

Another google find of Brian

A gardener's impressions of Ireland

Impression of Ireland

Late last month saw me and a group of like-minded gardeners touring through Ireland. Whether arriving by air or driving through the countryside, we were, like most visitors, immediately struck by the greenness. It is, after all, the "Emerald Isle."
 
Late last month saw me and a group of like-minded gardeners touring through Ireland. Whether arriving by air or driving through the countryside, we were, like most visitors, immediately struck by the greenness. It is, after all, the “Emerald Isle.”
Locals told us that they had had “no summer – just rain and cloudy periods.” Fortunately we picked a great time to visit: Beautiful weather with mostly sunny skies and only two days of intermittent showers. In general, Ireland’s mild climate is influenced by the Gulf Stream and hard frosts are infrequent.

The gardens we viewed were surprisingly full of colour for the time of year – annuals, bulbs, perennials, flowering shrubs and just the faint beginnings of autumn shades. Many of the plants are familiar to prairie gardeners, others less so. The site of a Scots pine in close proximity to a tropical palm or tree fern was a bit disconcerting, but we got used to it.

Of the shrubs, the most spectacular were the hydrangeas and fuchsias. Both were enormous by our standards – up to six feet tall by eight feet wide. The hydrangeas were in glorious shades of white, pink, blue and deep red, often with a two-toned effect comprised of recent and older blooms. A blue “lacecap” type hydrangea was among my favourites.

In Canada, our prevailing image of a fuchsia is of cascading branches and masses of multicolour blooms in hanging baskets – a type developed by plant breeders in California and the Netherlands. Not so in Ireland. First introduced from Chile over a century ago, Fuchsia megellanica is a shrub planted in the hedgerows of western Ireland and in full bloom well into the fall. While pollinated by hummingbirds in South America, in Ireland, insects do the job. Fuchsias long ago escaped from the hedgerows and are seen along roads and paths.

Also in evidence in the hedgerows were rose hips, red hawthorn berries (Crataegus monogyna) and the dark blue “sloes” of black thorn (Prunus spinosa) used to flavour sloe gin. Fuchsia shrub. Photo by Sara Williams Japanese maples, sumac and chestnuts were beginning to colour the autumn with their fall reds, oranges and yellows. And we saw many ginkgos, one of my late colleague, Brian Baldwin’s, favourite trees. Roses were blooming in almost every garden we visited.

The brilliant orange montbretia (Crocosmia x crocosmiflora) was in flower in many of the gardens, from the walled garden of the large formal Powerscourt estate to small cottage gardens. Considered a tender “summer bulb” (actually a corm) in Saskatchewan, it has naturalized widely throughout Ireland and is a familiar sight along country lanes and waterways, blooming from July through September. A monocot related to gladiola and crocus, monbretia is a hybrid of two South African species.

Other late blooming perennials were Heliopsis (false sunflower), catnip, sedums, a variety of ornamental grasses, yarrow, tansy, goldenrod, absolutely enormous clumps of Joe Pye weed (a North American native), Cimicifugia “Brunette,” dwarf fleeceflower (Persicaria affinis), Verbena bonariensis, Russian sage, phlox and monkshood. Delphinums were at the height of their second bloom in Helen Dillon’s Dublin garden.

Dahlias were everywhere just as they had been in Monet’s garden in Giverny in late fall. They were in such variety and so glorious thatI’m sorely tempted to go through the planting, lifting, storing and replanting cycle I’ve avoided for decades. Autumn crocus (Colchicum autumnale) was just popping up in beds and in lawns. Among the familiar annuals were nasturtiums and ornamental kales.
And we all had to chuckle when one of the garden owners proudly introduced us to an “exotic” shrub from Siberia of about five feet in height with bright yellow pea-like flowers and small pinnate leaves – our own caragana.

Sara Williams is the author of the newly expanded and revised Creating the Prairie Xeriscape; Gardening, Naturally: A chemical-free handbook for the Prairies; and the Saskatoon Forestry Farm Park Zoo: A Photographic History. Just home from hosting a garden tour of Ireland, Sara will be offering tours of England and Iceland (with cohost, Melanie Elliott) in 2016. For more information contact Ruth at ruth@worldwideecotours. com.

This column is provided courtesy of the Saskatchewan Perennial Society (www.saskperennial. ca; hortscene@yahoo.com; http://www.facebook. com/saskperennial). Check out our Bulletin Board or Calendar for upcoming garden information sessions, workshops and tours: Oct 21, 7:30-Lyndon Penner’s Favourite Perennials, Emmanuel Anglican Church, 607 Dufferin at 12th Street.
 

 

Googled Brian

As I do, every few years, I googled Brian.

This year I found that his friend, Sara, put a dedication to him in one of her books

Dedication to Brian in Gardening, Naturally: A chemical-free handbook for the Prairies

____________________________


Also, I found that one of his photographs was included in an article

A Gardener's Paradise in University of Saskatoon

A gardener’s paradise at the University of Saskatchewan

 , /Battlefords News-Optimist

MARCH 17, 2015 01:07 PM


Garden Chat
One of the most interesting and educational outdoor plant spaces at the University of Saskatchewan is Patterson Garden Arboretum (http://patterson-arboretum.usask.ca), a two-hectare arboretum in Saskatoon tucked into the southeast corner of Preston Avenue and College Drive. The arboretum, established in 1966, was named to honour Dr. Cecil Patterson, the first head of the University’s Department of Horticulture Science. Established originally as part of a now discontinued network of woody ornamental hardiness trial sites on the Prairies, the arboretum continues to be used for teaching and has long been a popular stop for the local horticultural community.
Patterson Garden is the most diverse arboretum in Saskatchewan, containing about 850 different trees, shrubs and vines. While the core of the arboretum consists of more than 40-year-old trees and shrubs, new plant material is constantly being added to replace the non-hardy, the victims of significant disease or insect problems or the ones that have simply reached the end their natural lifespans. All the plants are labelled with common and botanical name plus the year they were planted.
Spring is both an aromatic and colourful time to wander through. Several willows bloom in early spring while more than 40 lilacs (Syringa) are in flower from mid-May into June. The blossoms of a dozen different flowering crabapples (Malus) usher in summer.
A collection of vines, forming the eastern edge of the arboretum, includes commonly grown plants such as Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) and Dropmore Scarlet Trumpet honeysuckle (Lonicera brownii) along with the less known hairy honeysuckle (Lonicera hirsute) and Oak Lake Frost grape (Vitis riparia).
A large part of the arboretum contains various species and cultivars of shade trees such as oak, ash, poplar, elm, linden and birch. Seek out 44 year-old silver maple (Acer saccharinum).Also among the rare-for-the-Prairies are red ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), Serotina de Selys poplar (Populus canadensis), Japanese elm (Ulmus japonica), Mongolian lime (Tilia mongolica) and yellow birch (Betula lutea).Not to be missed are black walnut (Juglans nigra), scarlet oak (Quercus coccinea), the 48-year-old Shore pine (Pinuscontorta) and the nine-year-old Chinese catalpa tree (Catalpa ovata).
During the summer months, come and smell the 50 species and varieties of roses. Other flowering shrubs include 23 species of mature spirea and nearly 20 potentilla cultivars.
Scarlet oak, along with many of the deciduous burning bush (Euonymous spp.)varietiesprovide spectacular red fall colour. Bark texture and colour, along with the large selection of conifers, provide interest during the cold winter months. There are 17 creeping juniper cultivars (Juniperus horizontalis) along with numerous other juniper species. Over 20 cedar cultivars (Thuja occidentalis) can be found in varying shapes and sizes. Thirteen spruce species (Picea) and varieties, planted over the last forty years, are also on display. Among the pines (Pinus) is a 48-year-old Swiss stone pine (Pinus cembra) as well as a ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa). An extremely attractive 34-year-old white pine (Pinus strobus), native to the eastern North America but rarely grown in Saskatchewan, can be found in the middle of the garden.
If you haven’t had a chance to visit Patterson Garden, I invite you to take a tour. It provides an opportunity to see what that tree you just planted or are planning to plant might look like in 20 or 40 years, as well as simply the wide variety of trees beyond poplar, ash and linden that are possible to grow in Saskatoon. Bring a friend or go by yourself on a contemplative walk among these mature trees to learn, clear your thoughts and listen to birds.
Patterson Garden is open to the public 365 days a year, 24 hours a day. Maintenance and support for the arboretum is provided by the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of Saskatchewan and the Meewasin Valley Authority.
Bantle is a horticulturist living in Saskatoon.

________________

WOW...found a 3rd mention of him...funny how when you change the search criteria, more show up

The Silver and the Grey

The silver and the grey

 , /News Optimist

OCTOBER 5, 2014 02:00 AM

Garden Chat
Trees and shrubs with silver or grey foliage are attractive on their own but they really stand out when placed next to shrubs with purple-red foliage such as many of the barberries and ninebarks, not to mention Schubert chokecherry.
Two excellent silver-leaved, hardy woody perennials are Russian olive and wolfwillow, both members of the genus Elaeagnus. Both have attractive silver foliage, small silver berries and fragrant but inconspicuous flowers.
Russian olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia) is to dry areas what willows are to wet sites. Both have a large and billowy "willowy" appearance. The species name, angustifolia, means narrow leafed. Native to Europe and Asia, Russian olive is a graceful, fine textured tree, ranging in height from 4.5 to 7.5 metres. Leaves, twigs, flowers and fruit are all covered in minute grey scales, giving it a silvery appearance. The long, narrow leaves are retained through most of the winter, lending it a permanent "hoarfrosted" look. The inconspicuous yellow and silver flowers, borne in early June, are highly fragrant and are followed by inedible olive-like fruit. Thorny and non-thorny forms are available.
Russian olives do best in full sun in well-drained soils. They are drought- and salt tolerant but will not tolerate flooding or poor drainage. Some cultivars may suffer winter injury. These trees are used as specimen or shade trees, in screen plantings and in shelterbelts. The silver foliage contrasts well with evergreens and shrubs with red and purple foliage. Birds consume the fruit.
Wolfwillow (E. commutata) is native to the prairies and casts its sweet scent along fence lines in May, bringing nostalgic memories of walking to school to those who grew up in rural areas. An upright and sometimes leggy shrub of up to 2.5 metres, it suckers freely, soon forming thickets. Place it with care. It can be extremely "well-behaved" for 6 or 7 years and then dozens of unwanted suckers will emerge one spring as though by magic. On farms and acreages, a saline slough or a septic field is ideal. Little else will grow in these environments and there it can spread freely. The branches and leaves are covered with silvery scales. The fragrant, tubular, four-petalled flowers are inconspicuous, silver outside and yellow within. The small, silver fruit is dry and mealy.
Among the cultivars is Silverscape, a sterile hybrid of Russian olive and wolfwillow of only 1.8 metres in height and with less suckering than wolfwillow.
'Zempin' is an improved selection, widely available in Europe but much less so here in Canada. About 3.5 to 4.5 metres in height, it has very dark (almost black) branches and intense, contrasting silver foliage. Be warned: it suckers freely.
Wolfwillow does best in full sun in a variety of soils. It is used for wildlife plantings, naturalization, reclamation and on banks and slopes to control erosion. It provides food and cover for birds and is a bee nectar source.
Note: if your landscape is small, look for a wolfwillow that has been grafted onto Russian olive rootstock to prevent suckering.
Two other large shrubs with grey foliage are sea buckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides) and buffaloberry (Sheperdia argentea), another Prairie native. Neither is recommended for smaller urban landscapes because of their size, thorny nature, and tendency to sucker.
In their favour, they both are extremely drought-tolerant, salt tolerant and produce fruit. Although intensely labour intensive to pick and remove from stems, the fruit of sea buckthorn makes a lovely jam, similar in taste to an apricot liqueur. The red berries of buffaloberry were once widely used for pemmican. Both shrubs provide food and cover for birds.
Williams is the author of the new and revised Creating the Prairie Xeriscape. In her latest book, Saskatoon Forestry Farm Park & Zoo: A Photographic History, she tells of the history of an institution and the personal stories of the people who made an important impact on Prairie agriculture.
- This column is provided courtesy of the Saskatchewan Perennial Society (www.saskperennial.ca; hortscene@yahoo.com). Check out our Bulletin Board or Calendar for upcoming garden information sessions.



 


 

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Week 1 progress! Sink is done!

Hell has frozen over...I was able to complete the clearing of the sink area!!

I moved some of the extra cleaning supplies to the main floor powder room & found some supplies where the spray top wasn't working any more (tossed them all) and it made room for the few supplies I had sitting around the sink!

I purchased an on-the door hanger for paper towels.

I even crawled onto the cupboard and cleaned the blinds (which may never have been cleaned since we moved in. 

Before:


LOVE LOVE LOVE it...may toss the purple flowers, but will keep them for now.  HAVE to do my best to keep it like this...will be hard, I'm a slob.  I did manage to keep the pantry good for a year...so many there IS hope for me.

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Organize House - WEEK 1: Con't....Counter-tops & Sink

So...I'm trying to think of what to do with GJA's nest of breakfast stuff and thought of a couple ideas I want to ponder:

These are from BB&B


SALT 2-Tier Corner Shelf in WhiteMesa 2-Tier Rectangular Iron Basket with Chalkboard Panel  in Antique Black
 Stainless Steel Two-Tier Turntable



 If I can't find a cupboard that is too his liking, then the storage solution must look nice on the counter top.  Not sure that these fit the requirement....time will tell.  Must think of somewhere else I can find something

Another thing I need help with is recycling (papers, cardboard, plastics, tins etc)  Currently, we just keep bags of them and move them into a blue bag on recycle day....which leaves a lot of clutter in the kitchen that drives me nutso.  What do others do with recycling stuff?

Also...I have a roll of paper towel out on the counter and it needs to either be on a stand OR hidden somewhere...here are some BB&B ideas
Umbra® Beleaf Paper Towel HolderSpectrum™ Over the Cabinet-Door Paper Towel Holder in Brushed Nickel









Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Organize House - WEEK 1: Kitchen Organization: Counter-tops & Sink

We live like crazy people...stuff piled up everywhere...hoarders-R-us!

It was driving me crazy a few years ago and then MIL got sick and we now have MORE crap in the house...it is everywhere, can't find anything...driving me nuts

My brother and girlfriend will probably be home for Christmas next year...which means...in our crazy, messy house...which I can NOT do!  We must, at a minimum, get MIL's stuff out of the front entrance of the house...at the BARE Minimum.

I've joined a group that is following a place to organize your home...I'm going to 'kind of' join in...knowing that I can't fully do it because a lot of the problem is the hoarded stuff that doesn't belong to me and that particular person has to deal with the stuff or will freak out.

I will try to do the best I can, and if nothing else, posting about it in a blog, will help (I hope) me organize my thoughts about it and maybe formulate plans on how to deal with it.

I worry about PJ because all he knows is living with stuff everywhere...and that will not bode well for his future.

Anyway...week 1 is:  Kitchen Organization: Counter-tops & Sink

Seems pretty straight forward...LOL!

Step 1:  Functions for the Kitchen.
This is loaded... obviously is food prep & cooking & storage.  We also keep recycling there until its recycle day, our calendar is on the fridge and all mail arrives & lives there.  Now I would LOVE to put the mail somewhere else...but there really isn't anywhere else for it...so a organizing/storage method for this is something I have to figure out.  I has to be something that GJA would tolerate because he prefers it to be all out at his fingertips.

Step 2:  Create usable counter space, clear your table.
We are to have mostly clear counters & sink clear...get rid of stuff on the counters that have nothing to do with the function of your kitchen. Apparently, step 17 will help with mail organizer center...HA HA HA...we shall see!

Anything you don't use weekly should NOT be on your counter-top...find a cabinet for it.  hmmm...I think a bunch of this is pretty much dealt with...I may have to re-think some crap that could probably go and no one would care/mind.  Things that are duplicates should go...now this is where we have an issue...we inherited stuff from MIL...and GJA won't part with it because its perfectly good...so now our cupboards are less organized because there's duplicates

Step 3:  Kitchen storage solutions for counter top
Think I'm good for this...although I may re-look at the stuff GJA uses in the morning and see if a lazy Susan would work better...as long as its not nasty because it would be right on my counter-top...of course, it can't be worse that the mess it is now.

Step 4:  Keep Sink Clear of Dishes 2x a day
OK...we are bad for this...I leave stuff in the sink WAY too long...I will try harder to achieve this because I have always know that if you keep the sink clean, it helps make everything else feel clean.

SO..............Here are a few pictures of the current state of our kitchen:

This a view of the island...probably looks cluttered to you..well...its looks pretty good considering on Dec 23 the only usable space was the tiny bit at the front of the photo that was available for use...the entire rest of the island (both levels) was totally covered with papers, mail, cans, baking supplies, recyclables and lord knows what else. 

This, is another part of the kitchen counter area - stuff that someone wants out and available without having to go into anywhere to bring out every morning.  I only use the utensil jar and sometimes the piles of coffee mugs are so large, that I can barely reach over to grab a wooden spoon.

 This is another part of the counter top.  We use the appliances daily...the toaster is only out because GJA pulls it out every night before he goes to bed.  What I do see, that needs a new home, is the cleaning supplies and some travel mugs.
This shows that we clearly need to stop leaving dishes in the sink...a total bad habit that needs to be stopped!  I see a coffee maker that needs to be moved, since we haven't used it in well over a year.

 This is the junk drawer (aka...counter)...all school stuff and any other crap, gets piled here.  I had it all cleaned out last January...and it actually looks better than it did at the beginning of December...but needs work!

One thing that IS 'currently' good, is the kitchen table.  I do, however, prefer to leave my colouring out on the table....so it looks good now, but it won't for long!


 OK...so I can see where I will try to get some work done during this week 1 exercise!  Wish me luck!

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

44 Odd Things...
 
1. Do you like blue cheese? Not really, but it was ok in small pieces on a Wendy's salad
2. Have you ever smoked cigarettes? absolutely NOT 
3. Do you own a gun? absolutely NOT
4. What is your favorite flavor of ice cream? Mint Chocolate Chip
5. Do you get nervous before Doctor visits? Yes
6. What do you think of hot dogs? DISGUSTING...had to choke down one at K Days again this year...gross!
7. Favorite Christmas movies? ALL...but if I have to pick, White Christmas
8. What do you prefer to drink in the morning? one flavoured coffee
9. Do you do push-ups? no, can't, no upper body strength and it also hurts my knees
10. What’s your favorite piece of jewelry? silver and blue
11. Favorite hobby? Scrapbooking
12. Do you have A.D.D? Not even close
13. What’s the one thing you hate about yourself? lack of ability and desire to clean
14. Middle name? Ann
15. Name three thoughts right now: I want this cough to go away, I'm thursty, I need to sleep 
16. Name 3 drinks you regularly drink? diet coke, coffee, rum
17. Current worry? School
18. Current hate right now: this cough and the fact that I have to worry about school
19. Favorite place to be? vacation
20. How do you ring in the new year? trying to stay up until midnight
21. Where would you like to go? Disneyland
22. Name three people who will complete this. no one
23. Do you own slippers? yes
24. What color shirt are you wearing right now? blue
25. Do you like sleeping on satin sheets? doubt it
26. Can you whistle? Yes
27. Favorite Color? blue
28. Would you be a pirate? No
29. What songs do you sing in the shower? nothing
30. Favorite girls name? Diane 
31. Favorite boys name? Patrick 
32. What’s in your pocket right now? kleenex
33. Last person that made you laugh? Graeme 
34. Best toy as a child? barbies
35. Worst injury? chip in foot still helps me tell the weather is changing
36. Where would you love to live? I love our house...just need to move lots stuff OUT of here
37. How many TV’s do you have in your house? 2
38. Who is your loudest friend? not sure
39. How many dogs do you have? none - not a dog person
40. Does someone trust you? Yes, lots
41. What is your favorite movie? Sound of Music
42. What’s your favorite candy? SweetTarts
43. What’s your favorite sports team? Edmonton Oilers
44. What song do you want played at your funeral? I will remember you (but really, I have no idea...probably something more upbeat like Uptown funk...love that song)

Thursday, June 30, 2016

Scrapbook Layout - 2010 Trip to Calgary

We took a few days and went to Calgary...this was his first time in a long trip in the car (not long, it was only 3 hr drive) and the first time in a hotel.  Loving the green with the brown.

Road Trip & Motel sign are from Summer Vacation
'to' is from Street sign
Calgary is from Mickey Font

Heart is just a stamp that I hand cut, same as the brown banner


Scrapbook Layout - 2010 Capital Ex

We went to try out our local exhibition, which used to be called Capital Ex.  This is a boring page but I included it because of the ferris wheel.

The ferris wheel was from Summer Vacation, which I cut in 3 different colours...then I left the white one in-tact and cut the blue piece to attach and I believe I ended up colouring the red ring...but I might have cut it...can't remember..

The heading is from Carousel.  For some reason, I had a hard time gluing these pieces to look right.  Easy and makes total sense when in CCR, but once cut, it really hurt my brain.

I guess I forgot to photograph the 2nd page...oops, that's where the journaling is.