In The Garden/Rhode Island Home & Design

Thank you for visiting us at “In The Garden”. We are really excited about this because it offers two chances to not only read very interesting articles here by very knowledgeable people but also information on a great publication as well.

Mr. Andrew Locke publisher of Rhode Island Home & Design has given us permission to bring to you information that otherwise you may not have been aware was available to you. “In the Garden” is a feature in Rhode Island Home & Design and Mr. Locke allowed us to reproduce it for you. Take a look at this link to Rhode Island Home & Designs’ web site http://www.rhodeislandhomedesign.com/. Enjoy your read and if you would like to contact Rhode Island Home & Design all the information is on their site. Again we would like to thank Mr. Locke for his articles.

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Gardening Tips/Martin’s Garden Notes

Thank you for visiting our “Gardening Tips“ section of our web site. As you can see we have tried to bring you very interesting and informative articles. In our efforts to offer only the best quality information we are pleased to have top quality businesses agree to share their knowledge with all of us.

Mr. Martin VanHof owner of The Island Garden Shop Inc which is located at 54 Bristol Ferry Rd. Route 114 in Portsmouth R. I. 02878 , also on the shores of Narragansett Bay. Mr. VanHofs’ garden shop is a “must stop” when you are in the area as all the locals do. The staff at the garden shop is knowledgeable and can help you with any questions you may have. Call them @ 401-683-2231 or better yet check out their web site http://www.igsinc.com/. Again we would like to thank Mr.VanHof for allowing us to share with you his most interesting articles

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For the Gardener

Martin’s Garden Notes

Here are a few tips for the gardener on your gift list:
Felco pruners are just the best pruners around. They come in several models to fit any hand and have removeable blades for ease of sharpening.
Brass out-door Thermometers: Select from sprit or dial models in several sizes.
Gifts with maritime themes: Reproduction scrimshaw pieces, carves birds and more.
Orchids may be exotic but do not need to be difficult. We stock phaelenopis( moth orchid) because it is easy to grow and blooms for many months. It will be a welcome gift.
Bird feeders of several sorts can be found here. Give the birder on your list a Hummingbird feeder. They really work!
North Country Wind Bells and Woodstock chimes add pleasing sounds to the garden.
Gift Certificates are always welcome gifts by the gardeners on your list

Holiday Plant Care

Martin’s Garden Notes

Poinsettias are not toxic and are very easy to keep. Just give them  a few hours of direct sunlight and keep them evenly moist. A little fertilizer( 20-20-20 soluble)twice a month will help maintain good color. Night time temperatures is best at just below 60 degrees. Select yours from our nice selection grown here at island Garden Shop, Inc.
Cyclamen also like a sunny window to keep blooms coming. The trick to these elegant plants is to keep them away from the heat. Warm days and chilly nights kep them in good shape. Cyclmen can bloom until the weather warms in late spring. Don’t allow to wilt.
Christmas Cactus also like it cool. Hot dry conditions will often result in the loss of flower buds. Trim them back after blooms finish if necessary and keep them outside in the summer in mostly shade until the temperature dips into the 30’s. You can root the pieces you trim off just by sticking them in potting mix.
Get a quick start with Amaryllis bulbs by finding a very warm spot (75-78 degrees) to get them going. Once growing they can come into your living space with good sunlight.
Starting paperwhite narcissus bulbs is very popular. One trick is to store bulbs you want to start later in a warm place while a cool place is best to get them started. Grow them in a brightly lit location with night temperatures around 50-55 degrees.

Garden Lighting

Written by Adam Latham  

Landscape lighting can be accomplished with line voltage (120v) or with low voltage (12v). Each method has advantages and disadvantages. It’s not difficult to install a low-voltage system yourself. You’ll need to have an outdoor 120v receptacle near where you’d like to make the lighting improvements.  Local lighting supply houses and big-box retailers offer system components, including transformers, fixtures, lamps (bulbs), wire, and educational materials. These systems offer the ability to easily and safely adjust the location of fixtures as plants mature or when you’d like to change the design for some other reason. Depending on the quality of the components, low-voltage systems may be more expensive to install than line voltage systems. But because of their low cost to operate, they can make up the difference in installation cost.

Line voltage systems do not require transformers and are easily understood by homeowners. However, these systems are more expensive to operate than 12v systems, and alterations to the system layout are difficult to make and potentially dangerous. For these reasons, I recommend limiting 120v systems to small systems close to or attached to the home and its door-side light switches.

The Design Side

In its simplest and most common form, everyday landscape lighting is thought of as purely functional, meeting a household’s need for nighttime safety. For example, a light is needed to shine in a particular location for a stated purpose — lighting a set of steps to mitigate a tripping hazard, say, or lighting at the door for security reasons — and a fixture is selected to do that singular job. The visual results of the selection of both the fixture and the amount of light have about equal chances of being appropriate and meeting the need, or being ineffective and possibly dangerous. Perhaps the only decorative component homeowners think of is what the fixture looks like. This way of thinking is actually upside-down.  Whether lighting is provided via line voltage or low-voltage, the lighting design objective should be the same: see the light and not the source of the light. In those cases where you do want to showcase the fixture, careful attention has to be paid to proper mounting height to avoid glare.

Outdoor lighting is all about illumination for beauty and safety, not showcasing the style of light fixture. You still need to select a light fixture for a stated purpose (ask yourself “why light?”), but now you can view the fixture style as unimportant because you really don’t want to see it anyway. For landscape lighting, I recommend that the light source should blend with the surroundings; black, brown, weathered copper and bronze are good colors for the garden. Imagine how your landscape would appear without six-foot-tall post lights. Why would you want a post light that shines in your eyes anyway? If a path needs to be lit at night, the best way to do it is with down-lighting, or throwing light from knee-level bollards or path lights. Using down-lighting is a way to add more effective and natural moonlight-style lighting. For lighting a path near a house, a fixture matching the house’s color can be mounted in the house’s soffit or an earth-toned light can be mounted 15 feet up in a tree, and the light will shine down and pool on the walk without glare to pedestrians. Add a few path lights in key locations, such as steps, or a change in direction, and you’ve accomplished evening security goals with interesting lighting effects.

For more dramatic effects, up-lighting and backlighting can be used to show off interesting plant forms and textures. Without their leaves, trees and shrubs with horizontal branching patterns like flowering dogwood and redvein enkianthus become more evident and are perfect specimens for backlighting. New fallen snow nestled in the peeling bark of a Heritage river birch or in the deeply grooved bark of an old tupelo can be softly illuminated for an interesting close-up scene.  Multi-trunked trees that are aligned with the view from a living room or kitchen window are the perfect trees to be illuminated by up-lighting, creating an inspiring natural sculpture to be viewed at night. This method of lighting can also be used to cast shadows from plants, garden ornaments, and sculptures against exterior walls.

New to the Market

Over the last few years, LEDs for landscape lighting have been reaching more and more of the mass residential lighting market. Although initially more expensive to purchase, LEDs last thousands of hours longer and use substantially less energy than conventional incandescent and halogen lighting, making them more financially attractive when viewed over the long term. Because they don’t emit as much heat as conventional lights, LEDs may have some limitations for use as uplights in our climate, as snow and ice will not melt off the lens as quickly as they do on conventional landscape lighting. They do, however, make great down-lights, bollards, cable lights, and path lights.

I hope you’ll use this season to experience the lighting of your landscape in a new way. For more on the design side of landscape lighting, an online search for landscape lighting manufacturers will yield bountiful information and sample photos to assist you.

www.rhodeislandhomedesign.com

Decorating for the Holidays 2

Martin”s Garden Notes

Here are a few tips for using greens for your holiday decorating. Greens used for outdoors last through the season until you are ready to plant your containers for the spring. Balsam fir branches are inexpensive and take up a lot of room. Add some greens from Oregon like silver and noble fir, blueberry juniper or holly which can be used in  small quantities for variety. Winterberry branches are nice too. When using greens indoors, most things will hold their color for several weeks.

We have found that laurel and princess pine roping hold their color for at least a month but will dry out quite fast. Just use it where the traffic that can brush against it is limited. Needled evergreens like pine and fir need to be fresh and be in water to keep. Holly, even if it is in water will keep about a week, so keep a few branches in water in a cool but not freezing place to replenish the holly in your arrangements.

Boxwood is one of the best keeping greens for the holidays. One of our specialties is a holiday arrangements and wreaths made of boxwood which last many weeks. Stop by, Island Garden Shop Portsmouth RI.,to select one of our designer’s creations for your table

www.rhodeislandhomedesign.com