Connect with us

Outdoor

The Garden Guy: This is One Honey of a Petunia for Your Container Designs

Published

on

By Norman Winter | Horticulturist, Author, Speaker

The Garden Guy has a new honey but I assure you it is not the kind that will get Mrs. Jan upset, it is a petunia like I have never grown before. It is Supertunia Honey, actually three of them that I planted last October.

Somehow, I missed its debut but I know it won a bunch of Top Performer awards in 2020. Hopefully you haven’t been asleep at the wheel like I have been because I assure you this is a petunia in which you will fall in love with.

This is not a Vista or Mini Vista but a regular Supertunia that will get about 12-inches tall with a 24-inch spread. The fact that I coaxed mine through the winter shows it has some perseverance about it including taking 28 degrees for five hours straight in March.
The color is absolutely mesmerizing. It starts off deep gold with hints of burgundy, aging to gold and then a dashing yellow. It seems to me its color is even richer on those cool 40 to 50-degree mornings. The size of the blooms also is among the largest I’ve seen in the Supertunia group.

To read more, pick up a copy of the May issue of NTFR Magazine. To subscribe call 940-872-5922.

Continue Reading

Outdoor

Parting Shot: Grit Against the Storm…

Published

on

By

By Jelly Cocanougher

Brazen rumbles cut through the daylight stillness. Enamored by the grandiose symphony of the firmament, tinged in anticipation from where the light will snap next.
The clouds dance in the sky as a love letter to the electrically-charged synergy of the ground and air. It moves unashamed, reckless, and bold. It is raw power that could command attention for any being, a reminder that we are attuned to the primal opus of flora and fauna. The spirit of the prairie was awakened, the hands of a cowboy rests at the heart of it all, a symphony in combination.

Continue Reading

Outdoor

Grazing North Texas

Published

on

By

By Tony Dean, [email protected]

There are a handful of mean-spirited plants that seem to have developed a liking to growing in places where they are a nuisance on North Texas grazing lands. One of those plants is definitely tasajillo. I can not count the number of gates I have had to open that required a fight with this prickly foe.

I now realize there is a plausible reason why so many fence lines and gates are home to tasajillo, being that birds eat the seeds, and then deposit them along the fences thus creating a virtual nursery for this unfriendly species.

Tasajillo is a perennial member of the cactus family and can be found in all areas of the state, but with less presence in deep East Texas. It grows as individual plants or as thicket-forming clumps. This cactus seems to be most adapted to loamy soils and is often found in association with mesquite.
To read more, pick up a copy of the March issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.

Continue Reading

Outdoor

The Garden Guy: A Heart to Heart Handoff with Caladium of the Year

Published

on

By

By Norman Winter | Horticulturist, Author, Speaker

This time of the year you see stories not only looking back at 2023 but, of course, the prognostications for 2024. This is fun to do in the gardening world, too. For instance, the Proven Winners ‘Caladium of the Year’ for 2023 was Heart to Heart Scarlet Flame. This was an eye-opener for a lot of gardeners.

You see we think of caladiums in two basic types or forms, fancy leaves and strap leaves. Fancy leaves are large, heart or semi-heart shaped. Strap or lance-leaves are narrow, some ruffled, and generally shorter. So, this has led many gardeners to choose sides, as in bigger is better.
Scarlet Flame, the 2023 Caladium of the Year, is a strap-leaved selection and won our hearts with the number of leaves produced, vibrancy of color and the ability to work in mixes or partnerships most of us have never dreamed about.

I’ll never forget the combination with Blue Mohawk rush and Sweet Caroline Medusa Green ornamental sweet potato. It is also a caladium for sun or shade. Those of us who paid attention, will never roll our eyes at the suggestion of a strap-leaved variety again.

To read more, pick up a copy of the March issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.

Continue Reading
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad

Trending