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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: tree ferns + tree fern + don't  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/8/2008)

Should you use unlimited horse manure for bushes?
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA - Jul 2, 2008
Q: Is it possible to transplant a resurrection fern from an osage orange tree to a river birch? A: Resurrection fern is an interesting plant. ...
Pepper spray will protect marigold flowers
In-Forum, ND - Jul 3, 2008
If you don?t have any leaks in your foundation, water or sewer line, it will not be a problem. Q: Our dog tore or ate the bark off our beautiful crab tree ...
Outdoor oasis
phillyBurbs.com, PA -
Vines trace up and down her back porch, as an extensive array of impatiens, ferns, tomato plants, raspberry bushes and much more fill every inch of land. ...

MLive.com
New Turtle Creek Casino near Traverse City, Michigan, opens with a ...
MLive.com, MI - Jul 6, 2008
On another side of the building, a green roof planted with grass, hostas, ferns and day lilies connects with the ground and rises up to cover the casino's ...
The Grounded Gardener: There's room for beauty under the trees
Seattle Post Intelligencer - Jun 25, 2008
Sword ferns always look best when last year's fronds are cut back in late winter, before the new growth emerges. Other good choices include redwood ivy ...
Digging their gardens
Kingston Daily Freeman, NY - Jul 6, 2008
The burst of yellow from daffodils is long gone, although plenty of ferns are apparent in the woodsy setting. "You don't come to the Unison Sculpture Garden ...
Old farming method proves fruitful in state forests
Centre Daily Times, PA - Jul 5, 2008
They have tried fencing to keep deer out, herbicidal treatments to remove ferns and other competing vegetation, and cutting to remove other tree species ...
Sick holly fern is probably thirsty
Florida Times-Union, FL - Jun 27, 2008
By BECKY WERN, Special to the Times-Union Holly ferns are wonderful plants and fairly tolerant. But they don't tolerate drought. Your ferns are at the edge ...
SUMMER IN MICHIGAN 'Beach' means the Great Lakes
Detroit Free Press, United States - Jul 6, 2008
Ranger Margaret, the naturalist at the Harrisville State Park, has been teaching our kids about bugs and owls and bears and ferns every summer for years. ...
Adding life to long living room
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY - Jul 5, 2008
"I just don't know what to do with them," Maria Yunker lamented. Noble brought in bags of accessories from her car, purchased at the Christmas Tree Shops ...
Source: Google News

Leaf turnover rates and natural history of the Central American tree fern Alsophila salvinii -
RL Seiler - American Fern Journal, 1981 - JSTOR
... appears to be perpetuating itself, as there are hundreds of very young tree ferns
present with ... The ferns in the secondary forest don't form dense ...

[CITATION] Biogeography of temperate Australasian Polystichum ferns as inferred from chloroplast sequence and … -
LR Perrie, PJ Brownsey, PJ Lockhart, EA Brown, MF … - Journal of Biogeography, 2003 - Blackwell Synergy
... and the Himalayan P. lentum (D. Don.) T. Moore. ... and in the neighbour-joining tree
(not shown ... dispersal amongst other temperate Australasian ferns (Brownsey, 2001 ...

[CITATION] Biological invasions as global change
P Vitousek, L Loope, CD?Antonio, SJ Hassol - American Scientist, 1996

[CITATION] Why don't mosses flower?
G Theissen, T Munster, K Henschel - New Phytologist, 2001 - Blackwell Synergy
... liverworts as the first branch of the land plant tree, whereas some ... Why don't mosses
flower? It turns out that like ferns (M?nster et al., 1997), mosses have ...

The economic uses and associated folklore of ferns and fern allies -
LW May - The Botanical Review, 1978 - Springer
... tree ferns the hairs were brittle and lacked the resilency ... With very few exceptions
ferns have not been ... According to Witham (1972), "They don't even look good ...

Potential nitrogen fixation during primary succession in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park -
PM Vitousek - Biotropica, 1994 - JSTOR
... Cover by epiphytic bryophytes was estimated on each tree or tree-fern within one
meter of ... I don't know what causes this discrepancy, but it is not an unusual ...

[BOOK] Where the Red Fern Grows -
W Rawls - 1984 - scholastic.com
... (Don?t forget to chop the wood for the stove fire ... blood-curdling scream, he sprang
from the tree with claws ... When and where does Where the Red Fern Grows take ...

[CITATION] A Flood Plain Palm Forest in the Luquillo Mountains of Puerto Rico Five Years After Hurricane Hugo 1 -
JL Frangi, AE Lugo - Biotropica, 1998 - Blackwell Synergy
... 7) for dicotyledonous trees and tree ferns, and in Frangi ... is based on tree allometry
without hurricane effects and ... We don?t com- pare the 1980 biomass data ...

A depositional model for the Mid-Westphalian A to late Westphalian B coal measures of South Wales -
AJ Hartley - Journal of the Geological Society, 1993 - Geological Soc London
... page HJ Falcon-Lang Latest Mid-Pennsylvanian tree-fern forests in retrograding coastal
plain deposits, Sydney Mines Formation, Nova Scotia, Canada Journal of ...

Calcrete and coal in Late Carboniferous cyclothems of Nova Scotia, Canada; climate and sea-level … -
SK Tandon, MR Gibling - Geology, 1994 - Geological Soc America
... Geology Don't get GSW? ... Home page, Journal of the Geological Society Home page HJ
Falcon-Lang Latest Mid-Pennsylvanian tree-fern forests in retrograding coastal ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Don't give up on that tree fern

 

 

Q: My tree fern is all brown and tattered after the February freeze. One night, the temperature got down to 25 degrees at our house. Until then, the fern was nice and green. Is there anything I can do to revive it?

A: The hardiest of the tree ferns is Dicksonia antarctica, known as the Tasmanian tree fern. If yours was billed as hardy, this is probably the kind you have. Established D. antarctica can tolerate temperatures as low as 20 degrees, especially if you give them a little protection on the coldest nights.

Chances are your tree fern is still alive and will send up new fronds in the next month or two. Wait to see the fresh fronds unfolding from the center of the plant, then carefully cut back the old brown foliage.

Q: My neighbor says her favorite summer flowers are tigridias. I'm interested in growing more unusual annuals, so I want to plant some. Can you tell me what they are, and where I could find them?

A: Tigridia pavonia, called tiger flowers or Mexican shell flowers, are beautiful mid-summer flowers grown from bulbs. They have narrow leaf blades like a crocosmia, with freckled flowers in red, pink, yellow or orange. Each has a distinctive, darker blotch in the center.

Like daylilies, each flower blooms for just a day, but every plant has many blooms that open in succession for weeks. They need a warm location and, because they require good drainage, often are best grown in pots.

If your soil is free-draining, tigridias will overwinter in the ground. One good source for tigridias is Brent and Becky's Bulbs, 7900 Daffodil Lane, Gloucester, VA 23061; 804-693-3966; www.brentandbeckysbulbs.com.

Q: Preparing for our retirement, we moved into a mobile-home park last year. My "yard" is about 8 feet wide on each side of our manufactured home and about 40 feet wide across the back, but only 10 to 12 feet deep.

The front is very small; we're hemmed in on three sides by other homes. I've spent several months pondering how to create an appealing garden, hopefully one that qualifies as a National Wildlife Habitat. Nothing I've read addresses gardening around a mobile home in a park, and none of the gardens here seems to invite the friendly birds and bees I'd like to encourage.

A: I think a wildlife-friendly garden would be ideal around a mobile home, and might well inspire your neighbors to do more planting to attract birds, bees and butterflies.

It sounds as if you have sufficient space for a few key plants beloved by local creatures; if you can include some water in a small pond or birdbath, a thicket of native snowberry and flowering currant (Ribes sanguineum) for birds to nest and take shelter, and perhaps edge your garden with a few of the smaller rugosa roses for fall fruit, you'll have made great strides toward creating a naturalistic garden.

Since your garden space is limited, search out dwarf shrubs and trees so you can fit in more variety, which attracts creatures and keeps a garden interesting through the seasons.

Vertical gardening is a good way to squeeze in more plants. You could build an arbor or lattice to hold a fragrant honeysuckle vine, beloved by hummingbirds.

Pass on the grass, and fill your garden with shrubs and perennials such as hardy fuchsias, ceanothus, asters, viburnum, yarrow, lavender and rosemary, and you'll be visited by butterflies and hummingbirds.

All of these plants are easy-care and reasonably drought-tolerant, which will make your gardening life easier.

Stay away from herbicides or pesticides, for these can harm creatures you hope to attract as surely as they do the ones you want to get rid of. Organic gardening practices are key to a healthy garden for people and animals alike.

Sunset's new "Western Landscaping" book has a section on gardening with wildlife; Russell Link's book, "Landscaping For Wildlife in the Pacific Northwest" (University of Washington Press, 1999), is the bible on the subject.

To receive a packet of information on how to turn your garden into a designated backyard wildlife sanctuary, send $5 to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary Program, 16018 Mill Creek Blvd., Mill Creek, WA 98012. To find out all about the program, see www.wdfw.wa.gov/wlm/backyard.

Valerie Easton also writes about Plant Life in Sunday's Pacific Northwest Magazine. Write to her at P.O. Box 70, Seattle, WA 98111 or e-mail planttalk@seattletimes.com with your questions. Sorry, no personal replies.

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company

 
 
 
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