Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: flower + shows + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Dan Gross: Lawsuits, Web sites & K&A Gang
Philadelphia Daily News, PA -
Porn starlets Joanna Angel and Flower Tucci attended. Most of the Philadelphia Soul partied at Swanky Bubbles (482 Evesham) in Cherry Hill after their ...
Henry Homeyer: Cleaning up flowers pays dividends, maybe even ...
Foster's Daily Democrat, NH - Aug 4, 2008
In reality, all they are doing is following the cycle of life, converting flowers into the seeds that should deliver flower babies next year. ...
Paw Prints
Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY -
Mums are available for pickup from 8 am-5:30 pm Monday through Friday and from 10 am-2 pm Saturdays at Pires Flower Show in Norwich, and from 11 am-5 pm ...
OTCPicks.com: OTCPicks.com Daily Market Movers Digest Midday ...
Trading Markets (press release), CA -
The property is located at the corner of Flower and Ninth Streets in downtown Los Angeles, across the street from downtown's only major supermarket, ...SMTK - OTC:NTRZ - MMPI
Mix of campaign and family business draws criticism
Houston Chronicle, United States - Aug 3, 2008
Kim Brimer, R-Fort Worth and Jane Nelson, R-Flower Mound, quit paying campaign rent for luxury condos listed in their spouses' names, records show. ...
Garden show 'not for the faint of heart'
Allentown Morning Call, PA - Jul 26, 2008
The club hosts a flower show every two years with the next one planned for June 20, 2009, at St. John's in conjunction with the borough's commemoration of ...
Flower show July 19-20 in St. Petersburg by artists in clay
Tampabay.com, FL - Jul 18, 2008
By Judy Stark and Times Homes, Garden Editor Artists at St. Petersburg Clay Company are holding their annual flower and garden show from 9 am to 4 pm today ...

Dallas Morning News
Agapanthus: If blue flowers are what you want ...
Dallas Morning News, TX - Aug 1, 2008
There are dwarf forms, but the most commonly available are Headbourne hybrids, whose flower stalks can reach 6 feet. I just learned something new about ...
Middlesex County Fair opens for 70th time Monday
New Brunswick Home News Tribune, NJ - Aug 2, 2008
Sponsored by the Middlesex County Fair Association, the fair was founded in 1938 by the Milltown Grange as a successor to its flower and crop show, ...

C-Ville Weekly
Got scrip?
C-Ville Weekly, VA -
I send an introductory message to the group describing the goods and services I have to trade (or sell to earn more scrip): cut flowers, flower arranging, ...
Source: Google News

[CITATION] Integration of alien plants into a native flower?pollinator visitation web -
J Memmott - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2002 - The Royal Society
... by analysing how alien plant species integrate themselves into a native flower
visitation web. Historical records for a community in central USA show that 456 ...

The structure of a plant-pollinator food web -
J Memmott - Ecology Letters, 1999 - Blackwell Synergy
... 1 shows only a small proportion of the expected total flower?insect interactions
over a ... A number of factors are immediately apparent from the web. ...

Climate Response to Orbital Forcing Across the Oligocene-Miocene Boundary -
… , NJ Shackleton, JS Revenaugh, H Palike, BP Flower - Science, 2001 - sciencemag.org
... S. Revenaugh, 1 Heiko P?like, 2 Benjamin P. Flower 3. ... and that of the oxygen isotopes
[Web fig. ... spectral analysis of the amplitude modulation shows a coherent ...

[PDF] A TILLING reverse genetics tool and a web-accessible collection of mutants of the legume Lotus … -
JA Perry, TL Wang, TJ Welham, S Gardner, JM Pike, … - Plant Physiol, 2003 - jic.bbsrc.ac.uk
... Figure 3 shows part of a CODDLE output for the SYMRK gene ... 2000) as set up on the
CODDLE Web page (http ... A, SL1203-3 is a flower mutant bearing abnormal reiterated ...
-

… constraints and flower abundance determine the number of interactions in a plant-flower visitor web -
M Stang, PGL Klinkhamer, E van der Meijden - Oikos, 2006 - pt.wkhealth.com
... of flower visitors observed in the flower visitation web. ... A multiple regression analysis
shows that nectar ... nectar holder width and flower abundance explained 71 ...

[PDF] Don?t go with the flow: Web services composition standards exposed -
WMP van der Aalst - IEEE Intelligent Systems, 2003 - tmitwww.tm.tue.nl
... Table 1 shows a comparison of some of ... there are relevant differences between web
services compositions ... workflow management systems listed only FLOWer is block ...

Insect Attraction to Ultraviolet-Reflecting Spider Webs and Web Decorations -
CL Craig, GD Bernard - Ecology, 1990 - JSTOR
... on flower surfaces or nectar guides (summarized in Wehner 1981 ). Current research
shows that honey bees recognize dif- TABLE 3. Effects of spider and web ...

A MicroRNA as a Translational Repressor of APETALA2 in Arabidopsis Flower Development -
X Chen - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org
... that does not support current Web standards ... Translational Repressor of APETALA2 in
Arabidopsis Flower Development. ... Plant microRNAs (miRNAs) show a high degree of ...

Floral homeotic genes are targets of gibberellin signaling in flower development -
H Yu, T Ito, Y Zhao, J Peng, P Kumar, EM … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004 - National Acad Sciences
... which is published as supporting information on the PNAS web site) show that various ...
of the importance of DELLA proteins involved in flower development is ...

Web Supported Enactment of Petri-Net Based Workflows with XRL/flower -
A Norta - Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on the …, 2004 - Springer
... registers for the first time with XRL/flower, a worklistitem ... database model of Figure
3 also shows entities for ... together with time stamps through the Web client ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

FORGET WOMEN in hats judging chrysanthemums. The image for 21st-century flower shows is more likely a 20-something holding a prize orchid overhead while threading through the crowd on a skateboard.

 

 

This year's Northwest Flower & Garden Show is duly updated. Billed as a festival to celebrate springtime, it features performances for kids, balcony-sized gardens, interiors with custom-made plots, and containers everywhere.

The 2006 extravaganza (Feb. 8-12 at the Washington State Convention and Trade Center) includes the usual acres of display gardens and retail booths as well as the plant market. Not that you'll want to miss these because Christianson's Nursery is back with a garden called "The Joy of Lost Time," and fresh-flower stands will add to the market's many attractions.

Duane Kelly, the show's founder and ambassador, has been careful to retain the seminar series and displays that keep the show popular with dedicated gardeners. Last year, Kelly undertook significant research after realizing that nurseries and flower shows around the country and in England were suffering the same decrease in attendance that had plagued the Northwest show in recent years. He was energized rather than disheartened by what he learned; this year's innovations were driven by a fat notebook full of statistics, given out to everyone on the show's staff.

Hear Easton and see the show


Valerie Easton will talk about her new Whidbey Island garden at the Northwest Flower & Garden Show next month. "Starting Over: The Story Behind a New Mid-Life Garden" is scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 8, at 2:30 p.m. in the Rainier Room of the Washington State Convention and Trade Center.

For other information, including the new pricing, two-day passes, tickets to get in early, and new transportation options, check out the Web site at www.gardenshow.com or call 206-789-5333. For a complete schedule, see the insert in Pacific Northwest magazine Feb. 5.

The research shows that graying gardeners are simplifying their outdoor spaces, while younger gardeners aren't nearly as plant-crazy as we've been for the past 20 years. Generation X and Y enjoy gardens, but as spaces for socializing more than for growing perennials. Kelly thinks the future of gardening lies with younger people who want to be entertained rather than lectured to, hence this year's interactive-festival atmosphere.

"Sproutopia," designed to attract families, features story hours and performances by Seattle Children's Theatre. Many of the display gardens sound especially child-friendly this year, including Grandma's Garden with a bubblegum path (unchewed), a chocolate-themed garden and "Wildwood Folly" filled with storybook characters. Plus there's a new pricing policy for kids and students up to age 25. "We don't want anyone not to attend because they can't bring their family," says Kelly.

An emphasis on small gardens, container plantings and outdoor living are a sign of the times. Nine of the display gardens demonstrate how to make the most of diminutive spaces. I always loved the designer rooms you looked through to see the garden, and that concept has been brought back. There will be two custom interiors on the main floor, plus Windermere Real Estate will have a first-ever display of five walk-through rooms and gardens in "destination locations" such as the desert, seaside and mountains.

Innovations to lure newer gardeners include seminars for those gardening with children, in small spaces or "starting fresh." You might want to look at the symbols on the schedule as suggestions only because, for instance, the talk I'm giving about my garden is marked for new home owners, when I'd expect it to appeal to anyone gardening in limited space.

An "Ask the Expert" panel of master gardeners will be available during all show hours, and people are encouraged to bring in plants and questions for free advice.

As you wend through the exhilarating welter of plants, design, music and people, be sure to make your way to the South Lobby to see the curated traveling museum exhibit brought to the show by the Northwest Horticultural Society. "A Place To Take Root: America's Flowerpots, Regional Styles from the 18th, 19th and 20th Centuries" is a celebration of the artistry and history of the common flower pot. Here's interactivity for grown-ups, with potter John Weber and Connecticut master Guy Wolff demonstrating pot throwing in a custom-made studio. You get to see not only beautifully designed pots but also an array of contemporary containers planted by the very best local designers, who could only be talked into such an undertaking by a respected group like the horticultural society.

Valerie Easton is a Seattle freelance writer and contributing editor for Horticulture magazine. Her e-mail address is valeaston@comcast.net.

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company

 
 
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
 

 

Continue News With: News3 ; News4 ; News5 ; News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services. Home

 © 2002-2006

Keywords::

Contact Iconocast

Home Page