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Tuesday, March 9, 2010

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A Sampling of Articles:
Release Some Tension...Spend Some Time In Your Garden

Planting Blue Flowers In Your Garden

Planning Next Year's Garden

The Flower Garden In August

Starting Vegetable Garden Seeds & Plants Indoors

The Importance Of Garden Decor

Selecting The Right Water Feature For Your Garden

Pre-Spring Garden Planning

The Container Vegetable Garden

Rose Garden Tips

Rock Gardens ' A Different Kind Of Garden

Teak Garden Furniture - A Lasting Value

The 'Minimal' Garden

The Birth Of A Small Container Flower Garden

Seeds And More Seeds...What Your Garden Needs

Starting A Shade Garden

Preserving Flowers From A Potpourri Garden

The Perfect Garden Sundial

Preserving Flowers From A Potpourri Garden

The 'Minimal' Garden
Some people who lead busy professional and personal lives, don't feel they have the time to invest in the constant upkeep of floral .....
Fresh cut flowers all spring and summer are one of the bonuses of having a flower garden. Wouldn't you love to extend that bonus throughout the year' By choosing the right flowers and learning methods of drying and preserving flowers, you can fill your house with the beauty and fragrance of potpourri all year long.

Growing a Potpourri Garden
Potpourri is a fragrant mix of dried flower petals, leaves, whole flowers and spices. It can be sewn into sachets, simmered in a potpourri burner, or displayed in an open bowl. By choosing herbs and flowers that dry well and maintain their fragrance when dried, you'll be well on your way to scenting your home with the natural fragrance of last summer's garden.

Your potpourri mix should include both flowers and herbs from your garden, and be chosen with an eye toward color and a nose for scent. A potpourri garden might include several (or all!) of the following:

Fragrant Herbs and Flowers for a Potpourri Garden
Are You Over Watering Your Garden?
Take a look at your garden. You can see that it isn't doing as well as you'd hoped. The lower leaves on your .....
Lilac ' this flower is both beautiful and fragrant. To use in potpourri, dry the flowerets separately on a drying screen. For use in dried flower arrangements, use silica gel to dry whole flowers.

Lavender ' another fragrant purple flower, lavender dries well. Hang in bunches upside down in a dark, dry room. Both leaves and flowers carry the fragrance of lavender and can be used in potpourri.

Roses ' Roses are a beautiful addition to any potpourri. For fragrance, separate the petals and dry on a drying screen. If you want to include whole rosebuds from your potpourri garden, they're best dried in silica or another desiccant, but small, delicate rosebuds can be dried on screens as well.

Mint ' There's an amazing variety of mints available, and nearly any will add a hint of fresh spice to a potpourri. If you choose to grow mint in a potpourri garden, be sure to 'cage' the roots so that it doesn't take over the entire plot. To dry, either air dry tied bunches, or dry separated leaves on a drying screen.

Lemon Balm ' This perennial herb has a light lemony-mint scent that enhances the fragrance of roses and lilacs. The leaves should be picked before the plant flowers and dried quickly ' it's one of the few herbs that benefits from drying in a low oven on a screen.

Violets ' Sweetly scented and brightly colored, violets preserve their color well through drying. To dry, nip the flower off just at the base of the head, and lay on drying screens in the sun.

Building A Garden From Nothing At All
Gardening doesn't have to be an expensive hobby. Some of the most beautiful gardens I've ever grown cost me nothing but sweat and sore .....
Flowers and Herbs for Color in a Potpourri Garden
Many of the herbs and flowers listed above are brightly colored as well as fragrant. There are some flowers, however, that will add little to the fragrance of potpourri but dry so prettily that it's a shame not to include them.

Calendula ' Bright yellow or blue petals make calendula a pretty addition to a bowl of potpourri. To use, you can either dry the entire flower head, or separate the petals to dry on a flower screen.
How To Create A Decorative Garden Window
If you have a sunny window in a room where you don't have to worry about privacy, this d'r idea will provide a country home feel along with the beauty of .....

Pansies ' A relative of violets, pansies retain their bright color when dried in silica gel. They're a wonderful addition to a potpourri garden ' besides their appearance, they're edible and wonderful in salads or as candied decorations on a cake. In potpourri, the dried petals or whole-dried flowers make a beautiful accent.

About the Author

This article courtesy of http://www.best-florists.org




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