“Containers make vegetable gardening easier - Baltimore Sun” plus 1 more |
Containers make vegetable gardening easier - Baltimore Sun Posted: 04 Feb 2010 06:28 AM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. Containers can take 'everything but corn,' blogger saysContainers are the answer for the vegetable gardener short on space or sunlight, or one caught in a tug of war with hungry critters. "You can grow everything but corn in a container," said Kerry Michaels, who writes about container gardening online at About.com. Michaels has grown tomato plants in recyclable grocery bags and old laundry baskets and lettuces in yard-sale colanders. But she says the introduction of self-watering containers has made all the difference. These containers have a reservoir at the base and the soil wicks the water - and fertilizers - up to the roots in a slow, deliberate fashion, eliminating the drought-wet cycles that can stress any plant and cause disease. "Self-watering changed my life," said Michaels. That's because a consistent source of moisture might be the toughest part of container gardening. A downpour can flood your container, and pots can dry out quickly on a hot summer day. Michaels doesn't have many of those warm days where she lives in Maine. But gardening in containers allows her to "chase the sun." She loads up the wagons her friends and neighbors have learned to give her and drags her "gardens" in and out of the protection of the garage during early summer and in and out of the sunshine later. I plant lettuces and spinach in containers on my deck because they are semiprotected from the early spring cold and I can move them into the shade when the weather gets hot. Michaels is an organic gardener and prefers organic soil mixes as well as kelp and seaweed and fish emulsion fertilizers that she applies every other week. "You really do need to feed them like crazy," she said. Fresh soil and containers cleaned with a mixture of water and vinegar or water and bleach are key, too. Diseases can winter-over in your containers. I plant my tomatoes in containers on my deck, where they are safe from a blight fungus that seems to be in my garden. Gardener's Supply Co., as well as many local lawn and garden centers, will have the self-watering containers you need to get started on your vegetable container garden. But Michaels uses anything she sees. The larger the better, to maintain soil temperature and retain moisture. Michaels' biggest surprise in container gardening? "How amazing the potatoes taste when you grow them yourself." Which she did. In a bag. On top of a picnic bench. "Containers allow you to control the variables more," she said. "And that includes the critters." Next week: Vegetable gardening by the square foot Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
DMA names Allen interim president, CEO - DM News Posted: 05 Feb 2010 12:07 AM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. The Direct Marketing Association named Robert Allen, former president and CEO of the Vermont Country Store, its interim president and CEO effective February 5. He will fill the role while the trade group searches for a permanent replacement for John Greco, who resigned as president and CEO last month. Allen was not available for comment when DMNews contacted the DMA on February 4. He said in a statement that "direct marketing is in the middle of a period of rapid change." "It will be important to maintain a balance between tried and true methods and new concepts like social media and the digital landscape," he added in the statement. Allen joined the Vermont Country Store in 1982 as assistant to the president and became president himself in 1994. He also serves as a director for Gardeners Supply, Cuddledown, Susan Sargent Designs, JK Adams, Danforth Pewterers and Kalow Technologies. "[Allen] has successfully navigated businesses through revolutionary changes in direct marketing and will keep DMA advancing into the 21st century," said Eugene Raitt, DMA board chairman, in a statement. "He is exactly the kind of forward-thinking leader we need." Ramesh Lakshmi-Ratan, former EVP and COO of the DMA, left the organization September 18. He now leads a division at Pitney Bowes. The DMA did not fill his position. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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