home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!sequent!gaia.ucs.orst.edu!flop.ENGR.ORST.EDU!rutgers!njitgw.njit.edu!hertz.njit.edu!smt2626
- From: smt2626@hertz.njit.edu (sylvia m tou mfen stnt)
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Starting questions
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.162822.6502@njitgw.njit.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 16:28:22 GMT
- Sender: news@njit.edu
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, N.J.
- Lines: 55
- Nntp-Posting-Host: hertz.njit.edu
-
-
-
-
- As a beginner gardner, I am trying to start a vegatable and flower garden.
-
- 1. To make life easier (or so I think), I am trying for a mostly
- perennial flower garden with some annuals (I'll try the bulbs later).
- I started buying seeds for perennials such as delphaniums and columbines.
- I am rather confused though; the seed package says to start indoor planting
- 6-8 weeks before the last frost and then plant them in the desired locations.
- The books that I checked out of the library says to start planting them
- in cold frames (or in my case indoors under flourescent lights at work)
- in summer, then move out to the desired locations in fall. From what I
- can gather this second method makes them more hardy but how necessary is
- it since I really don't want to wait until next year to do the planting.
- Any suggestions? Also I am open to suggestions as to what to buy
- (seeds or grown plants); I am looking for hardy, easy care plants that
- thrive in full to partial sun; I live in Zone 6 (close to Zone 7), in NJ.
- (Worse comes to worse and this year, I'll buy annuals to plant for now.)
-
- 2. For the vegatable garden part, I am also starting from seeds. Do the
- above apply also to vegatables or just go ahead and do what the seed
- packages say to do?
-
- 3. How does one tell a still living (though inactive) plant from
- a dead plant. The previous people who lived there had a garden and I
- left it as is. Unfortunately for the most part I don't know what
- they planted. I figured I can safely assume the stuff that is still
- green above ground will bloom again come spring/summer but what
- about the dead brown stuff. A few of the plants have the tags so I can
- look them up but the others?
-
- 4. There is one area on my yard, along the fence that the previous
- people who lived there just threw stuff there (stuff as in lumber
- and ladder and stair railings). The area is acually nicely 'bordered',
- i.e. you can see a defineable division between grass and nongrass. THis
- area is also riched from years of decomposing leaves and stuff. I was
- thinking of growing some hardy shrubs there. The garden books I read
- confused me in this aspect because they talk about being careful about
- where you put shrubs in terms of lighting (as well as other reasons).
- In this location that I was thinking of, its all shade during spring and
- summer due to the trees there and alot of sun during the winter (no leaves
- for shade). The shrubs I was thinking of was the forsythia, azalea, and
- hydrangea. Any problems with this? Any other suggestions?
- (I was going to use the lumber to actually define a border and the rest dump.)
-
- 5. I am looking for a low growing perennial that has relatively shallow
- roots to use as a border (more specifically, its for decoration around a
- grave marker (slab of stone) for a deceased pet.) Any suggestions?
- Again NJ - Zone 6.
-
- So not to clutter things up, please send comments and suggestions to
- sylvia@maple.njit.edu. Thank you all.
-
- -- sylvia
-