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Edition 6.51 Almaden Valley Nursery News December 21st, 2006

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 Need a Handout?
In addition to the helpful advice of our Certified Nursery Professionals, we have more than 30 handouts to help show you how to properly plan, select, plant and take care of your garden and plants once you get home.

Please don't hesitate to pick up your FREE copy of any of these brochures. For a complete list of all of our handouts please visit our website at:
www.almadenvalleynursery.com

Need a Gift?

Cottage Shop
Visit the Gift Shop

A great selection of gifts, books, candles, soaps, lotions, florals, frames, linens, prints, potpourri, and home furnishings to decorate your home.


SPECIAL ORDERS

Ever had the problem of finding that one special plant or product no one seemed to carry? Almaden Valley Nursery offers a special order program that may be just right for you. If you can't find a plant or product, or if we are out of it at the present time, we will place a special order just for you.

We can usually fill your order in 1-2 weeks, depending on availability and quality, via our vast network of suppliers. So the next time you are frustrated, banging on walls, and plain old "can't take it anymore," take advantage of our special order program. Just ask any one of our Celebrity Service Staff for details and we will be more than happy to help you.


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December

Care for Gift Plants: Azaleas, cyclamen, and poinsettias would actually prefer to be outdoors; while they're in your house, display them in as cool a spot as possible - away from heaters and the fireplace. If pots are trimmed in decorative foil, punch a hole though the wrap or remove it so plants can drain well. Keep soil slightly damp, never soggy.


Be a Guest Gardener:

Gardeners love to learn from other gardeners "over the fence". We would love to include a tour and or an article from one of our readers!


Contact Information:

E-Mail:
Click to e-mail us.

Telephone:
(408) 997-1234

Address:
15800 Almaden Expy
San Jose, CA 95120-1503

Hours:
Weekdays 9AM-5PM
Weekends 8AM-5PM


Gardner & Bloome

Shady Hollow
Shady Hollow

Color Dept
Color Dept

Dr Earth

Color Courtyard
Color Courtyard

Dr Earth

Perfect Perennials
Perfect Perennials

quote of the week

Quotation of the Week:

"Perfumes are the feelings of flowers."
—  Heinrich Heine


From All of Us to All of You

Happy Holidays!

From,

Almaden Valley Nursery

Five Gardening Resolutions for 2007

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By Tamara Galbraith

1. Try Something New:
Are you a rose freak? An orchid expert? Or maybe you only grow vegetables. At any rate, diversity is a good thing. Take a journey -- however brief -- down another avenue of gardening. Or just try growing a new, cool plant you've never seen before.

2. Learn to Like Spiders (or, at least tolerate them):
Repeat after me..."Spiders are our friends. Spiders are our friends." Don't automatically reach for the Raid or rolled-up newspaper every time you see eight legs and a bunch of eyes staring back at you. Remember, the earth would be overrun with pests like flies, fleas and much more were it not for our fanged friends. If a spider or other relatively harmless bug gets in the house, try carefully catching it in a small container and releasing it outside before instinctively smashing it to bits. Or, if you're like me, allow a few out-of-the-way spiders to hang around. They'll keep your fungus gnat and earwig problems at bay, for sure. (Learn to identify the more harmful brown recluse and black widow spiders, however, and use orange oil on them if spotted.)

3. Don't Beat Yourself Up for Failures:
I guarantee you that even Martha Stewart has accidentally killed plants. Many times, a plant death isn't even the grower's fault - plants, like the rest of us, eventually die. If the plant's demise was your doing, learn from your mistakes and move on.

4. Be Good to Mother Nature:
Wean yourself and your plants off of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers. Start a compost pile. Plant native and/or waterwise trees, shrubs and perennials. Mulch, and use natural materials when doing so. It's all about building the soil.

5. Give Something Back:
Participate in or start up a community garden in your area. Share your love of gardening with kids and seniors. Got too many zukes? Take them to your local food bank. Gardening is at least twice as much fun when someone else benefits from your labor of love.

Fun Holiday Facts

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• The first commercial Christmas cards were commissioned in London, in 1843, by Sir Henry Cole. The illustration was by John Callcott Horsley. President Dwight D. Eisenhower issued the first official White House card in 1953.

• "Rudolph" was actually created by Robert May for Montgomery Ward in the late 1930's as a holiday promotion. The song was written later by Johnny Marks, and recorded by Gene Autry in 1949 - it promptly sold about 2 million copies. article image

• Christmas became an official national holiday in the USA on June 26, 1870.

• Poinsettias are the most popular Christmas plant and are the number one 'flowering' potted plant in the United States.

• Franklin Pierce put the first Christmas tree in the White House (in 1856), for a group of Washington Sunday School children. Benjamin Harrison is credited with starting the tradition of the White House tree - he was the first to have a decorated family Christmas tree in the White House in 1889, and Calvin Coolidge put the first National Christmas tree on the White House lawn (not in the White House) in 1923.

• The first reported electrically lit Christmas tree was in December 1882. The world's first practical light bulb was invented by Thomas Edison in 1879, and a mere three years later, in 1882, an officer of Edison's electric company, one Edward Johnson, electrically lit a Christmas tree for the first time. In 1917, after a tragic fire in New York City that was caused by Christmas candles, Albert Sadacca (fifteen years old at the time) invented safety lights for Christmas trees. Decorating a live Christmas tree outdoors became popular, and eventually moved to indoor trees. The outdoor lights also moved onto houses, and decorating houses in lights became (and remained) popular).

article image• Christmas trees are grown in all 50 states, including Hawaii and Alaska.

• In 1979, the National Christmas Tree was not lighted except for the top ornament. This was done because of the American hostages in Iran.

• According to the Guinness World Records, the world's tallest cut Christmas tree was a 221' Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) erected and decorated at Northgate Shopping Center, Seattle, Washington, USA, in December 1950.

• By the way, NORAD tracks Santa around the world every Christmas. If you'd like to find out how they do it, and how you can follow along, check out NORAD's website here.

Mastering the Machete

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By Tamara Galbraith

So, the first major freeze of the season has turned your cannas and bananas into floppy brown messes.

Gardeners in milder climates are lucky; we can leave a lot of our tropicals in the soil year round with just a little bit of above-ground clean up duty. That's where the invaluable machete comes in. But knowing how to use this intimidating tool safely and effectively is very important.

First and foremost, you should ALWAYS swing the tool away from your body, and wear proper eye and body protection.

Jungle expedition experts recommend that you keep your wrist parallel to the cut, and always cut at an angle. The steps for a correct stroke and follow-through are:

(1) As you pull the machete back, let your shoulder come down.
(2) Lead with the elbow.
(3) At the last second, flick or snap your wrist.

For woody saplings and thicker trunks, use a downward chopping motion. For fleshy herbaceous plants, use an upward flick.

Keeping your machete sharp with a whetstone, and sheathed when not in use, will ensure years of quality chopping as you fight through your backyard jungle.

Almaden Valley Trivia!

triva

This Week's Question: In How the Grinch Stole Christmas, what did the Grinch have that was two sizes too small?

Trivia Prize:
a $15 gift certificate

Click Here to Answer

Last Week's Question: Which is the mammal with the longest tongue?

Winner: Mary Berthiaume wins a 4" Esque Globe candle

Answer: A bat has the longest tongue of any mammal. Anoura fistulata is only the size of a mouse, but its tongue is around 8.5 centimetres long – more than double the tongue-length of similar nectar bats. Compared with its body, a tongue of this size is second only to the chameleon in terms of vertebrates, and it is the longest of all the mammals.

One winner per week. If you are the prize winner, simply come into the nursery, bringing some form of ID, to pick up your prize.

Meet our Celebrity Service Team!

Matt Lepow

Matt Lepow - President

Matt was born and raised in San Jose (Almaden Valley). After graduating from high school, Matt left Almaden to attend Cal Poly University in San Luis Obispo, where he received a degree in Ornamental Horticulture, concentrating in Landscape Design.

Matt first worked as a foreman with a landscape maintenance company at the Stanford Research Institute and then at another retail nursery before joining Almaden in 1993. In July 2006, Matt and his wife Jeni purchased Almaden Valley Nursery. Matt is very active in the industry and has served as president of the local chapter of the California Association of Nurseries and Garden Centers and now serves on state boards for the same organization.

Matt has an extensive wine collection as well as rock 'n' roll art memorabilia. In his spare time he likes to go wine tasting with his wife Jeni and big game fishing with his friends in Mexico. Matt and Jeni have two boys--Ryan and Shane.


Favorite Place:

Italy and Almaden Valley Nursery

Favorite Food:

Italian

Favorite Music:

Classic and Alternative Rock

Favorite Movies:

Raising Arizona, Cool Hand Luke and Time Bandits

Favorite TV_Shows:

Lost, Heroes, The Office, and Meerkat Manor


My staff and I look forward to serving you this year. We'll go out of our way to make your day!

Matt Lepow

Recipe of the Week: Candy Cane Bread

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What You'll Need:

  • 2 cups flour
  • 1/4 cup packed brown sugar
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup margarine
  • 1/4 cup chopped nuts
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • Red and green decorator icing (optional)
  • Powdered sugar for icing

Step by Step:

Grease a cookie sheet and set aside.

Stir together flour, brown sugar, baking powder and salt.

Cut in margarine until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add the nuts.

Combine the egg and milk. Stir into the flour mixture just til moistened.

On a lightly floured surface, pat dough into a 10" x 7" rectangle. Cut crosswise into 1" wide strips.
Twist each strip by holding both ends. Bend one end to form candy cane shape.

Place candy canes several inches apart on cookie sheet. Bake in a 425°F oven for 10 minutes or until light brown.

Carefully remove to a wire rack to cool.

Frost with decorator icing or with powdered sugar icing.

Powdered Sugar Icing
In a small bowl combine 2 cups powdered sugar and enough milk to make it of drizzling consistency (about 3 T.) Drizzle over cooled candy canes.

Makes 10 candy canes

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