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SAN JOSE
Weather Courtesy of:

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Links to
Our Recent Galleries:
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Need a Handout? |
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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 |
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Need a Gift?

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.
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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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Subscribe to the
Almaden Valley
Newsletter:
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May |
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It's not yet too late to start a vegetable garden — but if you want one and haven't started it yet, it is time to get moving!
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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!
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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
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 Shady Hollow

 Color Dept

 Color Courtyard

 Perfect Perennials
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Quotation of the Week:
"Flowers seem intended for a solace of ordinary humanity . . ." ~John Ruskin |
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All Pulp-Potted Roses are 30% off!
Almaden Valley Nursery has a great selection of hybrid tea, floribunda, and grandiflora bush roses, climbing roses, and 24" and 36" tree roses. Come pick out the perfect gift for Mom for Mother's Day. Why spend your money on pricey cut flowers that die in a week when you can buy her a rose bush that will bloom for months? Give her the gift that keeps giving.
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Sale is subject to stock on hand. Sale prices are good from Thursday, 5/10 through Sunday, 5/13 only.
Cannot be combined with volume discounts.
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Enriched with hard-working natural ingredients, these helpful products leave you as well-cared for as your surroundings. Home Thymes products are effective, beneficial, safe and responsible to us. And they smell amazing!
In the recent April 2007 issue of Real Simple magazine, they recommended the Home Thymes lines as one of their top home cleaning solutions.
Almaden Valley Nursery is now stocked with all four lines of the Home Thymes products. In each line you will find the All-Purpose Spray Cleaner, Dishwashing Liquid, Hand Wash and Hand Lotion, as well as a sink caddy containing both the very popular Hard Working Hand Cream, home fragrance mist and the fragrant candle.
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Apricot Quince
Succulent, tender and overflowing with the luscious orchard aroma of ripe apricots, plump, juicy peaches and sweet cassis; balanced with the pleasant tartness of quince. |
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Kumquat Lime
An inspiring take on citrus that mingles the essence of spirit-lifting tangerine, tangy-sweet kumquat and clarifying lime with the freshness of geranium and a sprig of sage. |
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Lavender Bergamot
Addictively appealing, with the cleansing, calming properties of fresh-picked lavender and rich, mellow Italian bergamot spiked with clover, heliotrope, and jasmine blossoms. |
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Mandarin Coriander
Crisp and clean, this one-of-a-kind herbal and citrus blend combines cold-pressed mandarin oil, the essence of just-peeled oranges and the distinctive signature of coriander. |
Taking care of your home has never smelled better!
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Butterflies are beautiful, dainty and graceful flying stained glass windows! The slightest glimpse of one of these creatures brings immeasurable joy to the beholder. Butterflies are simply revered by children and adults alike.
So wouldn’t you love to have a butterfly garden in your own yard? Even if your landscape is already established, if you plant a few of the plants listed below, butterflies will soon find a friendly environment in your gardens.
Unfortunately, not all flowering plants will attract butterflies. However, there are flowering plants that are excellent hosts for the butterfly larvae. Other flowers provide nectar for the adults. Different species of butterflies are attracted to different flower nectar and flower colors.
The flowering plants that butterflies love can be annuals, perennials, shrubs and/or vines. You can create a wonderful, colorful garden that blooms year round, is beautiful for you and attracts these delicate creatures.
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Food Plants for Larvae
Asclepias (Monarch Larva)
Carrot
Dicentra – Bleeding Heart
Fennel
Geum
Nasturtium
parsley
violets |
Nectar Plants for Adults
Asters
Buddleia
Cosmos
Coneflower (Echinacea)
Coreopsis
Daisy (Shasta)
Gaillardia
Passion Flower vine
Phlox
Lantana
Rudbeckia
Salvias
Verbena
Yarrow
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| This plant list is not exhaustive. During your next visit to Almaden Valley Nursery, ask one of our garden experts and we’ll help you with your selection. Even some of our California natives also host butterfly larvae and feed the adults. California Coffee Berry and California Wild Lilac (Ceanothus) are larva hosts.
One other quick note: Butterflies also like puddles. Provide a small water source in your garden with a shallow birdbath or buried bucket filled with stones and then filled with water.
By the way, did you know that the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles has a Butterfly Pavilion?
For more information, go to: http://www.nhm.org/exhibitions/butterflies/ |

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Across the country, bees have been disappearing at an alarming rate. Entire hives set out on what was presumably their normal day work of collecting nectar and pollen, but they never returned to their hive. This phenomenon is termed Colony Collapse Disorder, not an unknown event. But this year, commercial beekeepers are alarmed because it is happening to an extraordinary number of hives.
What does this matter, you ask? Aren't honeybees just garden pests that fly around, seek out humans and sting, sting, sting? Well, not really. In fact, if a bee would sting you, that would be the end of its life. And keep in mind, honeybees only choose to sting when they are protecting themselves or their hive. Otherwise, they really have no interest in us whatsoever.
In reality, honeybees are absolutely necessary in our environment; they are nature's pollinators. They pollinate our flowers, and not just the pretty ornamental flowers in our gardens. So, although our beloved literary bear character Winnie the Pooh believes, "The only reason for being a bee that I know of is making honey...and the only reason for making honey is so I can eat it" (A.A. Milne), he's not altogether correct. Sorry, Pooh.
Honeybees are hard-working pollinators of the world's vegetable and fruit crops. You might think of them in this way...when their work is done on farms across the country, then they have time to seek out our flowering trees, shrubs and perennials in our gardens.
Commercial farmers have worn the hat of not only a farmer but also of a beekeeper for years. And there are commercial beekeepers maintaining hives and supplying them to farmers at the appropriate pollination times of the growing season. That is how very important this fantastic creature is to our economy and environment.
Read more about the hive losses at the following websites:
American Beekeeping Federation: Honey Bee Die-Off Alarms Beekeepers, Crop Growers, Researchers
LA Times: Flight of the honeybees
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Don't be confused by all those letters and numbers! The N-P-K letters stand for Nitrogen-Phosphorus-Potassium. (The “K” is the chemical initial for potassium.) On each fertilizer label, you will see the percentage of each of these primary nutrients in that fertilizer product. For example, a 10-20-20 fertilizer contains 10% nitrogen, 20% phosphorus, and 20% potassium.
These nutrients, called macronutrients, certainly aren't the only ones plants need, but plants use them in the greatest quantities. You'll sometimes hear the term "fertilizer ratios." This is simply the ratio of each to the other. Divide the numbers by the lowest number in the group of 3 and you will have the ratio. For instance, 10-20-20 would have a 1-2-2 ratio, and 15-15-15 would be 1-1-1.
Nitrogen is the nutrient most often in short supply in soils. It stimulates vegetative growth such as leaves and stems, and gives a lush green color to leaves. Phosphorus stimulates root growth, hastens flowering, and promotes increased disease-resistance, whereas potassium increases the size and quality of fruit and flowers, among other benefits.
The balance of these nutrients can be as important as how much you apply. For instance, a tomato may respond with lots of vegetative growth and few fruits if you give it too much nitrogen. If you give it too much phosphorus and potassium, and no nitrogen, the result can be a small plant that produces only a few tomatoes.
Other necessary secondary nutrients include magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca) and sulfur (S). Magnesium is the core chemical of chlorophyll in green leaves. Calcium is needed for strong cell wall formation and root growth. Sulfur acts together with nitrogen in plant cells.
And, not to confuse you, micronutrients are necessary as well. These are trace elements, present in very tiny amounts. Examples are zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn) and iron (Fe). Iron is also necessary for chlorophyll production.
If a plant has yellowing leaves, or chlorosis, the pattern of that yellowing is important for you to note.
• Yellow leaves that are smaller than normal – needs nitrogen
• Yellowing between the green veins – needs iron
• Veins lighter in color than the tissue between them – needs sulfur
Be sure to use a fertilizer that is specialized for the type of plant you are feeding and the right time of year for the application. If you are not sure, just ask one of us and we'll help you sort it out!
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This Week's Question: What is the botanical name for the flower called Lenten Rose?
Trivia Prize: A
$15 Gift Certificate
Click Here to Answer
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Last Week's Question: What popular house plant is also known as mother in law's tongue?
Winner:
Gloria Bell
wins a
$15 Gift Certificate
Answer: Helleborus orientalis
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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.
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Meet our Celebrity Service Team!
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Jim Citta
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Jim was born in Santa Clara, California. He was raised on a small farm where is family grew apricots, cherries, almonds, and prunes. He majored in English and Political Science in college but eventually went to work in the photography field. After fourteen years at Eastman Kodak, Jim took a chance and quit to begin a long-term career in the nursery business.
Jim is a passionate environmentalist and vegetarian. He regularly participates in volunteer projects in his spare time, building fences, repairing trails and ridding parks and preserves of non-native invasive plant species. His long-term goals are to become a published author while continuing his work and passion for the environment.
Lifelong Ambition: |
To be a published author |
Favorite TV Show: |
None. "With a few exceptions, TV is a wasteland." |
Favorite Quote: |
"Be the change you want to see in others" - Gandhi |
Favorite Movie: |
Casablanca |
Favorite Food: |
Anything chocolate
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Recommended Read: |
Animal Liberation by Peter Singer |
My staff and I look forward to serving you this year. We'll go out of our way to make your day!
Matt Lepow
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Featured Recipe: Guacamole |
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| What
You'll Need:
- 2 avocados - peeled, pitted and diced
- 2 teaspoons salt
- 1 large tomato, diced
- 1 onion, diced
- 2 jalapeno peppers, chopped
- 1/2 tablespoon chopped fresh cilantro
- 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
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Step by Step: |
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In a medium bowl, mash the avocados and stir in salt.
Mix in the tomato, onion, jalapeno, cilantro and lime juice.
Cover and chill in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes before serving.
Yield: 2 cups
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