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Edition 8.02 Almaden Valley Nursery News January 10, 2008

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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 unique gifts, entertaining items, decor for the home and patio, books, candles, soaps, lotions, florals, frames, linens, prints, potpourri, and more!


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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January

Care for Lawns:
Mow cool-season grasses, blue, rye and fescue as often as necessary; recommended mowing height is 1.5 to 2 inches. To control germinating crabgrass, apply pre-emergent weed killer this month.


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

Submit your recipe!

quote of the week

Quotation of the Week:

"I am writing in the garden. To write as one should of a garden one must write not outside it or merely somewhere near it, but in the garden."
~ Frances Hodgson Burnett


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Mark Barton, owner of Pruning Specialties, will be hosting FREE fruit tree pruning seminars at Almaden Valley Nursery. Mark has been pruning trees professionally for 30 years and has been a Certified Arborist for the last 10 years. He is well known in the industry and is often asked to speak at educational seminars. Mark has also consulted with numerous clients of Almaden Valley Nursery on the care and pruning of all landscape trees and shrubs.

We feel he's one of the best in the business and we appreciate his hosting these free seminars for our customers. His presentation will focus on a variety of fruit tree pruning techniques including espalier, dwarf, orchard and citrus. He will also demonstrate how to clean, sterilize and sharpen your pruning shears.

Please join us!

Saturday, January 19th from 10:00 a.m. -12:00 p.m.
OR
Sunday, January 20th, from 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.


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Kalanchoe (Kalanchoe blossfeldiana) is a naturally blooming succulent that offers up an array of blooms in many festive colors. Kalanchoe [kal-an-KO-ee or kal-LAN-cho] is a perky little plant that is easy to care for. Whether planted in a decorative basket or grouped together in a basket on the kitchen windowsill, kalanchoes will not disappoint you.

Kalanchoes have become increasingly popular as a gift plant, and featuring dark-green succulent leaves topped by masses of miniature, brightly colored blossoms in shades of red, orange, yellow, or salmon-pink. In its native Madagascar, the plant blooms only during the spring months, but with a little attention, it can produce blooms in any season.

Kalanchoes are similar to poinsettias and chrysanthemums, which initiate their flowering in response to long nights. Growers pull opaque shade fabric over their plants for 14 hours each night until the plants initiate flower buds. You can accomplish the same thing by placing a box over your plant for the same "long night" period.

Kalanchoes prefer lots of bright light to keep them happy and are ideal for the warm temperatures inside a home. They like to be watered deeply, but prefer to dry out between waterings.

If leaves start to yellow and shrivel up, your plant might be dehydrated and in need of water. If this happens, remove spent foliage and water thoroughly. Kalanchoes look best when fed every two weeks with a water-soluble plant food, such as Max Sea All Purpose Plant Food.

Most kalanchoes can re-bloom for a second growing season. Simply cut back leggy growth and old flower stems, then repot, and keep well watered in a sunny window. Start controlling their light in early October for January blooms.

A Very Berry World

The world of berries can be confusing. You have blackberries, black raspberries, red raspberries, and yellow raspberries. And don't forget boysenberries, loganberries and marionberries, which are all closely related. How do you tell them apart? Berries whose core stays intact are blackberries. Berries that lose the core and resemble a thimble are raspberries. But then...a few berries are a cross between the two!

The similarities don't stop there. All bear fruit on two-year-old wood, except for the ever-bearing raspberries that also fruit on first year growth. These are also called two crop raspberries because they bear a late summer or fall crop on the first year growth and a second crop the following spring on the two-year-old wood.

Different types of wood? What's that all about? Ok, it may help clear up a lot of confusion about blackberry and raspberry culture if one remembers that after flowering and fruiting, any cane that bore fruit dies back to the crown. All the new growth will rise out from primary buds just below the soil line.

Now here's the good news, blackberries, raspberries and any other favorites will thrive in most locations and soil types, but good drainage is desirable with most varieties. Just give them some room to ramble because they do like to spread out. As far as cold-hardiness goes, raspberries tolerate very cold temperatures better than blackberries.

Most berries like being fed at blooming time, with a follow-up feeding in early fall after the plants have finished fruiting. Just use a well-balanced fruit tree food such as Dr. Earth #9 Fruit Tree Fertilizer . They prefer staying moist, and should be watered regularly if rainfall is insufficient.

The new canes that grow out each spring will not bear fruit until the following summer when they are two years old. After harvest, the two-year-old fruiting canes will start to die back and should be removed as close to the ground as possible without injuring the new canes.

In mild climates berries can be trained be trained to stakes or trellises in late summer or early fall, after the fruiting canes have been removed. In colder climates, the canes should be left on the ground over winter--making them less likely to be damaged by cold. The ideal time to "spring train" is after the danger of freezing weather and before the leaf buds begin expanding.

We have berry plants that grow well in our local area (click here for a list of our varieties). The bottom line is that all berries are easy to grow and they taste great. So don't stress about all your different choices. Just plant some berries and enjoy!

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What does soil pH measure?

Answer:

Soil pH indicates how acid or alkaline a soil is. In technical terms, it is a logarithmic function of the hydrogen ion concentration [H+]: pH = -log [H+]. Got all that?

In simpler terms a pH of 7.0 is neutral. Below that number is acidic, above that number is alkaline. The scale is progressive, too. A pH of 6.0 is ten times more acid than a pH of 7.0; a pH of 5.0 is 100 times more acid than a pH of 7.0, and so on.

You can test your soil pH with a simple pH test kit.

• To modify or correct acidic soils you need to apply lime.
• To modify or correct alkaline soils you need to apply soil sulfur or aluminum sulfate.

The best time to correct pH is in the fall, which allows enough time for the chemical to react and change the pH. Most plants prefer soil slightly on the acidic side of 6.0-- lower for acid-loving plants like blueberries, azaleas, and ferns.

Hint: To keep your hydrangeas blue, start to acidify your soil in October, then again in December and a final one in February. To keep them pink, alkaline the soil with lime on the same schedule.

Backyard Orchard Culture

As homes continue to be built larger and garden space becomes smaller, fewer homeowners have the space to plant as many fruit trees. But that doesn't mean you have to go without the fresh taste of homegrown fruit. All you have to do is incorporate the principles of Backyard Orchard Culture.

The objective behind this gardening concept is to allow for a prolonged harvest of tree-ripe fruit from a small space. This can be accomplished by planting multi-grafted fruit trees, planting two or more trees with different ripening dates in the same hole, or by espaliering fruit trees along a sunny house wall or fence line.

By using multi-graft trees or planting more trees in one hole, a homeowner can now extend a 3-4 week harvest season into 10-12 weeks of different flavors. Planting or creating espaliers along a fence line can also free up valuable garden space for more fruit trees or other ornamental plants.

Close planting also offers the additional benefit of restricting a tree's vigor, because it has to compete for root space and sunlight with other nearby trees. More of the tree's energy will go towards producing fruit instead of sending out new growth. Close planting also can create an environment for better cross-pollination, which also leads to increased fruit production.

Most types of fruit trees need to be pruned each year to stimulate new fruiting wood, remove dead and diseased branches, or to allow more sunlight between the branches to help fruit ripen better and more evenly. If you start pruning consistently when your trees are young, it will be much easier to keep the tree at a manageable or desirable height.

At the heart of Backyard Orchard Culture is the concept of summer pruning. By pruning at the same time you are thinning your crops, you will be better able to distinguish the kind of wood on which the tree sets fruit. You won't accidentally prune off any fruit because you can see it and the new growth is always above or beyond the fruit.

Reducing the size of the tree canopy will in turn reduce the photosynthesis (food manufacture) of the tree. This helps to limit the amount of food materials and energy available for the roots to store, which in turn will control the tree's capability to produce as much new growth the rest of summer or the following spring.

Pruning for size control in the summer will reduce your pruning chores in winter. Once the leaves fall off, you will have a better opportunity to prune for branch spacing and overall shaping of your trees. To create an espalier tree, simply prune off anything that doesn't grow flat. Then selectively thin and train what's left to space the fruiting wood. You can espalier most fruit trees, but apples and pears lend themselves to this type of pruning better than other varieties.

Smaller fruit trees can be much more manageable to spray, prune, and harvest than large trees. So, take a new look at your garden and you might be surprised at the possibilities you have for growing fruit trees. Then close your eyes and think about how great the fruit from those trees will taste!

Almaden Valley Nursery has one of the biggest selections of multi-grafted fruit trees and espaliered fruit trees in Northern California. Visit our online catalog to see our selection. Click here to view!

Almaden Valley Trivia!

triva

This Week's Question: It's a fact that kiwis do not ripen on the vine, so what are the steps to ripen them?

Trivia Prize: $15 Gift Certificate

Click Here to Answer

Last Week's Question: Why should you never store apples near potatoes?


Winner: Glenn Warren wins a $15 Gift Certificate.

Answer: You should not store apples with potatoes or carrots. Ethylene gas produced by apples can cause potatoes to sprout and carrots to become bitter. Potatoes cause apples to take on a musty flavor.

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!

ferne

Ferne Watt


Ferne was born in Iowa and spent many summers there at her grandparents' farm after her family moved to Colorado. She learned to love gardening, canning, quilting, and sewing from her grandmother but claims her most important life lessons have been learned from raising her two boys.


Favorite Places:

Fort Bragg and the Northern California coast

Favorite Hobbies :

Sewing, painting, gardening, fishing and blogging

Favorite Plants :

Euphorbias, hollyhocks, columbines and foxgloves

Favorite Books:

Anything by P. Allen Smith

Favorite Magazines:

Martha Stewart and Victoria


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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Our Featured Recipes are submitted by our family, friends, and employees of the Nursery. We'd also like our newsletter readers to submit great recipes to share. If you'd like to submit one or more of your favorites, please email us the recipe in the format shown below. Include a picture too, if you have one. We'd also like to know the origin of your recipe so we can include a little background on it.

Happy eats!
Matt and Jeni Lepow

This week's featured recipe is from Jeni's grandmother, Marge. We love these fritters. We hope you like them, too.

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What You'll Need:

• 1 cup sifted flour
• ¼ tsp. salt
• 1 tsp. baking powder
• 1 tablespoon sugar
• 1 8 oz. can crushed pineapple, drained
• 1 egg, beaten
• ¼ cup milk
• 1 tablespoon melted Crisco

Step by Step:

Combine first 4 items. Combine the next 4 in a separate bowl. Slowly combine the two mixtures. Mix lightly (do not overmix). Drop batter from a tablespoon into very hot oil until golden brown. Serve with maple syrup.

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