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SAN JOSE
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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 unique gifts, entertaining items, décor for the home and patio, books, candles, soaps, lotions, florals, frames, linens, prints, potpourri, and more!
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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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October |
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Pre-chill tulip and hyacinth bulbs (for six-eight weeks) in the refrigerator for planting.
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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:
Mon thru Fri
9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Saturdays
8:00 a.m.- 6:00 p.m.
Sundays
8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
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 Shady Hollow

 Color Dept

 Color Courtyard

 Perfect Perennials

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FEATURED QUOTE :
"The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn." ~Ralph Waldo Emerson
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By Tamara Galbraith
Calendula, widely recognized as the Flower of the Month for October, comes from the Latin word calendae, meaning "throughout the months." Gardeners who plant this long-blooming herbaceous annual will find it certainly lives up to its name.
Although members of the marigold family, calendulas' needs are quite different. They actually prefer cooler temperatures and evenly moist soil, and at 1-2 ft. tall, calendulas can get quite a bit bigger than your average marigold, too. If you're putting in transplants, use a slow-release fertilizer at planting time. We recommend Osmocote. Calendulas also do great in containers.
As your calendulas grow and flower, prune back spent blossoms to prolong blooming; some will continue to bloom into late fall, a nice treat since calendulas' predominantly orange and yellow flowers fit in with autumn's color scheme. In hot climates, calendulas will continue to grow throughout the winter.
Calendulas can continue to perform even after they're cut. Add the dried flowers to vinegar and use as a fish marinade or salad dressing. (In fact, the leaves themselves can be harvested for salads.) Tea made from calendula flowers is said to make a soothing eye wash, a mild treatment for skin irritations or a remedy for upset stomachs.
Give this hard-working beauty a try, and you'll be enjoying the calendula--as its name says--throughout the months!
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Prices are skyrocketing, the economy is not in the best of shape--but we still have to feed nutritious meals to our families. What's the solution? Grow your own cold-weather vegetables! And if you've never grown a vegetable garden before, relax. It isn't rocket science, and the rewards far outweigh the effort. In fact, you can incorporate your vegetables into your floral gardens and increase the visual impact with different colors and textures.
If you've decided to commit to a vegetable-only garden, first pick a 10 square foot area with plenty of sun, as well as a reasonable amount of shade. Work the soil up to a depth of 6 inches, mix in some organic fertilizer, smooth out the surface, and you're ready to plant. Which leads us to...what can you plant?
Cooler weather means leaves, roots, flower buds and pods in the vegetable garden. Leaf vegetables include chard, all lettuces and spinach. If you're in an experimental mood, try planting collards, kale, mustard, endive and chicory. Keep the soil nearly constantly moist as leaf vegetables like their water.
Root vegetables include beets, carrots and radishes. Combine them with onions, leeks and garlic, and along with your lettuces, you'll be salad-healthy all winter long.
Broccoli and cauliflower represent the flower bud category. These plants "head up" best when temperatures at night average about 45-50 degrees Fahrenheit, so be sure to take a break from your gardening to watch your local weather man!
The pods are just that: English peas, snap peas, and sugar peas. (More common beans prefer a warmer season.) And your peas, like your leaf vegetables, like a regular watering schedule, just not as moist or as frequent as the leaf veggies.
When you're steaming your veggies, be liberal with fresh lemon squeezes. And toss the used lemon segment into the steaming water, along with freshly ground pepper, tarragon, and rosemary. This will infuse your vegetables and enhance their already-delectable taste. Bon appétit!
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Holiday cacti are not hard to take care of, if you remember not to overwater them; getting them to bloom on time is a bit more complex.
Here's how to do it:
In order for these plants to form flower buds for holiday blooms, they need extended darkness for at least four weeks.
Place the plant in a dark room or keep it covered (under a box or bag works fine) for at least 12 hours a day.
When buds appear (it usually takes around four weeks), the darkening schedule can stop.
As the buds get larger, move the plant gradually to where it will be displayed for the holiday, avoiding extreme temperature or lighting changes.
Continue to water and feed while the plant is budding and blooming. Water only when the soil is completely dry--these plants do not like soggy roots.
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Should I use bone meal or bulb food when I plant my bulbs?
Answer: We recommend bone meal at the time of planting, then applying a balanced bulb food, such as Dr. Earth #1 Bulb Food, once the foliage appears above the soil line in late winter/early spring.
There are a couple of reasons for this. Nitrogen can burn the actual bulb, which only needs the phosphorus and potash from bone meal in order to stimulate rooting. But once the bulb is sending out a stem, it needs nitrogen to become strong so it won't bend over from the weight of the flowers that it sets. This is especially important for bulbs with large heavy flowers, such as tulips, ranunculus, and hyacinth.
It's also important to dig the holes or trenches a little deeper than the bulb
needs to be, applying some bone meal below the bulb, then a little more soil
so the bulb doesn't sit directly on the food but has access to the food as it
sends out roots (got to give those roots some incentive to stretch).
Click to print this article.
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This Week's Question: How much does the world's biggest pumpkin weigh?
Choose Your Answer: A: 245 pounds, B: 485 pounds, C: 685 pounds, D: 1,385 pounds
Trivia Prize: One (1) Large Pumpkin of your choice from our pumpkin patch!
Click Here to Answer
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Previous Trivia Question: Six of the seven continents can grow pumpkins (including Alaska!) Which continent will pumpkins not grow in?
Winner: Cynthia (Kinch) Malapitan wins One (1) Large Pumpkin of your choice from our pumpkin patch!
Answer: Antarctica
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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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Matt Lepow - President
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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 |
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- 1 lb. dried navy beans
- 6 cups chicken broth
- 4 tablespoons butter
- 1 tablespoon minced fresh garlic
- 1/2 onion, diced
- 1 1/2 cups diced green chilies (canned, undrained)
- 1 lb chicken breast (diced and sautéed with 1 clove garlic, salt and pepper until browned)
- 1 tablespoon ground cumin
- 1 tablespoon oregano
- 1-2 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1 pinch red pepper flakes
- 1/2 bunch cilantro leaf, chopped
GARNISH
- sour cream
- green onion
- grated Monterey Jack cheese
Step by Step:
- Rinse beans and place in a bowl big enough that the beans don't fill it more than 1/3 of the way up.
- Cover the beans with cool water 2-3 inches past the top of the beans.
- Soak overnight.
- Next day drain and place in large pot with chicken broth; cover the pot with a lid and bring to a boil.
- Cook for about 45 minutes to an hour.
- While beans are cooking, place butter in a sauté pan and melt.
- Add garlic, onions, and chilies and then sauté till onions are soft.
- Add chili mixture to beans and then add chicken, cumin, oregano, and peppers.
- Cook for 1/2 hour and then add cilantro.
- Garnish as desired and serve with corn chips or corn bread.
Yield:
6-8 servings
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