510 East 1st Street Ankeny, IA 50021
Phone: (515)964-3038

From the Poppy Gallery: Double Blooming Opium Poppy

Double Bloom Somniferum

In Trumpets, Spires, Bells: Japanese Wisteria

Japanese Wisteria

In the Herb Gallery: Empress of India Nasturtium

Empress Nasturtium

Or See All Galleries >>

Featured Plant Music (Listen)
Listen to current playlist: Vielle, ambient and classical music mix

Absolutely fabulous vielle playing by Shira Kammen. Highly recommend the whole album but this particular tune (Hanter Dros) is melodic - listen all the way through. And truth be told, the plants just love it! (Yes, I do have some wild theories about growing plants). You can stream this song and hear the complete play list of vielle, ambient and classical music here or download the mp3 to play on your own desktop. Complements Magnatune. Happy listening!

Interesting

Sub Rosa: Interview with Graham Hancock On Plant Teachers

Sub Rosa: Interview with Graham Hancock: On Plant Teachers (.pdf download). This review is featured on page 35 in Issue 2 of the most interesting Sub Rosa Magazine. I love this particular issue both for it's inclusion of the controversial Graham Hancock, and, for the featured cover art by amazing plant shaman and artist Pablo Amaringo. His text "Ayahuasca Visions" is well worth reading both for it's interesting shamanic and cultural insights as well as for the stunning imagery. To see more issues of Sub Rosa visit: The Daily Grail. Enjoy!

Featured Garden Video
Film: Why Organic?

Why Organic? Much like a PowerPoint presentation but still extremely interesting. Compares organic cultivation to conventional growing methods and covers topics such as: genetics, overall sustainability concerns, impact to our ecosystem, and some interesting reflections on the relationship (consequence) between chemical application advocacy and consciousness. Quite lengthy so view when time permits if you are interested in the topic.

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    Astounding

    Fruit, Seed, Pollen Series

    A masterpiece of plant macro's - fruits, seeds, pollen. More visuals and where to obtain here.

    Extraordinary

    Marianna's Seeds

    Heirlooms and Italian seed. Marianna's.

    Garden Curiosity

    Kitazawa Seed Co.

    Kitazawa. An excellent seed source for some less common varieties. FYI: their kyoto and "violet" carrots grow extraordinarily well and are highly nutritious!

     

    ChilePlants.com!

    ChilePlants.com. You will be amazed at the very exotic peppers from high in Peru to well, Chile. No kidding - super fabulous live plant shippers!

    Recently Added
    Featured Text

    Abercrombie's Complete Kitchen Gardener (1789)

    Complete Kitchen Gardener - By John Abercrombie and as published in 1789. The full text available online courtesy of the fabulous Victory Hort. Library.

    Entries in Grow A Garden (6)

    Sunday
    12Oct2008

    A Corn Maze and What I Found In My Garden

    A group of us took several children to a 14 acre corn maze. I think I got my exercise for the whole year! Here's some pics below of Donna - forever the child herself that took off to find her way through the maze and Barbie, whom we voted the "Corn Queen" with that gorgeous maize colored hair of hers. Couldn't resist including the shot of them in "power puff" pose with the farm equipment...

    Click to read more ...

    Friday
    30May2008

    Spring Chive, Purple Pansy and Clematis

    Every year I look forward to the first signs of the season with the arising of chives - which I have EVERYWHERE. Chives start off slow from seed but with each successive year, they get bigger and bigger. They don't like to be moved once they are established though. They transplant just fine but if you want big huge blossoms (like these at left, and NO I did not change the color; that's exactly how they are in my garden) - then find a happy sunny spot and let them go crazy. :) Some other purple friends nearby include the pansies and clematis below too.

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    Monday
    26May2008

    Bella Donna's Lettuce and Radish Fetish

    Here's a bed I made for Bella Donna, which was promptly planted with lettuce and radishes. She LOVE LOVE LOVES radish! If you think you can't grow anything- try radishes because they really are easy to grow and come up QUICK too! Radish interplant well with lettuce and they are happy companions together. Just watch out for root maggots-- when the radishes get too big they are prone to little pests!

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    Thursday
    01May2008

    Bella Donna and Barbie

    Here is one small corner of my garden happily situated - until Donna arrives with her rototiller that is! I am so grateful to have such great friends. Every year Donna spends half her summer at my house helping with the gardens, and Barbie often comes too when she can. They are both sisters to me. 

    And what's going on here in the photo below is Donna and Barbie decided to join me in cutting up about a third acre of really wild landscape with her rototiller. Which is great - except she showed up wearing a string bikini and a sari. You know the kind from India with the bead fringe flying all over the place? Right. So here's how we both learned NOT to wear sari's within about a yard of a rototiller. Because the beads got sucked up into the motor mid process of cutting out sod and here you see Donna and our sister Barbie attempting to repair it (before her boyfriend Mike finds out she sort of "borrowed" stuff out of his shed). I am not in the picture because I was standing there laughing my head off and taking this photo. :) I am sure you can imagine how absolutely hilarious this was!

     

    Here they are again - posing with tools. We did a lot of work this year but have a ways to go yet. We are already planning to be more diligent about the cutting and weeding, and have also sorted out a ton of varieties that work  versus those that don't for our temperamental northern climate.

    I am just so happy to have them both in my world. :)

     

     

     

     

    Thursday
    01May2008

    Spring Has Sprung! Creating Raised Beds and About Lasagna Gardens

    o this spring 2008 I had a strong urge to extend my garden plots - which I did! However, I discovered the effort involved far exceeded what I anticipated. If you plan on really digging up your landscape or yard, and it is wild land or sod with no prior cultivation, then be prepared for back breaking labor! :) I also discovered a popular garden idea called "Lasagna Gardening" that I wanted to try. This term was coined by author Patricia Lanza in her book on the subject. This idea interested me because while I already have about half an acre of existing gardens so far, I have such a wild mass of land otherwise that I know (first hand) the tilling and digging required. I wanted to see if I could avoid hauling out the tractor to expand this out here and there.

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    Sunday
    24Jun2007

    Growing Datura

    "In Bactria there is a plant that grows called Gelotophyllis, which, if drunk with wine and myrrh produces continuous laughter. A similar results is produced by Arum Aegyptiacum when eaten, and by the flowers and seeds of Datura....Plants of Omen "

    Datura Strammonium
    Datura Strammonium
    While I have had almost a lifetime of growing this plant , it never ceases to fascinate me. Whilst others are busy with their ornamentals, I much prefer (at least lately) continuing my fascination with this very ancient and sacred plant of the Solanacea family. Yes, it is related to the tomato! However, like MANY in this family of plants, it is extremely toxic. Datura is believed to be sacred to the destroyer God Shiva, and Indian dancing girls are said to drink a potion made from datura flowers and seeds to bring joy and laugher (I would not recommend attempting this). It is sacred to the moon, and is called by many elders the "Moon Plant". The reason is because it flowers more profusely during the moonlit hours, and, imparts a more intense aroma during the evening as well.

    The seeds from this plant can be (*and usually are) fatal when ingested. While in the hands of a skilled practitioner it could be medicinally useful, it is definitely not something one should just brew up and consume. It would be wise to also consider not growing it at all if you have young children amidst your garden. Chemically similar to the Brugmansia species, Datura is thought to have been introduced to the New World via the Mongoloids in late Paleolithic and Mesolithic periods [cite: Schultes and Hoffman], and possesses high amounts of tropane alkoloids, particularly, atropine (the same found in Atropa Belladonna another member of the Solanacea family), hyoscyamine, and scopolamine. It is these alkoloids which lend the plant it's narcotic effects.

    From a more aetheric perspective, the beautiful trumpet flowers produced by this plant are as a gift from the gods themselves. It is perhaps their almost otherworldly aroma which deceives the ignorant man to his death in attempt to imbibe it. I have spent much time admist this ancient plant, and have my own inner knowledge on the matter. While modern science has yet to discover how to obtain its volatile essence for mass manufacture, it remains a dream of mine to someday unlock the mystery of their scent and share it with the world!

    Tips on Growing Datura: Datura is extremely easy to grow and will profusely re-seed itself once your main plants are established. However, getting it started from seed can sometimes be frustrating and appear to take some time. The secret to growing it is in understanding its preferences and habits.

    Considered a "roadside weed" (which I find a rather profane description but unfortunately one often used), it does thrive well in poorer soils and where it would be naturally protected in the wild from other weeds and debris. Therefore, the trick is to imitate this type of environment. For example, if you were to create a small section or bed and plant the seeds about 1/2 inch in tilled soil, and then water them, and then cover them with leaves or grass clippings and such, you will find them to grow very well. But if you try to "over attend" to them, they don't honestly care for that and will not be as vigorous.

    Remember: this plant is the icon of the destroyer God, and extremely independent! Adoration is ok, fussing over it is not ok if you want robust plants. So tend it minimally and otherwise leave her alone! In fact, if you should have a rock garden or area of common ground rock cover (like the sort you can buy from a home and garden shop), and you planted some seeds amidst it and watered the area regularly, you would find the seeds to germinate right there for you and arise sturdy and strong. To support their growth during the germination and growing phases, avoid letting them dry out by keeping them well watered. Once established they are very drought tolerant, but up until that point they are susceptible to wilting and dying off. Datura plants take anywhere from 7 days to 2 weeks to germinate (in reality) depending on the temperature and soil conditions. In warmer weather, they will germinate and grow faster (much like a tomato plant); in cooler weather, they will take their time and not develop as quickly.

    Some say they are desease resistant and this is fairly well true, however, they are NOT bug resistant. Many small garden pests enjoy eating their leaves; and yes, Japanese beetles will eat their leaves as well as Tomato hornworms among other things. I have found them to be more prone to attack when potted, than when growing in the ground. Yet, they do make lovely potted plants provided: they have a large enough pot to accomodate their vigorous root growth and provided: you continually water them, because they cannot stand being grown in pots to begin with as they tend to dry out so quickly.