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Whittier
Weather Courtesy of:

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Links to our Recent Galleries
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July |
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Vegetables need a good feeding this month. Use Gro~Power Liquid All-Purpose Fertilizer, Or Dr.Earth Organic 5 Tomato, Vegetable and Herb Fertilizer.
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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:
(562) 947-2013
Address:
Whittier, CA 90603
Daily:
Open 8 am-5 pm
7 days a week
Summer:
Closed on Tuesdays
Open 8:30 am-5:30 pm
6 days a week |




The Blue Hills
"Canine Squad"

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Included in this special:
Agapanthus 'Midnight Blue' 5 gallon
Buddleja 'Petite Indigo' 1 gallon
Buddleja 'Petite Plum' 2 gallon
Buddleja 'Petite Snow' 1 gallon
Pittosporum 'Golf Ball '2 gallon
Eugenia 'Monterey Bay' 5 gallon
Hydrangea 'Buttons and Bows' 5 gallon
Hydrangea 'Lady in Red' 5 gallon
Pittosporum 'Emerald Wave' 5 gallon
Plumbago 'Royal Cape' 1 gallon
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Alstroemerias
(Peruvian Lilies)
All 2 gallon and 8" size Alstroemerias on sale!
$5.00 off marked price!
limited to stock on hand
Does not include items already on sale
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The Great Pumpkin is on its way!
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Featured Plant: Vinca rosea (Catharanthus roseus)
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Here's a hardy little workhorse of a plant! It's good in a xeric (low water) garden once established. It has a range of colors—pink, white, and red with the characteristic center eye. It blooms all summer and even through Thanksgiving in our climate zone. This plant is attractive to bees, butterflies and/or birds. Aren't there any negatives? Well, yes--a couple. It self-sows freely, so keep it deadheaded if you don't want it coming up all over next season. And the big one: it's dangerous if it's consumed orally, so keep nibbling children and pets away from it.
Height: 1-2'
Blooms: summer to fall
Water: moderate until established; then drought-tolerant
Exposure: full sun
Soil: well-drained
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Featured Plant: Portulaca 'Sundial'
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This is a tough plant for tough places. Another xeric choice, it's attractive in rock gardens, in parking strips, as edgings—and even in hanging baskets. Ground-hugging, succulent-leafed carpets glow with single or mini-rose double blooms up to 2" across. Space 6-8" apart. A winner in hot and dry areas, it's also perfect for containers. A bonus: it doesn't need deadheading; the faded blooms just fall off! Six-packs of assorted colors.
Exposure: sun
Blooms: 2" across
Height: 4"
Soil: whatever
Water: low to moderate
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Beautiful bougainvillea, that evergreen subtropical plant from South America, comes in several different forms. The most common is a vine--a vine that does not twine or cling--but a vine nonetheless. It also comes in a shrub form and a ground cover.
The vibrant colors are not the flower, but are colorful bracts surrounding a small, inconspicuous flower. The color show begins in spring and can continue into the winter. Now, you can't ask much more of any flowering plant!
A mature vine bougainvillea in full bloom is simply a huge "WOW!" factor in any garden. The vine bougainvillea is a fast grower and needs regular pruning to keep in good form. Because of this vigorous growth, any structure chosen for support must be very sturdy.
Yes, they do have thorns. Keep that in mind when you are thinking of the best location in your landscape.
Other bougainvilleas have a low-growing form which is perfect for containers. Place containers near the edge of a balcony and the bougainvillea will grow outward and down, spilling color over the outside wall of your home.
Great care must be taken when planting bougainvilleas. The roots do not like much handling so do not disturb the root ball. You can cut out the bottom of the pot and plant both bougainvillea and pot. Alternatively, carefully make four vertical cuts down the side of the nursery container and carefully pull all four sides farther apart. Supporting the base of the root ball (not grasping the trunk of the plant), gently remove the plant from the growing container and carefully place it into the ground or new container, remembering that the roots are very sensitive to handling.
Bougainvilleas like full sun and regular watering. If you water too much, they won't bloom. Fertilize with Gro-Power Flower n Bloom 3-12-12.
Bougainvilleas come in white, yellow/orange, pink, red, and purple. Plant all one color for a huge color impact, or mix and match colors, to create the look of an impressionist painting.
Click to print this article.
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A tree or a shrub can create a delightful focal point in your patio garden design.
Many of our gardens have at least one specimen plant, usually a tree but sometimes a shrub. A specimen plant is one that is eye-catching, beautiful, often architectural in form, and can stand alone in a yard or garden. Such specimen plants do not have to reside only in the ground. You can bring one or more onto your patios, decks or balconies and create the same visual effect.
Many smaller scale patio trees are absolutely wonderful specimens, and they can remain perfectly happy living in a container. Even if you don't have a backyard, you can still have a tree on your patio.
Also, many people forget to consider shrubs for their containers. Many of our shrubs are just as happy and healthy in a container as in the ground. How simple it is to bring foliage and flower color into your patio gardens! Just pick your favorite shrub and design your patio garden around its color and form.
And you know what else is great? You can prune many shrubs into an open tree form, creating a beautiful specimen piece. They are beautiful in an open graceful form, like an oriental painting.
Now, you may be tempted to plant flowers at the base of your tree. They will add color but their roots will compete with the root system space of your new tree or shrub. Instead, try mulching using colored landscape glass, stones in your favorite colors and textures, or bark.
Of course, container selection is very important--your container must be large enough for the plant's future root system growth. Potting soil and fertilizers are also very important. Select a high quality potting mix such as our Fox Farm Ocean Blend Potting Soil, and do not forget to mix in a controlled release fertilizer like Osmocote. Also, remember that moisture retention is frequently a problem with containers, so mix in a soil polymer that will hold on to the moisture between waterings.
We'll match you up with the correct products once you've selected your tree and/or shrub.
Well, what are you waiting for? Summer is here and it is time to redecorate your outdoor living space. So come on in! We'll be looking for you in our tree and shrub section.
Click to print this article.
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FEATURED QUOTE :
"How cunningly nature hides every wrinkle of her inconceivable antiquity under roses and violets and morning dew!" ~Ralph Waldo Emerson |

Thanks for all the answers and kind comments.
Please, if you need an answer to a question, telephone us at (562) 947-2013. And If you wish to enter a change of e-mail address, please refer to the "Subscribe" box in the left-hand column on the main page. (We have people who do that for us.)
This Week's Question: What did the great rivals John Adams and Thomas Jefferson do on July 4, 1826? (Hint—no fireworks were involved.)
This Week's Prize: 1 pair of garden gloves ($7.99)

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Last Week's Question: Sunflowers get their name not only from their resemblance to the sun, but also from the fact that sunflower heads actually track the movement of the sun throughout the day. What is this habit called?
Last Week's Winner: Apryl McCulloch wins 2 six-packs of Lisianthus.
Last Week's Answer: The process by which a sunflower follows the movement of the sun is called solar tracking or heliotropism.
Winners: To claim your prize, please bring in an I.D. and a copy of the newsletter page showing your name and the prize you won.
Individuals or families cannot win more often than once every two months. (But keep answering anyway--we like keeping in touch!)
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The Fourth of July is almost here. It's not too late to create an Independence Day planter in red, white, and blue! For reds: try verbena, petunia, Sweet William, or salvia. For blues: bachelor's button, salvia, petunia, or lobelia. For whites: alyssum, petunia, candytuft.
Now...on to the July tasks in your gardens!
Planting
You can still plant some annuals and perennials in your summer gardens. For annuals, try marigolds, portulaca, and zinnias for that huge splash of color. For perennials, and even more color, plant coreopsis, gaura, rudbeckias, salvias, and many more.
Tropical plants are popular now and can be brought into any garden, whether tropical, cottage, or country themes. Flowering shrubs include hibiscus, brugmansia (Angel's Trumpet), canna, bougainvillea, and vines such as passion flower or Burmese honeysuckle. Large-leaf evergreens include philodendrons, xanadu, tree ferns, and gingers. You can even include abutilon, which comes in several colors including red, yellow, orange, and pink.
Harvesting
You are probably busy harvesting and enjoying your summer vegetables like green beans, tomatoes, eggplant, squashes, and peppers. You can also continue to plant these veggies to extend your crop harvest.
Maintenance
This time of year is often a major "pest" time in our gardens. Those holes in your rose leaves are from the rose slug. Aphids love the rose buds, and more. You can wash off these pests with water. You can also use Light Yard & Garden Spray w/ Spinosad. Caterpillars are abundant; try a spray containing Bt. And we can't forget snails--they won't let us. We recommend Monterey Sluggo for snails and slugs.
It's feeding time for your flowerbeds, roses, vegetables and warm-season lawns. Come in and ask one of us which fertilizers will be best for each of your plant needs. We offer a wide selection of fertilizers: multipurpose, organic, and slow release.
You can do some pruning, even though it's summertime. Fuchsia 'Gartenmeister,' gaura, and salvias will look much better if cut back by about 1/3. Oh...and your catmint, too.
If you forgot to increase your watering from the spring months, you must do so now. Trees (non-citrus) and shrubs will need deep soaks once each month in the summer, and regular irrigation in between. Citrus and your flowerbeds need regular weekly watering.
Those of you growing tomatoes and peppers, watch for tomato hornworms. They will need to be hand-picked from your foliage.
As usual, mulch, mulch, mulch! We will always tell you to mulch. This does not mean mound up the mulch to 5 feet. It means continue to replenish the mulch and maintain a 2-4 inch blanket over your soil. So when you hear us singing the MULCH song, you know just what we mean!
And last, but not least, have a very Happy Independence Day!
Click to print this article.
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Earwigs are the brownish/black insects (about ¾ inch long) with pointed pincers on the rear of their abdomens. Earwigs' lifelong pursuit is to be active members of the insect cleanup crew of the garden. They chew up plant debris and turn it into humus. For this job, earwigs are considered a beneficial insect. You rarely see this insect out in the open, but rather under leaves, under low growing foliage plants or in a woodpile. Creating humus is part of the earwig "career," and that is a positive thing for any garden.
However, they also have a liking for new tender foliage and this is what gets them into trouble with gardeners. When they eat tender foliage, they are considered a pest.
There are a number of different earwig management techniques. Earwigs like dark, damp places in the yard. In these locations, place rolled up newspapers or low-sided cans coated with oil.
The earwigs will crawl inside of either of these traps, and you can simply throw them away. If, however, you have an infestation of earwigs eating too much of the new foliage, you may find it necessary to apply an earwig bait like Monterey Sluggo Plus. A follow up application two weeks later usually takes care of any stragglers.
Ultimately, the best way to prevent earwig infestations is to keep the garden clean and remove potential earwig hiding spots. A few here and there are more helpful than harmful to your gardens, but if they're making a meal out of your prized plants don't hesitate to pull out the bait!
Click to print this article.
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Does mulching grass clippings into the lawn increase the build-up of thatch?
Answer:
Most homeowners bag lawn clippings because they think that the clippings add to the buildup of thatch. This is not true. Clippings that remain on the lawn quickly decompose and release valuable nutrients and beneficial bacteria that actually feed on the thatch layer. Fertilizer needs can be reduced by 20 to 30 percent if the clippings are left on the lawn. The shorter the clippings, the deeper they fall into the turf.
The use of a mulching mower and/or frequent mowing will produce the smallest clippings. If you don't have a mulching mower, consider mowing your lawn twice at one time. This will further reduce the size of the clippings and distribute them deeper into the lawn. Mowing when the grass is dry and fertilizing properly will also help to prevent an excess buildup of thatch.
Click to print this article.
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Ingredients:
- 1/2 cup pesto basil sauce
- 1 (12 inch) pre-baked pizza crust
- 2 cups cooked chicken breast strips
- 1 (6 ounce) jar artichoke hearts, drained
- 1/2 cup shredded fontina cheese
Directions:
- Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F.
- Spread pesto sauce over the pizza crust. Arrange chicken pieces and artichoke hearts over the sauce, and sprinkle with cheese.
- Bake for 8 to 10 minutes in the preheated oven, until cheese is melted and lightly browned at the edges.
Yield: 6 servings
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