Rooted in potential: advances in estimating spatiotemporal root water uptake in situ
New Phytologist, EarlyView.
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We spent the third day of CAST 2025 visiting with companies in Santa Barbara. Among the highlights, here were five plants that caught my eye.
The post Dr. A’s Top Picks From California Spring Trials 2025, Day 3 appeared first on Greenhouse Grower.
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These are the best tomatoes for containers that prove you don’t need to have a large space or elaborate garden to grow delicious produce.
“Between February and March 2025, the strawberry season in Basilicata recorded lower production volumes than both market demand and the same period last year. Unstable weather conditions continue to cause problems, however, a recovery is expected by May, which should bring production levels back in line…
New labels and promotional materials distributed to the markets Read More »
While there is currently still snow on the ground in the garden of Quebec, the expectation is for the planting season of iceberg lettuce, Romaine lettuce, Romaine Hearths, and celery to start in about three weeks, around April 14. These crops will be followed by carrots, green onions, parsley, cilantro,…
Uncertainty causes increased interest for Canadian grown produce Read More »
Crop chem firm Gowan Canada has picked up registration for its first biological product in the Canadian horticulture market. The product, called EcoSwing, is approved for control of mummy berries in high-bush blueberries and powdery mildew in cucurbits such as pumpkins, squash and cucumber. It’s also…
Gowan Canada gets registration for first crop protection product in Canadian market Read More »
The demand for tomatoes right now is outweighing the supply of them. “The tomato supply has been very short,” says Roger Riehm of Blue Creek Produce. “Florida is in a gap on supply, and Mexico is in the same situation–there’s not a lot of supply there either.” Earlier weather occurrences in both regions…
Tomato pricing continues to strengthen this week Read More »
On the morning of March 20, 2025, there was an early gathering for a group of 30 quality employees in connection with a visit to the European Fruit and Vegetable Centre in Brussels. The participants were not only paying attention to breakfast, but were addressed by three speakers involved in the…
John Van Laethem announces farewell as business manager Read More »
It was great fun to visit Hersonswood Garden last July with my fellow Flingers (the same day we also visited Windcliff, Dan Hinkley’s current garden). I think there were roughly 90 of us, but the garden is so large (15 acres) we quickly dispersed and only occasionally would we cross paths. Since I’d been a few times before, I was able to stroll at a leisurely pace and not try to see it all, I felt sorry for those folks who had to rush. Here are my highlights…
Lovely purples with the cotinus and acanthus.
This is the first time I’ve seen the Raining Wall (at the entrance to the Renaissance Garden) complete.
Blechnum penna-marina
Rhododendron valentinioides
Selaginella tamariscina ‘Golden Sprite’
Adiantum x mairisii
Adiantum aleuticum ‘Subpumilum’ (on either side of the moss).
Blechnum microphyllum
This was interesting to see. When at the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden in February I spied a plant that looks a lot like this. I called that one out as perhaps Polygonatum mengtzense. But I had a phone screen shot in my files noting this plant as Maianthemum oleraceum. The plot thickens!
I’ve taken a photo of this container on several visits. Parts change, parts stay the same.
Okay, here’s a confession. I love this…
I hate this…
I’ve felt the extreme love/hate ever since my first visit to the garden. One seems like an interesting way to raise up planters above the ground level, the other seems overly contrived and out of place.
Ditto for the potager.
I used to dislike the chanterelle fountain, but it’s grown on me.
Imagine rinsing your vegetable harvest here after picking them from the potager…
Lillies, the flower of July…
I loved the dusty hues of this vignette.
Globularia incanescens
Empty pot as framing device, it works. It really does.
A little further into the same planting.
The tree ferns! These have been here for years, surviving the seasons, unlike some newer tree ferns in the Renaissance Garden.
Dryopteris crassirhizoma
I feel extreme plant lust every time I look at a photo of this fern.
A last look at the tree ferns (Dicksonia antarctica).
Making my way out of the garden and back to our bus I passed this totem pole that had been left to rest, decay, and return to the land.
It was a great reminder that the garden is now owned by the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe and going forward the garden will meld their vision with that of it’s famous founder, Dan Hinkley.
We Fling at Heronswood Read More »