John Shelley's Garden Center Roots and Shoots Online
Summer 1998
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Milk Jug Watering

Liquid Assets

Re-Cycle Those Milk Jugs In Your Garden as a Drip-Irrigation System.

Save those 1-gallon plastic milk jugs! They're invaluable for watering plants. After planting perennials or small nursery stock (use several jugs for shrubs and small trees), simply put 3-5 pin-holes in the bottom of the jug, remove the plastic cap and sit the jug right next to the plant. In five or six hours, all the water will slowly drip into the ground and can be uptaken by the newly installed plant. Adding a transplant fertilizer (5-25-5 or something similar with a high phosphorous number) is a good idea. Keep the jug from blowing away after it's water is exhausted, simply tie a piece of string through the jug's handle and to a bamboo stake driven into the ground near the plant; never tie the jug to the plant.

In addition to having a wonderfully easy drip system at your disposal, you've helped to recycle plastic from the landfills and dumps, since the plastic lasts for many years. Remember to keep the cap to each jug, so that when you fill it and take it to a new plant for irrigation, you can turn it upside down with the cap in place until you sit it next to the plant or shrub.

Newly-Released Plants

They are rare, unusual and hard-to-find, to be sure.

Over 106 new varieties are now available at the Garden Center, all never before seen in this area prior to our introduction. Ranging from Androsace to Trillium, some are in very limited quantities due to their earthly rarity. Combined with our current 75 cultivars of rare and unusual miniature conifers, Alpine Trough Gardens, Rockeries and Scree Gardens are now an easy reality for anyone interested in trying this very rewarding hobby.

We offer these very special and rare plants to you from Oregon, Montana and Washington State for your own Planted Gardens

In this Issue:

Page 1:
Beat The Heat With Drought-Resistant
Plants

Perennial Help

Page 2:
Perennial Help, continued

Planning For The Fall Garden

Mulch Well and Water Less Often

Page 3:
Mulch Well and Water Less Often, continued

How Much Mulch Do I Really Need?

Page 4:
How Much Mulch Do I Really Need?, continued

Summer Days Discount Coupon

Page 5:
Milk Jug Watering

Newly-Released Plants

Page 6:
Newly-Released Plants, continued

Under Stress: Plants That Can Take It

Page 7:
Hardy Cactus Garden

Garden Center is Available for Meetings, Tours and Events

Page 8:
8th Annual Open House

1998 Workshops & Seminars Schedule

Spring - Summer - Fall Hours

Page 9:
In The Next Issue