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PLEASE NOTE: In the autumn of 1995, we hatched the idea for a free, local gardening publication. The following spring, we published the first issue of Michigan Gardener magazine. Advertisers, readers, and distribution sites embraced our vision. Thus began an exciting journey of helping our local gardening community grow and prosper.
After 27 years, nearly 200 issues published, and millions of copies printed, we have decided it is time to end the publication of our Print Magazine and E-Newsletter.

Website Extra: Margot McCormack

March 29, 2012   •   Leave a Comment


This gorgeous bloom is peacock flower or Abyssinian gladiolus (Gladiolus callianthus ‘Murielae’). A member of the iris family, it blooms in late summer and is a fragrant, tender bulb that must be stored in winter or purchased yearly. (Photo: Sandie Parrott)


Above left: Rub the leaves of this popcorn cassia (Cassia didymobotrya) and it smells like buttered popcorn. This tropical must be treated as an annual and needs lots of water. It has yellow blooms for up to 6 months. Above right: This variegated fig tree bonsai started as a gift included in a planter from a co-worker when McCormack’s father died in 1991. She keeps it as a houseplant, but puts it outside in the summer. (Photo: Sandie Parrott)


Each year, McCormack’s backyard floods until about May. Yet her garden dries and bounces back the rest of the year. (Photo: Margot McCormack)


In 2008 McCormack worked on a Tournament of Roses parade float at the Burbank float barn. She volunteered for three days and had her camera at the ready because she heard HGTV would visit. Paul James graciously agreed to have his picture taken while there. (Photo: Margot McCormack)


“I bought this Japanese tree peony about 20 yrs ago. It adds one more blossom each year. It never fails that we will get a downpour when it looks its best, so it has a very short appearance. The flower petals are so delicate, like tissue paper. I am guessing it might be ‘Yachiyotsubaki’ tree peony (Paeonia suffruticosa ‘Yachiyotsubaki’).” (Photo: Margot McCormack)

Filed Under: Website Extras

Unseasonably warm weather is trouble for tulips

March 25, 2012   •   Leave a Comment

The Detroit News:

In Windsor, 12,000 of the 20,000 bulbs planted in a city park were gobbled up by squirrels. In Holland, deer dug up so many tulips in a park that the city placed a fence, not around, but over the flowers. In Bloomfield Hills, Cranbrook House and Gardens kept the critters away with a concoction that was three parts sawdust and one part hot pepper.

“The squirrels were having a feast while looking at us and giving a giggle,” said Dave Tootill, horticulture supervisor for Windsor.

While the onslaught isn’t a threat to the Tulip Time Festival in Holland, organizers are also worried about another malady related to the warm temperatures.

Read the full story here…

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: deer, Holland, squirrels, tulips, warm

Plants are blazing new trails

March 13, 2012   •   Leave a Comment

PBS:

Chihuahuan desert plants like autumn sage, hummingbird mints, and desert willow trees thrive in the gardens that David Salman, president of Santa Fe Greenhouses, oversees.

This wouldn’t be unusual…in the Chihuahuan desert. But Salman’s display gardens are hundreds of miles north of the desert in Santa Fe. Thirty years ago, these plants wouldn’t have survived that city’s high elevation and chilly winters.

And that’s not the only change in New Mexico. Santa Fe has seen better fruit and vegetable gardens over the last 10 growing seasons, and fruits like cantaloupes, which barely stood a chance before, now grow.

Read the full story here…

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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