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    • garden planner >
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Edible Garden Confidential

Witch Hazel the Winter Wonder

3/10/2023

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​The gray winter landscape explodes with color and texture when witch hazel blooms, heralding the spring, each January, February and March. Spidery flowers, whose ribbon petals are like crinkled paper, come in vibrant yellow, dusty orange and faded burgundy. A favorite of the winter garden, Hamamelis is known for striking winter blooms and brilliant fall color, with leaves ranging from yellow to deep orange and red.
 
The name witch hazel derives from the use of forked branches as divining rods for “witching” wells. People have used it medicinally for ages. Its astringent properties are great for shrinking varicose veins and hemorrhoids. It reduces swollen joints and stops bleeding. It is an age-old cure for acne or any skin irritation or cut. The witch hazel solution you buy at the store is a distillation intended for external use only. Try making your own decoction to use in a compress.

Witch hazel thrives in partial shade, producing more flowers when grown in full sun. Since it blooms in the winter, plant it where you can see it from indoors. Place near front of perennial bed so you can easily smell the flowers without getting your shoes muddy. It needs fertile, well-drained soil and cannot toleration wet feet. Provide summer water for the first three years, until plants are established.
 
Learn more about Hamamelis. Check out www.witchhazelnursery.com. This wholesale nursery in England has a huge collection. Their photo gallery is worth a visit.
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Hamamelis Mollis Pallida in bloom in March
​Got piles? Swollen joints? Acne?
A simple decoction can be made from witch hazel twigs and bark. Grind up plant material, cover with water. Bring to a boil then simmer for 30 minutes. Strain and use as skin wash or in a cloth compress.
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Witch hazel thrives in shade and provides winter fragrance and color
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February 2023 Newsletter

3/6/2023

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Hello and Happy Lunar New Year!
Here is my Garden with Lisa February newsletter offered as a pdf. Inside you’ll find something for the whole family!
  • February Edible Gardening Guide with Inside and Outside tasks.
  • My schedule of educational and speaking events. Contact me! I am booking now for 2023!
  • When Can I Start Planting? Four things to consider in timing your cool and warm season crops.
  • Family and Kid’s Gardening Crafts. This month we are growing pea shoots and harvesting them to make a tasty stir fry. Give it a try, grow your own dinner!
  • Gardening Resources. A really good list of garden resources for the PNW gardener.
garden_with_lisa_newsletter_february_2023.pdf
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Raise Your Own Mason Bees

2/24/2023

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Raise Your Own Mason Bees

Make a Bee House for Orchard Mason Bees, a non-stinging native bee that helps pollinate fruit crops and other early blooming plants. This fascinating, docile native bee helps your garden grow delicious fruit and a bee house will give them a place to raise their young. Join the worldwide effort to save the bees by making a Mason Bee house from common household items. Mason bee houses can be hung outside in early spring.

Orchard Mason Bees are solidary bees that pollinate our fruit trees and early blooming plants. They are native bees and use abandoned insect holes, cardboard tubes or bamboo to lay their eggs. The adult bees carry pollen to the tunnel or tube and create a big pile onto which they lay one egg. They are called Mason Bees because they use mud to close off that section of the tunnel. They continue to create pollen piles, lay eggs and close up the chambers until the tunnel is full then they move on to the next tunnel. Adult Mason Bees live from mid-March through mid-June.

During late spring and early summer, the Mason Bee eggs hatch in the tunnels and the larvae eat the pollen. They stay in the chamber as they grow. Finally, they pupate creating a cocoon in the fall. It is safe to remove the cocoons from bee tubes after they have formed their pupal shell. The smaller cocoons are male bees and the bigger are female. While in the cocoon they change into adult bees that will chew their way out of the surprisingly tough cocoon in early spring. Weather determines when they will emerge. Have Fun!
 
Mason Bee House
A Mason Bee House is a container filled with cardboard, paper or bamboo tubes placed so that the round opening is facing out and the mason bees can enter the tunnels.
​
Hang Mason Bee House in a protected area under the eaves of a house or shed on the warmest side of the building. Make sure it is out of the rain. In late September through early November, remove filled bee tubes and cut them open to free the cocoons. Remove and clean off the cocoons using a small brush or soft cloth. You can wash the cocoons to remove stubborn mud and other debris. Place cocoons in plastic container with a couple air holes in the refrigerator until the next spring. Make sure the cocoons don’t dry out or get moldy.
 
Put clean bee tubes in your Mason Bee House and hang it up in February through mid March. You may want to hang more than one Mason Bee House if you have many early blooming plants in your yard.
 
Resources
Mason Bee supplies and cocoons
Crown Bees     www.crownbees.com     (425) 949-7954
​  Woodinville, WA
 
Questions about Bees
Garden Hotline  help@gardenhotline.com   (206) 633-0224
 
Books
“Turn This Book into a Bee Hive” by Lynn Brunelle, illustrated by Anna-Maria Jung
“Mason Bee Revolution: How the Hardest Working Bee Can Save the World - One Backyard at a Time” by Dave Hunter and Jill Lightner
“Pollination with Mason Bees: A Gardener’s Guide to Managing Mason Bees for Fruit Tree Pollination” by Dr. Margaret Dogterom
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Mason Bee nesting in hollow stalk
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DIY Mason Bee house made from recycled bottle and scrap paper

DIY Mason Bee House Supplies
  • 1 empty water bottle – 16 oz size
  • 26-28 pieces of paper cut to 5 ½”  X 8” (a half sheet of 8 ½ X 11 paper)
  • 1 piece of dark colored paper cut to 5 ½”  X 8” (optional)
  • 1 disc of paper cut the size of the bottom of the water bottle
  • 1 new pencil (not sharpened)
  • Scotch or masking tape
  • Premoistened, air dry clay (or dry clay and water)
  • Yarn, string, or thin wire for mounting bee house outside
  • Scissors
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Bug house using bamboo of various sizes to attract diverse insects
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Monkey Puzzle Love

2/15/2023

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PictureFemale Monkey Puzzle with new cones
​Nothing is quite so unique and wonderful as the Monkey Puzzle tree or Araucaria Araucana. I saw the fresh developing cones on a beloved female tree in the neighborhood and felt a profound sense of hope. This tree has been around for a long time. Weathered all storms and human interference. It has persisted. The extreme heat wave we had in 2021 really took a toll and many large Monkey Puzzle trees have many brown, dead branches. It is difficult to see the tree limbs dying but at the same time, they all seem to be putting on new, fresh green growth and cones. Hope!
 
Monkey Puzzle trees grow slowly, reminding me that it is ok to go slow. To let things develop as they will and enjoy the ride! If you have wondered about how a Monkey Puzzle grows then read on – let’s meet Araucaria araucana or Monkey Puzzle Tree.
 
Where and how it grows
Araucaria araucana is also called the Chilean Pine or Monkey Puzzle Tree. It is the national tree of Chile and a member of the Araucarian Plant Family. It is a cousin of the Norfolk Pine. It is an evergreen conifer. Araucaria araucana is a perennial tree that grows in part shade to full sun. It can grow in a variety of soils as long as there is good drainage. It prefers fertile well-drained soil. It likes to grow in climates with abundant rainfall and mild temperatures. It is very tolerant of salt-laden maritime winds.
 
Araucaria araucana can grow to 100 feet tall with a 50-foot-wide canopy. The trunk can be 3 to 5 feet in diameter. It is a very slow growing tree. It is very hardy and can tolerate temperatures down to -4 degrees Fahrenheit. Although it can tolerate dry, droughty summers, it will grow faster if it is watered throughout the summer.
 

 
Seeds and Cones
Araucaria araucana is edible. The female cones produce many large delicious seeds. Mature trees are highly productive. Seeds are a staple crop for many indigenous people in Chile and Argentina where it grows natively. It is said that 18 mature female Araucaria araucana trees could sustain one adult year-round.
 
It is not self-fertile. Flowers are either male or female but only one sex is found on any one plant. Araucaria araucana is fertilized by wind. One male plant can fertilize 4 to 6 female trees. Male cones are oblong and shaped like cucumbers. They are 3 to 5 inches long and 1 1/2 to 2 inches in diameter. Female cones are large and globelike. They can be 5 to 8 inches in diameter. Araucaria araucana make cones in the fall. Female cones take 1 ½ to 2 years to ripen. Cones are ripe in winter November - February. They fall to the ground when ripe, so harvesting is easy.
 
How it moved from South America
Araucaria araucana was a rare and unusual tree grown by wealthy aristocrats in English gardens starting in the late 1700’s. In 1850, a proud owner of a young tree was showing it off to a group when one of the visitors remarked that “it would puzzle a monkey to climb that.” The name Monkey Puzzle stuck.
 
No one is sure exactly when they arrived in the Pacific Northwest or whether they came as seeds or starts. Many say it was the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition held in Seattle in 1909 while others point to the Lewis and Clark Exposition in Portland, Oregon in 1905. It may have been earlier. It seems probable that the biggest, oldest Araucaria araucana trees in the Puget Sound would have been planted in the early 1900’s coinciding with the construction of the buildings or homes.
 
Oldest, Slowest Native Tree
It can live over 1000 years. Araucaria araucana fossils have been found dating back to the time of the dinosaurs. It can take up to 30 or 40 years for Araucaria araucana to produce seeds. It is a very slow growing plant.
 
Araucaria araucana grows natively at elevations above 3,300 feet in the foothills of the Andes in Chile and Argentina. It is grown from seeds. It takes 2 to 6 months for a seed to germinate.
 
Araucaria araucana is listed as an endangered species. It is threatened due to logging, overgrazing and massive forest fires in 2001 and 2002 that destroyed thousands of acres of Araucaria araucana forest. Araucaria araucana grow well in the United Kingdom, Ireland and the Pacific Northwest. There are quite a few Araucaria araucana growing all around the Seattle and Puget Sound area. 

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Spike the Monkey Puzzle seedling
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Male cones, Monkey Puzzle
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Monkey Puzzle seeds
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The Fabulous Fifteen for 2023

2/11/2023

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The Fabulous Fifteen
Here is my list of 15 beautiful and tasty vegetables, herbs and flowers to grow this season.
I picked these wonderful plants using these criteria.
  • Grows well in our climate. Hardy, short season.
  • Produces reliably and abundantly. Yield matches space, time, inputs.
  • Tastes great, versatile in the kitchen and pantry.
  • Heirloom, open pollinated. Available, easy to find.
  • Easy to grow.
  • Pest and disease resistant.
  • Grows well in small spaces. Containers, vertically.
  • Bonus points for perennial.
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​Cool Season Vegetables
  • Sow indoors to transplant in February and March.
  • Transplant kale and lettuce to garden 4 to 6 weeks after sowing.
  • Transplant onions mid-March through April
  • These cool season vegetables can be sown again starting in late June to mid-July for a fall and winter harvest.
  • To overwinter many of these varieties, sow early to mid September so plants are tiny as they go through the winter.
 
Lettuce
Flashy Trout’s Back -speckled romaine
Australian Yellow -leaf
Marshall -dark romaine
 
Kale
Dazzling Blue Kale
Sprouting Broccoli
 
Onions
Bunching Onions -- Evergreen, Heshiko, Evergreen White Nebuka, Ishikura Improved
Welsh Onion
 
Greens
Ruby Streaks Mustard
​
Mache (Corn Salad)
 
Warm Season Vegetables
  • Sow indoors to transplant from late February through late March.
  • Transplant under cloche late May to early June.
 
Tomatoes
Chadwick’s Cherry (ind)
Gill’s All-purpose (sd) or Burbank (sd)
Glacier (d)
 
Tomatillo
Ground Cherries -- Aunt Molly’s, Pineapple
 
Cucumbers
Mouse Melon or Mexican Sour Gherkin
Double Yield, pickling
 
Summer Squash
Tromboncino
Beans
Malibu Pole, snap
Runner Beans
 
Herbs
  • These perennial herbs are hardy, long-lasting and delicious.
  • These are typically grown from starts purchased at a garden store or nursery.
 
Sweet Bay Laurel  Laurus nobilis --  Not English or Cherry Laurel Prunus laurocerasus
 
Mediterranean favorites
Sage, Rosemary, Thyme, Oregano and Parsley
 
Salad Burnet  Sanguisorba minor
 
Edible Flowers
  • Beautiful and delicious, these three are beloved by people and pollinators.
  • Half-hardy fruit sages can overwinter during a mild year.
  • Self-sowing annual flowers are dependable and easy to control.
 
Fruit Sage  Salvia elegans
          Tangerine, pineapple
Nigella or Love-in-a-Mist  Nigella damascene
 
Calendula  Calendula officinalis
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January 2023 newsletter

2/4/2023

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Hello and Happy New Year!

Here is my Garden with Lisa January newsletter offered as a downloadable pdf. Inside you’ll find something for the whole family!
  • January Edible Gardening Guide with Inside and Outside tasks.
  • My schedule of educational and speaking events. Contact me! I am booking now for 2023!
  • The Fabulous Fifteen. My suggestions for great vegetables, herbs and flowers to grow in 2023.
  • Family and Kid’s Gardening Crafts. This month is a great time to start a sprout farm so dig out some mung beans and give it a try!
  • Gardening Resources. A really good list of garden resources for the PNW gardener.
 
If you want to learn more about edible gardening, check out my online Edible Gardening School follow the Learn with Lisa tab to sign up.

I would be delighted to bring edible organic gardening programs to your group, school, company or organization. I am currently booking for 2023, contact me at gardenwithlisa@gmail.com with inquiries.

Sign up to receive my monthly newsletter sent directly to your email inbox and receive 20% off any of my online edible gardening classes.
 
Enjoy this newsletter and have fun growing!
garden_with_lisa_newsletterjanuary_2023.pdf
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Welcome to Edible Garden Confidential

1/5/2022

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Welcome to my new blog. This is a place where I will track my gardening efforts. I will also share info and insights. I will also share some tips and tricks and "the stuff they never talk about" along the way. It will be a place to post a little more information than a Facebook or Instagram post. The plan is to post weekly or at least twice per month.

Sometimes it will just be pictures of beautiful vegetables, like these purple cabbage. Enjoy!
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purple cabbages at Yelm Worm Farm
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