The Flower Fields of Carlsbad- A garden road trip
30 Apr 2010 7 Comments
in Flowers, Living Healthy, Photography Tags: garden roadtrip, nadia's san diego garden blog, Ranunculus, San Diego Flowers, The Flower Fields

This week my garden road trip was The Flower Fields in Carlsbad to take photos and enjoy the day with some of my gardening buddies. The Flower Fields are open from March until May and is home to the ‘Tecolote’ Ranunculus, a native to Asia Minor and a member of the Buttercup family. The hillside is covered with rows of vibrant colored flowers which are actually rhizome bulbs. Ranunculus have a rose petal type look with no fragrance and are a long-lasting cut flower for floral designs.
At The Flower Fields we chose to walk up the hill to get a close- up look of the flowers and how they are planted and grown, but tractor-wagon rides are also available for a relaxing tour of the grounds.
An American flag display constructed from growing ranunculus covers the south hillside of the property. But wait, there’s more! A rose garden area, a very large walk-thru sweet pea maze that stands over 6 feet tall, several kid craft and educational tables, a historic poinsettia tent with information about the Paul Ecke Ranch, The Carlsbad Mining Co. booth where you can pan for gold and flower gardens in raised beds.
Shopping: Yes, there is an Armstrong Nursery as you exit. I bought an Organic Eggplant to transplant in my garden.
Cost: $9.00 with a AAA card.
Food: Just a block away to the North is the Carlsbad Outlet Mall with lots of places to eat and a Starbucks if you need a caffeine fix.
Location: West of the I-5 off Palomar Airport Road: 5704 Paseo Del Norte, Carlsbad, CA

I was tempted to eat the nasturtium flowers behind me.
Water Wise and Ocean Friendly Landscaping
26 Apr 2010 5 Comments
in Cactus, euphorbia, Garden Design, Photography Tags: designing with succulents, drought tolerant landscape, nadia's garden blog, ocean friendly garden, San Diego garden blog, xeriscape landscape design
Water friendly landscaping comes with a variety of titles such as xeriscape, drought-tolerant, California natives and ocean-friendly just to name a few. Creating a drought tolerant landscape doesn’t mean that its synonymous with a “zero-scape” of bland looking plants surrounded by a sea of rock. This photos below shows my side yard with a raised planter 5 feet deep and 20 feet long. Five years ago I turned off the water supply and planted succulents, aloes, euphorbias and cacti. In the winter months nature takes care of all the watering and in the summer months it gets a light sprinkling once a week with the hose. No fertilizers, pesticides or weed-killer. One unexpected benefit from creating this water-friendly garden is the wildlife visiting in greater numbers than ever before, lizards, dove, hummingbirds and bees. With succulents, cacti and aloe blooming all year-long and a fire-resistant area spanning across the entire side of my yard I think it was a good choice of landscape design.
Check out these resources for drought tolerant landscape information: Ocean Friendly Gardens, Be Water Wise.com, Xeriscape website.
Thank you for visiting my garden blog: www.nadiaknows.com
Plant-Grow-Enjoy
Friday Garden Photo
23 Apr 2010 4 Comments
in Flowers, Photography Tags: julia child rose, ladybug photo, macro lens photography, nadia's san diego garden blog
Friday morning garden photo: Two ladybugs on a Julia Child yellow rose bush.
Have a green weekend!
Plant – Grow – Enjoy.
www.nadiaknows.com
HAPPY EARTH DAY- The Giving Garden
22 Apr 2010 3 Comments
in Garden Projects, Living Healthy, Vegetable/ Herb Garden Tags: Earth Day 2010, Happy Earth Day, nadia's san diego garden blog, Recycle and Renew, The Giving Garden
♥ earth day ♥ earth day ♥ earth day ♥ earth day ♥ earth day ♥ earth day ♥
Today in the United States we celebrate our 40th Earth Day. In recognition of Earth Day I’m featuring the concept of a Giving Garden that is all about sharing, it’s a simple lesson that we all learned in the sandboxes of our youth. I’ve written blogs about the Giving Garden several times and believe it is my favorite Earth Day celebration all year-round. Sharing our gardens with others can happen in many ways such as growing extra vegetables for neighbors and co-workers, growing flowers for bouquets to brighten someone’s day, or opening up your garden and sharing plant cuttings. Several weeks ago I came home to find little sunflower plants a friend had started from seed on my doorstep including a bottle of wine to go with it, does sharing get any better than that?
I was inspired when another friend created small succulent containers with the cuttings I gave to her from my garden. Here is the link to her blog showing off her talent with container gardening: Kate’s blog .
Earth Day is a designated day to think about how we can live greener and healthier for our planet and future generations. I want to believe any effort is worthwhile like taking shorter showers, composting, planting your own vegetables, adding a tree to your landscape, sharing and mostly just caring about our planet.
Happy Earth Day!
Thank you for visiting my garden blog: www.nadiaknows.com
♥ Create - Share – Grow ♥
Gardening Secrets
18 Apr 2010 7 Comments
in Books, Garden Fruits, Garden Projects, Vegetable/ Herb Garden Tags: 1001 Gardening Secrets Book, Garden Book Review, Garden Tips, nadia's san diego garden blog, vegetable gardening
Book Review:
1,001 Gardening Secrets The Experts Never Tell You. Editors of FC&A Publishing. © 2008 by FC&A Publishing.
I stumbled upon this gardening book at a used book store in downtown Encinitas for $8.00 which was a real bargain when I compared it to the Amazon online price for $44.00. This book is an easy read with corny bold chapter titles, “Wet and Wild Watering Secrets”,”Pesky Plant Problems” and “Win the War on Weeds” to name a few. After placing posty notes all through the book at my favorite pieces of advice I decided to share them on this blog. Many of these tips and tricks I plan to try out this week such as cutting up banana peels and digging them into the soil of my potted rose bushes. Another secret I read and desperately need in my yard is how to get rid of the fruit flies in the compost bin. Here are some top secrets quoted straight from the book to help make our thumbs a little greener.
→ For the sweetest, juiciest tomatoes ever, add powdered milk to their water. Milk is a great source of calcium, which nourishes the plant and can help prevent blossom end rot.
→ Roses love banana peels, so cut some up and mix them in the soil at planting time. The calcium, sulfur, magnesium and phosphates are good for your roses.
→Sprinkle some tea leaves under your rose bushes and give them some water. You’ll have roses that are bigger and more beautiful than ever.
→ Recycle a wine bottle and fill it with 1/3 rice vinegar and place near or inside compost bin to get rid of fruit flies.
→ Seed soaking Soak peas and beans in-between a wet paper towel placed inside a Ziploc bag over night to speed up the seed germination.
→ Place a drop of white glue on the top of each stem after pruning roses. When the borers come, the stems will be sealed.
→ 1 tbsp. of Vinegar in a Gallon of water helps your indoor house plants thrive. Do this once a month.
→ Cucumber beetles do not like radishes, so put a couple of radish seeds into the cucurbit hill at planting time.
→ Plant garlic, marigolds, and a wide range of herbs to repel critters. It’s organic and healthier than using pesticides.
→ Wipe out aphids in a hurry with this simple solution and a spray bottle. Mix powdered milk with warm water, spray it on the plants’ leaves, let the mixture dry. As it dries, the milk will kill the aphids.
→ Sprinkle cinnamon powder on the soil when you start plants from seed. It helps stop damping-off, a disease that kills tender, young seedlings.
→ Wait until tomatoes start to show fruit blossoms before you side dress the bushes with a low nitrogen fertilizer.
→ To keep leaf diseases at bay, trim off all the greenery below the fruiting branches of your tomato plant.
→ Tomatoes, eggplant, peppers and potatoes love milky water because it kills the tobacco mosaic virus. It also protects cabbage from cabbage worms.
→ If you want your tulips to stand straight and tall, drop a few copper pennies in the vase.
→ Add two tablespoons each of sugar and vinegar to a quart of water and pour the mixture in a vase to keep cut flowers beautiful.
→ Orange rinds and coffee grinds around the garden repels cats.
→ Here’s a general rule of green thumb to use when deciding how deeply to plant a herb seed. Take a look at the diameter of the seed. Dig a hole twice that deep for the seed.
→ Garlic spray is a popular organic pesticide, but it also works well as a fungicide, prevents downy mildew, cucumber rust, tomato blight, and other fungal diseases. To make a spray, puree several garlic cloves with a little water in a blender. Add the pungent mixture to a gallon of water.
→ Use large, flat stones for multipurpose mulch in your tomato, watermelon, and other heat-loving plants. The stones soak up the heat from the sun during the day and radiate it back into the soil at night.
O.K. I have to stop at some point! I think this is an easy read and getting out in the garden to test out these secrets is what home gardening is all about. With 1,001 gardening secrets anyone could probably learn a thing or two from this book. I wonder how much powdered milk I should put in the water to feed my tomatoes? The book never gave an amount. Anyone?
Thanks for visiting my garden blog: www.nadiaknows.com
Knowing that learning and growing are essentials in life.
Agrostemma Purple Queen & Pink Contessa
16 Apr 2010 6 Comments
in Flowers, Garden Design, Photography Tags: flower garden, Flower seed, nadia's san diego garden blog, Pink Contessa Flower, Purple Queen Contessa Flower
Flowers seem intended for the solace of ordinary humanity. ~John Ruskin
Purchasing a seed packet for $2.79 of Purple Queen & Pink Contessa flowers months ago paid off this morning as they burst into full bloom. Planting these seeds was a first for me and I waited with anticipation to see how they would grow in my garden. Mother Nature has been good to Southern California this winter with a favorable amount of rainfall so I hardly tended to them at all.
These are very long-stemmed dainty cottage flowers that float back and forth with the wind creating a beautiful movement in the garden. My list of favorites is expanding each month as I try out new seeds and fall in love with them once they bloom. Since these were a success I can add them to my list of “YES, GROW THIS AGAIN”. My past flower growing ventures were limited to Sunflowers and Nasturtium which in their own right are full of rewards, but there are so many more flowers out there to get to know and grow and enjoy.
Happy Gardening! Thanks for your visit today: www.nadiaknows.com
♥ CREATE – GROW – INSPIRE ♥
Roxy- Keeping me company in the garden…
14 Apr 2010 5 Comments
in Photography Tags: Golden Retriever, nadia's san diego garden blog, Photography, Retriever and Friends of So. Ca
We adopted Roxy about 7 months ago and she is finally starting to relax and enjoy being a part of my garden, oops…(I meant my family)… ha ha. Roxy is a very sweet golden retriever and I wanted to thank Retriever and Friends of Southern California for all of their hard work and dedication to saving abused dogs and finding homes for them!
Honeybee
10 Apr 2010 5 Comments
in Garden Fruits, Living Healthy, Photography Tags: Bee Photography, honeybee, macro lens photography, nadia's san diego garden blog
♥ I followed this honeybee around my garden a bit before I was able to capture a nice clear photo of it pollinating my Meyer Lemon Tree. I like the profile angle of this photo and how the orange-yellow colored pollen shows up so well clustered around its legs. I added several fruit trees to my garden this year along with blueberry, strawberry and raspberry plants which subsequently increased the amount of bees I’m seeing in my yard this year over last.
◊ Interesting -HONEYBEE- Trivia ◊
* One bee hive per year collects 66 pounds of pollen. Pollen is used as food for honeybees consisting of protein, sugars, carbohydrates, enzymes, minerals and vitamins.
* Honey has antibacterial qualities and some say that eating honey is a great way to naturally cope with allergies.
* Without pollination there would be a significant decrease in the production of fruits and vegetables.
* Beekeepers are said to suffer less than any other working group in the areas of cancer and arthritis.
* Dab some honey on a scrape or cut for healing.
* They can Fly 15 Miles per Hour.
* Honeybees are native to Europe and introduced in the USA by early settlers.
* Bees carry out specific roles in a highly organized bee society. The queen bee can live for several years, but the worker bees only live from 6 weeks to 9 months. Bees live longer in the winter months.
* The U.S. bee population is continuing to decline. Many researchers believe that pesticides may be a contributing factor in the declining population.
♥ “Most people don’t have any idea about all the complicated life going on inside a hive. Bees have a secret life we don’t know anything about” August, p.148 (The Secret Life of Bees).
Do you have any interesting information about bees? I would love to read your comments. There is a lot of research being conducted about the decline of the bee population and why there has been such a drastic decline in the United States since 2006, some of the reasons are pollution, pesticide use, bacteria and less agricultural land use. To date researchers are still baffled as to why.
Starting Seeds Indoors
07 Apr 2010 12 Comments
in Flowers, Vegetable/ Herb Garden Tags: carnations, nadia san diego garden blog, sowing seeds indoors, summerfeast tomato, sungold tomato
I usually plant my garden seeds directly into the outdoor soil each spring, but this year on February 28th I planted Broccoli, Carnations and several tomato seeds, Sungold and Summerfeast. Only 10 days later they were popping up out of the soil and looking healthy. Have you ever grown your own carnations? I am one of those people who loves the smell of home-grown carnations because the florist versions have very little if no scent at all. Home grown carnations have an amazing sweet clove fragrance. The carnation seeds I bought from Botanical Interests Seed Company and the Broccoli and Tomato seeds I bought online from Renee’s Seeds.
This seed starter set-up I found at Target in the gardening section, it’s a “Burpee” brand bio-degradable packaged seed starter with soil and under-tray included . I plan to use it over and over again. I placed warm water in the tray and kept the seeds moist through the bottom tray instead of pouring water over the seeds.
Starting seeds indoors, especially tomatoes is a great way to get a head start on your spring garden. Keep seedlings moist but not soaking wet, then place them in a sunny window or use cool fluorescent bulbs to light them during the day. After the danger of frost has passed it will be safe to transplant the seedlings into the garden.
I have heard from master gardeners and several horticulture articles that growing heirloom tomatoes is difficult and not as easy as growing hybrid tomatoes. I did purchase the Summerfeast tomato that is an heirloom so I will keep you posted on how that goes! Maybe it will be my “garden challenge” for the spring.
This week they all go outside to start the “Harden Off” process since the soil is warming up and the danger of frost is over. To Harden Off Seeds introduce them slowly to the outdoors by placing them in a shady area for a few days, but keeping them indoors at night. Day 2 through 6 allow the seedlings to be exposed to more sun and on Day 7-10 keep them outside full time. I usually transfer them into the garden at about Day 10 when the seedlings have hardened off and are acclimated to the outdoor temperatures and sun exposure.
Thanks for visiting my garden blog:www.nadiaknows.com
HAPPY EASTER
04 Apr 2010 6 Comments
in Living Healthy, Photography Tags: Easter Eggs, Happy Easter, nadia's san diego garden blog


















