|


TODAY'S WEATHER |
|
Lafayette
Weather Courtesy of: |
|
Subscribe Now to
The Orchard Online News | |
|
Have a Look Around our Site |
|
|
Be a Guest Gardener:
Gardeners love to learn from other gardeners "over the fence." We would love to include a tour and or an article from one of our readers!
|
|
|
Contact Information:
E-Mail:
Click to e-mail us.
Telephone:
(925) 284-4474
Address:
4010 Mt. Diablo Blvd.
Lafayette, CA 94549
|


|
|
E. B. Stone Sure Start
is a blend of natural organic ingredients formulated to help newly transplanted plants develop strong roots and sturdy growth. Sure Start is rich in natural sources of phosphorous to help your plants develop a strong foundation for future growth. Our gentle and non-burning formula is safe to use with even the most tender transplants. Contains Blood Meal, Feather Meal, Bone Meal, Dried Chicken Manure, Bat Guano, Alfalfa Meal, Kelp Meal, Potassium Sulfate, Humic Acids and soil microbes including mycorrhizal fungi. Prepare your soil for planting almost anything with our Planting Compost. |
|
|
 |
Quotation of the Week: "Youth is like spring, an over-praised season more remarkable for biting winds than genial breezes. Autumn is the mellower season, and what we lose in flowers we more than gain in fruits."
— Samuel Butler |
 |
|
Summer may be in the rear view mirror but show-stopping color doesn't have to be! Fall can be the most rewarding season of all as plants make one final encore in an explosion of colors. Here are just a few surprises you might want to plant in your landscape.
Remember the blueberries you planted this spring? Well, stand back and enjoy their fall color display treat as well. Earliblue, Toro, and Bluetta provide red colors to the landscape. Duke, Berkeley and Jersey adorn the yard with yellow leaves while Darrow, Elliott and Brigitta offer burgundy leaves.
Fragrant Sumac (Rhus aromatica): A deciduous shrub producing green aromatic foliage sparkling brilliant scarlet or orange in the fall. Great for covering banks or slightly sloping areas. This sun or part shade plant has yellow flowers in the spring and red berries in the summer.
Dwarf Fothergilla (fothergilla gardenia): Plant dwarf fothergillas in every nook and cranny. They give so much in both summer and fall color yet ask for little of the gardener. Dense, round native shrub growing 2-3 feet tall, produces orange to scarlet fall color in sun. Enjoy creamy white, honey scented flowers in the spring.
American Sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua): Often mistaken as a maple, this tree is a must have. Cultivated specifically for its fall color, the glossy green summer leaves hanging on late into the fall turn to tones of rich yellow, purple, red in the fall. The American Sweetgum grows tall and relatively narrow (15'-20' spread) Great urban tree.
|
SEPTEMBER |
'PUT IN WINTER CROPS':
Summer's vegetables are most likely finished, making room for winter's vegetable crop. Winter crops to consider planting include beet, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, carrot, cauliflower, celery, endive, garlic, kale, kohlrabi, leek, head and leaf lettuce, onion, pea, radish, spinach, Swiss chard and turnip. Plant Brussels sprouts and cabbage as early in fall as possible. Be sure to plant both deep, burying the bend in the stem.
|
 |
|
This beautiful orchid plant, one of many varieties carried here at Orchard’s Flower Shop, is our number one requested orchid. These come in several different colors and bloom for up to 3 months or more. These are an exceptional value and a pleasure to enjoy. |
| Light: Plenty of bright indirect light (no direct sun). |
| Temperature: 70 degree days are best with a max of 90 degrees.
10 degree drop at night is ok. |
| Humidity: Mist twice daily to improve humidity indoors. |
| Water: Apply water to the roots/bark; allow to nearly
dry before watering again. During hot summer
months it will dry out sooner and less often
during winter months. |
| Fertilizer: Phalaenopsis have no rest period, so they must be fed
often. Dilute fertilizer to ½ strength and feed
twice monthly. |
|
Stop by our Flower Shop to check out the selection
and speak to one of our orchid experts. |
|
September Is The Time To... |
 |
|
1. Start planting cool-season flowers to bloom during winter and spring, such as alyssum, stock, snapdragon, and foxgloves.
2. Plant sweet peas from seed for Christmas bloom.
3. Start planting winter vegetables
4. Cut back petunias in late September
5. Continue to feed your tuberous begonias and fuchsias
6. Resume picking, deadheading, and fertilizing your roses.
7. Fertilize your ferns with fish emulsion, or a houseplant or flowering plant complete formula. Also MAKE SURE that the soil is thoroughly moist before you fertilize to avoid burning.
8. Feed all container-grown succulents with a well-diluted complete liquid fertilizer.
9. Don’t let fall-planted tropicals dry out.
10. Keep citrus evenly watered to help prevent fruit from splitting.
11. Don’t let camellias dry out now, or buds will fall off later.
12. Continue to control rose pests and diseases.
13. Start new winter vegetable gardens.
14. Start cleaning out flower beds and prepare the ground for fall planting.
|
 |
|
One of September’s most important and exciting jobs is to start buying and planting spring-flowering bulbs. Bulbs are easy plants to grow. They have a mystique bordering on miraculous, but growing them here in Northern California is different from growing them in the East or Middle West. Many bulbs need to undergo a cold winter in order to bloom. Some will bloom without cold weather but tend to rot during our hot, dry summers. Countering these drawbacks, we’re able to grow a huge number of charming and fascinating bulbs that are little known and rarely grown back East. Many of these naturalize readily, are drought resistant, and are unbelievably easy to grow.
Buy Bulbs Now to Plant Later
Begin purchasing spring-flowering bulbs in as soon as possible. They soon get picked over and sometimes put back in the wrong bins. A reliable local nursery is the best source of varieties that will do well in your climate zone, though some rare varieties can only be bought from catalogues or online. Choose the largest and fattest bulbs, because they produce the biggest blooms.
Among hardy bulbs (the kind grown in winter climates) the best choices for Northern California are daffodils (narcissus), Dutch Irises (Iris xiphium hybrids) and bearded iris. In inland gardens add grape hyacinths – muscari.
Look for daffodils with two or more divisions. Don’t pull them apart. If they’re still connected, each point will produce a bloom. Feel them gently to make sure they’re firm to the touch; softness means rot. Hyacinths perform best and give the most bloom if you buy large bulbs. Tulips have to be bought yearly.
Take daffodils, hyacinths, tulips, crocuses, anemones, grape hyacinths, and ranunculus home but don’t plant the bulbs yet. Getting them in the ground too early is a big mistake. Keep them cool and dry. The garage is usually a good place. Hyacinths, crocuses and tulips other than the lady tulip (Tulipa Clusiana) need to be chilled for six to eight weeks, prior to planting. Do not put apples or citrus in the refrigerator, they emit an ethylene gas, which acts as a hormone that makes bulbs think they already bloomed. Grape hyacinths, or muscari, don’t need prechilling, but they usually don’t grow well in costal gardens. In interior zones muscari sometimes come back year after year. Narcissus, ranunculus, anemones, and Dutch irises need no prechilling either.
Buy Bulbs to Plant NOW
Some bulbs can be planted in September as soon as you buy them. Among these are some superb choices from the bearded iris, daffodil (Narcissus) family, various oxalis from the Western Hemisphere and many bulbs and corms from South Africa, such as freesia, ixia, spraxis and watsonia. Pick up our “Bulb Planting Guide” It has directions for planting and spacing.
|
|