City Gardening

a gardening blog-a-zine by Lorraine Flanigan

Author Archive

When native plants aren’t the answer

By Lorraine • Feb 8th, 2011 • Category: Fresh Dirt, Plants

Belinda Gallagher tells it like it is. And backed by an impressive career as a nursery-owner and most recently, as Head of Horticulture at the Royal Botanical Gardens, her words reflect her experience and pragmatism. Although I missed her lecture on January 27, 2011 at the Toronto Botanical Garden, my good friend (and note-taker extraordinaire) Lorraine Hunter was there. [...]



Mulch, Mulch, Mulch

By Lorraine • Nov 12th, 2010 • Category: Dig in, Fall

To non-gardeners, bags of leaves left at the roadside are just so much waste material to be collected and disposed of by the city. But to the horticulturally cognoscenti, those leaves are plant duvets that keep the garden cozy all winter long. Like a deep blanket of snow, a four- to six-inch mulch of leaves [...]



Autumn Tool Care Tips

By Lorraine • Oct 24th, 2010 • Category: Dig in, Fall

As the cool winds of autumn usher out another gardening season, I can’t help reflecting on what I accomplished in the garden over this past summer. Although I planted lots of new perennials, potted up summer bulbs and separated clumps of flowers with clashing colours, what I’m most proud of is taking apart and cleaning [...]



Barracuda Blast!

By Lorraine • Oct 13th, 2010 • Category: Dig in, Fall

Fall is my favourite season for a host of reasons. My Barracuda leaf vacuum and mulcher rates in the top 10 things I like about autumn. On crisp, sunny days, you’ll find me sucking up the fallen leaves from the linden in the front yard with my trusty Barracuda, or in the backyard chopping bags of [...]



Bulbs Like It Cool

By Lorraine • Oct 10th, 2010 • Category: Dig in, Fall

Colourful bulbs are calling out to us from the shelves of garden centres and from the pages of mail order catalogues. Their siren sounds seem to say, “Buy me, plant me, water me and you’ll be rewarded with my spring beauty.”To succumb to these irresistible cries is to play into the hands of the squirrels. [...]



Dividing Time

By Lorraine • Oct 8th, 2010 • Category: Dig in, Fall

How did your plants spend their summer vacation? Walk out into the garden and take a look around. Have the Siberian irises crowded out the phlox? Are the stems of your yarrow lazily flopping over its neighbours? Has the centre of the your silvery artemisia browned-out? Did you notice how much smaller the peony flowers [...]



This calendar’s a winner!

By Lorraine • Jun 28th, 2010 • Category: Designers, Gurus & Trends, Style

Whether it’s the World Cup, Olympic Games or the Oscars, everybody loves celebrating a winner, and right now garden communicators like me are congratulating one of our own for her Silver Medal Award-winning garden calendar. The Garden Writers Association has just annouced the winners of its annual awards program, and Niagara Falls-based Theresa Forte has won big [...]



If I had to choose just one … Japanese anemone, it would be ‘Honorine Jobert’

By Lorraine • Jun 23rd, 2010 • Category: Favourite Plants, Fresh Dirt, Plants

The first time I saw ‘Honorine Jobert’ was in the south of France — near Nice I think — when I was on vacation and just new to gardening. I was dazzled by an entire border of these tall, white-flowered perennials waving in the wind. When it came time to plant my small woodland garden, I [...]



If I had to choose just one … brunnera, it would be ‘Jack Frost’

By Lorraine • Jun 10th, 2010 • Category: Favourite Plants, Fresh Dirt, Plants

You may prefer the creamy edges of Brunnera ‘Hadspen Cream’ or the gold-rimmed ‘King’s Ransom’ or even the silvery leaves of  ‘Looking Glass’, but my heart will always be true to ‘Jack Frost’. It’s not just the snowy foliage (it reminds me of Frosted Flakes cereal — maybe it’s a nostalgia thing…), or those gorgeous forget-me-not [...]



If I had to choose just one … hardy geranium, it would be ‘Rozanne’

By Lorraine • Jun 7th, 2010 • Category: Favourite Plants, Fresh Dirt, Plants

Walking through my garden the other morning, it occured to me that I tend to hang onto plants whether they perform or not. In other areas of my life, I’m ruthless about getting rid of things I no longer use, wear, read, eat — well, you get the picture. So, in an effort to force [...]