2011  August : The Garden Rose
Recommended:

Rose Gardening Secrets Guide


Discover the three D's to Rose Pruning like a professional, including when to prune and how to prune step-by-step -- this is VITAL to making sure your roses grow right! (page 72)

Discover the different major classes of Roses and their characteristics to help you choose the correct Rose -- choose wrong, and your Rose garden will be the laughing stock instead of the blue ribbon winner! (page 20)

Learn how a Rose is named and why. This is a special spiritual practice that should NOT be taken for granted. (page 21)

Discover which Rose to buy to suit your landscaping needs -- this secret alone will turn your house into the envy of all your neighbors (and even increase it's value!). (page 22)

Understand the complete Anatomy of a Rose -- this is what separates the professionals who get great roses 10 times out of 10 from the rank amateurs! (page 22)

The keys to ensuring the Rose you buy is suitable for the use you have in mind (page 27)

Learn how the color of your Roses projects your personality and that of your home and can create harmony (and the exact opposite!) (page 29)

Know how your local climate can affect your choice of color and even the colors themselves -- remember, everything counts! (page 31)

If a fragrant garden is your goal, you need to know the most fragrant varieties of roses and I' ll reveal every single last one to you (page 32)

Discover the best varieties of Roses to suit your exact climate conditions. If you don't know this, growing roses will be more torture than an enjoyable hobby! (page 34)

Learn the exact varieties to suit hot conditions or shade conditions (page 37)

Discover the key list of Roses most tolerant against Rose disease -- vital for protecting your hard work from the evils of nature! (page 38)

Why buying a bare-root Rose is vital to your success as a champion rose grower. (page 39)

Discover a step-by-step method in knowing what to look for so you'll always buy healthy Roses instead of weak ones that will never grow right (page 40)

Discover the best time to plant your Roses and my special techniques to cultivating them to perfection. (page 42)

Learn the best growing conditions for Roses and how to achieve this (page 43)

Discover how to test your soil conditions and their suitability for Roses -- if you don't do this right, you're shooting yourself in the foot before you begin! (page 44)

Learn the secrets to amending your soil for maximum growing power (page 45)

Secrets to preparing your bare-root Roses for planting (page 48)

Learn the correct depth and soil preparation before planting so you can maximize your soils potential for feeding your rose from birth to maturity. (page 49)

Learn the correct time of day to plant your Roses (neglect the time of day, and you run the risk of seeing your roses wilt before they grow big and strong) (page 50)

Discover how to relocate your existing Roses without damage (page 52)

Daily maintenance secrets that will keep your Roses strong and healthy for months (page 54)

Learn the correct way to water your Rose Garden and a simple test to confirm you' ve got it right (page 55)

Learn the method of mulching that will put your Roses on steroids! (page 59)

Discover why you have weeds in your Rose garden and how you can get rid of them! (page 62)

Discover the right fertilizer formulation and in the right amounts and when to apply to maximize the growth potential of your garden. (page 63)

Discover all the nutrient deficiencies for Roses, their symptoms, and simple treatments that can save your precious roses. (page 70)

How to save money on expensive Rose tools (page 76)

Learn the step-by-step guide to pruning without fear but with amazing results (page 76)

Discover how to disbud to achieve the largest flowers possible (page 80)

Discover how to avoid sending your Rose into shock when deadheading your Roses (page 82)

Learn a secret technique for hybridizing Roses and creating flowers that will put your friends in SHOCk when they see them! (page 95)

Learn how to harvest Rose seeds and sow them successfully -- it's like creating your own army of super-roses! (page 99)

Discover simple secrets to propagating Roses by budding, by stem cuttings, layering and division (page 101)


Guns N’ Roses – Don’t Cry (Tokyo 92′)

Guns N’ Roses is an American rock band that was formed in Los Angeles, California in 1985. The band, led by frontman and co-founder Axl Rose, has gone through numerous line-up changes and controversies since its formation. The band has released six studio albums, three EPs and one live album during its career. The band has sold an estimated 100 million albums worldwide,[4][5] including over 43 million in the United States.[6] The band’s 1987 major label debut album Appetite for Destruction has sold in excess of 28 million copies and reached number one on the United States Billboard 200. In addition, the album charted three Top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100, including “Sweet Child o’ Mine” which reached number one.[7] The 1991 albums Use Your Illusion I and Use Your Illusion II debuted on the two highest spots on the Billboard 200 and have sold a combined 14 million copies in the United States alone and 35 million worldwide. After over a decade of work, the band released their follow-up album, Chinese Democracy, in 2008. Their mid-to-late eighties and early nineties years have been described by individuals in the music industry as the period in which “they brought forth a hedonistic rebelliousness and revived the punk attitude-driven hard rock scene, reminiscent of the early Rolling Stones.” The Use Your Illusion Tour was a promotional tour for the albums Use Your Illusion I and Use Your Illusion II, although due to the scale of the tour, the term “promotional tour” is

1913 - A BOOK ABOUT ROSES HOW TO GROW & SHOW THEM BY S REYNOLDS HOLE-ILLUST
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Do you regularly stop to smell the roses?

Question by Silva: Do you regularly stop to smell the roses?
Orchid you do better?
There are daisy’s when I violet too many things bug me!
Now I never rest on my laurels anymore!
I have tulips to speak my mind and two iris’s to see all the beauty out there!
So Lilac like everyday is my last and enjoy them!
How about all of you?
Have you inhaled the sweetness of life today?

Best answer:

Answer by ghouly05
I will remain mum on whether I do or not. It is none of you business. LOL. Besides, I Lilac a rug so you couldn’t believe me no matter what I say. This is not really a thorny issue but I deserve some privacy. There is no telling what ramifications could stem from answering it. Petal your question somewhere else.

What do you think? Answer below!

Half Ball Amethyst Rose Quartz Tiger Eye Opal Gemstone GEM Carved Dragon Pendant
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How do I take care of rosebushes?

Question by Mandy: How do I take care of rosebushes?
I recently bought my first house, and the landscaping has about 45 mature rosebushes! I don’t know anything about gardening, let alone roses. Most of the bushes are 4 feet high, most are budding; a few are enormous at about 10 feet x 10 feet, and have dozens of blooms.

What should I do to take care of them? How much water, how often and how do I prune, what soil do they need? THANK YOU in advance for your help! :)

Best answer:

Answer by chefgrille
Well, they’re already planted in the soil, so that’s working out well for them, don’t worry about what type of soil they’re in. We don’t even water our rose bushes unless it’s a really dry summer, then each one get the garden hose laying at the base of it (don’t spray the leaves or blooms) for about 10 minutes once a day either in the morning or evening, not during hot times or the water will just evaporate off the ground fast.

As for cutting, just cut each one maybe an inch from where it comes off the bigger branch. That way you’ll still get more blooms out of it.

What do you think? Answer below!

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All You Need To Know About Landscape Gardening

Landscape farming has regularly been likened to the painting of a picture. Your art-work teacher has doubtless told you that a good picture should have a thrust of chief activity, and the leftovers of the points merely go to make more charming the middle idea, or to form an excellent locale for it. So in landscape gardening there must be in the gardener’s beware a picture of what he requests the total to be when he completes his work.

From this reading we shall be able to work out a little guess of landscape gardening.

Let us go to the lawn. A good area of open lawn legroom is forever lovely. It is peaceful. It adds a sensation of plot to even small basis. So we might generalize and say that it is well to keep open lawn seats. If one covers his lawn space with the prairie, with little flower beds here and there, the common produce is variable and fussy. It is a bit like an over-dressed persona. One’s reason failed all individuality therefore treated. An explicit ranking or a small group is not a bad arrangement on the lawn. Do not centre the hierarchy or plants. Let the dewdrop a bit into the background. Make a pleasing margin figure of them. In choosing foliage one must keep in awareness several property. You should not decide an overpowering hierarchy; the ranking should be one of good sculpt, with something interesting about its bark, leaves, plants or fruit. While the poplar is a hasty farmer, it sheds its leaves early and so is left settled, bare and dreadful, before the tumble is old. Mind you, there spaces where a row or double row of Lombardy poplars is very valuable. Nevertheless I think you’ll acquiesce with me that one solo poplar is not. The catalpa is fairly lovely by itself. Its leaves are broad, its flora attractive, the seed pods which embrace to the hierarchy awaiting away into the iciness, add a bit of picture squeness. The smart berries of the ash, the brilliant foliage of the darling maple, the blossoms of the tulip ranking, the bark of the ashen birch, and the leaves of the copper beech all these are beauties points to respect.

Place makes a difference in the variety of a ranking. Suppose the sink portion of the proof is a bit low and soggy, then the location model for a willow. Don’t group trees together which look thorny. A long-looking poplar does not go with a kind somewhat rounded little tulip ranking. A juniper, so neat and precise, would look silly beside a dispersal chestnut. One must keep proportion and suitability in brains.

I’d never advice the planting of a group of evergreens close to a house, and in the front yard. The look is very dark genuinely. Houses therefore surrounded are overcapped by such trees and are not only gloomy to live in, but justly unhealthful. The chief necessary inside a house is sunlight and profusion of it.

As trees are preferred because of certain good points, so bushes should be. In a bundle I should crave some which bloomed early, some which bloomed belated, some for the beauty of their descend foliage, some for the colour of their bark and others for the fruit. Some spireas and the forsythia bruise early. The red bark of the dogwood makes a bit of colour all frost, and the red berries of the barberry adhere to the bush well into the iciness.

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Certain bushes are good to use for barricade purposes. A hedge is somewhat prettier mostly than a fence. The Californian privet is excellent so. Osage orange, Japan barberry, buckthorn, Japan quince, and Van Houtte’s spirea are other shrubs which make good hedges.

I forgot to say that in ranking and shrub variety it is usually better to take those of the zone one lives in. Unusual and exotic plants do exclude well, and regularly match but poorly with their new venue.

Landscape gardening may ensue along very stiff outline or along informal ranks. The first would have arranged paths, erect rows in stiff beds, everything, as the name tells, rightly stiff. The other procedure is, of course, the thorough reverse. There are threat points in each.

The strict arrangement is prone to look too stiff; the informal, too fussy, too wiggly. As far as paths go, keep the in wits, that a pathway should forever target anywhere. That is its topic to direct one to a definite place. Now, candid, even paths are not unpleasing if the realize is to be that of a formal patch. The danger in the curled pathway is an abrupt curve, a whirligig stimulate. It is far better for you to spike to arrange paths save you can make a really pleasing curve. No one can tell you how to do this.

Garden paths may be of annoy, of dirt, or of lawn. One sees meadow paths in some very lovely gardens. I suspect, however, if they would purpose as well in your small gardens. Your patch areas are so imperfect that they should be re-spaded each period, and the grass paths are a great upset in this work. Of course, a gravel lane makes an adequate appearance, but again you may not have gravel at your control. It is promising for any of you to dig out the pathway for two feet. Then put in six inches of rock or ember. Over this, bunch in the dirt, rounding it slightly regarding the centre of the trail. There should never be depressions through the central part of paths, since these form convenient places for water to shelf. The under layer of sandstone makes an accepted drainage structure.

A shop regularly requests the help of vines or flora or, both to tie it to the reason in such a way as to form a harmonious complete. Vines give themselves well to this work. It is better to yard a perennial deposit, and so let it form an undying part of your landscape diagram. The Virginia planted, wistaria, honeysuckle, a climbing rose, the clematis and trumpet creeper are all most satisfactory.

Close your eyes and picture a house of normal colour, that melodious bleak of the gnarled shingles. Now add to this old house a purple wistaria. Can you see the beauty of it? I shall not overlook quickly a rather obnoxious part of my childhood home, where the dining room and kitchen met. Just there climbing over, and lessening over a framework was a trumpet creeper. It made superb a gauche point, a dreadful bit of carpenter work.

Of course, the morning-glory is a yearly creeper, as is the moon-vine and untamed cucumber. Now, these have their elite function. For regularly, it is basic to coat a horrid thing for just a time, awaiting the better things and better period come. The annual is ‘the chap’ for this work. Along an old fence a hop vine is a thing of beauty. One might try to rival the woods’ landscape work. For often one sees bedecked from one rotted tree to another, the ampelopsis vine.

Flowers may well go along the piece of the structure, or adjoining a hike. In broad, while, keep the front lawn space open and endless by beds. What lovelier in early bounce than a bed of daffodils close to the house? Hyacinths and tulips, too, form a glow of glory. These are little or no trouble, and start the spring aright. One may make of some bulbs an exception to the reign of complete front lawn. Snowdrops and crocuses planted through the lawn are wonderful. They do not frighten the universal provoke, but just unify with the intact. One practiced bulb gardener says to take a basketful of bulbs in the plunge, stride about your grounds, and just release bulbs out here and there. Wherever the bulbs slump, plant them. Such small bulbs as those we plant in lawns should be in groups of four to six. Daffodils may be therefore planted, too. You all recall the grape hyacinths that grow all through Katharine’s elevation yard.

The place for a flower plot is generally at the area or rear of the house. The backyard is a lovely idea, is it not? Who requests to bequeath a wonderful looking front yard, jaunt the bend of a house, and find a ditch heap? Not I. The flower patched may be laid out formally in neat little beds, or it may be more of a careless, hit-or-skip character. Both having their good points. Great stacks of bloom are attractive.

You should have in awareness some notion of the blending of colour. Nature appears not to judge this at all, and still gets wondrous effects. This is because of the tremendous quantity of her absolute background of green, and the limitlessness of her space, while we are confined at the best to relatively small areas. So we should worked not to blind people’s eyes with clashes of colours which do not at close series unify well. To collapse up extremes of colours you can always use adequate of fair flora, or something like mignonette, which in provoke green.

Finally, let us sum up our landscape moral. The grounds are a site for the house or buildings. Open, limitless lawn spaces, a tree or a personal group well placed, flowers which do not fill up the front yard, groups of bushes these points to be remembered. The paths should conduct somewhere, and be each orthodox or well warped. If one starts with a formal garden, one should not mix the informal with it before the work is done.

For tips on california lilac and dwarf lilac, visit the Lilac Flower website.


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Patti Moreno, the Garden Girl, dead heads her roses. Distributed by Tubemogul.

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Using Rosehip oil As an Ingredient in Skin Care Products

What is Rosehip oil

Its botanical name is Rosa rubiginosa L. (Synonym R. eglanteria) and it belongs to the family Rosaceae. Its common names include: Wild rose, Sweet Briar, Sweet Briar Rose, Egelantier, Eglantine, or Sweetbrier.

Considered a noxious plant in parts of Australia, the Wild rose is a deciduous shrub native to Europe and western Asia, and grows to 2.5-3.0m high and 2.5-3.0m wide.

As is so often the case, what is considered a weed by some, and in some regions rightfully so, is often a powerful medicine for others. Just think about Dandelion, Milk thistle and so many other ‘noxious’ Australian weeds, many of which have powerful medicinal properties and several of these ‘weeds’ are used in modern pharmaceutical drugs.

Where does Rosehip oil come from

When the flowers looses their petals, what is left is the fruit of the rose. This is the part used to make teas, and where the carrier oil comes from.

What are the properties in Rosehip oil

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Rose hip oil contains 80% essential fatty acids (EFAs), predominantly linoleic (Omega 3) and linolenic (Omega 6) and is naturally enriched with antioxidants beta-carotene and lycopene. It is also a good source of vitamins and minerals, especially vitamins A, C and E (natural d-alpha tocopherol), flavonoids and other biologically active compounds, thus it is a powerful antioxidant.

An infusion or tea made from the dried rose petals can be used to treat headaches and dizziness; with honey added the infusion is used as a heart and nerve tonic and a blood purifier.

The rosehip seed is rich in vitamin E and the carrier oil extracted from the seed is used externally in the treatment of burns, scars and wrinkles.

Rosehips also contain tannins (astringents), which explains its effectiveness in the treatment of large skin pores externally, and diarrhoea when used as a tea or herbal extract, internally.

Using of Rosehip oil in Skin Care Products

The essential fatty acids aid the regeneration of skin cells and the repair of damaged tissues. It retards the signs of premature aging and provides excellent results in the treatment of scars, burns (including sunburn), dry eczema and other skin blemishes. The antioxidants in Rosehip oil are effective in reducing post-acne and surgical scarring.

These properties of Rosehip oil make it an ideal ingredient in natural skin care products and Rosehip oil is recommended for use in anti-aging facial creams, body lotions, in hair care products for dry and damaged hair, and for use in sun care products.

On its own, or in combination with other ingredients, it has been shown to be very effective in the treatment of scarring from acne or postpartum, when used for prolonged periods of time.

This carrier oil is relatively expensive, however it provides a powerful arsenal of constituents for common skin problems and skin complaints and should not be overlooked.

Danny Siegenthaler is a doctor of traditional Chinese medicine and together with his wife Susan, a medical herbalist and Aromatherapist, they have created Natural Skin Care Products by Wildcrafted Herbal Products to share their 40 years of combined expertise with you.

They practice Herbal and Chinese medicine at their Wildcrafted Cottage Clinic.

© Wildcrafted Herbal Products 2009


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Planting And Caring For Your Rose Garden On CD
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I’ve heard that coffee grounds are good for rose gardens. Is this true?

Question by Paul C: I’ve heard that coffee grounds are good for rose gardens. Is this true?

Best answer:

Answer by my game
Coffee grounds are good for all plants and if you have coffee left over in the pot you can also use that to water your plants.

Give your answer to this question below!

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Giving The Right Gardening Gift

There is nothing nicer than receiving a gift linking to one’s passion. If your loved one’s passion is farming, then show your thoughtfulness by generous a gift that will be actually appreciated. There are so many great farming gifts that the only constraint is your own finances.

If your account is small, go for effects like gloves, kneepads or even a fishy hat. An appealing pot (or a watering-can) packed with a small bag of potting mix, a pack of bulbs, some gloves and a small trowel or other tool will be normal with delight by most gardeners. There are many hand tools at hardware supplies that are reasonably priced.

If you think that is too mundane, how about a subscription to a gardening magazine? A tiny bit more exclusive perhaps, but it will give twelve satisfied months of delight. A book on gardening is another idea, but make really your recipient does not already have the one you prefer. Books are often violently discounted at Christmas time, so you may get a bargain.

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On the other hand, a pot that contains a pinnacle lodge is commonly a welcomed gift. Be definite to influence a stand that is right to your climate. Sometimes plants are sent from stifling to measure zones and kept in artificial conditions in the stow. These plants will not do well once taken from their environment. Shrub roses are robust and attractive and grow in many climates. Tulips do best in the cooler climate.

If your budget is great, a more exclusive tool may be appropriate. A withdraw-trolley is easier to use than a wheelbarrow and, like some exciting tools, is still not awfully pricey. Small thrilling tools such as whipper-snippers can retail for as little as .00. Or, if your isolated has a sluice but not a hosepipe totter, then that would be a more expedient gift that he would strictly appreciate.

Automatic lawn mowers, electric cultivators, hedge trimmers and brush cutters are in the more luxurious value reach and you are the only one who can decide whether that is an appropriate gift. However, when the recipient realizes you have given a gift that compliments his passion, dear or not, it will indeed become the best gift your companion has ever normal.

Learn about korean lilac and japanese lilac at the Lilac Flower site.


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About Botanical Gardens

A botanical garden is a place in which plants are grown and displayed primarily for scientific and educational purposes. A botanical garden consists chiefly of a collection of living plants, grown out-of-doors or under glass in greenhouses and conservatories. It usually includes, in addition, a collection of dried plants, or herbarium, and such facilities as lecture rooms, laboratories, libraries, museums, and experimental or research plantings. Concrete fountains and wall water fountains are often included in the display of botanical gardens.

The plants in a botanical garden may be arranged according to one or more subdivisions of botanical science. The arrangements may be systematic (by plant classification), ecological (by relation to environment), or geographic (by region of origin). The larger botanical gardens often include special groupings, such as rock gardens, water gardens, wildflower gardens, and collections of horticultural groups produced by plant breeding, such as roses, tulips, or rhododendrons. A plantation restricted to exhibits of woody plants is called an arboretum. Most botanical gardens will incorporate water features such as water wall fountains. For more information on wall water fountains visit http://www.garden-fountains.com/Categories.bok?category=Wall+Fountains.

History of Botanical Gardens

One of the earliest botanical gardens for the study of plants was established in ancient Athens about 340 B.C. by Aristotle and run by his pupil Theophrastus. The oldest public botanical gardens in the world are those established at Pisa, Italy, in 1543; at Padua, Italy, in 1545; at Paris in 1635; and at Berlin in 1679. In the 16th and 17th centuries, herbalists cultivated medicinal herbs in private gardens. In 1673, the Society of Apothecaries planted the Chelsea Physic Garden in London to provide materials for research and medicine. The American botanist John Bartram near Philadelphia established the first experimental botanical garden in the U.S. in 1728.

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Where Botanical Gardens Are Found

Almost every major city has a botanical garden. The Royal Botanic Gardens, better known as Kew Gardens, near London, founded in 1759, is the largest in the world. Experiments and research done there have led to the transplanting of commercially productive crops, such as rubber, from their native habitats to other parts of the world.

More than 300 botanical gardens are in the U.S. Among the most important are the Missouri Botanic Gardens in Saint Louis (1859); the New York Botanical Garden in Bronx Park (1895) and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, both in New York City. The Arnold Arboretum, established in 1872, is located at Harvard University.

Benefits of Visiting a Botanical Garden

By visiting botanical gardens or arboretums, city dwellers can discover a part of the natural world to which they ordinarily have no access, escape from the pressure of dense urban population, and perhaps even develop new interests and hobbies having to do with the natural environment. In these special parks, plants from all over the world are scientifically cultivated, studied, and artistically displayed for the pleasure and enlightenment of the public. Arboretums specialize in raising trees and shrubs (woody plants) in their natural surroundings. They may exist independently or as part of a larger botanical garden.

Unlike ordinary parks, botanical gardens and arboretums are laid out with more than just the beauty of the landscape in mind. They will offer sculpture and cast stone water features. Although trees and shrubs may be interspersed throughout the area to enhance the pleasant surroundings, plants are usually grouped according to their scientific relationships. Often there are small, special gardens, such as rose gardens, rock gardens, wildflower gardens, or Japanese landscape gardens contained within the larger botanical gardens. Many have sections devoted to plants of particular geographic origins, such as a tropical plant section, or an aquatic plant section. Usually, plants are labeled according to common name, scientific name, and region of origin. For more ideas on great cast stone water features visit http://www.garden-fountains.com/cast-stone-fountain-patinas.htm.

A garden may contain a few hundred or as many as 20,000 different species and varieties of plants, depending upon the amount of land, money, and professional help available. In size, botanical gardens range from about 2 1/2 acres (1 hectare) to over 220 acres (90 hectares). There may be a greenhouse, or more than one greenhouse, in a botanical garden. The greenhouse is used both for displaying plants and, where winters are cold, for growing plants that would not otherwise survive the seasonal change. In temperate climates, certain tropical plants must be grown in greenhouses-for example, tropical orchids and ferns, pineapples, Spanish moss, cacti, African violets, and begonias. Seedling plants that are to be set outdoors as soon as the weather is warm enough for them may be started in greenhouses or in hotbeds, which are beds of earth that are heated and covered with glass. Learn more about featured botanical garden plants at
http://www.garden-fountains.com/water-lilies/main-page-history-of-water-lilies.htm.

Many kinds of plants need certain climatic conditions at certain seasons, and a botanical garden may need special storage areas for them. Some young plants, for instance, may need a winter growing period but cannot survive freezing temperatures. They must be stored in cold frames, which are unheated, boxlike structures covered with glass. Houses built of lathing may be needed to store some plants temporarily in semi shade and to grow certain plants that cannot stand the hot summer sun.

Elizabeth Jean is an outdoor gardening writer and frequent contributor to Garden-Fountains.com, a popular internet destination for water fountains and garden statuary.


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The Cultivation of a Concrete Rose: The Planting

The Cultivation of a Concrete Rose: The Planting

The Cultivation of a Concrete Rose: The Planting
by: Gayle Rutner

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Please Read this, and tell me what you think??

Question by Ella S: Please Read this, and tell me what you think??
Its been here before, but I didn’t get enough criticism for it.

Be HONEST.. compliments are really not any help Please note that this is not the beginning, but the second small chunk. Search for my other questions if you want to read the beginning. It’s not crucial.
Read part of a story, and tell me what you think.?
Be HONEST.. compliments are really not any help Please note that this is not the beginning, but the second small chunk. Search for my other questions if you want to read the beginning. It’s not crucial.

Rose hung up without properly saying goodbye. It was something the sisters had dispensed with once they moved away from the house, Virginia to Cornell and Beth to… well, away. Away meant as far from stuffy old Boston as she could get. A stint abroad, several waitressing jobs which paid abysmally, a (very) brief stay in a commune, and one quite serious boyfriend with whom she had lived in an apartment which had seemed romantically Spartan at first and turned out to be just plain old small and dirty. And now, she lived in California. That was what her parents told their friends when anyone asked what Rose did for a living. “She lives in California now,” her parents would say, and everyone would exchange knowing looks. Rose didn’t care in the least, which was what distinguished her from Virginia and their two brothers. Rose was in fact happier than she’d ever been, working at a Waldorf day-care center and even occasionally seeling a painting or two. She was paying the bills with even a little to spare for luxuries like shampoo and fresh fruit.
Rose looked at the clock the floor beside her bed, did some quick math and decided to call her brother Jim in New York. His full name was James Joyce Llewellyn, and their second brother’s name was Thomas Jefferson Llewellyn. The three oldest were all named after various people the Llewellyn’s admired, and then there was Rose, the baby. Just plain old Rose. The child of her parents’ middle age and diminished brain cells. Virginia, the oldest, had always introduced herself first, and someone, thinking themselves clever, would invariably turn to Rose and say, “and I suppose you’re Georgia,” Rose usually said, no, she was New Jersey. Sometimes she was Delaware. It depended on the day.
She got up and put on a pot of coffee, as there was little chance she was going back to sleep. Virginia had awakened her, but also given her much too much to think about to sleep. She punched in Jim’s number and waited as a phone two and half thousand miles away rang.
Jim answered, groggy from sleep.
“What are you doing home?” demanded Rose as soon as he picked up, again skipping niceties.
“What?” Jim said foggily.
“I said what are you doing home? Don’t you have classes? It’s a Wednesday.”
“Thanks for the update.”
“You didn’t answer my question. You sound like ****. You sound hungover.”
“I do not. I mean I am not. I mean I am, but I don’t sound it. Whatever. It’s what, four-thirty out there? Who died?”
“Nobody, but I’ve got something to spill.”
“Well, okay. Dish.”
“Dad’s got a new girlfriend, a young one, young enough to be our sister- that’s verbatim from Ginny- and he’s bringing her to the wedding.”
“Well, good for him, the old dog. Why is this waking-someone-out-of-a-sound-… news?”
“You just don’t get it, do you?”
“Get what?”
“He’s bringing her to the wedding. To meet all of us, and mom, and all our relatives, and all of Ginny and David’s friends. He’s bringing her to the wedding, Jim.”
“Yeah. And?”
“God, you are such a man. Don’t you have any loyalty for Mom?”
“Well, I guess, but it’s not like they’re getting back together. Irreconcilable differences.”
“Yeah, but she’s like nineteen,”
“You’re exaggerating. You think that the wedding is going to be an opportunity for you to pull some kind of a Parent Trap maneuver, but trust me, it’s not. They can’t stand each other. End of story.”
“I wouldn’t care if…” Rose trailed off.
“You’d care no matter what. I’m not saying I don’t care too, but he’s fifty-seven years old. We can’t tell him what to do.”
“Why do you have to be so goddamn rational? Why can’t you just be on my side, on mom’s side?”
“I’m not on anybody’s side, I just-“
Rose dropped the phone back onto the cradle with a clatter of plastic and metal.
Jim tossed the portable phone across the bedspread and scowled fiercely at the sunlight streaming through his uncurtained windows. Stacks of books glowered at him disapprovingly from the dresser. He pushed a hand through his dark hair and pulled his Fordham sweatshirt on over his head, and shoved his glasses up over his nose. He looked at his watch, and decided there was no way he was making it to Contract Law at nine-thirty. Instead he dialed his brother Tom’s number in Boston.
Tom was having the worst morning of all the Llewellyn siblings. He’d awoken to find the half of the bed which belonging to his girlfriend Claire cool and unrumpled. Alarmed, he’d run to the bathroom to find that her toothbrush was gone, and linen closet emptied of exactly half their towels. She’d taken the coffee, the peanut butter, two apples, a banana, the Saltines, and half the loaf of bread.. She’d been nothing if not democratic in the way she’d wrecked everything, thought Tom as he absorbed the state of the apartment which they’d shared until four-thirty six that morning. And so Tom was sitting dazedly at the kitchen table, staring at nothing in a particular, when the phone rang
“Guess what?” demanded Jim
Tom sighed.
“What?”
“Dad’s having a full-out, clichéd midlife crisis, complete with a nubile Playmate, who is reportedly young enough to be our sister, ”
“Well, that’s just Fantastic, isn’t it.”
“You’re sunny this morning. What’s the matter?”
“Nothing. Everything is perfect.”
“How’s your lovely, leggy graduate student doing?”
“Claire is fine. Claire is perfect.”
“Okay. If you say so. I hear that Dad’s bringing this new girl to the wedding, and believe me, Virginia and Rose are about ready to-“
“Look, I really have to go. I’m about an hour late,”
“Well, so am I,”
“Well, at least I’m not paying forty-five thousand a year to get drunk and over sleep.”
“Don’t be so-“
“So what? Responsible?”
“So uptight. So, anyway, I was wondering if maybe I could have your plus-one for the wedding. I’ve been seeing this girl for a couple months now, and I was just thinking that since-“
“No, Jim, I—“
He was going to say “I need it,” and remembered that he didn’t, not anymore. Instead, he hung up and got dressed for work.
It is easy to forget, when one is upset, that other people cannot intuit your every thought, nor see the elephant which is occupying your headspace. And so it wasn’t until he was pulling out of the tight parking spot which he’d fought tooth and nail for that Tom realized he hadn’t said a word to his brother about what had happened with Claire

Best answer:

Answer by fantushe
well one thing that i noticed is that you dont use the rule where you put two spaces after a period

good luck! :)

Add your own answer in the comments!

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