Please welcome ou new sponsor: Nature's Nook!
Make plans now to join Melinda on her famous Garden Walks at Boerner Botanical Gardens in 2013! Download the schedule here.
Nationally renowned garden expert Melinda Myers helps everyday gardeners find success and ease in the garden through her Melinda’s Garden Moments radio segments. Melinda shares “must have” tips that hold the key to gardening success, learned through her more than 30 years of horticulture experience. Listeners from across the country find her gardener friendly, practical approach to gardening both refreshing and informative! On this page, Melinda shares some more extensive garden tips, which expand on the information provided in her one-minute radio segments.
New tips are added throughout each month, providing timely step-by-step tips on what you need to do next in your garden! Visit Melinda’s website www.melindamyers.com for more gardening tips, how-to videos, podcasts and answers to your questions.
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Grow Some Homemade Soup for Valentine?s Day
by Melinda Myers
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posted Jan 31 2013 4:26PM
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Celebrate Valentine’s Day and National Homemade Soup Day by sharing a bowl of soup with the ones you love. And while you sip some soup, start planning the soup ingredients you’ll grow in this year’s garden.
Start with a look at your favorite soup recipes. Then decide what vegetables will grow best in your garden and store well for making winter soups.
Root crops such as carrots, turnips, parsnips and rutabagas are great choices since they store well and add nutrition to winter soups and stews.
Butternut, acorn and other winter squash make wonderful warm winter soups. The texture, color, and flavor make it a great starter or complete meal for fall and winter.
And of course don’t forget the potatoes, onions and garlic. All work well in container gardens and you can interplant the onions and garlic with other vegetables and flowers in your landscape.
A bit more information: Grow carrots, turnips and other root crops in well drained soil, raised beds or deep containers for best results. And grow short varieties of carrots if splitting and distortion have been a problem in the past.
For more gardening tips, how-to videos, podcasts and more, visit www.melindamyers.com
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