The Budget-Wise Gardener. Kerry Ann Mendez

The Budget-Wise Gardener - Kerry Ann Mendez


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       I love getting a deal. And so do you. There is something deeply satisfying when you acquire something highly esteemed for a song. Even better when it’s a plant!

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      I’ve been called cheap (I prefer frugal) by some in my family. But being thrifty allows me the luxury of splurging at times! Actually, my love of gardening was a direct result of my financial hardships earlier in life. I needed a second job to pay bills, and although I didn’t know anything about growing perennials, I applied at a five-acre field-grown garden center. Getting a tan while I worked seemed like a good idea. Praise the Lord for Melba Higgins who took a risk on me, offered me a job at $6 an hour and mentored me under her horticultural wing.

      My budget-wise attitude was put to the test after I became a plantaholic. Flower gardening grew into a passion – and then my livelihood. A home-based gardening business is not a high income profession, yet I was determined to create flower gardens and container gardens that were lush, opulent-looking, and done on a tiny budget. My penny-pinching skills soared to new levels for finding great plants, organic gardening products and other landscaping essentials. I also became skillful at saving money (and time) on routine maintenance chores including watering, weeding, mulching, preventing critter damage and more. Everything I designed had to be easy on the pocket and on my back.

      My most recent book, The Right-Size Flower Garden, focused on creating spectacular, non-stop-color gardens that were 50% less work while being environmentally friendly. The Budget-Wise Gardener expands on this practicality theme by providing “insider trade secrets” for spending less without compromising quality. You’ll learn how to get the best deals by plant group (i.e., perennials, shrubs, annuals); discover sources for amazing finds, including a number that will surprise you; save money on garden and container designs; and spend less time and cash on garden maintenance while embracing sustainable practices.

      Sometimes the hunt is more fun than finding the treasure. In this case, however, they are both priceless! Let’s enjoy the journey together…

       Kerry Ann

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      HOW TO SCORE GREAT PLANTS FOR LESS…OR FOR FREE!

      Welcome to the Academy of Shrewd Plant Hunters! Perhaps you’re enrolling as a wide-eyed, non-discriminating garden nymph – happy with whatever plant randomly lands in your shopping cart for whatever the price. Or maybe you consider yourself pretty savvy at mining “plant gems” from a quarry of flowering plants. My job as your tutor is to build you into a sophisticated plant geek able to track down elusive deals while getting the highest quality for your money. My mission is to equip you with superior plant scouting skills for capturing the healthiest, best-priced plants and eliminating costly poor decisions. The end goal: heavenly-looking, budget-wise gardens that do not create hell on earth.

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      The Academy’s first course focuses on evaluating contenders for a place in your garden. No more spontaneously reaching for the container with the biggest or most flowers at the garden center. You’re going to have cutting-edge assessment tools and precision timing to seize exceptional plants for less. Your untrained eye will develop radar vision. You will quickly identify poorly rooted specimens, pots that have been inconsistently watered and plants on the verge of an insect or fungal outbreak. Your scouting skills will identify prized containers that hold two, three or four closely spaced plants to create an impressive display. Or a hefty two- or three-year-old plant in a one-gallon pot, that will shortly be transplanted to a larger container by nursery staff and priced for twice as much. You will also learn how to “hold your fire” until the sale or clearance price appears. Exciting, heart-pounding stuff!

      The following sharp-shooting, purchasing tips are not only about keeping more money in your wallet, you will also receive insightful briefings on how to avoid costly mistakes, such as buying plants with inferior genetics or placing the wrong plant in the wrong spot for the wrong reasons.

      As a sophisticated plant geek you will be able to successfully maneuver many different terrains and situations – i.e., garden centers, mail-order catalogs, garage sales, friends bearing plants from their gardens – making informed, money-saving, smarter decisions that will result in luxurious gardens and landscapes.

      For practical purposes, I have listed my shopping tips by the following popular plant groups: perennials, biennials, ornamental grasses, bulbs, annuals and flowering shrubs. You’ll notice that I left out vegetables, herbs, conifers and trees. That’s because my time-tested, tactical training is primarily with ornamentals. However, I do give brief mention to conifers and trees for container planting, in Chapter 4.

      But first, before I start pulling designer trade secrets out of my magic garden hat, I want to emphasize that planet-friendly, sustainable gardening practices are of paramount importance. We’re making changes to our little piece of the earth. For some gardeners, the biggest challenge to creating a garden of their dreams is to put themselves second and ask: How will it benefit pollinators? Conserve precious water? Keep poisons from entering the ecosystem? And the wonderful news is we can have breathtaking gardens and be good stewards of the planet, by making wise plant choices.

      Having said this, it would be a glaring omission for me not to mention neonicotinoids (aka neonics), especially when these are applied to perennials that are nectar and pollen sources for precious pollinators. As you may know, a neonicotinoid is a systemic insecticide that is applied to plants to kill many insects, especially sap-feeding ones like aphids. This poison can also be present in nectar and pollen.

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      Globe Thistle (Echinops) is a bee buffet!

      This is not the platform to get into a long dialog about why I believe these insecticides are dangerous. There is plenty of easily accessible information for you to make your own decision. Rather, for those of you who believe as I do (or you are not sure what you believe), I want to provide a few resources for locating growers, garden centers and mail-order companies that do not use neonicotinoids on their plants.

       Neonicotinoid Information Sources

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      Bee Better. Bee Better’s mission is to educate homeowners, community leaders and developers about the importance of sustainable, organic and water-wise garden design, with a focus on native plants for resident and migrating birds, bees and butterflies. The site includes lists of neonicotinoid-free growers, as well as growers that still use neonicotinoids. beebetter.info/

      Beyond Pesticides. Features a comprehensive directory of companies and organizations that sell organic seeds and plants to the general public (seeds that have not been coated with bee-harming neonicotinoid pesticides or drenched with them). (beyondpesticides.org/programs/bee-protective-pollinators-and-pesticides/what-can-you-do/pollinator-friendly-seed-directory)


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