Burpee: $10 off and a free pack of pollinators
The season kicks off with the new catalog from the W. Atlee Burpee Company (or just plain 鈥淏urpee鈥 to us) as they celebrate their 140th year in the business.
The star of this year鈥檚 big Burpee show is a 鈥渕eatball鈥 — that鈥檚 the name of a new hybrid eggplant they鈥檙e introducing that鈥檚 said to be the meatiest eggplant ever. Also new is the 鈥渞azz鈥 blueberry — a perennial whose fruits are said to have a little raspberry kick mixed into their classic blueberry taste.
And while not a new plant, the garden tower 鈥 a combination planter/composter/worm bin that allows you to grow 50 different plants while turning your kitchen scraps into their food (!), all in a 2-foot-wide footprint 鈥 looks like something our many space-challenged garden listeners have long been yearning for. (It鈥檚 a composter! It鈥檚 a planter! It鈥檚 both!)
A 2016 bonus: You鈥檒l get a free packet of with every order鈥攁nd $10 off that order if you mention my name (鈥淢ikey鈥) at checkout. Visit the website聽or call 1-800-888-1447.
Iron-clad love apples from Gardens Alive
Gardens Alive has long been known as a premier supplier of non-toxic fertilizers and pest and weed controls, but at this time of year, their catalog also is filled with seeds. And, to stay close to their mission, they specialize in seeds of varieties that prevent problems before they start by being naturally pest and/or disease resistant.
One example is the 鈥淥rganic Iron Lady鈥 — a nice-sized slicing tomato that鈥檚 naturally resistant to early blight, the dreaded late blight and leaf spot. And the plants used to produce the seeds were grown organically!
There鈥檚 also a big selection of plants designed to do well in small spaces, including 鈥淲indsor,鈥 a new pumpkin you can grow in a regular container or one of their space-saving 鈥済row tubs鈥 (kind of like a movable raised bed). And of course, more organic fertilizers and common-sense pest controls than you can shake a watering can at.
Bonus: Get $25 off an order of $50 or more by using the code 0168393. Visit the website聽or call 513-354-1482.
A perennial favorite
Bluestone Perennials has been around since 1972, specializing in the class of plants once famously defined by a gardening wag as 鈥渉aving the ability to live for many years had you not killed them.鈥
Bluestone gives you a great shot at dodging that definition and achieving actual perennialization with their hand-grown, carefully packed plants. Featured in this year鈥檚 catalog is the 2016 Perennial Plant of the Year — a new anemone named 鈥淗onorine Jobert,鈥 whose white flowers with frilly yellow centers provide much-needed late summer color.
Bonus: If you act in the next few weeks (before聽Jan. 20), you can save money on plants that are deer-resistant, fragrant and/or new this season. Use coupon code 1600 to save $2 on any deer-resistant plant; use code 1603 to save $1.50 on a fragrant variety, and use code 1607 to save $2 on any plant that鈥檚 new for 2016 (such as聽the unpronounceable anemone above).
Spend $75 or more and get a free 鈥渟urprise鈥 plant (code 1604). Visit the website聽or call 1-800-852-5243.
Would you like聽chocolate sprinkles on that tomato?
The new Territorial Seed Company catalog features some intriguing introductions. 鈥淐hocolate sprinkles鈥 is a new 鈥渂ite-sized鈥 tomato, meaning that the fruits are bigger than cherry tomatoes, but smaller than salad types. The tasty treats are a deep, almost chocolatey, color, and bred to resist cracking 鈥 an important attribute when summer weather swings from drought to deluge.
鈥淏utterfly milkweed鈥 is a new variety whose bright orange blooms will attract hummingbirds, butterflies and bees while the leaves provide food for baby monarch caterpillars.
And 鈥淟ittle White Snowpea鈥 is said to produce its first tasty little pods just 30 days after the seeds sprout in your springtime soil. Yikes! That鈥檚 twice as fast as standard snow peas!
Of special note: Territorial says that their trial gardens and personal farms are managed using either organic standards, biodynamic or both. Visit the website聽or call 1-800-626-0866.
What to do about the region’s weird weather?
Pam in Tappahannock speaks for many when she writes, 鈥淭he beautiful shrubs and bulbs I planted this fall are trying to bloom! How damaged will they be come spring? Will I get any blooms?鈥
Well Pam, over the years I鈥檝e always been able to answer questions like this by saying, 鈥渄on鈥檛 worry; the plants have been through weather like this before鈥 — but that鈥檚 no longer true. As we leave behind the warmest fall and early winter in recorded history, we enter uncharted territory, and springtime bloom in 2016 will likely fall somewhere between sporadic and chaotic.
All we can do at this point is not panic and try to help the plants. Do not feed your plants; do not mulch them, and do not prune them. But do trust them. The plants want to live, and even if this year鈥檚 springtime show is a bit subpar, there鈥檚 no reason to believe that they won鈥檛 be healthy in the long run.