Times Colonist

Insect netting lets in more light, gardener’s journal inspires

- HELEN CHESNUT Garden Notes hchesnut@bcsupernet.com

The next few days will be “event-full,” with B.C. Family Day, a holiday for many, on Monday, then “Shrove” Tuesday and the quirky combinatio­n of Ash Wednesday and Valentine’s Day on the 14th — holiday frolicking and pre-penitentia­l gorging (traditiona­lly, on pancakes) followed by a celebratio­n of love to begin six weeks of mindfully abstemious living leading up to Easter.

It’s a busy and purposeful time for gardeners too. My mail suggests that keen home gardeners are fine-tuning their planning and checking through seeds and supplies in readiness for a new growing season.

Useful aids: The William Dam Seeds catalogue is a source for Proteknet, insect netting that lets in more light than other lightweigh­t row covers used as insect barriers.

This year, I’ll be trying a new way to hold the knitted fabric above plantings — Dam’s “Loop Hoops,” steel wire supports with corner loops for holding twine that forms a support for the netting. This is a source also for my earliest and best container tomato — Siderno.

A watering tip from Christene Rafuse, who gardens in Sooke: “For years I’ve been watering most of my garden with drip (weeper) hoses that I buy in 50foot lengths at Canadian Tire. They are packaged as a Continenta­l Flat Soaker Hose. They must be popular. They sell out by late spring.

“I roll out the hoses next to the vegetables and other plants each spring and take them up in the fall. They are collapsibl­e, take up little space in storage, seem very durable (some I’ve been using for over five years), and they are very efficient.”

This type of hose (soaker, weeper, drip) is probably the most water-thrifty way to irrigate garden beds.

Three Year Gardener’s Gratitude Journal, by Chelsie Anderson and Donna Balzer (240 pages, softcover, $28.55): An effective agent for firing up enthusiasm for a new gardening season is a lightheart­ed and warmly encouragin­g garden journal like this one.

Subtitled “Part Diary, Part Personal Growing Guide,” this newly published journal is arranged with three entry spaces for each date, turning the diary into a three-year gardening memoir.

At the end of each month there is extra space for notes.

This design gives room for recording planting and harvesting dates as well as hits (successes) and misses (“learning experience­s”) as the gardener learns, as gardeners do, by “trowel and error.”

A sheet of stickers that comes with the journal allows the gardener to punctuate occurrence­s such as “first tomato” and “record harvest.”

The journal is generously endowed with “good news” stories that inform and amuse. A January story tells of helpful husband renting a “tiger torch” to clean away weeds in a newly acquired, overgrown garden. “I knew nothing of the project until I … heard the fire trucks.”

Every few pages, there is a quote to ponder: “Gardening is cheaper than therapy and you get tomatoes” — (author unknown). Best of all, this attractive journal is a gentle reminder to pay attention to and appreciate our gardens.

Inquire at bookstores and garden centres for Three Year Gardener’s Gratitude Journal or order it from donnabalze­r.com/ garden-journal/. The website gives more informatio­n about the publicatio­n.

 ??  ?? A gardening journal is a perfect companion at the start of a growing season.
A gardening journal is a perfect companion at the start of a growing season.
 ??  ?? Proteknet is a lightweigh­t knitted mesh cover that keeps out pests like onion flies and carrot rust flies.
Proteknet is a lightweigh­t knitted mesh cover that keeps out pests like onion flies and carrot rust flies.
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