Category: Holidays
Merry Christmas!
Container Gardening: More of This Year’s Containers
As a follow-up to last Wednesday’s post, here are the rest of this year’s winter containers.
Container Gardening: Some of This Year’s Winter Containers
As per my recent posts on spray-painted alliums and wreath-making, I am trying do most of my indoor and outdoor Christmas decorating with cuttings from my garden. As a part of this effort, here are some of the winter containers that I have put together this past week. I’m about half-way done and will post pictures of the others after I finish them. If you want to see how they differ from last year’s winter containers, click here.
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Winterberry and Leyland Cypress
Carex, blue spruce, variegated holly, Ballerina rose hips, and spray-painted allium
How to Make a Wreath with Materials from Your Garden
1. Gather together your supplies. You will need: (a) a wire base–I used a wire frame I purchased from Michael’s, but you can also purchase them online at the Maine Wreath Co.; (b) floral wire; (c) pruners; and (d) wire cutters.
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Christmas Decorations from the Garden: Spray-Painted Alliums

Inspired by The Garden in Winter by Suzy Bales, I am making more of my Christmas decorations with materials from the garden.
Amaryllis, Winter Containers and Christmas Decorations
Over the past two weeks, traffic on my blog has turned to winter containers and Christmas decorations. The only thing that I have done thus far is plant my amaryllis (for a prior post on growing them, click here). This picture is from a couple of days ago and the bulbs should be blooming around Christmas.
I haven’t gotten around to the winter containers or Christmas decorations yet, but will be sure to post about them in the coming weeks. For those of you who have already moved on to those activities, here are two posts from last year that you may find helpful:
Happy Thanksgiving: A Gardener’s Thanksgiving Day Centerpiece
Today’s centerpiece was harvested from my garden: broom corn; hickory and clethra leaves, previously soaked in glycerin and water; and Molina grass, for the binding.
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I give thee thanks, O LORD, with my whole heart; before the gods I sing thy praise; I bow down toward thy holy temple and give thanks to thy name for thy steadfast love and thy faithfulness; for thou hast exalted above everything thy name and thy word. On the day I called, thou didst answer me, my strength of soul thou didst increase. All the kings of the earth shall praise thee, O LORD, for they have heard the words of thy mouth; and they shall sing of the ways of the LORD, for great is the glory of the LORD. -Psalm 138:1-5
Perhaps we garden bloggers can help remember our veterans and war dead by posting a picture of a poppy today?
Many years ago, on my first trip to the U.K. during this time of year, I was struck by the fact that everyone from all walks of life wears artificial poppies in honor of those who died at war for Remembrance Day or Poppy Day. I later learned that these artificial poppies are sold as an annual fundraiser by the Royal British Legion, a charity dedicated to helping war veterans.
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According to Wikipedia: “The poppy‘s significance to Remembrance Day is a result of Canadian military physician John McCrae‘s poem In Flanders Fields. The poppy emblem was chosen because of the poppies that bloomed across some of the worst battlefields of Flanders in World War I, their red colour an appropriate symbol for the bloodshed of trench warfare. A Frenchwoman, Anna E. Guérin, introduced the widely used artificial poppies given out today.”
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In the U.S., we celebrate Veterans’ Day today for the living and reserve Memorial Day in May for the dead. Unfortunately, we do too little–we do not wear poppies or pause for two minutes of silence at eleven o’clock–on both of these holidays to truly celebrate, remember, or honor those who served and returned or those who died. Fortunately, Zoe over at Garden Hopping helped me to remember this holiday today with a picture of a poppy and this poem: Garden Hopping: Lest We Forget.







