Thursday, 29 December 2011

valentines flowers ideas - The presents we already have

EL PASO – Can any holiday measure up to our expectations of it?  As in any city, our appreciation of it probably depends on which streets we travel, what we do there, and with whom. Holidays come in all sorts of packages, some so large we cannot avoid, like the proverbial elephant in the room, and some so small we barely notice they have come and gone.

The winter holidays have been packed with meaning, weighted down with lots of luggage. (valentines flowers ideas)
Holidays emerge from some collective sense about the specialness of an event and a belief that it ought to be remembered, honored. These events emerge primarily out of religious traditions (Easter, Passover, Ramadan), nationalism (4th of July, President’s Day), and the recognition of relationships (Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day). Among certain population groups, celestial events are also celebrated, such as the Chinese Moon Festival. Many holidays do double duty.  So, instead of celebrating every President, we celebrate all of them on the same day, and Mondays have become a popular day for moving our federally recognized holidays to, thereby giving some workers a three-day weekend. The religious festival of Ramadan uses the Islamic lunar calendar to signify its beginning and end.
The winter holidays have been packed with meaning, weighted down with lots of luggage.  There is Christmas, religious and secular, there is Hanukkah, Eid al-Adha, Kwanza, winter solstice, and the end and beginning of different new years. Maybe we do this because we are a frugal country with a Puritan past or a multicultural country. Maybe we learned something from the Indians about combining celebrations: holiness required by a Catholic church and reverence for corn, to declare a feast day that accomplished both demands.
The danger of piling on is the confusion it can create along with the increased likelihood of someone getting hurt. Combining holidays and a variety of holiday traditions needs to be carefully balanced and orchestrated, like Pueblo Feast Days. In this country and at this time of year, tensions derive from a clash among religious traditions as well as between religious and secular traditions. So, to the intersection of State Street and Church, we add the bumper-to-bumper traffic of Main Street to the mix, and that means business. It means money, and it plays with our emotions as much as with our credit cards.
Additional tensions emerge from memory and expectations. Aside from any inherent meaning, the calendar acts as a trigger that wounds us with bullets of the memory of loss or disillusionment. It can also raise our expectations by creating an idyllic past that we struggle to recreate, but never seem to succeed. These feelings may be compared to the dimly lit back alleys of the holidays, places where we are afraid of what might happen. This is where the ghosts of Christmas past and the ghosts of the future sit against warehouse walls, drinking from paper bags, waiting, leering, taunting, or worse.

People who work in retail sales, on Main Street, watch those who have been wounded, who have walked through the alleyways, who are maniacally trying to create an ideal space, an ideal family, an ideal holiday. They do their best to help these impatient customers now in their aisles, at their counter, even as they try to meet their own inflated sales goals, to buy their own perfect gifts, and drive to and from work in that same bumper to bumper traffic. They become perhaps even more disillusioned about the holidays than the man who has lost his religious faith. Customers scream and say rude things that a god never would.

So. Do we wait out the calendar? Drink away the old year and toast the new one? Make resolutions? My son received a Snoopy Christmas card with an inside line that read: “Sometimes, the very best gifts are the ones we already have.” That’s a start. We could celebrate that.

Wednesday, 28 December 2011

valentines flowers ideas - A Primer for 2012: Tiger, Danica and Olympic Glory


The greatest sports moments are best expressed as a match-up. Ali-Frazier. Evert-Navratilova. Roger Bannister versus the four-minute mile. Each needs no further explanation.

As we look forward to valentines flowers ideas , no one knows exactly where and how the drama will unfold but the possibilities are as enticing as any in recent memory. Of course it would be grand if Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady can carry their teams to the Super Bowl, but Drew Brees and Ben Roethlisberger may have something to say about that.

Here are nine likely, and in most cases, guaranteed match-ups that any sports fan should keep their eye on in the coming year.

TIGER vs. TIGER
Golf's greatest meal ticket, currently ranked No. 23 in the world, ended 2011 with his first win in more than two years. But Tiger Woods, winner of 14 majors, won an event he runs, with an 18-player field, on a course essentially in his boyhood backyard. A battle lurks between Woods and his assumed heir, Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy. To be fair, Woods probably isn't ready for McIlroy yet. First he has to overcome his balky knee, his version of the mid-career yips—he hit just 48.9% of PGA Tour fairways in 2011—and an inconsistent putting stroke. Woods also turns 36 years old on Friday. Tom Watson won his last major at 33 valentines flowers ideas.

Tuesday, 27 December 2011

valentines flowers ideas - New year, new border


If your borders lack colour, texture and depth, then it’s an ideal time to plan a new one to give you all-year-round colour, beautifully matched plants and a few surprises along the way.valentines flowers ideas

Don’t be afraid to copy other’s ideas. You may need to visit a National Trust garden or simply look for inspiration closer to home, seeking out ideas by peeking into neighbouring gardens or simply asking keen gardening friends how they achieved a particular effect which you want to replicate.

Take a camera and notebook with you so that you can take pictures of particular scenes, so you don’t just rely on your memory.

Alternatively, cut out pictures from magazines and cover them with tracing paper, drawing on the key plant shapes you like. You may not be able to use exactly the same plants that you have admired in a magazine, but it will give you an idea of what works shape and height-wise.

When planning, ensure that the border provides year-round interest, not just a mass of blooms in summer which leaves the area looking dull and boring in winter.

Brighten up spring with bulbs and make use of evergreens and shrubs with coloured bark or berries in autumn and winter to prolong interest and keep a shape to the border.

While summer can be a riot of colour, trees and shrubs provide a framework to the border, some structure on which to build seasonal displays. They can also be used individually to create a particular effect such as a focal point.

Of course, the first consideration is your soil – is it acid or alkaline, is your aspect light or shady, is the ground dry or moist? Again, consider plants which have done well in your neighbours’ gardens because they are also likely to do well in yours.
valentines flowers ideas

If you want a tree or shrub to add height to a border, use a tripod of canes which can be moved around to give you an idea of where the new addition will fit in best and when choosing a tree, consider its rate of growth and ultimate size. You don’t want it dominating the border and casting shade over some of your more colourful sun-lovers later in the season.

Try to keep the planting design simple, choosing perhaps large interlocking drifts of plants rather than a mismatched smorgasbord of a lot of little plants which you’ve bought on a whim but which don’t really complement each other.

Consider a themed border for compatible plants, such as a Mediterranean border, or a border with one type of plant such as herbs, which can be intermingled successfully.

Think about repetition in your border as using a particular plant repeatedly makes a particularly showy plant stand out and also helps merge a diverse display.

Alliums, with their stunning lollipop-shaped clusters of flowers can provide a showy display repeated at points along a border, but any repetition will help give the border more visual uniformity.

If you haven’t particularly thought about colour, do so now, and use a colour wheel to judge which colours go best together.

Do you want a sizzling clash for a dramatic, hot effect, or a softer palette of colours closer in shades such as pinks and mauves, which will merge together beautifully in the border?

Use a few large, architectural plants such as phormiums or fatsias, to create a dramatic effect, rather than lots of fussy, small plants. Position plants, still in their pots, so you can stand back and view the effect from several angles and move them if you need to.

Best of the bunch – Poinsettia

If your poinsettia has made it happily through Christmas, you may be able to make it bloom again for the next festive season.

Keep it moist, but not sodden, and out of draughts for the time being. From April, gradually decrease watering, then when the leaves have fallen, cut back the stem to leave 4in stumps. At this point, the pot can be placed in a mild, shady position and the compost should be kept almost dry.

In early May, water and repot the plant, replacing some of the old compost, and place it on the brightest windowsill you have. By the end of the month you should see vigorous new growth. Feed regularly and remove some of the new growth to leave four or five strong new stems.

In June, move the plant outside in its pot and place it in a semi-shaded spot and in July pinch out each stem by about an inch to keep the plant bushy. Bring the plant back indoors in August and continue the watering and feeding regime.

By the end of September light control is essential, so you’ll need to cover the plant with a black plastic bag in the evening and remove it the next morning so the plant is kept in total darkness for 14 hours.

In November you can stop the darkness treatment and hopefully your poinsettia will again be in bloom at Christmas time.

Good enough to eat – Turnips

No haggis feast would be the same without ‘neeps and tatties’, which may prompt you to try to grow some in the new year.

Maincrop varieties are the easiest to grow and can be sown in July and August, for a first crop from October. Good varieties include ‘Manchester Market’, which is recommended for long storage, ‘Golden Ball’ and ‘Champion Green-top Yellow’.

Turnips do well in non-acid soil with reasonable drainage. Sow them thinly in a non-shady spot and thin them out as soon as the seeds are big enough to handle, until the plants are 25cm apart. Water them regularly to make sure you don’t end up with small and woody roots and hoe regularly to keep weeds under control.

Start lifting them as soon as they are large enough to use, as they deteriorate with age. However, in most areas you can leave them in the ground and lift them when you want them.

Three ways to… Secure your garden

1. Replace external shed hinges (those with screws on the outside) with internal ones.

2. Use wall and ground anchors to secure heavy furniture left out over winter and bolt down valuable containers and statues.

3. Use prickly shrubs such as berberis to make hedges around your boundary which should help deter opportunist thieves.

What to do this week

Clean up your pots if you haven’t already, brushing off dirt with a hard-bristled brush and discarding those which have broken, which can then be used as crocks.
Sprinkle a thin layer of compost over the ground to enrich the soil and set off the flowers of early spring bulbs when they come through.
Order seeds to be sown in January or February.
Protect vulnerable plants from frost and wind damage.
Check on bulbs being forced for indoor display every week so you don’t miss flowering.
If the soil is not waterlogged or frozen, continue winter digging.
Clear borders of weeds and debris to keep them neat and prevent a build-up of garden pests and diseases.
Order new summer-flowering bulbs in good time from a reputable supplier.
Replace plant ties which have rotted before plants start growing actively.
Examine stored dahlia tubers every few weeks and discard ones which are showing signs of rotting.
In the greenhouse, if you want to force lilies to produce early flowers, pot them up now.
Protect early-flowering winter bulbous irises by covering them with a cloche.
Cut back suckers of rhododendrons at their point of origin.

Saturday, 24 December 2011

Valentines Flowers Ideas - Fabulous Christmas Decorating Ideas


valentines flowers ideas There's nothing more Christmassy than a beautiful tree filled with ornaments or a pretty wreath topped with a red bow. While the tree might be the main event, there are plenty of other places you can add festive holiday flowers to your home. Florist Lisa Riso put together these lovely looks that are easy for anyone to make at home. valentines flowers ideas