Microclimate In Your Specific Garden

By Jannie Vaught Definition , the climate of a very small or restricted area, especially when this differs from the climate of the surrounding area. Conventional wisdom states that what a gardener can grow is limited to the USDA Hardiness Zones their gardening in, but i have found that this is not always right. We see one garden area thriving and another struggling to survive. … Continue reading Microclimate In Your Specific Garden

Halloween – Scary or Stupid

By Stephan Pisko There are two absolutely very monger psychological conundrums’ associated with this once again controlling concept of Halloween it’s awesomely pagan within this very progressive modern planet. You willingly teach you’re children that people will give them nice things (psychological problem #1) and if they don’t get nice things from a person you have every right to perform an outwardly rotten physical action … Continue reading Halloween – Scary or Stupid

A Request Has Arrived Gourds, From Seed To Use

By Jannie Vaught Gourds, Wiki definition, includes the fruits of some flowering plant species in the family Cucurbitaceae, also called Cucurbita, or the gourd family, the term refers to a number of species and subspecies with or without a hard shell. One of the earliest domesticated plants the bottle gourd. Gourds have been used for storage vessels, musical instruments, drinking cups, eating bowls, platters, dishes … Continue reading A Request Has Arrived Gourds, From Seed To Use

Garlic Easy Natural Health Boost And Loves Our Area

By Jannie Vaught Garlic ( Allium sativum), is a species in the onion genus: Allium. Close relatives include onion, shallot, leek, chive, and Chinese onion. Is a bulbous plant growing up to 3.3ft. in height. If planted at the proper time and depth it can be planted as far north as Alaska. It produces hermaphrodite flowers, it is pollinated by bees, butterfly’s, moths and other … Continue reading Garlic Easy Natural Health Boost And Loves Our Area

Parental Path Programming

By Stephan Pisko Parents’ should never ever force their children with ‘parental path programming’ as this stifles any form of intellectual input don’t instigate any such ‘bias brigade’ as this will have a negative harming effect just because the child is considering dropping the sciences’ for the arts’ don’t be alarmed to the conditioning response that the child may be a failure while the thought … Continue reading Parental Path Programming

When Its Extremely Hot And No Rain Is In Sight What Is A Gardener To Do?

By Jannie Vaught Water, pull unwanted grass, plant some radishes and learn and plan for that cooler wet weather. Here’s whats growing in this permaculture garden, beets, radish, the peas that were supposedly OK to plant now died the baked inn the sun death. So more will go in next week, still trying, The stored rain water is coming out of storage this week, And … Continue reading When Its Extremely Hot And No Rain Is In Sight What Is A Gardener To Do?

The Personal Garden Library

By Jannie Vaught, With the intense heat and no rain every living thing is struggling to get through another day! The tomatoes are either done or the strong are actually slowly growing, with even a hint of ripening, they need consistent watering same amount same time everyday. Seems plants like consistency also! Yes, my fall garden is sprouted and the radish are the first to … Continue reading The Personal Garden Library

Human Laboratory Rats

By Stephan Pisko, Think of this globe as 7.6 billion human laboratory rats’ experimenting expeditiously with hormone altering – mood messing – pain protruding illegal pharma substances’ made mainstream legal unknowingly realizing the horrific side effects’ of any of these crusted conglomerates’ for this is how the healthcare system is setup for you today initiating world planetary unrest just up the dose for mass rat … Continue reading Human Laboratory Rats

Pollinators Are High On The List This Season

    By Jannie Vaught     And for this gardener, it has been a high priority for building and growing habitat for them. Here’s what we all can do to help our pollinators survive and thrive. As you plan your gardens make sure there are many flowering plants that are blooming well into the fall. Plant native plants and even grasses that sustain places … Continue reading Pollinators Are High On The List This Season

Conscious Seeing

By Stephan Pisko Conscious seeing forms the personality and shapes the mind we are psychologically inputting experiences that create identity a supposition of who we are within a conscious state. The camera molds these experiences which in turn creates ‘creative fantasy’ from the ‘illusion’ we call reality. The mind is constantly mixing logical fact with capricious unobtainable desires (or) phantasmagoria the ingredients for a ‘mental … Continue reading Conscious Seeing

The Mid-Shoulder Season

By Jannie Vaught, Planting in mid -season or shoulder season, generally there are 2 garden seasons, but if your are a gardener in a warmer climate with less frost or deep freezing the shoulder or mid-season are very productive. We have annual and perennial plants in our gardens. And many of the annuals are actually perennial, meaning they will grow year round for m zone … Continue reading The Mid-Shoulder Season

Learning + All Knowing = Purpose 

  By Stephan Pisko Your energy was ‘placed here’ to learn (or) ‘replaced here’ to learn the ‘knowing’ must be earned in certain physical stages of development.     Most human beings’ never learn anything here within this physical place because basically they get trapped in the ‘physical pleasures’ that surrounded in temptation.    The ‘all knowing’ is for all to understand if their allowed to, … Continue reading Learning + All Knowing = Purpose 

July In The Garden

  By; Jannie Vaught Well here we are almost at the end of a hot July!  What to do in the garden? Sow seeds: Amaranth, Black eye peas, Corn, Cucumbers, New Zealand spinach, Okra, Pumpkin, Squash (winter and summer). Fruit: Cantaloupe and Watermelon. Herbs: Anise, Basil, Bay Laurel, Catnip, Cumin, Horehound, Lavender, Oregano, Perilla, Rosemary, Sage, Santolina, Savory, Sorrel, Tansy, Tarragon, Thyme, Transplant: Eggplant, Peppers, … Continue reading July In The Garden