Podcasts about coreopsis

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Best podcasts about coreopsis

Latest podcast episodes about coreopsis

Focus on Flowers
Tickseed

Focus on Flowers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2024 2:00


Coreopsis is from the Greek word koris meaning bug and opsis meaning resemblance to. This is because the seeds of coreopsis took like small ticks. 

greek coreopsis
The Growing Season
The Growing Season, May 18, 2024 - Long Bloomers

The Growing Season

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2024 53:17


Follow my lead!   Green is all you need.  In some cases, the statement above is correct.  Horticulturally, green is used to keep your plant pals growing strong.  But what about colour?   Is it possible to have all that green hold hands with some prolonged colour over the course of the spring, summer and  fall?Jack, Lynne and Matt McFarland talk about long bloomers on this week's episode of The Growing Season.What is a long bloomer?   How long is long in a bloomer?  The McFarland's reveal a little about how they design with prolonged flowerers. Monarda, Roses, Goldenrod, Japanese Kerria, hostas, Coreopsis, Rozanne Geranium, Phlox, Lilac and the new Bloomerang Lilac come into focus. Is the reblooming weigela?   Yup!   Its really cool!Tune in. Looking to book a consult for your property?  We'd love to help.  CLICK HERE.What is a TGS Tiny Garden? CLICK HERE. Subscribe to The Growing Season podcast.  CLICK HERE. 

Spoken Garden Podcast
4 Ways to Prep Your Perennials in Containers at Summers End - DIY GM

Spoken Garden Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 3:12


On this episode, Sean tells you 4 different things you can do to prep your perennials in containers for fall and beyound. Listen to this episode to know what you can do to make sure your perennials are healthy and ready for the fall and winter months! If you want to see us cut back Coreopsis, Agastache, or Nepeta, watch one our more recent YouTube videos: https://youtu.be/vbZSoFdmYb0   Make sure to get your Little Dibby or Dibby XL at one of our three shops listed below so you are ready for fall seed sowing season! Etsy Shop Shopify Amazon   All rights reserved for Spoken Garden. Music by Benjamin Tissot.

Lexman Artificial
Pharmacy Technician Quits, Gets Equivalency Issue

Lexman Artificial

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2022 2:46


Chris Mason, a pharmacy technician, shares his story about how he resigned from his job, and how it related to a potential equivalency issue.

KSL Greenhouse
Laceleaf Coreopsis

KSL Greenhouse

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2022 17:27


Welcome to The KSL Greenhouse Show! Hosts Maria Shilaos and Taun Beddes tackle your gardening questions, talk plants, and offer tips for an amazing yard. Listen Saturdays 8am to 11am at 1160 AM & 102.7 FM, kslnewsradio.com, or on the KSL Newsradio App. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram at @kslgreenhouse. #KSLGreenhouse  The Plant of the Week is the laceleaf coreopsis. This daisy looking plant is native to North America and blooms in the Summer for a long time. Its will thrive in an east facing area with six to eight hours of sunlight. Glen has honey locus roots he wants to cut but he has a couple of questions before he does it. Taun talks about how well Texas sage would do in Utah's climate. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Lexman Artificial
Boots, Saddles and Beyond: David Fravor on Coreopsis and Ch

Lexman Artificial

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2022 2:48


David Fravor, veteran equestrian and Coreopsis specialist, discusses the unique properties of this versatile flower, as well as the recent resurgence in interest in riding chazans.

boots dwellings saddles coreopsis suedes
Dig It - Discussions on Gardening Topics
Cottage Garden Perennials with Rosy Hardy

Dig It - Discussions on Gardening Topics

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 47:22


From peeking over hedgerows to see flowers from a different viewpoint and scrumping apples on a horse, leading nursery expert Rosemary Hardy's love of plants and gardening blossomed from a very young age. Rosemary chats to Peter Brown and Chris Day about the development of the nursery from a walled garden just down the road to their current beautifully nurtured 13-acre Hampshire Nursery in Freefolk.Painting with plants is Rosemary's mantra and we find out about the fascinating perennial flower scene as well discovering the philosophy of right plants, right place. Rosemary shares her wealth of plant knowledge and tells us about when things don't quite go to plan at the flower shows.We learn about the best size of plants to plant in the garden, tips to get your cottage garden plants established and find out more about the process of creating those Gold winning displays at the famous Royal Horticultural Society's shows.First time gardener perennials: Go for strong plants such as Alchemilla, Centranthus, Coreopsis, hardy Geranium, Geum, Lamium, Leucanthemum, Nepeta such as ‘Six Hills Giant', Persicaria and Rudbeckia.Light shade perennials include Aquilegia, Bergenia, Veronica and Veronicastrum.Perennials with roses: Asters (Michealmas daisies), Astrantia, Gaura (now called Oenothera) and Campanula, especially the carpeting types.Best plants to get young gardeners going: Sweet peas (watching the tendrils twine, quick growing and wonderful scent), consider fast growing annual seeds like Cornflowers and Nasturtium, members of the daisy family and for growing involvement Geum rivale, which is easily propagated.You Tube video most asked question – Will this grow in a pot!Rosemary's favourites include Cirsium, Oenothera lindheimeri Rosyjane (PBR), Anemone ‘Frilly Knickers', Geum ‘Totally Tangerine' (PBR) and Geum ‘Scarlet Tempest' (Macgeu001'PBR)Desert Island plant: Fagus sylvatica, a beautiful native green beech which changes beautifully through the seasons.Hardy's Cottage Garden Plants, Priory Lane, Freefolk, Whitchurch, Hampshire RG28 7FA Tel: 01256 896533.Website: https://www.hardysplants.co.ukRosemary Hardy Gardening YouTube ChannelHardy's show dates and eventsWe stock a wide range of herbaceous perennials at the Garden Centre and through our websiteOur thanks to Chiltern Music Therapy for providing the music. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Dictionary
#C429 (coreopsis to corkage)

The Dictionary

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2022 23:35


I read from coreopsis to corkage.     The word of the episode is "Coriolis effect".     "The Dictionary - Letter A" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter B" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter C" on YouTube     Featured in a Top 10 Dictionary Podcasts list! https://blog.feedspot.com/dictionary_podcasts/     Backwards Talking on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmIujMwEDbgZUexyR90jaTEEVmAYcCzuq     dictionarypod@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/thedictionarypod/ https://twitter.com/dictionarypod https://www.instagram.com/dictionarypod/ https://www.patreon.com/spejampar 917-727-5757

coriolis coreopsis
Secretos con Gabo
Roberto Hernández / Coreopsis

Secretos con Gabo

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2021 30:23


Hola! Hoy tenemos un nuevo programa muy especial, estoy seguro de que les va a gustar la historia de Roberto.

roberto hern coreopsis
Focus on Flowers
Always Cheerful Coreopsis

Focus on Flowers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 2:00


Our native perennial coreopsis is a stalwart in many American gardens.

The Growing Season
The Growing Season, May 22, 2021- The Colour Series: Red

The Growing Season

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2021 53:26


WE'RE SEEING RED!The TGS Colour Series continues with one of the most popular colours to use in a horticultural setting - red.Fireball Beebalm, Amur Maple, Paul's Scarlett Hawthorn, Sumac, Norway Spruce, Cotoneaster, Phlox, Weigela, Coreopsis and Geraniums are just some of the 40+ plants that Jack, Lynne and Matt McFarland chat about over the course of 53 minutes.  In typical Growing Season fashion the info is rapidly paced and packed with humour.  Hit play and get planting those redders!Need a visual?  The visual accompaniment to The Growing Season is here to help.  CLICK HERE. Looking to book a consult for your property with spring upon us?  We'd love to help.  CLICK HERE.What is a TGS Tiny Garden? CLICK HERE. Subscribe to The Growing Season podcast.  CLICK HERE. Watch "The Land Line," our LIVE streaming show.  CLICK HERE. 

Outta The Park
The Growing Season, May 22, 2021 - The Colour Series - Red

Outta The Park

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2021 53:26


WE'RE SEEING RED! The TGS Colour Series continues with one of the most popular colours to use in a horticultural setting - red. Fireball Beebalm, Amur Maple, Paul's Scarlett Hawthorn, Sumac, Norway Spruce, Cotoneaster, Phlox, Weigela, Coreopsis and Geraniums are just some of the 40+ plants that Jack, Lynne and Matt McFarland chat about over the course of 53 minutes. In typical Growing Season fashion the info is rapidly paced and packed with humour. Hit play and get planting those redders! Need a visual? The visual accompaniment to The Growing Season is here to help. CLICK HERE. Looking to book a consult for your property with spring upon us? We'd love to help. CLICK HERE. What is a TGS Tiny Garden? CLICK HERE. Subscribe to The Growing Season podcast. CLICK HERE. Watch "The Land Line," our LIVE streaming show. CLICK HERE.

Rose Chat Podcast
Plant Chat with Dr. A

Rose Chat Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2020 36:43


PLANT CHAT  Dr. Allan Armitage   New Hellebores that hold their heads up.  Well behaved Coreopsis!   Yes, this and so much more from Dr. Armitage, who wows us with new plant information and, as always, adds loads of fun to gardening.     BOOK PROMO CODE: Until the end of November, you will receive free shipping on books purchased from his bookstore by using the promo code ROSECHAT. http://www.allanarmitage.net/shop   DR. A's FAVORITE NEW PLANT LIST...   PERENNIALS...   Hellebores with upright flowers!  Frostkiss Variegated Hellebores There are almost a dozen cultivars with tough beautiful foliage and colorful upright flowers.   Ice & Roses Hellebore series (not variegated, but good performers)   Rudbeckias: The new rudbeckias bred by Brent Horvath of Intrinsic Perennials in Hebron, IL.  An upgrade to ‘Goldsturm’.   Coreopsis: Uptick series, the best is ‘Gold & Bronze’   Roses: Brindabella series of roses and the nicely-behaved ‘Winner’s Circle’ climbing rose    Aralia: 'Sun King’, as good as the press claims it to be.   ANNALS...   Gomphrena: 'Truffula Pink’ - I love it, flowers forever, and ho can you not like Dr Seuss?   Begonia: ‘Canary Wings’, the golden form of ‘Dragon Wings’. Absolutely brightens the shade.   SHRUB... Deutzia ‘Chardonnay Pearls’, not new but extraordinary   TREE...  Any Japanese maple     SOCIAL MEDIA: Join Dr. A for events including "Walk Abouts" in his garden and on his travels via Instagram and Facebook.     ABOUT DR. ARMITAGE:   Dr. Allan Armitage is a well known writer, speaker, and horticulturist. Born and raised in Quebec and Ontario, he later lived in East Lansing, MI and now resides in Athens, GA. He has worked with landscape plants and greenhouse crops in the North and South, and travels the world speaking and sharing his passion for plants.   OUR HOSTS:   Chris VanCleave - www.RedneckRosarian.com Creator of the Rose Chat Podcast. Mr. VanCleave is a nationally known rosarian, speaker and advocate for the rose.   Teresa Byington - www.TheGardenDiary.com Co-Host Teresa Byington is a Consulting Rosarian, Master Gardener, writer, and a member of the Board of Directors of the American Rose Society. Teresa's large cottage garden weaves together her love of roses - from the oldest to the most modern shrubs and their garden companions.   SUBSCRIBE: Subscribe to Rose Chat Podcast Updates: http://bit.ly/subscribeROSE   VISIT OUR SPONSOR: Haven Brand Soil Conditionershttp://www.ManureTea.com/shop

Talking Dirty
Talking Dirty (Brigitte Girling - Moss & Stone Floral Design, Episode 3)

Talking Dirty

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2020 35:27


Join Thordis Fridriksson and Alan Gray (of East Ruston Old Vicarage gardens) for our Podcast for Plant Lovers, as they catch up with their plant-a-holic pals. This week it's Brigitte Girling of Moss and Stone Floral Design in the guest chair and boy oh boy does she bring her floral A-game! From Phlox to Coreopsis, via Cosmos, Rubeckia and a whole lotta Dahlias, this is a joyful half hour of horticultural chat. Plus - of course - some Floral FOMO (Fear of Missing Out on a Fabulous Plant!)

The Garden Log
#80 How to choose bog plants for dry gardens, plant a wild urn and massively amplify astrantias

The Garden Log

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2020 40:19


This week the gardeners spread outrageous herbaceous perennials to all corners of the garden and report from the meadow. Ligularia 'Zepter' Centranthus ruber 'Albus' Rodgersia aesculifolia Astrantia major 'Gill Richardson’ Iris 'Dusky Challenger' Geranium 'Sirak' Cynara cardunculus Coreopsis grandiflora 'Sunray' The Albertus Oak Mysteries: Amazon US https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0871XW1HC Amazon UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/kindle-dbs/entity/author/B084TRFVNF Ko-fi.com/bendark

The Daily Gardener
September 6, 2019 Planting in September, Jean-Baptiste Van Mons, Thoreau leaves Walden Pond, James Veitch Jr, Joseph Hers, Kathleen Basford, Bartlett Giamatti, Montrose by Nancy Goodwin, Sowing Flowers, and Stolen Flowers

The Daily Gardener

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2019 13:14


September is my favorite month for planting trees, shrubs, and perennials.  The cool air makes outdoor exercise a joy and the ground temperatures add the perfect amount of warmth for plants to get established.  Planting in the fall is preferred because it's the time of year when perennials experience less transplant shock. At the same time, there is still sufficient time for plants to establish their roots in the garden in time for winter. After their season of dormancy, when the ground warms again, fall-planted perennials grow and bloom more vigorously than if they were planted in the spring. Bottomline: Now is NOT the time to stop planting. It's the perfect time to get your dig on.     Brevities #OTD Today is the anniversary of the death of the botanist Jean-Baptiste Van Mons who died on this day in 1842.   The name of the game for Mons was selective breeding for pears. Selective breeding happens when humans breed plants to develop particular characteristic by choosing the parent plants to make the offspring.   Check out the patience and fortitude that was required as Mon's described his work:   “I have found this art to consist in regenerating in a direct line of descent, and as rapidly as possible an improving variety, taking care that there be no interval between the generations. To sow, to re-sow, to sow again, to sow perpetually, in short to do nothing but sow, is the practice to be pursued, and which cannot be departed from; and in short this is the whole secret of the art I have employed.”   Jean-Baptiste Van Mons produced a tremendous amount of new pear cultivars in his breeding program - something north of forty incredible species over the course of his lifetime. The Bosc and D'Anjou pears, we know today, are his legacy.      #OTD Today is the anniversary of the day in 1847 when Henry David Thoreau left Walden Pond and moved in with Ralph Waldo Emerson in Concord, Massachusetts. His two years of simple living at Walden Pond were over.    #OTD  Today is the anniversary of the death of James Veitch Jr. who died on this day in 1869. Veitch was born into the famous family nursery business known the world over as Veitch Nurseries. His grandfather, John, had started the business. After growing up and learning the business from his father and grandfather, Veitch went to London to train with other nurserymen.    After he quickly became a partner in the nursery, he married Harriott Gould. In addition to being a wonderful plantsman himself, James Jr. was an exceptionally bright businessman. He acquired a nursery called the Royal Exotic Nursery in London to ensure the Veitch Nursery stayed competitive and he turned Royal Exotic into the largest specialty nursery in Europe.  James Veitch Jr created the RHS Fruit and Floral Committees which still exist today. His love of the plants and the business were carried on in his three sons. The oldest, John Gould Veitch, was one of the first plant hunters to visit Japan. The second son, Harry James, oversaw the business during a period of peak growth. The third son, Arthur, worked with Harry to send Plant Explorers on missions all over the globe.    Of the brothers, it was the middle son, Harry, who outlived them both.  His older brother John Gould died young at age 31 from tuberculosis. Harry outlived his younger brother, Arthur, who died young as well - he died after a short illness when he was just 36 years old. #OTD  Today is the birthday of the Belgian botanist and dendrologist Joseph Hers who was born on this day in 1884. Dendrology is the science and study of wooded plants, like trees and shrubs, and their taxonomic classifications.   Hers made his first trip to China in 1905; he was an interpreter for the Belgium ministry. He later founded organizations to promote good relations between China and Belgium.   Later, Hers spent five years collecting in the north-central provinces of China from 1919-1924. The Arnold Arboretum had hired him to collect for them. As a dendrologist, Hers was especially focused on trees. The rapid rate of deforestation in China was especially alarming to Hers. Among Hers discoveries was the snakebark maple Acer tegmentosum.       #OTD   Today is the birthday of the British Botanist Kathleen Basford who was born on this day in 1916. As a young girl, Basford's nanny, Winny, taught her about the natural world; she learned to identify wildflower and trees. In the 1940's, Basford had three children of her own. She began gardening. When she wasn't with the children, she started breeding orchids. She became so interested in botany, she took evening classes on the subject. By the early 1950's, Basford published a paper on a fuchsia she discovered. It proved that the fuchsia had existed 20-30 million years ago - before the break-up of the continents. Her paper caught the attention of the chair of the botany department at Manchester University; a geneticist named Sydney Harland. He offered Basford a job on the spot. Later in life, Basford also wrote a book called "The Green Man." Before her book, this topic was largely unknown to the world. The Green Man, is a mythical figure - portrayed as a man with a head that sprouts leaves. It is a relic of the middle ages.      Unearthed Words "It's designed to break your heart.  The game begins in the spring, when everything is new again,  and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings,  and then as soon as the chill rains comes,  it stops, and leaves you to face the fall alone." - Bartlett Giamatti Today's book recommendation Montrose by Nancy Goodwin   This is a book that was released in 2005 and it's still one of my favorites. Nancy Goodwin and her husband, Craufurd, searched for 10 years before finding a 61-acre property in 1977. The place had been in the Graham family for three generations. They had named it Montrose in honor of their Scottish ancestry. This book is the story of how the Goodwins transformed the property; it's a beautiful biography of the many gardens of Montrose.   You can get used copies of this treasure on Amazon for $4 using the link in today's show notes.       Today's Garden Chore If you live in a cold climate, late fall is a wonderful time to sow flower seeds in your garden. Sweet Alyssum, Bee Balm, Coreopsis, Delphinium, Lady’s Mantle, Penstemon, and Sweet Pea are just a handful of the flowers you can sow in your fall garden. Additionally, many annuals, like cosmos, nigella, and cleome, will seed themselves after a summer in your garden.  If any seeds germinate in places where you don't want them, it's pretty easy to remove them in the spring or early summer.     Something Sweet  Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart I was researching a family tree on Ancestry recently, and I came across this little notice in The Mower County Transcriptout of Lansing Minnesota from this in 1893.   Here's what it said:   "The parties who recently took flowers from the garden of Mrs. M. E. Nancarrow are known and must call and pay for them or be subjected to serious trouble."     Thanks for listening to the daily gardener, and remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Wildflower Report for May 31, 2012

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2012 2:04


Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Wildflower Report for May 24, 2012

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2012 1:55


Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Wildflower Report for September 20, 2011

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2011 1:58


wildflowers blue ridge parkway fall color coreopsis queen anne's lace
Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Wildflower Report for July 20, 2011

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2011 2:12


Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Wildflower Report for June 22, 2011

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2011 2:32


wildflowers yarrow blue ridge parkway coreopsis spiderwort fire pink
Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Wildflower Report for June 21, 2010

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2010 2:28


Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Wildflower Report for September 9th, 2008

Virtual Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 2:02


wildflowers goldenrod blue ridge parkway coreopsis queen anne's lace