Showing posts with label American Beauties. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Beauties. Show all posts

Monday, October 29, 2012

Tips for Creating a Lasting Winter Container

Have you picked up the Nov/Dec issue of Horticulture magazine yet?  The cover features a stunning photo of Lantana Luscious Berry Blend that is a bright spot in this dreary weather.

Especially exciting is the story on Winter Containers on pg 80.  Experts from the Association of Professional Landscape Designers and Garden Media offer tips on creating a lasting and stunning winter container mix.  The secret: It's all about the right plants in the right pots in the right spots!

Tips for Picking the Right Plants:
  • Chose plants that are hardy to at least two zones colder than your USDA Zone
  • Combine conifers, evergreens and grasses for a lasting look
Photos by The Personal Garden Coach, Christina Salwitz
Tips for Choosing the Right Containers:
  • The larger the better
  • Pick a non-porous material such as fiberglass, metal or stone
  • Make sure you have drainage holes
Tips for Placing Containers in the Right Spot:
  • Pick a sunny, wind free spot
  • The north facing side of your home is an ideal location

Pick up the latest issue of Horticulture to read more, and if you have a beautiful winter container photo to share- post it to our facebook page!

Thanks to Christina Salwitz for her beautiful winter container photos. 

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Are You Going to IGC?

The IGC Show (Independent Garden Center Show) is the world's largest educational resource for independent garden centers. Held at Chicago's Navy Pier Tuesday August 21-23, IGC is the best place to learn from our industry's thought-leaders, trend-setters and rising stars.  Before you arrive, we'd like to introduce you to a few of our all stars!

Fall Creek Image Collage
Introducing BrazelBerries™ the first ever consumer ready blueberry, grown by Fall Creek Farm and Nursery.  These varieties are like nothing you've seen before. With exquisite ornamental qualities and amazing fruit, these deliciously beautiful shrubs are not to be missed. 
~ Booth #2017


RESCUE! Image CollageCome check out a brand new product by RESCUE!® Never before seen, to be unveiled at IGC. From stink bugs to Japanese beetles, RESCUE!® provides safe solutions for your home and family.  
~ Booth #733


Hines Growers image collageIf you're looking for new plant varieties with color and ease of growing, Hines Growers are your best bet. Their new and unique Bloomtastic! plants are easy to grow, with fantastic color all season long.  
~ Booth #2715



American Beauties image collage
With the recent rise of the lawn reform movement, American Beauties Native Plants specializes in meadows and attracting wildlife. This ground breaking program offers proven solutions for your landscape while creating beautiful garden habitats for desirable wildlife.  
~ Booth #516


 ~ James
Garden Media Group
 

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Easy Ways to Save Water

This spring, Americans should make conserving water one of the most important environmental actions they take at home.  According to the EPA's WaterSense publication, “One of the best ways to save energy across the country and in our own home is to use water more efficiently.”

Mother Nature Network's Roni Robbins lends advice on easy ways to save water at home. Not to mention how it will help cut utility bills.
Watering a lawn
Don’t water your lawn on windy days when most of the water blows away or evaporates. (Photo: tympsy/Flickr)
Below are tips for preserving this natural resource when landscaping - since it accounts for between 30-70% of water used daily in American homes, depending on the region and season. Taken from “100 Ways to Conserve.”
Rain Barrel from The Growers Exchange
  • Don’t water your lawn on windy days when most of the water blows away. Also note: trickling or cascading fountains lose less water to evaporation than those spraying water into the air.
  • Water your plants deeply, but less frequently, to encourage deep root growth and drought tolerance. More plants die from over-watering than under-watering. Set a kitchen timer when watering your lawn or garden to remind you when to stop or redirect the water. A running hose can lose up to 10 gallons/ min
  • Check the root zone of your lawn or garden for moisture before watering. If it’s still moist 2-3 inches under the soil surface you have enough water. Install a rain sensor on your irrigation controller so your system won’t run when it’s raining. Use a rain gauge, or empty tuna can, to track rainfall on your lawn. Then reduce your watering accordingly. A can of tuna also measures sprinkler output. 1in of water on 1sq ft of grass is 2/3 of a gallon of water.
  • Next time you add or replace a flower or shrub, choose a native, low-water-use plant like those from American Beauties for year-round landscape color, and save up to 550 gallons a year
  • Direct water from your roof’s rain gutters into a rain barrel to water your garden. 
Soil Reef soil amendment
And finally, a GMG tip: Soil Reef, a biochar based soil amendment, helps your soil retain water and nutrients.  Use it in your garden or in containers and you won't have to water as often.

For other easy ways to save water in and around  the house, check out the graphic home tour navigator at www.H2ouse.net to target room-specific conservation ideas.

And, use this tool on the EPA’s website to calculate the savings you would achieve by using water saving products.

 Katie @KatieGMG
www.gardenmediagroup.com 

Monday, April 23, 2012

TODAY Show Celebrates Earth Day with American Beauties

Yesterday American Beauties Native Plants was highlighted on the weekend edition of NBC's TODAY Show! The Earth Day segment featured David Mizejewski from the National Wildlife Federation and how to Garden for Wildlife! Watch it below or click here!



-Karen
Garden Media Group

MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: What does YOUR business do?

I recently saw a post on the Facebook group for garden centers asking, "How do I write a mission statement?" WOW! This is a tough question and a hard task.

It seems like a simple questions. What does my business do? This is the stuff of which mission statements are made. So why is this simple question so insurmountable? Why do so many people get tongue tied when asked this question?

I think because we aren't really clear on what it is supposed to say. We get it confused with our vision - which is what we want our business "to be". We get hung up on using just the right words or words that are way too fancy. And we think it is supposed to sound like something someone who has an MBA has written.

So just how do you get this illusive mission statement written?

First of all, you will – and should - struggle with this. Getting your mission statement right is important and that doesn’t happen overnight. While you are in the struggle, make a “mission statement” folder and write down your thoughts, examples of other mission statements you like and other resource materials to help you "think." Just Google “mission statement” and you will get lots of ideas.

And involve your staff. Ask them what they think your business does. What it does better than anyone else? What it does differently that makes it stand out and differentiates it from the competition?

But don't struggle to find the proper words. Just jot down a few ideas and put it in the file.

Put this list in (order of) priority. Then cross off those ideas that don't seem important. Then rewrite the list.

Remember, all mission statements include:

• What you do. The type of business you are in.
• The needs your company fills.
• Clients you serve now or want to serve.
• How you serve these clients?

You want your statement to be broad, not specific, and positive and forceful. It should be free of jargon. Everyone must be able to understand it, especially your customers. And, most importantly, it is easy for you and your staff to live with. That's a pretty big billing.

Our mission at Garden Media Group used to be some marketing gobbly goop like "we help mid-sized companies achieve their goals through focused, responsible public relations evaluations and efforts" that, when I "recited" it to people, I could just see the shades of their eyes close. They didn't get it.

Now we say, "Garden Media Group helps make lawn and garden companies popular with their customers through focused public relations and social media efforts." People get it immediately. Everyone understands popular.

It is clean, easily understood and general. It's positive and forceful, and not at all vague.

Here are a few other examples of some lawn and garden companies:

America Beauties mission is to bring life to the garden and protect the balance of nature by offering great performing native plants that attract wildlife and solve a variety of gardening challenges.

Bloomstatics! Plants mission is to help gardeners be successful by offering both new and redeeming under-utilized plants and shrubs that provide fantastic color, are easy to grow and low maintenance.

BrazelBerries wants to bring beauty, purpose and joy to the berry lifestyle by offering superior ornamental berry shrubs perfect for the landscape, simple to grow and bursting with great tasting berries.

Now, in my opinion, you should try to make this as personal as possible, because it is YOUR statement of business. So it better be YOUR mission statement in 30 words or less. Then get it down to seven clear words.

Just for fun, very quickly, write down what it is you do. Now turn that paper over and write three or four sentences that explain the purpose of your business. Now narrow this down to 25 words.

Pause.

Look away.

Read your sentence aloud. You didn't do it! Okay. Start again from the very beginning in 30 words or less.

You need to know what you do - or no one else will either.

Suzi
Garden Media Group

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Gift idea #2 for your favorite Gardener

Last Friday we released the Top 10 gifts for Gardeners Under $25.

Gift idea #2 is for the gardener who takes serious pride in their backyard.  Certify their Wildlife Garden for them. 
 
To certify a yard, you need to provide the following:
Food 
Examples of food sources: native plants like American beauties, seeds, fruits, nuts, berries and/or nectar


Water 
Examples of water sources: birdbath, pond, water garden and/or a stream

Cover 
Examples of cover: thicket, rockpile and/or a birdhouse

Places to Raise Young 
Examples of places to raise young: dense shrubs, vegetation, nesting box and/or a pond

Monday, October 17, 2011

WSJ Falls for Natives





















It's always exciting to see a story that you've been working on with a magazine, newspaper or blog finally come to fruition. 

We were thrilled here at GMG to have the opportunity to provide The Wall Street Journal with some wonderful Campania containers and American Beauties Native plants for a photo shoot on fall planting. And I must say, they pulled it off nicely!

As you can see from the article above, they created some interesting fall planter combinations using mainly easy-care perennials. I'm especially loving the texture and colors of the Harvest Hue container, which features one of my favorite plants -- Purple Fountain grass!

Click here to the read full article online and let me know some your favorite fall container combos!

Enjoy,
Stacey

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

GMG Garden Soiree Dallas Style

We all had a blast at the 9th GMG Garden Soiree at the GWA Annual Symposium this week in Hot!!! Dallas.


We had Dallas size fun thanks to our sponsors American Beauties, Briggs, Conard-Pyle, Costa Farms, JazSpray and Liquid Fence .
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Steve, Karen, Carol, Barbara, and Deb along with Lynne, Karen, Stacey and I gathered with about 40 of our closest gardening friends for some sizzling fun and lots of red meat and red wine.
Our goodie bags had lots of new plants and products for 2011 and some little cow bells. So we rang, rang rang, rang your bell. And we rang out for Stacey for making the party 1st class! And she surprised me with our own GMG 'brand' - because as Steve Castaroni says, "GMG makes brands sizzle!"<>