Houston Native Plants: Winter Color, Marigolds & Manure Insights
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Nature’s Way Resources is proud to bring you this free weekly newsletter. While we don’t run ads, generous sponsors help support this project as a public service. Their names are listed below, please consider showing your appreciation by supporting their businesses!

Nature’s Way Resources honors the contributions of our late owner, John Ferguson. “The Lazy Gardener” Brenda Beust Smith and Shelby Cassano welcome your feedback and remain grateful to the many horticulturists who share their expertise.

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goldenrod vs ragweed

by Brenda Beust Smith The Lazy Gardener

Only 3 days left in National Native Plant Week. Still time to walk into your local nursery (one that doesn’t carry natives) and ask where theirs are located! You might inspire more on the marketplace! Not that you HAVE to buy all natives, but you may be overlooking some truly beautiful, low-care, butterfly-/hummingbird (and many other delights)-attracting ones you’ve never thought of using! How to know which ones are natives? Try Native Plant Society of Texas

Good starting place: Whole website is fantastic, but be sure to check out: “What Native Plants Are Good For My Area?”Then, get specific with your specific area (Greater Houston alone includes a number of Native Plant Society of Texas chapters). 

WANT TO STOP DEER DEMOLISHING FLOWERS? One Halloween tradition might help you out! Deer are said not to like marigolds. You can find them in bloom in many nurseries now, not because of deer but because many of our Mexican friends are following ancient Aztec traditions. ‘Tis said vivid-colored “cempoalxochitl” (aka marigolds, a reference to “Mary’s Gold”) with religious as well as practicial accolades handed down from Ancient Aztecs and now reflected in Anglo All Souls Day, Nov. 1. This prime bloom period is still fueling the ancient tradition of utilizing marigold’s intense color and scent to help ancestors to find their way back home for this one special day only. And deer? ’tis said. they don’t like the taste of marigolds, so don’t destroy them as they do so many other colorful plantings! Anyone able to confirm or refute this claim?

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Want to share some of your favorite winter color blooms with our readers?  Don’t give up on planting garden color just because fall’s upon us. Sure, sudden snow or freezing temps might slow things down, but if you don’t plant, no color’s a certainty! We all know about pansies, but (if not already), showing up in nurseries will be dianthus, petunias, stocks, poppies, lobelia, and many others that, even if they die back in very cold spells, might pop back up once temps rise. And you know what a rollercoaster our winters are!

Share some of your favorite winter color blooms? What, if anything, you do to help the pickier ones through extreme cold? 

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      sign in front of natures way resources at the entrance that says retail nursery and other information

      ATTN. GARDEN/PLANT GROUPS

       —  Nature’s Way Resources offers free guided tours of NWR’s extensive nursery/soil/mulch facilities for garden clubs, plant societies and other plant-oriented, organized groups. As usual, NWR’s now-expanded meeting site is free to above groups. Reservations a must for both. Great time to visit.

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      john ferguson with soil in his hands at natures way resources

      John’s Corner

      NEWS FROM THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF SOIL AND PLANTS

      Subject: Manure-Based Fertilizers

      Please enjoy this column from October 2024. 

      Click below to learn more about all of the different types of mulch in detail.

      Explore our article library to learn more information about various mulches and other topics.

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      About Us

      BRENDA BEUST SMITH

      WE KNOW HER BEST AS THE LAZY GARDENER . . .

      but Brenda Beust Smith is also:  

      • a national award-winning writer & editor 
      • a nationally-published writer & photographer
      • a national horticultural speaker
      • a former Houston Chronicle reporter 

      When the Chronicle discontinued Brenda’s 45-year-old Lazy Gardener” print column — started in the early ’70s as a fun side-project to reporting, it then ranked as the longestrunning, continuously-published local newspaper column in the Greater Houston area. The name, she says, is not just fun, it’s true.

      Brenda’s gradual sideways step from reporter into gardening writing led first to an 18-year series of when-to-do-what Lazy Gardener Calendars, then to her Lazy Gardener’s Guide book which morphed into her Lazy Gardener’s Guide on CD, which she now emails free upon request.

      Brenda became a Harris County Master Gardener and, over the years, served on theboards of many Greater Houston area horticulture organizations. She hosted local radio and TV shows, most notably a 10+-year Lazy Gardener specialty shows on HoustonPBS (Ch. 8) and her call-in “EcoGardening” show on KPFT-FM.

      For over three decades, Brenda served as Assistant Production Manager of the GARDEN CLUB OF AMERICA’S “BULLETIN” magazine. Although still an active broad-based freelance writer, Brenda’s main focus now is THE LAZY GARDENER & FRIENDS HOUSTON GARDEN NEWSLETTER with John Ferguson and Pablo Hernandez of Nature’s Way Resources.

      A native of New Orleans and graduate of St. Agnes Academy and the University of Houston,  Brenda lives in Humble, TX, and is married to the retired Aldine High School Coach Bill Smith. They have one son, Blake.

      Regarding this newsletter, Brenda is the lead writer, originator of it and the daily inspiration for it. We so appreciate the way she has made gardening such a fun way to celebrate life together for such a long time.

      About her column, Brenda says: “I don’t consider myself a ‘garden writer.” I started out 50+ years ago as a very lazy “gardening reporter.” I still feel that way today. I hope my columns inspire/help newcomers, but I do not write to them. I write to very experienced gardeners who want to expand their horizons.

      JOHN FERGUSON

      John is a native Houstonian and has over 35 years of business experience. He owns Nature’s Way Resources, a composting company that specializes in high quality compost, mulch, and soil mixes. He holds a MS degree in Physics and Geology and is a licensed Soil Scientist in Texas.

      John has won many awards in horticulture and environmental issues. For years he represented the composting industry on the Houston-Galveston Area Council for solid waste. His personal garden has been featured in several horticultural books and “Better Homes and Gardens” magazine. His business has been recognized in the Wall Street Journal for the quality and value of their products. He is a member of the Physics Honor Society and many other professional societies. John is the co-author of the book Organic Management for the Professional.

      For this newsletter, John contributes articles regularly and is responsible for publishing it.

      SHELBY CASSANO  is the communications and marketing lead for Nature’s Way Resources and the editor of The Lazy Gardener and Friends newsletter. Through her business, Leaf and Ledger, she exclusively partners with NWR to direct all marketing efforts, from campaign strategy and content planning to technical production of the newsletter. Shelby holds a B.S. in Agriculture with a concentration in Horticulture from Stephen F. Austin State University and previously managed the company’s nursery.

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      101 Sherbrook Cir.
      Conroe, TX 77385

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