Produced by OSU Extension, each month provides reminders of key garden chores. Such as fertilizing, pest control, planting and maintanance.
Recommendations in this calendar are not necessaritly applicable to all areas of Oregon. For more information, contact your local Extension office.
Get the most out of your tomatoes when you learn how to select and use equipment, complete the canning process, and store your creations safely. This guide includes six delicious recipes to try.
From apples to berries to fruit juice. This complete guide on canning fruits will help you preserve your favorite natural treats.
You will learn to choose the right equipment, prepare the fruit and the techniques for canning.
Maintaining an attractive lawn that is both functional and beneficial to the urban environment is easier than you might think. Lawns are a valuable way to conserve soil, reduce runoff, improve air quality, help purify water, reduce urban heat loads and sequester atmospheric carbon.
This vegetable plant guide, created by owner Dianna Brainard-King, will give you all the necessary information on when to plant vegetables, the ammendments they require, companion plants, what to avoid & helpful notes so that you can have your own successful and delicious vegetable garden.
This Herb Plant Guide wwill give you all the necessary information on when to plant herbs, companion planting, what plants not to plant nearby and how herbs might be used in your culinary ventures.
Bring birds to your home today by growing native plants. With Audubon’s Native Plant Database, you can find the best plants for the birds in your area. Growing bird-friendly plants will attract and protect the birds you love while making your space beautiful, easy to care for, and better for the environment.
The presence of boxwood blight in Western Oregon presents a new challenge to homeowners, commercial landscapers, professional gardeners and nursery owners alike because boxwood is a popular component of landscaping. If boxwood blight’s severity and destructive impact in Europe and New Zealand are any indication, we can expect it to become a much bigger problem in Oregon.
Azalea lace bug feeds on both evergreen and deciduous azaleas and rhododendrons. Damage on rhododendrons appears to be more severe than the damage reported from rhododendron lace bug. In the Willamette Valley, azalea lace bugs emerge
from their eggs beginning in mid-May to early June.
1298 13th Street SE Salem, OR 97302
(503) 413-0386
nursery13thstreet@outlook.com
Wednesday-Saturday:
10AM-5PM
Sundays:
10AM-4PM