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The Garden Thread - February, 2026
February 1, 2026 | Diana in WI/Greeneyes in Memoriam

Posted on 01/31/2026 6:26:44 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin

The MONTHLY Gardening Thread is a gathering of folks that love soil, seeds and plants of all kinds. From complete newbies that are looking to start that first potted plant, to gardeners with some acreage, to Master Gardener level and beyond, we would love to hear from you.

If you have specific question about a plant/problem you are having, please remember to state the Growing Zone where you are located.

This thread is a non-political respite. No matter what, you won’t be flamed, and the only dumb question is the one that isn’t asked.

It is impossible to hijack the Gardening Thread. Planting, Harvest to Table Recipes, Preserving, Good Living - there is no telling where it will go - and that is part of the fun and interest. Jump in and join us! Send a Private Message to Diana in Wisconsin if you'd like to be added to/removed from our New & Improved Ping List.

NOTE: This is a once a MONTH Ping List, but we DO post to the thread all throughout the month. Links to related articles and discussions which might be of interest to Gardeners are welcomed any time.


TOPICS: Agriculture; Food; Gardening; Hobbies
KEYWORDS: cooking; food; garden; gardening; hobbies; recipes
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I had my older sisters tell me.


141 posted on 02/06/2026 6:00:24 PM PST by Pollard
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To: Qiviut; FRiends

Ok, we looked it up. This is our model of Craftsman snowblower. I’m sure it costs more now than when we bought ours 12 years ago.

It works, though! Handles heavy snow, and starts up without a problem.

Maybe put it on your Christmas wish list? Your neighbor won’t care, because it will get the job done quickly. He won’t need to help you get it started either. And then, after all is said and done, he will want to borrow yours! ;-)

Craftsman Select 24 CMXGBAM213101 24 in. 208 cc Two stage Gas Snow Blower

Here’s the write up from the Ace Hardware website. https://www.acehardware.com/departments/lawn-and-garden/snow-removal-and-equipment/snow-blowers/7015522


142 posted on 02/06/2026 6:34:50 PM PST by FamiliarFace (I got my own way of livin' But everything gets done With a southern accent Where I come from. TPetty)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I love both of those trees. We have a few of honey locusts in our backyard, but I would LOVE to have a maple with that much red! Just gorgeous.


143 posted on 02/06/2026 6:37:57 PM PST by FamiliarFace (I got my own way of livin' But everything gets done With a southern accent Where I come from. TPetty)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I’m talking fruit and nut trees and shrubs. Food Forest.

I do like ornamentals, preferably native. Can’t wait to see my orange lilies flower this year. Goats liked the buds. Dug them up down the road and they multiplied like mad. Gave half away one year. Had some surprise lilies. Will see if I still do this year. Still need some wild daffodils. Some kind of maple grows wild here. Will have to find out what kind. A lot of people have some kind of shrub that turns into a mass of yellow flowers in early Spring. Need some of them. Need to become that crazy person that always has a shovel and pruners and stop by some places. Mind if I do a little clipping/digging?

Not quite native but will likely grow here is that red twigged dogwood which would have looked nice this past two weeks with the snow.


144 posted on 02/06/2026 6:44:26 PM PST by Pollard
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To: Pollard

*** A lot of people have some kind of shrub that turns into a mass of yellow flowers in early Spring. ***

Forsythia?


145 posted on 02/06/2026 6:58:07 PM PST by FamiliarFace (I got my own way of livin' But everything gets done With a southern accent Where I come from. TPetty)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin; little jeremiah
L.J. 3 of these sources are in Oregon, one very close to you. Do you have a preferred source for your herbs? Thanks!

https://www.motherearthliving.com/health-and-wellness/bulk-herb-wholesalers-you-can-trust-zmez16jazolc/

146 posted on 02/06/2026 8:28:35 PM PST by Pete from Shawnee Mission ( )
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
Diana; Locust trees; Thorns to stop the raccoons is great, but not so nice when you need to do tree work. Locust trees can also have problems with Mimosa web worm and extensive networks of roots that sprout new young trees.

I have a thornless locust tree in my front yard. I love the shade in summer and low branches. My neighbor hates it and of course the shoots all over his golf course lawn. I have new trees popping up 50 and 60 feet from the trunk.

Be careful....

(Good night!)

147 posted on 02/06/2026 8:42:16 PM PST by Pete from Shawnee Mission ( )
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To: FamiliarFace

Thanks!


148 posted on 02/06/2026 10:31:00 PM PST by Qiviut (A Mighty Fortress: “...the body they may kill. God’s truth abideth still. His kingdom is forever")
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To: FamiliarFace
That looks like it. (Forsythia × intermedia, or border forsythia) I had assumed it was a native due to a lot of people having them but I guess it's just popular here. I see no equivalent in the MO Dept of Conservation field guide website. Asian so it might be popular because it can grow in low pH soil which large parts of Eastern Asia has. Propagated by cuttings of green wood after flowering in late Spring to early Summer and can spread or be propagated by layering.
149 posted on 02/07/2026 1:53:01 AM PST by Pollard
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To: Diana in Wisconsin; All

Our weather for today - I won’t be going anywhere:

“A frigid start to the weekend with temperatures in the single digits to low teens. Strong wind gusts for the entire day, 30-50 mph with 50-60+ mph for the ridges. Wind chills -5 to -15 degrees, mountains -20 to -30 degrees. A few flurries at times or stray snow squall early. Dangerously cold with highs only in the single digits for the mountains low to mid teens for the valley. Wind chills staying below zero for the entire day.

Still windy in the evening, but weaker gusts 25-40 mph. Temperatures slowly falling to near 10. Mountains in the single digits. Brutally cold overnight with wind tapering off. Lows in the single digits. Wind chills still around to below zero. Mountains -5 to -15 degrees.”

**********

The wind is currently ‘howling’. When it’s this bad, I can’t stand to be upstairs where I can really hear it. This ‘should’ be the last of the frigid weather with a warm-up this coming week into the 40’s during the day. We still have snowcrete - won’t see the grass until March at this rate.

Thursday, I made split pea soup, cornbread, picked 2 rotisserie chickens & put the carcasses in the slow cooker for bone broth. The bone broth was ready yesterday - about 5 quarts. Since buying it ready-made is $5+ per quart, I’m happy to have saved some money. The chickens are just under $4 each and the meat is quite moist & tasty. The next kitchen project, something I’ve always wanted to do & have never gotten into, is making sourdough bread.


150 posted on 02/07/2026 4:18:24 AM PST by Qiviut (A Mighty Fortress: “...the body they may kill. God’s truth abideth still. His kingdom is forever")
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To: 4everontheRight; Augie; Apple Pan Dowdy; Aevery_Freeman; ApplegateRanch; ArtDodger; AloneInMass; ...
*Calorie-Free Chocolate Saturday Ping*


151 posted on 02/07/2026 6:48:22 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: FamiliarFace

We DO like our gossip up here on The Frozen Tundra - and MY big surprise moving our here to The Boonies is how crazy-related everyone is to everyone else (not to the point of mentally defective children, thank goodness!) and how everyone ‘KNOWS’ everything about you before they meet you, LOL!

It’s taken me 10 years now, but the women in Miles’ circle of friends and schoolmates and farm wives and female hunters are finally warming up to me.

I get it. And I am always on good behavior around them. A few have even given me their phone numbers, so that was pretty huge - though it just happened THIS PAST YEAR! ;)

I wanted to jump around like Sally Field when she won her Oscar: ‘You like me! You really, really LIKE me!’ LOL!


152 posted on 02/07/2026 6:56:08 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Good Morning!





May You Have A Warm, Delightful, Day!

((((HUGS))))

❤️Let All That You Do Be Done In Love. (1 Corinthians 16:14)❤️

ML/LTOS

153 posted on 02/07/2026 7:02:14 AM PST by left that other site ( For the Lord is our judge, the Lord is our lawgiver, the Lord is our king; He will save us Is.33:22)
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To: Pollard
"A lot of people have some kind of shrub that turns into a mass of yellow flowers in early Spring. Need some of them."

Forsythia. I have one and it is lovely. Also fun to force some branches into bloom in very early Spring - when you CAN'T TAKE IT ANYMORE!

We have a ton of Red Twig Dogwood. My favorite combo is in the front corner of the house yard - dogwood, Whitespire Japanese Birch and a Concolor Fir tree. They look like nothing all season, but really POP against the snow in winter and the Cardinals LOVE the dogwood branches for roosting.

154 posted on 02/07/2026 7:05:08 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

T hose look great. My gut is growing just looking at them. Heh. :-)

The rosemary in front of the house (eastern exposure) is still huge and still perfectly green, despite OK’s recent bitter cold. Didn’t get arou8nd to covering it, so I’m totally mystified as to how it survived, when the 2020/2021 winter killed every bit of the previous rosemary I’d had.


155 posted on 02/07/2026 7:06:43 AM PST by AFB-XYZ (( We have two options: 1. Stand up, or 2. Bend over))
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To: Diana in Wisconsin; All

What I wouldn’t give to have an Edit function . . . I promise I’m not “typing under the influence”.


156 posted on 02/07/2026 7:08:06 AM PST by AFB-XYZ (( We have two options: 1. Stand up, or 2. Bend over))
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To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
The hybridized Locust trees for yard-use aren't invasive, as they used to be.

The one you want to AVOID fir sure are the Black Locust. The wood is good for fence posts - and that's about it. You see a lot of them in old farmsteads around here. They are the first things to bloom in Spring, and they are very pretty. The flowers are edible. I used to have customers ask for them all the time, but they were not sold propagated by us - for the reasons you stated. A house yard could be taken over by them.

Easy enough to spot in the wild, though:


157 posted on 02/07/2026 7:16:02 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: Qiviut

“The next kitchen project, something I’ve always wanted to do & have never gotten into, is making sourdough bread.”

My new brad machine did a great job on making the dough - but a terrible job on baking the bread. And now I REMEMBER why I always used my old one just for making and rising the dough, then baked it myself in the oven.

Good luck on the Sourdough. I’ve not mastered that by a long shot!


158 posted on 02/07/2026 7:18:24 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: AFB-XYZ

Yep. FR needs an ‘edit’ and a ‘like’ feature! :)


159 posted on 02/07/2026 7:19:44 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: AFB-XYZ

My indoor Rosemary is still doing well. South window, on a saucer of water for extra humidity and I mist her and turn her once a week. Saturdays are Houseplant Care Days around here.

The clippings I was rooting made it until this week, then started losing leaves/needles, even with the proper TLC, so I composted them.

I’m ruthless that way - perform for me, or into the compost bucket you go! ;)


160 posted on 02/07/2026 7:22:35 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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