Gingko leaves? Do they have any fruiting trees? We had two outside our house growing up and it always resulted in a solid month of the most wonderful rotting food smell...
This site is mostly about ornamental horticulture. But I hope to appeal to both non-gardeners and green thumbs.
Sometimes I may hammer out something about Durham neighborhoods, growing vegetables, or Nature. But chances are, most of my posts will be observations about different landscapes I encounter: a tree here, a bush there, some rumored bulbs in an abandoned garden somewhere else.
I have been living and gardening in zone 7 since the fall of 2004. This time in the garden has turned out to be a mostly zone 8 experience. Global warming may not be great for the polar ice-caps but maybe it has been part of what's kept my lantana and gardenias safe over the last few winters?
I am not a hard-core environmentalist or strict organic gardener but I do like native plants as well as my shrinking lawn.
I love old fashioned pass-along plants and the stories they hold.
Unless otherwise credited, Victor Gordon is responsible for all the writing and photography here.
2 comments:
Gingko leaves? Do they have any fruiting trees? We had two outside our house growing up and it always resulted in a solid month of the most wonderful rotting food smell...
hmm.. i don't know..did you see this the other day?
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/05/complaint-box-ginkgo/
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