chhotii: (Default)
[personal profile] chhotii
Where do those of us who still consider "garden" a verb go to shop? I looked under "Garden" in the yellow pages, and found what sounded like a serious gardening center (just from the name, no display ad-- only the florists had display ads) in Woburn, just one town away. It took much longer than expected to drive there, and they didn't have a bunch of stuff I need to do gardening. I bought a trowel, but I still need clippers, seeds, gloves, a wide-brimmed straw hat, a new hose, and netting to keep birds off the berries. OK, so finding a hat would have been unusual, but no seeds? I asked if they ever had seeds, if I was just looking too late in the season, but no, they don't ever carry seeds. Not much demand, they said. Of course, in future years I plan to plan ahead and mail-order seeds, but I think it's too late to mail-order and get any carrots this year, and a gardening center should cater to last-minute needs like that. What they did have was a lot of adult plants, in pots, and chemicals. Ranting to Marmota about this later, he suggested that the difference was that this was a garden center not a gardening center. I.e., not an outlet for people who garden, but for people who have a garden: they want to pick out some fully-grown plants, hire someone to install them, and viola, a garden. Noun, not verb.

I did buy (impulse purchase) what appears to be a very small lemon tree. It's labeled "Meyer Lemon" and is growing very small lemons. I hope they are usable, I fancy the idea of edible houseplants. Interest in food should help me remember to water.

Sorry, drbitch, there are still no restaurants in Wilmington. I undertook this investigation today. Listed in the Wilmington telephone book: a bunch of fast food-ish places, about 4 Chinese restaurants, and one Italian joint. No more exotic ethnicities than that. I generally am adverse to Chinese unless it's of Mary Chung or Sechuan Gorment level quality. I doubt any in Wilmington are of that class. Someone braver than I am can try them out to rule out whether I'm just being prejudiced.

Did find lunch that didn't suck, though. Porchside... Sandwich? Diner? Something. Near where 129 and 38 meet up. They had a salad bar and small buffet that was OK. Not a food event, but OK for when the fridge hasn't yet arrived.

But the fridge has now arrived.

Date: 2004-07-21 04:17 pm (UTC)
totient: (Default)
From: [personal profile] totient
but but there are all kinds of great restaurants in Wilmington... I had a fabulous lunch there not too long ago... oh, wait. Wilmington MA, not Wilmington DE. Nevermind.

places

Date: 2004-07-21 04:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] candle-light.livejournal.com
Try O'Connor Hardware (http://www.oconnorhardware.com/) in Billerica. They will have most if not all of what you're looking for. They are a wonderful rather all-encompassing hardware store that sells a bunch of gardening stuff. Was the gardening store you went to called Mahoney's? If not, you might try Mahoney's. The food situation in Wilmington is rather dire in my opinion. Have you been to the vegetarian southern Indian restaurant in Billerica on the Wilmington/Burlington line? It's called Masalaa (http://www.boston.com/dining/restaurant/1584).

Re: places

Date: 2004-07-22 09:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chhotii.livejournal.com
Ooooooooo Indian foooooooood. Must try that soon.

Must check out O'Connor too soon.

Date: 2004-07-21 04:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] donnad.livejournal.com
Yes, Meyer Lemons are very edible, but it is NOT an outdoor plant. Although it is one of the more hearty citrus varieties, it will not survive being planted in the ground in New England. It is strictly a container plant, better kept indoors because citrus are *very* suseptable to insect infestation. You can put it outside on hot days, but be prepared for spider mites and/or scale and bring it in in the evenings. It can withstand temps into the 30's, even into the upper 20's, but anything below that will definately kill it.

Meyer Lemons are a hybrid, a cross between a lemon and a mandarin. They are less tart than regular lemons and you can taste the orange/tangerine in it. The skin and flesh is not as yellow as a standard lemon, It has a tint of orange to it.

If you want it to keep fruiting,you have to artificially pollinate it when it blossoms, or it will drop fruit that results from unpollinated blossoms. It's easy, just use a q-tip and spread the pollen between blossoms.

We grow several indoor citrus trees ourselves, currently two lime trees and a overly fruit laden Calamondin orange that has been fruiting since January and are just now starting to turn orange. We have just eradicated an infestation of scale, (using a toothbrush and Dr. Bronner's we scrubbed every stem and leave on this three foot tall tree, luckily we caught it before the fruit got infested.) and our citrus are strictly indoor plants. Once we are sure we have gotten rid on the scale, our next acquisition will be a Meyer.

If you have any specific questions, please ask, we currently have every book available on growing citrus in containers.

Date: 2004-07-22 10:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chhotii.livejournal.com
Thanks for the tips! I'm not sure I would have figured out the self-pollination thing.

O'Connors is where it's at!

Date: 2004-07-21 05:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frotz.livejournal.com
I started talking about this the other night before the conversation got derailed; O'Connor's is an excellent source for damn near anything. There's also a nonobvious route (though your GPS might get it right) that's both direct and that entirely avoids 3A.

There's also a very downscale gardening place right around the corner from you, on whatever street Butters Row is after it crosses 38. Dunno if they've have what you're after, but it's so close you may as well have a look.

Wilmington is terrible for food, but I keep being surprised at the number of cool things that it does have. (Just the other week, I found out that Pedro's (http://www.pedros.com/) is in Wilmington!)

Date: 2004-07-21 08:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quietann.livejournal.com
It's a bit late in the season for seeds, but Mahoney's might have them. They should also have most of the rest of what you want (though I'd go elsewhere for bird netting and a hose.) They are a bit pricey, but late-season stuff goes on sale. Actually, in September or October, if there are any perennials or shrubs you want to get, they are usually 25% to 50% off, and the fall is a very good time to plant them. The Mahoneys in Winchester is *huge* but the one on Rt. 38 in Tewksbury in very close to where you live.

Date: 2004-07-22 06:32 am (UTC)
skreeky: (Default)
From: [personal profile] skreeky
I found a lot of the tools at Home Depot. BJs carries packs of gloves (this rocks). Try cheap department stores for hats, esp. if you don't care if you look silly - Kmart, Sears, Pennys.

As of 3 weeks ago, our Stop&Shop had packets of seeds for vegetables and annuals. I bought some. Not that I've gotten around to planting the silly things.

PS

Date: 2004-07-22 07:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quietann.livejournal.com
If you are going to be at the new place this weekend, give me a call? I'd love to see it. And if you want to go garden-shopping and want company, let me know :)

Re: PS

Date: 2004-07-22 10:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chhotii.livejournal.com
Great! Can we plan to go garden-shopping this Saturday? I'll be at the new place on Saturday but not Sunday.

Re: PS

Date: 2004-07-22 12:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quietann.livejournal.com
That would be fun. We'll be out in the morning but should be home noonish...

Re: PS

Date: 2004-07-22 04:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chhotii.livejournal.com
OK, I'll call you then-ish.

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