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May/June 2004 - Volume 83, Number 3
The following is a
table of contents of the articles that appear in
the
May/June 2004 issue of
The American Gardener. Links have
been established to each article. However, many articles are only
accessible to American Horticultural Society (AHS) members . When you click on
these links, a challenge will appear for a username (ahs) and password
that AHS members can use to view these articles. Non-members are encouraged to join AHS to be able to
enjoy each of these articles and the many other benefits of AHS membership.
ASTERISKS (*)
INDICATE PAGES VIEWABLE BY NON-MEMBERS.
Non-members can view the EXCERPT
from the
Coneflowers—An American
Classic feature.
Note: Most articles files below are in PDF format.
If you do not have
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Features
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Tasteful Legumes by Pam Baggett
Legumes are not just for the vegetable patch. Find out how many ornamental
members of this family are growing in your garden.
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Artful Borders by Karen Bussolini
Designer Lynden Miller’s Irwin Perennial Garden at the New York Botanical Garden
abounds in inspiration for home gardeners.
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The Allure of Lotus by Ilene Sternberg
Don’t have the pace or time for a full-size water garden? Growing a lotus in a
container can be a satisfying alternative.
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Coneflowers—An American
Classic* by Kim Hawks
Once considered weedy, coneflowers are now the darlings of plant breeders and
mainstays in the summer border.
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Grounds for Sculpture by Carole Ottesen
In New Jersey, an artist and a landscape designer have created an eye-catching
synthethis of landscape and art.
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Garden Railroads by Pat Hayward
This fast-growing hobby presents creative landscaping challenges and a new way
to look at plants.
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What is a Garden? by Tres Fromme
Why you have to do your homework before you can really design a garden that is
both useful and aesthetically fullfilling.
Departments
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Notes from River Farm*
Insights and updates about the American Horticultural Society from AHS
President Katy Moss Warner.
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Members’ Forum
Readers write to voice their opinions, make recommendations, or set the
record straight.
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News from AHS*
Updates on American Horticultural Society programs and events. In this
issue: 2004 AHS Children and Youth Garden Symposium at Cornell, successful
indoor-plant workshop at River Farm, springtime blooms and children’s
programs at River Farm, AHS hosts meeting of national Partnership for
Plant Based Learning.
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AHS 2004 Book Award Winners*
Special: Five notable gardening books.
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Natural
Connections*
An occasional look at natural phenomena or symbiotic relationships that
can be observed in the garden or in the wild. This month: The 17-year
cicadas are coming.
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Gardener’s Notebook*
Short, newsworthy articles on horticultural topics. This issue: New
franklinia hybrid developed, fire department-approved plants for southern
California, saving the box huckleberry, rust-resistant daylilies, Peter
Raven to receive RHS Veitch Medal, chocolate industry could save Brazilian
rainforest, milk as fungicide.
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Everyday Garden Science*
Plant science in plain English by AHS President Emeritus H. Marc Cathey.
This issue: Unraveling the mystery of plant dormancy.
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Book Reviews
*
Featured: Restoring American Gardens, The Earth Moved, and Annuals and
Tender Plants for North American Gardens. Special focus: Regional
gardening books.
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Regional Happenings
Listings of lectures, flower shows, and other gardening events across the
country. Featured: Green roof conference and rose festival in Portland;
Weird Plant Sale in Tucson.
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Hardiness and Heat
Zones and Pronunciations
A guide to USDA Plant Hardiness and AHS Plant Heat Zones for most of the
cultivated plants listed in each issue—and a user-friendly guide to
pronouncing their botanical names.
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Perfect
Plant Companions
A spotlight on plants that look great together. This issue: A ground cover
tapestry.
You can gain
access to the online version of this issue of The
American Gardener AND get a printed copy of each
bimonthly issue mailed to your home by becoming an American
Horticultural Society (AHS) member today. Click
here to learn about the many other benefits of AHS
membership--the annual Free Seed Exchange, toll-free gardener's hotline,
free and discounted admission to flower shows and botanical gardens, and
much more--and for a membership application. To purchase a single copy
of the magazine, click
here. The American Gardener
is also available through select vendors; ask your local newsstand for
our publication.
Items marked
with an asterisk (*) can be viewed by non-members without a username and
password.
Letters to the
editor should be emailed to: editor@ahs.org
or mailed to:
Editor, AHS,
7931 East Boulevard Drive,
Alexandria VA 22308.
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