"How-w-w-DEE-E-E-E!" |
My "Minnie" moment occurred recently as I inspected my Hamptons garden. I observed quite a few new shrubs that I planted in 2011 with their price/ID tags now prominently visible among the leafless branches. For me, it doesn't reflect boasting, but my usual eagerness to get everything planted. Stopping to take off the tags before planting might actually slow me down a few seconds.
The plastic tags are pretty harmless, but the metal wired tags can eventually bind into a shrub's bark as it grows. So it's a good practice to remove them all before the shrubs really start growing.
$22.99 for a healthy Rosa 'Blanc Double De Coubert' |
My folder of tags is quite full these days so I need to come up with a more organized way to save these. If you have an idea, PLEASE share.
And if you're curious, the price tag on that beautiful hat above with its everlasting flowers was just $1.98. Less than the cost of a four-pack of annuals today.
2 comments:
Worse is to wear a new dress to a party and have a cute guy notice the security tag is still on it!
Do you have a gardening journal? I keep the tags on the page with a pic, when planted, etc. Messy, but then I've always been charmed by depictions of stuffed journals (Indiana Jones) and stuffed books (The English Patient's copy of Herodotus) held together with an elastic band. Scrapbookers are notorious for finding ways to mount tickets and the like.
Then again this wonderful blog works well as a gardening journal. I arrived via your posting to gardenweb on the ferns growing in your stacked wall.
Christy,
I thought about a paper journal, but would probably lose it or leave it outside. I did start a journal on my computer once, but forgot to update it. So when I originally started my blog, I had hoped to use this as a good review of the past. Regarding the plant tags, I did get a suggestion to put them in a looseleaf binder and then buy those plastic pages for saving business cards. Seems like an easy idea if they all fit. If not, I may just paste the tags to paper and put in the binder. I'm going to save the tags for plants that didn't perform and mark them with an X. Don't want to make the same mistake twice.
Thanks,
Jeff
Post a Comment