2014 Editorial Calendar - Chicagoland Gardening Magazine
Transcription
2014 Editorial Calendar - Chicagoland Gardening Magazine
2014 Editorial Calendar Reach Engaged Readers! Cover to cover, Chicagoland Gardening magazine is the most comprehensive and relevant source for gardeners in Zone 5. From editorial to advertising, our readers spend more time with each issue because it fully relates to them in their area. January/February– The Ideas Issue! Special Issue Filled With 100’s of Ideas for Home Gardens Plus: Best New Plants of 2014; One space, three different budgets; Pond Tips Special Sections: Order Direct, Gardening Events Scheduled to mail: 12/5 DEADLINES Calendar items: 11/6 Space closing: 11/7 Materials due: 11/14 March/April Geums: New Varieties from a Local Breeder Plus: A “Before & After” Garden; Curb Appeal; Garden Myths Special Sections: Order Direct, Gardening Events Bonus Supplement: Annual Resource Guide! Scheduled to mail: 2/11 DEADLINES Calendar items: 1/6 Space closing: 1/7 Materials due: 1/14 May/June Rhododendrons & Azaleas: Success in Chicagoland Plus: Having it All in a Small Garden; Kids’ Gardens; Growing Hydroponically Scheduled to mail: 4/8 Special Section: Public Gardens Guide DEADLINES Calendar items: 3/3 Space closing: 3/4 Materials due: 3/11 “Love this magazine, recommend it to every gardener I meet!” –Naperville, IL DEADLINES “This magazine gives the reader gardening ‘excitement’ like no other magazine. I absolutely love it and look forward to each issue! –Chicago, IL July/August Tropical Gardening Plus: Growing Veggies on Roofs; Native Garden Ideas from the Illinois Prairie Path Special Section: Petal Tours/Public Gardens Guide Scheduled to mail: 6/10 Calendar items: 5/5 Space closing: 5/6 Materials due: 5/13 September/October Attracting Butterflies to the Garden Plus: Unusual Shrubs You’ve Never Grown; Living Succulent Art Special Sections: Order Direct, Landscape & Fall Festivals Guides Scheduled to mail: 8/12 DEADLINES Calendar items: 7/7 Space closing: 7/8 Materials due: 7/15 November/December Poinsettias and Their Cousins Plus: Great Winter Containers; Crafts Made with Gourds; Growing in a Terrarium Special Section: Order Direct, Holiday Greens & Activities Guide Scheduled to mail: 10/14 DEADLINES Calendar items: 9/8 Space closing: 9/9 Materials due: 9/16 www.chicagolandgardening.com 630.908.2224 chicagoland gardening magazine, A publication of State~By~State Gardening P.O.Box 730, Downers Grove, IL60515-0730• Direct: 630.908.2224• MainOffice: 888.265.3600• Fax: 630.214.5409• Web: www.chicagolandgardening.com “I like it because the articles are about plants that will thrive and grow in our area.” –Palatine, IL Editorial 2014 Chicagoland Gardening Abraham Darby New English Roses by David Austin The big deal about the Austins is that they have the form and fragrance of “olde tyme” roses but the repeat bloom of a modern hybrid tea. I hanker after every David Austin rose I see, but have limited myself to three so far: Constance Spry, Heritage™, and Abraham Darby®. Although bred in Shropshire, England, the Austins are generally hardy here, according to trials done at the Chicago Botanic Garden, but some, such as Abraham Darby, do get some black spot (I pretend I don’t see it.) In my garden the other two have not been afflicted. Heritage is an upright plant that grows about 4 feet tall. Its light pink flowers have the old-fashioned half-quartered form and it can be richly perfumed, but its first June flowers often appear alongside the year’s first heat wave. Temperatures soaring into the 90s tend to drain the fragrance and fade the color to white. During the cooler days of September and October, however, the flowers are a lovely pink and the scent is glorious. Abraham Darby is a uniquely colored apricot pink with rich fragrance and repeat bloom until frost. The flower stems tend to nod, but that may be because I live near the lake and my soil turns sandy about 18 inches down. Those of you with clay may find those canes standing ramrod straight. Constance Spry is a climber with large peony-like pink blossoms. It’s Austin’s first introduction, from 1961, and the only one that doesn’t repeat bloom. Spectacular when it flowers, it is very, very vigorous. I regularly trim it back and remove canes all the way to the ground. It never seems to be enough. I sometimes consider replacing it with something more compact, but its roots are probably immense at this point, and I’m not sure my knees would survive the excavation. As with Heritage, too much heat and the fragrance evaporates. Since I hanker after every David Austin rose I see, I now have my heart set on Lady of Shalott, a striking double-flowered orange beauty. Heaven only knows where I’ll find room for it. Feature articles throughout the year discuss… Plants: What Grows in Our Zone and Where to Find Them Home Gardens and Gardeners in Our Region Professionally Designed Gardens Community Supported Agriculture Programs Small and Large Space Gardening from Basic to Elaborate Private and Public Display Gardens Associations and Niche Plant Societies Romantica® Roses By Carolyn Ulrich Irresistible When it comes to roses, some of us just can’t say no. Here’s the true confession of one local gardener. Departments 54 Q & A—Ask Our Experts Answers to readers’ questions using our own expertise and information from local professionals. What To Do in the Garden Timely tasks and helpful hints for ornamental, edible and indoor garden maintenance. Regional Reports Gardening news reaching into Rockford, Kankakee, Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan Calendar of Events The region’s most comprehensive calendar of gardening classes and special events listed chronologically by region. Listings are free. Potpourri Current gardening news and views., letters from readers, garden club profiles and more. Sources A shopper’s guide for the issue. Readers can begin their search for plants and products they’ve just read about in the pages of the magazine. Contact Ann Sanders at 630-908-2224 for more information about how to be included. Email: ann@chicagolandgardening.com These are the French answer to David Austin. Bred in Provence, France, by the Meilland Rose Company, they have the old-fashioned flower form with wonderful fragrance, hardiness and a fairly compact habit. They are hyped as having “improved disease resistance,” according to one website, but my Rouge Royale® has a significant black spot problem most years. Yet I treasure it because of its incredible fragrance and lovely he powers that be have hit upon a way to get me to stop dark red color. The flowers emerge looking like a hybrid tea, talking about roses. “Write us a story,” they said, “and get then make a metamorphosis into the half-quartered form of old it out of your system.” roses. This is the only rose that gets winter protection since I It so happens that I do have quite a few roses — more than really don’t want to lose it. A gardener I know in St. Charles has 20, I believe, although whenever I set out to do a mental had a good experience growing other Romanticas with lots of count, I keep getting confused. Did I include the ‘Harison’s bloom and no disease problems. Yellow’ or not? And what about the Cherry Pie in the conAlso from Meilland International is Elle®, a lovely, very fratainer? Oh, I think I forgot Hot Cocoa™. And so I start over, grant pink hybrid tea that was an All-America Rose Selections and then start over again. Finally, I decide to just let it go. As I winner in 2005. Mine grows in partial shade so it’s not a heavy said, more than 20. bloomer. If I could find a place for it in more sun, I would move Some of these roses I bought because I dearly coveted them. it … probably. Gotta think about those knees. Others were sent out by the breeder for trialing purposes before The Explorer Series they appear on the retail market (some identified only by numbers), so I have a few no-name wonders hanging around. But Do you want tough? Then get an Explorer rose. This series among those whose identities I know, here is my little survey of was bred at Canada’s agricultural research stations in Ottawa, the best and the brightest. Quebec and Ontario. All named after Canadian explorers such Lady of Shalott T PHOTOS COURTESY OF DAVID AUSTIN ROSES • • • • • • • www.CHICAGOLANDGARDENING.com CHICAGOLAND GARDENING • MAY/JUNE 2013 55 Columns Gardening Basics The novice gardener is hungry for basic information. We’ll take out the fear factor and teach newbies how to succeed in the garden. The Indoor Garden Extending the garden indoors. . . focusing on the plants we can grow indoors and the people who do it well. NEW! – Curb Appeal Our staff explores the heartland and brings back front yard designs that make you stop for a second look. The Edible Garden The wave of new gardeners is finding growing their own food a rewarding way to learn about gardening. This column provides how-to along with a look at a wide variety of food homeowners can grow. The Hands-On Gardener How can gardeners save around the yard? By doing it themselves. This column takes a step-by-step approach to succeeding in garden projects. Chicagoland Natives How can we use native plants in the garden? This column examines a wide range of native plant issues. Container Gardening Fun and colorful ideas for containers. 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Without in the garden, t white r, the scarlet. In my garden, , brillian ht red But wai the yea rse reach rt-lived ssed in ing on workho purple and h is sho It is expected to years. forms. Ma ked in brig mark Depend nished red to extremely slow pink flus e in 10 rdless. to larger spring and cloa is bur her It wid 15 e rega it in t? from feet mad ut 6 in abo best par es only 8 feet by 5 to blooms fruit in fall, she But move iev And the is shaders. 8 feet tall ach it ent , to doe d sist and tree g per y goo y has pro growin an understory the trul n’s Nurser sion called As among nso rs. Joh ver yea t a. l. t as wel by 18-foo roved form over, Tin toleran new 10imp resisduced a A’), an (‘Select blight and scab Firebird ellent fire with exc .com A Have a problem with dry shade? Growing on a slope or parkway? We give targeted solutions for specific trouble spots. NEW! – The Kids Garden Each issue will have ideas for garden-related activities gardeners can pursue at home with children. The Garden Classroom The science behind the garden’s pretty face is examined in articles ranging from environmental issues to sustainability to why the bees are disappearing. Mike Nowak The inventive radio personality enters his 9th season as the voice of horticultural incorrectness with hilarious levity. ARDENING www.CHIC 24 AGOLANDG chicagoland gardening magazine, A publication of State~By~State Gardening P.O.Box 730, Downers Grove, IL60515-0730• Direct: 630.908.2224• MainOffice: 888.265.3600• Fax: 630.214.5409• Web: www.chicagolandgardening.com