Archive for January, 2010

How to Get the Most From a Garden Show

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Guest Post by Laura Schaub of the San Francisco Flower & Garden Show

Flower and garden shows are magical events, especially when they occur in early spring. As a veteran of many shows and a past show-garden creator, I have advice that might make your next garden show even better. The pictures are from the San Francisco Flower & Garden Show archives.

(1) Dress for spring gardening, not a summer garden party. Jeans, comfortable shoes and several layers will keep you happier than a flowery frock and strappy sandals, especially if there are outdoor displays. Shows like San Francisco often cover several acres, and you’ll want to see every square inch.

(2) Bring a friend, someone who totally understands when you squeal  “oh my gosh, is that a [insert object of horticultural lust here]” and is willing to trudge the last weary mile with you.

(3) Bring a camera. There is an overwhelming amount to see at a garden show. Finding the most interesting and pleasing aspects of each garden to photograph can help you…focus! And don’t stop there: post your photos to Flickr and tag them with the name of the show for others to enjoy!

(4) Keep your hands free to take notes, snap pictures, and hug your friends; wear a backpack or a cross-body messenger bag. Lightweight rolling carts are very popular among the savviest show visitors (just mind people’s shins!)

(5) Try not to touch. Yes, this is hard, but please don’t use those free hands to touch everything you see. This gentlemen gets an A+ for proper attire, but considering that 50,000 people will be seeing this garden, that plant isn’t going to last long if everyone touches it (and don’t even get me started on picking!)

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Top 5 Valentine’s Day Gift Ideas

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Image by Vanessa Pike-Russell

A quick perusal of the Valentine’s Day aisle at the convenience store warrants unsatisfactory results. There you’ll find nothing but chalky conversation hearts, goop-filled chocolates, cheap stuffed animals, and cheesy perfumes endorsed by even cheesier celebrities. And you don’t want to give your sweetheart the same old crap. You want to give your love something special, unique, and meaningful to commemorate Valentine’s Day, right? Right!

Here at aHa! Modern Living we have chosen our top 5 Valentine’s Day gift ideas to make it easy and fun to select a Valentine’s Day gift for your significant other. All of these items are sure to say, “you’re special, so I picked something special for you.” We think our gifts are a welcome change from the “same ole same ole,” and we’re sure your honey will think so, too.

(1) Owl Salt and Pepper Shakers

Owl Salt & Pepper ShakerWhat better way to say “whooooo loves you, baby?” The Owl Salt and Pepper Shakers are a great gift for the eco-conscious recipient, since they are made from water buffalo horn. We love the idea of giving a gift that can be used and enjoyed every day. This is a terrific gift for the man or woman who loves to cook, or host dinner parties. Whether you choose to take a cue from the nakedness of the owls is up to you.

(2) Cacao and Spice Hand Lotion

Daub & Bauble Cacao & Spice Hand LotionWant to give something chocolatey sweet without inducing a tummy ache? Daub and Bauble presents a delicious solution with its luxurious Cacao and Spice Hand Lotion. This delectably scented, creamy hand lotion is fragranced with a rich chocolate and cinnamon, and formulated with softening Vitamin E and Aloe Vera. For a perfect set, select the Cacao and Spice Hand Wash as well. Then deliver with the following simply sweet message: “I wanna hold your hand.”

(3) Birdie Necklace

Silver Birdie NecklaceNow it’s definitely true that most women would love to receive some gorgeous new jewelry for Valentine’s Day. But when it comes to jewelry, make sure you don’t fall into “the trap.” That is, don’t buy your wife or girlfriend the necklace that has been advertised by all the national jewelry store chains for 3 months now. That’s just boring, and she’s already seen it on television a thousand times. Instead, take a look at this creative and beautiful Birdie Necklace. It’s the perfect way to say, “you make my heart sing.”

(4) Eggling Seed Starters

Eggling Seed StartersWant your love to blossom and to grow? Then give your honey an Eggling Seed Starter. They come with all the essentials, so all your schnookums will need to do is crack open the top, add the seeds, and water. It is perfect even for those who claim to kill all their houseplants. Plus… who knows… maybe the Eggling Seed Starter will help you to start your own little somethin’ somethin’.

(5) West County Garden Gloves

West County Garden GlovesThere is no better way to say “I glove you” than with West County Garden Gloves. These gloves are particularly unique because they are the perfect blend of both functionality and fashion. They are a great choice for work around the lawn and garden, and even have a mesh back that makes them light and breathable. Remember, though, that it’s Valentine’s Day. Don’t let the gloves do all the dirty work!

Rhythm and Motion: Animate Your Garden Using Design Elements

Thursday, January 21st, 2010
Kuhlmann garden design

Landscape designer Marilee Kuhlmann of Comfort Zones Landscape Design created a sustainable front garden for her client in Santa Monica. The repeated shapes of New Zealand flax move the eye through this fluid design scheme.

Guest Post by Debra Prinzing of Shed Style and contributor to the LA Times Home Blog

In landscape design, you can create a visual flow through the garden with the dynamic element of rhythm. As a beat is to music, as choreographed steps are to a dance, rhythm animates a garden. Even if the wind doesn’t blow, your garden can look and feel infused with energy.

MOTION

ron radziner roof garden

The roof of architect Ron Radziner's house in Venice Beach, Calif., is planted with cape rush. Ocean breezes move through this grassy green roof and create gorgeous movement.

We experience a physical sensation when something rustles or sways in the garden. We pause to appreciate movements, subtle or dramatic – flowing water, rippling leaves, a billowing banner, or clanging chimes – because they signal life’s evanescent qualities. Such movements resonate as the garden responds to the earth’s vital elements.

By the very act of creating a garden, we embrace the external forces of nature, most of which are out of our control. In addition to rays of sunlight and rain showers, the kinetic presence of wind and breeze in our landscapes is important to channel – as movement – in a planting scheme. We can’t help but notice extreme gusts or light flurries flowing through branches and stems – they infuse an otherwise commonplace landscape with vitality.

The choices of plants that can catch the airflow, gently dance, or furiously shake are endless. Perennials with tall, slender stems ripple like the fringe on a canopy (think of a vibrant stand of daylilies or a swath of lavender). Fluffy inflorescences of maiden grass undulate above its finely-textured blades – and the overall effect is a seductive rhythm. The leaves of a California pepper tree shimmer like sequins on an evening gown. Agapanthus seedpods rattle and whisper as autumn arrives. The natural symphony energizes any landscape.

RHYTHM

Stone Path

Movement can be implied in hardscape, as well. Here's a gorgeous, sinuous stone and pebble path designed by my friends Linda Knutson and Ron Sell, for their garden in Yakima, Washington

Beyond individual plants, the visual suggestion of movement can also be incorporated into the garden. The repetition of organic forms, the course of a sinuous path, or the sensual outlines of beds and borders suggest movement. Alternating shapes – the gradual widening or narrowing of a space, the regular spacing of trees – do as well.

When the tiny stones in a Zen garden are raked into concentric circles, movement appears. When a “stream” of large, smooth, river rocks fills a gully or trench, the sense of running water is implied. The sequence of stepping stones spaced through a cushioned ground cover of fragrant thyme invigorates the scene and helps direct the viewer’s eye through the garden. The scene is emotionally alive and visually pleasing.

Movement in a garden is essential. It’s the organic rhythm, the fluid characteristic that every garden needs in order to come to life for those who enjoy it.

Here are some tips for “animating” your garden:

  • Develop a repertoire of plants: Base your plant selection on the scale of your house and the natural setting around it. Once you’ve selected the primary plants – those that provide structure and have multiseason interest, such as ornamental grasses – you can choose a second wave of plants to “star” in specific seasons.
  • Create a basic framework for design: Choose a template and follow it consistently throughout the garden. One method is to mirror dominant lines of your house, such as repeating key architectural shapes in the landscape. Use these as a guide for shaping pathways and planting beds. For example, a home’s arched windows and doorways might be echoed in the contour of a border or patio. Alternately, you can borrow a framework for design from nature, such as the irregular rhythm of distant hills.
  • Consider the vertical dimension: Select plants that bring height, energy, and motion into the garden, and vary their placement for impact. Even if surrounded by buildings on every side, your garden will respond to daily and seasonal climate changes. Watch how breezes move through the garden, and capture that energy by placing fluid plants where currents flow. Notice where the sun rises and sets in relation to your landscape, and choose trees, shrubs, grasses, and other perennials that will reflect the morning light or absorb sunset’s glow. Red and purple foliage turns flame-like when backlit. As the sun’s rays shine through fringed tassels of fountain grass or pampas grass, the garden will shimmer in response.

Author contact: Debra Prinzing, 805-523-8706 or dkprinzing@aol.com

Stave Off Winter Dry Skin with Daub & Bauble

Thursday, January 14th, 2010
Daub & Bauble Orange & Clove Hand Wash

Orange & Clove Hand Wash

There are plenty of things that we love about plummeting temperatures in the winter: snuggling on the couch with a good book and a fleece blanket, sipping a mug of piping hot chamomile tea, the natural flush that appears on our cheeks after shoveling snow off the driveway. One thing that certainly does not make this list, however, is the scaly cracked skin that crops up on our hands each year when freezing temperatures set the stage for dry winter skin. Yuck!

Be prepared this winter to fight the battle against unbearable, chapped hands. By using these two easy steps, exfoliating dead skin and applying a natural moisturizer every day, you will keep your hands soft and smooth all winter.

(1) Exfoliate those dead skin cells

White cane sugar is a natural exfoliant.

Natural exfoliant: pure cane sugar

Exfoliating is the process of sloughing off dead skin cells so that fresh, more moisture-rich cells may be revealed. One of the safest and most natural exfoliants is one that you probably already have in your kitchen cupboard- it’s plain old white sugar.  For an easy and gentle hand exfoliant, start off with a pump of Daub and Bauble Hand Wash in your palm. This luxurious hand wash is filled with emollients such as Vitamin E and Aloe Vera. It also contains natural vegetable glycerin, which helps to heal those little cracks that appear in your skin when it’s cold.

Make Your Own Natural Skin Exfoliant

  • Squirt a dab of yummy-smelling hand wash in your palm, add a teaspoon or two of white cane sugar.
  • Lather this in your hands using soft, circular motions, concentrating on scaly spots.

The sugar will gently scrub off the dead skin cells on your hands, while the Daub and Bauble Hand Wash will create a luxurious lather that will sweep the dead skin away.  Your hands will be left feeling amazingly soft, and you can exfoliate them as often as once a day to keep them feeling pampered and smooth.

Make sure to use the Daub and Bauble Hand Wash each time you wash your hands throughout the day as well. It is important to avoid using hand soaps with drying ingredients such as alcohol and Triclosan during the winter. These ingredients suck the moisture right out of your hands. Now, while your hands are still damp from washing, it’s time for the next step.

(2) Apply a natural moisturizer daily

Fig & Thyme Hand Lotion

Fig & Thyme Hand Lotion

After washing your hands, gently pat them dry, (do not rub them).  Now it’s time to add a nice thick layer of moisture with Daub and Bauble Hand Lotion. Like the hand wash, the lotion comes in a variety of delicious scents: energetic orange and clove, exotic fig and thyme, refreshing lemon and ginger, and rich cacao and spice.

Daub and Bauble Hand Lotions are chock-full of ingredients that will go right to work at healing your dry skin. One of the best parts is that they won’t leave your hands feeling greasy, either. you’ve probably heard about the amazing moisturizing properties of Shea butter, right? Well, Daub and Bauble Hand Lotions contain Shea butter along with grape seed oil and avocado butter. Your hands will drink these nurturing ingredients right up.

Don’t forget the gloves!

Remember to protect your hands when you go outside in the cold! Don’t let the winter wind lick away all of that luxurious moisture.

New aHa! Monthly Newsletter

We will be “growing” our Grow Category this February, so check back soon for new products! Or why not make it easier on yourself? You can receive updates on new products, special promotions, earn aHa! Customer Rewards, and unique content you won’t find on the blog, by subscribing to our new aHa! Modern Living E-letter. Take a peek at our December issue.

Healthy Living: aHa! New Year’s Resolutions

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

This year we’re turning over a new leaf. For the start of a fresh decade, we’re making new year’s resolutions we can (and will) actually keep!

(1) Contribute to a greener Earth

It's Easy Being Green BookThe media will have us believe that it is impossible to live an Earth-friendly lifestyle without buying newfangled expensive products, such as a hybrid car or a high efficiency washing machine. It’s Easy Being Green begs to differ. This easy-to-read paperback offers simple, easy to understand suggestions that we can all afford to incorporate into our daily lives. With this book in hand, we are ready to make the next decade our most Earth friendly one yet! One thing we love about this book is that it has allowed us to set reasonable expectations and goals for ourselves when it comes to living a green lifestyle. We realize there is no need for us to purge our homes of all of our conventional cleaning products. But when they run out, little by little, we intend to replace them all with plant or castille based products. This is a good way to make a smooth, gradual transition. For other simple switches you can make around the house, take a look at this article from the Organic Fertilizer Sources blog, Beyond the Crap.

(2) Consume a more nutritious diet

Everyday Raw CookbookFor us, eating healthy isn’t about losing weight. It’s about preventing disease, promoting longevity, and fueling ourselves so that we can feel energized every day. We know that a raw diet is our key to achieving all of these things. A study in the Journal of Nutrition found that consumption of a raw foods diet lowers plasma total cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations. A raw foods diet is also great for promoting healthy digestion, increasing energy, and improving skin appearance.Everyday Raw has all of the information we need to get started with this healthy and delicious way of living. This is a thorough guidebook for those who wish to make the complete transition to the raw food way of life. We here at aHa! Modern Living are just beginning to dip our toes into the raw foods waters, so we plan to take baby steps here. We are starting off by replacing just one meal per day with a raw foods meal. One of our favorite ways to do this is with a healthy raw smoothie for breakfast. Check out this green smoothie recipe from Planet Green. It is chock full of antioxidants without skimping on sweet flavor. A healthy smoothie, such as this one, is an easy way to incorporate a raw meal every day.

(3) Correspond with family members more frequently

Matchstick GardensNothing brightens up our day quite like receiving mail. Not junk advertisements or fliers addressed to “current resident,” we mean real mail. With the increasing use of email, we find that good ol’ snail mail correspondence is fading away. This is why we resolve to correspond with our family members by mail more frequently. Email may be a daily occurrence, but opening the mailbox to find an unexpected present? Now that is an awesome surprise. First on our list, we’re going to send a Matchstick Garden to each of our loved ones. They’re small enough to tuck into an envelope with a Hallmark greeting. What a fun way to spread a little love!

(4) Kick our gardening booties into great shape

Okay, so it’s no great secret that there are a milli0n reasons we should all be exercising every day. As gardeners, we can add yet another reason to our long list. It is important for us to keep our bodies in prime condition so that we can safely complete all of the bending and squatting movements that are necessary as we get our hands dirty in our backyards. Regular strengthening exercise is the best way to prepare for everyday physical activity, and minimize stress on the body.

As fitness guru Stacy Walters points out in this video, it is essential for us to “prepare (our bodies) to safely perform the task at hand.” She and Carl Edwards lead us through a series of easy-to-follow core stabilization exercises that we are going to practice at least three times a week. We will, no doubt, see and feel the results when it comes time for spring stooping, planting, and weeding. Plus, we know we’ll see almost immediate improvements in our posture. What’s not to like about that?

New aHa! Monthly Newsletter

We will be “growing” our Grow Category this February, so check back soon for new products! Or why not make it easier on yourself? You can receive updates on new products, special promotions, earn aHa! Customer Rewards, and unique content you won’t find on the blog, by subscribing to our new aHa! Modern Living E-letter. Take a peek at our December issue.

Bring Some GREEN Indoors this Winter

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010
When it looks like this outside, it's definitely time to bring some green into your home. Image source: Andrew Prokos Photography.

When it looks like this outside, it's definitely time to bring some green into your home. Image source: Andrew Prokos Landscape Photography (http://andrewprokos.com)

With the frigid months of winter upon us, it’s all too easy to find ourselves sitting around and twiddling our green thumbs. We can’t wait to dig our hands into some spring soil, but alas, months of frozen earth lay ahead. And our mood is starting to reflect the gray, black, and brown shades of our frozen gardens.

What’s the perfect cure for the winter blahs? Bring some green indoors! After all, nothing brightens up a room like a cheerful indoor plant. As a bonus, houseplants also help to clean the air by taking in carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen, which is a definite plus when it is too darn cold to open the windows and get some fresh air in your home.  There are numerous  Benefits of Decorating with Houseplants; click here to learn all about them.

When the weather prevents you from gardening outside, some friendly and perky houseplants can come to the rescue. They also make the perfect hostess gifts, as they are considerably more creative than the obligatory bottle of wine. Our favorite houseplants here at aHa! Modern Living are cheery, low maintenance, and easily portable.

Check out the Perch! Campy Planters

Ceramic Campy PlantersThese simple yet stylish handmade planters come in three different vibrant color combinations: green and turquoise, gray and green, or white and yellow. We absolutely love their mini size; each planter stands just 6 1/2 inches tall. They can fit even on a small space such a bathroom sink or nightstand.We love the idea of planting a succulent in a Campy, which is pictured on the left. This is super low maintenance, since succulents can survive for long periods of time without water. Perch! Campy Planters also have a perforated bottom for water drainage, which is integral for healthy plants.

Another great indoor option: Eggling Seed Starters

Basil Eggling Seed StarterAt just 10 bucks a pop, you can afford one as a gift for each of your friends and still treat yourself. Check out both varieties: basil and chrysanthemum.Eggling Seed Starters are simple as pie to use. All you have to do is crack open the top, and water the soil within, which is already filled with peat mixture and seeds. One thing that we really love is how easily the Eggling may be transferred from the indoors to the outside. After 5 months, the whole egg can be planted outdoors. This way, your Eggling can brighten up your home all winter, and come spring it will be ready to take root.

Looking for something a little bit quirky and fun?

iGrobot Desktop PlanterThen you will love the iGrobot Planter.  Again, we just can’t help but love how fool-proof this planter is. It comes with instructions, two measures of peat, and a packet of rye grass seeds. Once your grass sprouts, you can trim it into a mohawk, or any other shape you may desire. We are sure that it will make a fun addition to your home or office space, not to mention a great gift for any techie.

New aHa! Monthly Newsletter

We will be “growing” our Grow Category this February, so check back soon for new products!  Or why not make it easier on yourself?  You can receive updates on new products, special promotions, earn aHa! Customer Rewards, and unique content you won’t find on the blog, by subscribing to our new aHa! Modern Living E-letter.  Take a peek at our December issue.