86 episodes

Desert Horticulture is as unique to horticulture as the desert to other environments. Growing plants in the desert is part science and part art. The science must be "tweeked" to grow plants successfully here. This podcast takes questions from listeners, and topic suggestions that are current, and discusses how to 'tweek" the science for Desert Horticulture.

Desert Horticulture Bob Morris

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 5 Ratings

Desert Horticulture is as unique to horticulture as the desert to other environments. Growing plants in the desert is part science and part art. The science must be "tweeked" to grow plants successfully here. This podcast takes questions from listeners, and topic suggestions that are current, and discusses how to 'tweek" the science for Desert Horticulture.

    Soil Sampling and Testing of Desert Soils

    Soil Sampling and Testing of Desert Soils

    Testing of home landscapes can be expensive. Sampling and testing of desert soils doesn't  have to be done every year. Usually every three to five years is enough. Learn how to establish a baseline desert soil test of your landscape and how often testing should be done. All this and more in this episode of Desert Horticulture.
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    • 19 min
    Internet Research on Desert Horticulture. Good, Bad, or ?

    Internet Research on Desert Horticulture. Good, Bad, or ?

    Desert horticulture is a unique form of horticulture that must be tweaked for desert soils, increased sunlight intensity, increased temperatures,  low humidity and other factors. It's frustrating when solid local horticultural advice been given and people check its accuracy on a general horticulture Internet sites, not knowing whether this advice is good or bad. When seeking advice stay close to home and from a reliable source.  Sometimes advice is based on marketing. Sometimes it's just bad advice. Only you can determine if the advice is applicable to your situation or not.  Find out more on this episode of Desert horticulture.
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    • 33 min
    Amending the Soil - What Does it Mean?

    Amending the Soil - What Does it Mean?

    Desert soils can be very low in organics. This is why amendments are added to landscapes. Amendments will benefit the soil structure or soil chemistry or both! Learn what it means to amend the soil and differences in soil amendments and what they can and can't do. Learn how composts differ in how  rich in nutrients and why, how they are made and which to use and when.  All in this episode of Desert Horticulture. 
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    • 34 min
    Iron Treatment Differs Depending on Time of Year

    Iron Treatment Differs Depending on Time of Year

    Iron, manganese and zinc is in short supply in desert soils. Particularly iron. Learn how applications of iron should differ, from soil to liquid leaf (foliar) applications, depending on the time of year. Not only that but its effectiveness varies depending on the type of product used, how it is applied and when it is applied. Learn this and more in this episode of Desert Horticulture.
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    • 27 min
    Fire Blight Disease in Your Fruit Trees

    Fire Blight Disease in Your Fruit Trees

    Fire blight disease is one of the most virulent and aggressive diseases that fruit trees and landscape plants can get. This past year we've had an outbreak of this disease. Some fruit trees and landscape plants are more susceptible to it than others. In particular Asian pears, Quince and some European pears as well is apples can get it. Walk your landscape and Orchard in the spring months when new growth occurs. If you've had fireblight in the past walked your landscape frequently to check on this disease. Learn more about this disease by listening to this episode of Desert horticulture.
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    • 31 min
    Managing Fruit Trees by Summer Pruning

    Managing Fruit Trees by Summer Pruning

    Summer pruning is a confusing management practice. It starts around late spring or very early summer and may continue all summer long. Its purpose is twofold: keep the tree smaller and reduce the winter pruning workload. Summer pruning focuses on removal of new growth only from existing productive trees. Summer pruning allows the tree to invest new growth where it senses light and a "hole" in the canopy needs to be "plugged". When fruit trees are meant to stay small, summer pruning can be a valuable management tool. Learn all about it on this episode of Desert Horticulture.
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    • 14 min

Customer Reviews

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A Treasure of an Episode

When I drove through Montana, I stopped at a very low Yellowstone River near the Theodore RooseveltNational park, Which has a Painted Canyon still splashing mudslides of ancient sandstone. Where near-anaerobic slop is produced, horse tail had been edged, drilling its black roots where one would think impossible! No wonder The Equisetum is one of planet Earth’s plants, the original behemoth , one which decomposed into the first-ever organic soils.

Episode 16 confirmed a lot of my hunches, not limited to my hopeful expectations of Desert Horticulture. The details are expository I’ll be subscribing to this program and recommending episodes to others.

Riddle me this: Even though I’ll be veggie farming in SW Oregon (Ashland) where intolerance to drought comes as a thing of July, what exactly should I try planting considering best feed and provision for caterpillars’ return to diversity. A rare but endemic oak? Is there much use in selecting native plants from a couple states over? We know another specimen to Douglas fir or hucklberry won’t be novel to bringing back our primary herbivores.

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