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A Minnesota growing season is akin to a sprint. There's so little time to work with that the virtue of patience is forgotten in the spring rush to get seeds and seedlings into the ground. Sometimes we jump the gun and lose much of our investment to late-season (but, we must admit, predictable) frosts and freezes. Mother Earth Gardens helps us turn our gardening efforts into something more resembling a marathon: In the dead of winter and into early spring, the store offers free classes to get... More »
Dealing with a short growing season and a long winter, a backyard gardener in this part of the country is an efficient and patient animal. One must work quickly when planting time comes, and must wait and wait and wait for it all winter long. It is easy for such an animal to want from its growing season the promise of an uncontested campaign to make seed into bounty. This might explain why nearly every garden store in the Twin Cities is thick with the acrid air of pesticide stock. The... More »
This neighborhood garden center in south Minneapolis is Mecca for garden gurus and novices alike. Here, the botanical-minded can find everything they need to create their very own oasis: wooden wind chimes that won't drive the neighbors batty, unique annuals that will make the same neighbors jealous, a wide assortment of clay pots that are sure to match any decor, and handmade decorations like glass butterflies that will add a signature touch to your labor of love. Plus, this meditative... More »
The Cities and suburbs are scattered with greenhouses so jam-packed with lawn ornaments and holiday knickknacks that they might as well be listed under "toys" in the yellow pages--and there's nothing wrong with that. But the smaller neighborhood garden centers often have better service and better doodads. Located in a large lot across the street from the Riverview Theatre, Mother Earth has all of the essential utilities and unessential extras you'll need come spring, from attractive clay... More »
Dealing with a short growing season and a long winter, a backyard gardener in this part of the country is an efficient and patient animal. One must work quickly when planting time comes, and must wait and wait and wait for it all winter long. It is easy for such an animal to want from its growing season the promise of an uncontested campaign to make seed into bounty. This might explain why nearly every garden store in the Twin Cities is thick with the acrid air of pesticide stock. The organic gardener need only pass through the parking lot of a garden store with window down and nose a-sniffin' to tell whether it's earth-friendly. Outside Mother Earth Gardens, all you can sniff is green. One of the few stridently organic garden supply stores in the Twin Cities, Mother Earth has adapted masterfully to the gardeners it serves. During growing season, you'll find pots, plants, guides, and even consultants—of both the contract and informal, neighborhoody variety. Everybody smiles in this place—and it's not clear if it's the staff or the customers who start it. In the winter, there are locally grown Christmas trees and a Santa with a real beard (who seems to have a Ph.D. in being a holiday icon—he was overheard last Christmas talking to a five-year-old about the Roman feast of Saturnalia). More crucially, the store offers seminars, especially during the long winter months of January and February, on getting ready to garden. Attendees make maps and charts and dream anxiously of their bounty to be. Then these efficient and patient animals go home and sit, waiting for the sun to burn through the snow, spade and charts in hand, pesticides be damned.
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