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New journal issues are kept on display for two weeks.
As many of our journals are not indexed by online databases, we also provide
a current awareness service. The library staff identify a selection of key
articles from the recently received issues and they are listed in the fortnightly
new journals listing.
The journal collection is not available for loan.
Journals issues on display from 18.12.06
Journals issues on display from 4.12.06
Journals issues on display from 20.11.06
Journals issues on display from 6.11.06
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Journals issues on display from 17.4.06 Journals issues on display from 3.4.06
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Journals issues on display from 20.2.06
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Journals issues on display from 23.1.06
Journals issues on display from 9.1.06
Journal Display 18.12.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (6) September 15 2006
a. Ornamental grasses in masses: when one plant just isn't enough, using ornamental grasses in a grand approach or a layered approach can create a stunning, low- maintenance garden. p. 14.
b. Hard to handle: a USDA entomologist explains why exotic forest insects are difficult to manage. p. 20. c. Versatile Vitex: chaste tree is a tough, drought-tolerant shrub that performs well in a variety of soils. Several species of Vitex were put to the test at Longwood Gardens, and the results showed this genus passed with flying colors. p. 27.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (7) October 1 2006
a. Walking hard line: choosing the best materials for a hardscape project takes careful consideration. But with so many options, the possibilities are boundless. p. 16.
b. Lighting the way to better profits: bank on a better bottom line with careful attention to the business of outdoor lighting. p. 24. c. Nutrient know-how: fertilizer manufacturers churn out a variety of products in a growing and innovative market to continue meeting the needs of the green industry. p. 29.
AQIS BULLETIN 6 October/November 2006
ARBOR AGE 26 (11) November 2006
a. Pest of the months - buckthorn. p. 12.
b. Make winter "bear" -able: root health is key to a plant's survival. p. 18.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE December 06/January 07
a. A tribute to Alex Shigo: Dr Alex Shigo - 8 May 1930 - 6 October 2006. p. 2.
b. 11 Secrets of the millionaire tradesmen - Part 2. p. 10. c. Flying fox life lines. p. 16. d. Neighbourhoods: a national urban forests perspective. p. 24. e. Tree pruning: working with a trees physiology. p. 34.
f. The role of pruning in tree health care. p. 40. g. Back pain: back pain is the most common health problem for Australian workers according to the National Occupational Health and Safety Commission. p. 46. h. Arborist rope. p. 58.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 515 December 2006
a. Australian wine sector coping with drought and frost. p. 10. b. Semillon vines susceptible to heat and water stress. p. 24. c. Managing virus in New Zealand vineyards. p. 43.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (12) December 2006
a. Pest notes - not-so-merry Christmas beetles. p. 14. b. Australian plants - a welcome summer flame. p. 16. c. Good bugs rule, okay!. p. 30. d. Soil, not roots, at fault: guarding against structural damage to buildings caused by contracting soil is as simple as keeping tree roots at bay. p. 34. e. Grevillea grafting takes hold: many West Australian grevilleas struggle to adapt to life in more humid regions but grafting combats disease susceptibility and produces attractive standard plants. p. 37.
f. Out of Africa?: Denis Crawford looks at the rich history and promising future of th boab, one of northern Australia's most distinctive trees. p.38.
ECOS 133 October - November 2006
a. Naturally regrowing eucalypts is a challenge: the successful establishment of new woodland eucalypt saplings occurs infrequently and under limited circumstances. p. 33.
THE GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 131 (12) December 2006
a. Sustainable vision - the gardens at Highgrove: for more than 20 years, HRH the Prince of Wales had developed Highgrove's gardens using his ethos of sustainability. p. 808.
b. In praise of the English garden - extracts from "the English Garden". p.822. c. Underwater gardening - water plants for home: seldom regarded by gardeners, some water plants make attractive house plants when grown in glass containers indoors. p. 834. d. In conversation - Lila das Gupta and Steve Bradley: journalists with differing views regarding organic and nor-organic approaches to gardening discuss topics candidly. p. 844.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 56 December 2006 - January 2007
GARDENING AUSTRALIA January 2007
a. Talk to the trees - a tropical wonderland: Join Jerry Coleby-Williams as he explores the magical Whyanbeel Arboretum in Queensland. p. 22.
b. Growing great lillypilllies. p. 41. c. Know-how: secrets to healthy soil. p. 52.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 23 November 2006
a. Arbutus: this versatile shrub is popular in late autumn. p. 18. b. Solving a growing debate: growing media suppliers are working hard to offer viable alternatives to peat. p. 23.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 30 November 2006
a. Orchids: long lasting and exotic, this big selling plant does not deserve its 'difficult' reputation. p. 18.
b. Modern methods to manage trees: computerised management systems offer time and cost savings for local authority arborists. p. 27.
HORTSCIENCE 41 (7) December 2006
INDIGENOTES 17 (3) November 2006
IFPRA WORLD (International Federation of Parks and Recreation Administration) December 2006
a. Visiting professor assessing value of Australian turfgrass industry. p. 5.
b. How green is your roof: green roofs in Switzerland. p. 16.
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Spring 2006
IRRIGATION AUSTRALIA 21 (4) Summer 2006
LAND FOR WILDLIFE NEWS 16 (1) Nov 2006
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (7) July 2006
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (8) August 2006
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (12) December 2006
a. Prairie from ground to sky: a Chicago museum installs an award-winning green roof. p. 28.
b. From dumps to destinations: the conversion of landfills to parks has great potential for cities. p. 50. c. Landfill parks. The ultimate spectacle: what did it take to convert a decaying pile of trash into what Boston's mayor calls the harbor's newest jewel? p. 56. d. A great leap forward: New York City officials and a community activist work together - and separately - to improve a park beloved by immigrants. p. 81.
MUELLERIA 24 2006
PLANT DISEASE 90 (12) December 2006
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 21 (4) 2006
a. Special issue. Seminar proceedings: interactions between weeds and animals.
PLANTSMAN (NEW SERIES) 5 (4) December 2006
a. Helleborus bocconei and the hellebores of Italy: two new species are described following a review of Italian hellebores. p. 228. b. Micropropagation in horticulture: the background to the techniques and the ways in which it affects the plants we buy. p. 238.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 17 (9) September 2006
a. Tree/shrub insect pest management update. Part 2: New pesticides and when to use them. p. 38. b. Fertilization 101: what to use and when. p. 48.
TURF CRAFT INTERNATIONAL 111 November-December 2006
a. Nutrition and soils: monitoring the effect of effluent on turf profiles. p.31.
b. Pests, weeds and diseases: diseases - preventative or curative approach? p. 38.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 4.12.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (5) September 1 2006
a. Plant health: the ongoing fight against honey locust pod gall midge. p.8.
b. Memorial park: a Minnesota landscape company fulfills the dreams of a bank founder by transforming unused land into a community park. p. 14 c. All in the family: a plant pathologist takes us back to the classroom becaus knowing what family a particular insecticide belongs to helps growers and landscapers use each material more effectively. p. 21
d. Salinity tolerance: nonpotable water resources, like saline groundwater and treated sewage effluent, can be used on some groundcovers and herbaceous perennials when there are freshwater restrictions. p. 26.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (10) November 15 2006
a. Plant health: finding solutions to root circling. p. 8.
b. What you need to know about P. ramorum: a plant physiologist and a plant pathologist at Purdue University explain how growers can minimize or stop the spread of sudden oak death (SOD) in their nursery stock. p.20.
c. Broad-leaved evergreens. p. 28.
ARBOR AGE 26 (7) July 2006
a. Ropes: climbing and rigging. p. 32.
ARBORICULTURE & URBAN FORESTRY 32 (6) November 2006
a. An Integrated Pest Management success story: orangestriped oakworm control in Norfolk, Virginia, U.S. p. 286.
b. Street tree diversity in eastern North America and its potential for tree loss to exotic borers. p. 297. c. Effects of planting depth on landscape tree survival and girdling roof formation. p. 305.
AUSTRALASIAN PLANT CONSERVATION 15 (1) June-August 2006
a. Special theme: seed resources.
AUSTRALASIA PLANT CONSERVATION 15 (2) September-November 2006
a. Special theme: conserving symbioses.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 18 (3) November/December/January 2006/2007
a. Tasmania's first gardener: an as-yet-unpublished new paper by three academics sheds fascinating light on the French gardener Felix Lahaye who over 25 days in 1792 established a garden of European vegetables at the bottom of the world. p. 4.
b. Getting it right: the Australian War Memorial Garden. p. 8. c. Looking back at gardens: that was the year...1926. p. 12.
FIELD NAT NEWS 160 December 2006/January 2007
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 14 (6) November/December 2006
a. Education and the winds of change - are they needed?: an encouraging trend in the turf industry to strive towards gaining a better education. p. 18.
b. Soil moisture: sensors for courses. p. 33. c. TPA updates(by David Aldous, Burnley College, University of Melbourne). p. 40.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (13) November 2006
a. The soul of horticulture: the people of the industry prove horticulture is not dying. p. 20.
b. All eyes on PGRs: With increased competition, new formulations and generic products coming on the market, suppliers of plant growth regulators (PGRs) address changes and challenges in the industry. p. 34.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (12) December 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 9 November 2006
a. Landscape plant focus - Elaeagnus: fast growing with attractive foliage, the hardy Elaeagnus is a versatile option. p. 22.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 16 November 2006
a. Landscape plant focus - Boxus: box is ideal for hedging and topiary but should be used with care because it is susceptible to disease. p. 18.
THE JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY 81 (6) November 2006
a. Effects of auxims on organogenesis and somatic embryogenesis from juvenile explants of Eucalyptus erythronema, E. stricklandii, and two inter-specific hybrids. p. 1009.
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (7) July 2006
a. Irrigation and water: four keys to water-efficient irrigation. p. 34.
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 27 (5) October/November 2006
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF VICTORIA 118 (1) 31 October 2006
a. Public land use planning using bioregions and other attributes: determining the study area of the VEAC River Red Gum Forests Investigation. p. 75.
THE RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER July 2006
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 34 (3) 2006
TELOPEA (JOURNAL OF PLANT SYSTEMATICS) 11 (3) 2006
TRUST NEWS 35 (2) November 2006
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 20.11.06
ARNOLDIA 64 (4) 2006 a. Linking people with plants: a master plan for the Pine tree State Arboretum. p. 10.
b. The pilgrimage of the groves: reconstructing the meaning of a sixteenth-century Hindu landscape.p39.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 514 November 2006
a. Hormones have crucial roles in berry development and may be keys to successfully altering ripening. p. 29.
b. Grapevine nutrition - making the right decisions. p. 32.
c. The influence of adjacent vegetation on the abundance and distribution of natural enemies in a vineyard. p.36.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (11) November 2006 a. IPM gains preference: concern for not only the environment at large but themselves and their staff is leading horticulturists to choose IPM over pesticides. p. 27.
b. Soil food web boosts plant production: achieving and maintaining the right balance of micro-organisms is crucial to producing healthy plants. p.31.
c. An invisible killer: excessive concentrations of zinc is an increasingly common problem in Australian soils, according to Simon Leake, whose Sydney-based laboratory tests manures, potting media, artificial soils and composts to Asutralian Standards. p. 36.
d. Graft without corruption: Allen Gilbert concludes his report on modern drafting techniques with a look at some of the most effective methods used today. p. 40.
e. Sweet smell of success - roses. p. 45.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 53 September 2006 a. Do garden designers know enough about using plants?: how much do garden designers need to know about plants to put together a scuccessful planting scheme for a project? A garden designer, gardener and nurseryman discuss the topic. p. 14.
b. Playing the garden: the International Garden Festival at Chaumont-sur-Loire is famous for testing the boundaries of garden design and this year is no exception. p. 16.
c. Designer profile: Arabella Lennox-Boyd. Landscape architect and garden designer has a striking eye for detail and structure in her gardens. p.23.
d. Rain drain: permeable paving and sustainable drainage systems offer a big step forward in reducing flood risk in heavily paved urban areas. p.29.
e. Better by design: therapeutic gardens need to be practical, stimulate the senses and offer a sense of escape if they are to be successful. Rowland Byass discusses the main points to bear in mind when designing such a space. p. 34.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 55 November 2006 a. Designer profile: Rita von Schoenaich. Anne Hardy visits the German-born landscape designer and discovers an innovator working to improve the experience of public space. p. 23. b. Clear perspectives: glass and Perspex have come to symbolise all that is new in garden design. Andrew Wilson and Mark Gregory look at how these materials can be used to good effect. p. 29.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA December 2006 a. Artful abutilons: grow your own gorgeous Chinese Lanterns. p. 29. b. Special feature. Surviving summer: beating the dorought. p. 35. c. In love with trees: flowering trees. p. 53.
GENUS 18 (4) November 2006
GREEN PLACES 30 November 2006
a. Special edition - public space accessibility.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 70 (7) November 2006 a. Generation why: an insightful look at an up-and-coming demographic and how our industry can cater to them. p. 50.
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (8) August 2006
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (11) November 2006
a. Raising the bar on green roof design: how does ASLA's unconventional green roof design perform? p.22.
b. Cultural landscapes. Cementing the viewshed: the struggle to restore the Picturesque landscape of painter Frederic Church continues. p. 48. c. Education. The 0.1 percent dilemma: how can academics grow the profession when 99.9 per cent of high school students don't apply to landscape architecture programs p. 88.
d. Pre emptive park: can a park jump-start an "instant neighborhood" in Chicago's downtown Loop? p.94.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE AUSTRALIA 112 November 2006 a. Exercising restraint: the past, present and future of the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. p. 29.
b. Defence strategy: the many challenges facing the custodians of the ANZAC battlefields and cemetries at Gallipoli. p. 32. c. Child's play: a review of the Ian Potter Foundation Children's Garden at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne. p. 49.
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 46 October 2006 a. Of cannas and bananas: the origins of the subtropical garden. p. 21.
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL 21 (4) November 2006 a. The history of herbicides for New Zealand bowling: green management - a time line. p. 13.
b. The complete idiots guide to..."ground keeping". p. 21. c. The A-Z fertilisers in turf: facts, formulations and fundamentals. p. 32.
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (8) August 2006
a. Tips and training for managers. Playbook: the art of presenting. Giving a presentation doesn't have to be hard - follow these steps to success. p. 18. b. Playground design is becoming more targeted to appeal to specific age groups. p. 53.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (11) November 2006
YOUR GARDEN Summer 2006 a. Pool panache: turn your pool into a design feature of your landscape. p. 20. b. Welcome...Mediterranean style: a relaxed approach to summer garden-making that borrow European style for a bush setting. p. 30. c. Living without lawns: attractive alternatives for carpeting your ground. p. 46. d. Bali in the bush: a subtropical garden that relies on rainfall and its owners' devotion. p. 52. e. Flowering plants that beat the heat of summer. p. 70.
f. In search of the good life: integrating people, pets and plants...perfectly. p. 96. g. Warriors in silk: hunting spiders and orb weavers: natures own pest controllers. p. 136.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 6.11.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (4) August 15, 2006
a. Plant health - managing botrysis blight on Hosta. p. 8.
b. And the winner is....:a well known perennial expert details some of the most popular new selections that hit the market in 2006. p. 14.
c. Summer hazard: protect your employees from summer heat and pest dangers with these pointers from a horticultural insurance professionals. p. 30.
d. Xeric for mesic: mesic plants need supplemental irrigation to survive in arid landscapes. These xerics can replace mesics in dry climes - without sacrificing appearance. p. 36.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (6) October 15, 2006
a. Plant health - southern blight: deadly curse for peonies. p. 8.
b. Tackling a thorny issue: researchers at the University of Connecticut analyze the reproductive potential of Japanese barberry cultivars. p. 30.
ARBORIST NEWS 15 (5) October 2006
a. Basic tree risk assessment. p. 12.
b. Climbers' corner - speedline variations: a photo essay, part 2. p. 40.
c. It's not easy being green...but it's worth it! : trees provide a wide variety of social communal, environmental, and economic benefits. p. 70.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS MANAGEMENT 8 (5) October-November 2006
a. Nitrogen fertiliser management and its influence on turfgrass water use. p. 36.
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. NEWSLETTER 447 November 2006
FLORA CULTURE INTERNATIONAL 16 (7) November/December 2006
FLOREO (Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne Australia) 14 Spring 2006
a. Art and artists in the gardens. p. 8.
ECOS 132 August-September 2006
a. CSIRO 80 years of impact. p. 16.
b. Greening the planet, one backyard at a time: urban backyard gardens are becoming an increasingly popular part of living sustainably. p. 30.
c. Research: Vegetation carbon stock has doubled since 1788. p. 34.
GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131(11) November 2006
a. Bring in the new: Townsend Place, Kirkcaldy. An old garden in Scottish coastal town has been given a new lease of life. p. 738.
b. Islands of diversity: landscapes and plants of New Zealand. p. 750.
c. Plants with personality: New Zealand plant hunters. p. 758.
d. With zeal and enthusiasm: Ayrlies, one of New Zealand's best. Developed over the past 40 years, Ayrlies has astonished and inspired gardeners with its diversity and
beauty. p. 760.
e. North America in Norfolk: Adrian's Wood at Foggy Bottom. This new garden at Bressingham is filled with plants of North American origin, which are an abiding passion of
its maker. p. 776.
f. Say goodbye to the urban garden?: In advance of this month's RHS Forum, 'What future for urban gardens: Eden or extinction?', Ian Hodgson outlines the increasing challenges
facing urban gardens. From planning policy to parking spaces, garden space is under pressure like never before. p. 780.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 119 November 2006
a. Maori magic: outstanding New Zealand plants suitable for the UK. p. 32.
b. RHS Wisley - Piet Oudolf borders: an in-depth look at the designer's plant choice. p.
c. Iconic gardens. Stream of consciousness: the elegant water gardens by Jellicoe at Shute House in Dorset. p. 58.
d. High-altitude garden: a wild-life friendly garden in New Mexico. p. 64.
e. Experimental garden: the owners of Veddw House invite criticism as a way of progress. p. 74.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 54 October 2006
a. Pocket perfection: Jennifer Hirsch visits two courtyard gardens in London that solve the challenge of limited space with panache. p. 18.
b. Bright future: new products and advancements in lighting technology present an ever-wider choice to garden designers. p. 23.
GREEN PLACES 29 October 2006
a. Towards a wetter future: throughout history Britain's wetlands have been systematically drained and modified. Carrie Howard explains how a new partnership vision of the future could reverse their decline. p. 16.
b. The public art of planting: Graeme Moore looks at the work of artists who use innovative planting to develop public art installations. p. 29.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (10) October 2006
a. Lessons in landscaping: common mistakes that can defeat your design. p. 17.
b. Pushing the envelope: this Missouri sports turf manager learns how to grow bermudagrass outside its comfort zone. p. C1.
c. On the edge: separate, contain and maintain design with landscape edging. p. C12.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (11) November 2006
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 70 (6) October 2006
a. Control bulb height using topflor on tulips, hyacinths and narcissus. p. 32.
b. Greenhouse energy conservation: case studies show room for improvement. p. 42.
c. Water sanitation: mitigating the risks of contaminated water. p. 64.
d. Taking responsibility: eco-labels - programs that define and certify environmentally and socially responsible production and business guidelines for floriculture - are gaining
in popularity with growers around the globe. p. 74.
SUPPLEMENT TO GROWER TALKS.
2007 Grower Talks/North Carolina State University plant growth regulator guide
HORTICULTURE WEEK 12 October 2006
a. Pyracantha: this evergreen shrub with attractive berries deserves to cast off its reputation as a security hedge. p. 24.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 19 October 2006
a. Bellis: this hardy genus is ideal for adding colour to both spring and autumn bedding sales. p. 18.
b. Special liftout. Landscape review: trees in the urban landscape.
c. Weed out the problem: chemical use, waste disposal and water supply are big issues in weed
control. p. 31.
d. Rethinking street trees: the Trees in Towns II survey will recommend root and branch reforms in local authority approaches to arboriculture. p. 37.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 26 October 2006
a. Betula: with its range of colours and characteristics, this genus is able to complement most designs. p. 20.
b. Natural revelations: a UK company claims to have designed a glasshouse that offers growers the best of both weather worlds, inside and out. P. 23.
c. Papaver nudicaule: continuing series on RHS plant trials, Graham Clarke reviews the most recent trial of Iceland poppies. p. 39.
INDIGENOTES 17 (2) September 2006
a. The beautiful country: extracts from 'Remarks on the Voyage to Western Port' by William Hovell. p. 4.
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (10) October 2006
STUDIES IN THE HISTORY OF GARDENS & DESIGNED LANDSCAPES 26 (4) October-December 2006
a. The transformation of the concept of the old English garden and interpretations of garden history during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. p. 267.
b. Chinese gardens. Think globally, build locally: syncretism and symbolism in the Garden of Sitting in Reclusion. p. 295.
c. Stourhead revisited & the pursuit of meaning
in gardens. p. 328.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 17 (8) August 2006
a. Tree & shrub insect pest management update. Part 1: PHC vs. IPM, and providing sustainable environments. p. 8.
b.The growing business of tree and plant appraisal. p. 50.
VITIS (JOURNAL OF GRAPEVINE RESEARCH) 45 (4) 2006
a. Pruning effects on Pinot Noir vines in southern Tasmania (Australia). p. 165.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 23.10.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (3) August 1 2006
a. Garden design and maintenance business 102: a garden design and maintenance veteran provides tips on how to get the most out of each day, regardless of the season. p. 28.
b. The forgotten feature: often overlooked, hardscape plays an important role in the design of a residential landscape. p. 33.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 58 September/October 2006
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 9 (3) Spring 2006
a. Project management: tools for delivery. p. 40.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 513 October 2006
a. Beneficial insects in vineyards: parasitoids of LBAM and grapevine moth in south- east Australia. p.21.
b. Fungi associated with grapevine decline in the Hunter Valley and Mudgee. p. 30.
c. Tritrophic interactions between grapevines, phylloxera and pathogenic fungi - establishing the root cause of grapevine decline. p. 33.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 11 (3) October/November 2006
a. Urban trees and the global greenhouse (by G.M. Moore, Head of the School of Resource Management and Burnley Campus, University of Melbourne). p. 14.
b. Lightning damage in trees: the spark of death. p. 22.
c. Semi-permanent knots. p. 32.
d. Aerial rescue avoidance concepts. p. 42.
e. Which is the best mulch?: further evidence that chunky mulches are best. p. 50.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (1) October 2006
a. Pet notes - Cut down cutworms. p. 16.
b. Australian plants - Pomaderris: drought-resistant groundcover in showy display. p. 20.
c. Common chemicals can cause chaos. p. 24.
d. Budding talent: the budding and grafting of plant material has been practised for at least 8000 years but new methods continue to emerge. p. 32.
e. Water once a month with wonder gel: Rosalea Ryan gets the lowdown on a product that promises to do away with watering for up to for weeks at a time. p. 56.
FIELD NATS NEWS 159 November 2006
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 16 (6) September/October 2006
a. Taking responsibility: eco-labels - programs that define and certify environmentally and socially responsible production and business guidelines - are gaining in popularity with growers. p. 32.
GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131 (10) October 2006
a. End-of-season attractions: a celebration of late-summer borders. p. 676.
b. Mizmazing: Mount Ephraim garden 'maze', Kent. A spectacular experiment that successfully pushes the boundaries of the traditional maze by using a mixture of perennials and grasses to give year-round interest. p. 686.
c. Islamic oasis - Al-Azhar Park, Cairo: a beautiful regeneration project hat has provided a welcome green retreat within the urban jungle of Africa's largest city. p. 690.
d. Viewpoint - age before beauty?: the much-vaunted quality of age is seen as highly desirable in most gardens, but does our romantic view of the past mean many modern gardens of worth are unfairly disregarded? James Alexander Sinclair asks if age is, frankly, overrated. p. 708.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA November 2006
a. Garden paradise: perched between the city and the sea is the spectacular garden at historic Bronte House in Sydney. p. 30.
b. Wild about natives: Cheryl Southall's native garden - gardening tips for growing native plants. p. 56.
c. Larger than life: Gymea lily - growing tips. p. 61.
d. Heavenly herbs: make the most of a small space by growing herbs to enjoy in the garden and cook with. p. 82.
e. Growing grapevines: how to grow, harvest and cook vine leaves. p. 96.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 14 (5) September/October 2006
a. Stadia v suburbia: Trevor Siviour from Turspec compares management approaches in stadiums with that at the municipal level, particularly with regard to soil compaction and stability. p. 18.
b. Soil surfactants: soil surfactants are used in all forms of horticulture to overcome the problem of soil water repellency - but what does this mean and should you be using them? p. 28.
c. Much ado about Haydu. p. 41.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (9) October 2006
a. Dahlia: a specialty cut flower. p. 42.
b. The green menace: several organizations are working to combat invasive species that disrupt native ecosystems. p. 58.
c. What is that?: insect and disease diagnosis for floriculture crops (special liftout, custom published by Greenhouse Grower and Cornell University)
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 34 (4) October 2006
a. How to grow your own kitchen garden. p. 31.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 28 September 2006
a. Phormium: low-maintenance New Zealand flax is an eye-catching addition to any planting scheme.p16.
b. RHS plant trials: hamamelis (witch hazels). p. 32.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 5 October 2006
a. New-plant honour goes to Wollemi pine. p. 7.
HORTSCIENCE 41 (6) October 2006
a. Impact of drought and temperature on growth and leaf gas exchange of six bedding plant species under greenhouse conditions. p. 1409.
INTERNATIONAL PLANT PROPAGATORS' SOCIETY (COMBINED PROCEEDINGS) 55 2005
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Spring 2006
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 131 (4) July 2006
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (9) September 2006
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (10) October 2006
a. Old school, new space: Wellesley College and Van Valkenburgh Associates turn a parking lot into an ecological showplace. p. 42.
b. Working in Shanghai: risks and opportunities abound in China's southern megalopolis. p. 54.
c. Born again in Seattle: a neighborhood hangout for drug users has been converted into a well-loved park. p. 68.
d. Art meets nature at Peirce's Woods: a landscape architect creates an idealized forest and refines his design over the long term. p. 90.
e. Research design connections: studies show the benefits of green roofs and solitary trees and examine what makes playgrounds usable and safe. p. 102.
f. Shades of green: green roof or rooftop garden, this landscape brings a high- mountain meadow to downtown Salt Lake City. p. 168.
THE RHODODENDRON 46 2006
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 17 (7) July 2006
a. Biology and management of eastern tent caterpillar. p. 26.
b. Choosing the right avenue tree. p. 57.
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Journal Display 9.10.06
ARBOR AGE 26 (8) August 2006
ARBOR AGE 26 (9) September 2006
a. Dutch elm disease. p. 12.
b. Chemical delivery methods: what do we apply to trees and why do we do it? p. 22.
ARBORICULTURE & URBAN FORESTRY 32 (5) September 2006
a. Growth and water use characteristics of six eastern North American oak (Quercus) species and the implications for urban forestry. p. 202
b. Evaluation of the fate of ice storm-damaged urban maple (Acer) trees. p. 214.
c. Residents attitudes toward street trees in the UK and U.S. communities. p. 236.
ARBORICULTURAL JOURNAL 29 (3) August 2006
a. Establishing a relationship between soil aeration and fine root development of seven tree species using the steel rod technique. p. 161.
b. Developing a sustainable community strategy for street trees II. Research for strategic development. p.185.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 11 (1) June/July 2006
a. Whole of life tree management: this article summarises the critical stages of tree management from planning to removal and replacement. It also includes a bibliography that may be a useful resource. p. 6.
b. SRIV - Sustainable Retention Index Value: a visual method of rating the viability of urban trees for development sites and management, based on general tree and landscape assessment criteria. p. 14.
c. OH&S and the tree industry. p. 28.
d. Pre-climbing tree assessment. p. 44.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 18 (2) September-October 2006
a. Weeds versus history: what happens when a plant deemed to be historically significant is also branded a weed? It's a dilemma that faces gardener, historian and weed-fighter alike? p. 4.
b. The Baron's sad last years. p. 10.
c. Reading more into cemeteries: they might mark the final resting place of the departed but cemeteries have much more to tell us, from the way our ancestors lived to even the way they gardened and the plants they liked to grow. p. 12.
DISCOVERING STONE (All you need to know about stone) 5 (1) September 2006
FIELD NATS NEWS 158 October 2006
GARDEN HISTORY (Journal of the Garden History Society) 34 (1) Summer 2006
a. "Striped plants": the first collection of variegated plants in late seventeenth- century gardens. p. 64.
b. Prince Frederick and liberty: the gardens of Hartwell House, Buckinghamshire, in the mid-eighteenth century. p. 80.
c. Hartwell House: the late sixteenth - and early seventeenth-century garden and parterres of the Lee family. p. 92.
d. Bodysgallen: a renaissance garden survival. p. 132.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (10) September 2006
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (11) Mid-September 2006
a. Young plant issue.
GREEN PLACES 28 September 2006
a. Special edition - urban parks: integrating city and public realm.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (9) September 2006
GROUNDSWELL 17 (10) October 2006
a. Retail news - dealing with difficult and upset customers. p. 13.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 70 (5) September 2006
a. Supplement to Grower Talks Magazine - Grower Talks/North Carolina State University insecticide and fungicide guide.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 14 September 2006
a. Thuja: with its wide variety of forms and colours, this genus is leading the conifer renaissance. p. 22.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 21 September 2006
a. Gaura: attractive, tough, long-flowering and problem-free, Gaura has real customer appeal. p. 16.
b. Training production personnel: managerial skills, health and safety and green issues are all part of the production horticulture skillset today. p.27.
IFPRA WORLD September 2006
THE JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY 81 (5) September 2006
a. Anatomical response of olive (Olea europaea L.) to freezing temperatures. p. 783.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 131 (3) May 2006
JOURNAL OF THERAPEUTIC HORTICULTURE 15 2005
a. An exploration of the meaning and effects of horticultural therapy on human health and well-being. p.6.
b. The potential on the doorstep: the importance of gardens in the psychological well- being of older people. p. 28.
c. A horticultural therapy probation program: community supervised offenders . p. 38.
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE 67 (3) July/August/September 2006
a. Plants are in control. p. 14.
b. The white garden. p. 27.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (10) October 2006
a. Rates of epiphytic growth of Erwinia amylovora on flowers common in the landscape. p. 1331.
PUBLIC GARDEN 21 (2) 2006
a. Special edition - the changing visitor experience.
THE RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER September 2006
TURF CRAFT INTERNATIONAL 110 September-October 2006
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Journal Display 25.9.06
AQIS BULLETIN 5 July/August 2006
ARBOR AGE 26 (6) June 2006
a. Understanding soil pH: why it is important, and how to maintain optimum levels. p. 12.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 512 September 2006
a. Investigating a soil management option to overcome salinity problems through whole of block experimentation. p. 19.
b. Pest and disease management. Beneficial insects and spiders in vineyards: predators in south-east Australia. The first study of generalist insect predators and their seasonal changes in Australian vineyards.p.37.
c. The Botryosphaeria conundrum - a New Zealand perspective. p. 49.
d. Grapevine leafroll-associated virus 3: an emphasis on the test results of Western Australian samples. p.54.
e. Phomopsis alert in the Limestone Coast region of South Australia. p.60. f. Improving management of grapevine powdery mildew. p. 62.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (9) September 2006
a. Pest notes: persimilis - a mighty mite. p. 18.
b. Media fungi not threat to plants. p. 26.
c. Plant releases - 12 bright sparks: rounding out this year' crop of plant releases are a dozen selection to brighten the home and patio with a splash of colour or spill luxuriantly through garden beds. p. 43.
d. Education. Want 230% more from your staff?: there's a wealth of information out there for employers and employees interested in formal training in horticulture. Knowing where to start looking makes the process easy. p. 49.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA October 2006
a. Irresistible iris: Peter Cundall shares his expert advice on tall bearded iris. p. 20.
b. Delightful dahlias: fall in love with these beauties. p. 46.
c. Organic gardening. Going green: 10 practical tips extracted from Josh Byrne's new book "Green gardener" on making your garden several shades greener. p. 52.
d. Design for life: how to choose a landscape design professional. p. 57.
e. Stepping out: how a boring garden became a fab entertaining area. p.63.
f. Beautiful boronias: stars of spring for beginner and advanced gardeners. p. 68.
g. Organic gardening: plant companions. p. 73.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 118 October 2006
a. French connection - Normandy garden: Cleve West juxtaposes naturalistic planting with bold modern sculpture. p. 24.
b. Seed-uction: Noel Kingsbury discusses using seedheads for autumn and winter interest. p. 36.
c. Designer garden: James Alexander-Sinclair's charming design for an Exmoor garden. p. 50.
d. Supporting role: Noel Kingsbury travels to Zurich to visit a public park, where colourful climbers entwine with a huge steel frame to create environmental harmony in an urban landscape. p. 58.
e. Iconic gardens. A modern ideal: a rare example of a modernist garden at St Ann's Court in Surrey. p.74.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 31 August 2006
a. Ampelopsis: with their decorative foliage and beautiful berries, pepper vines deserve wider recognition. p. 20.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 7 September 2006
a. Anthurium: a popular houseplant, Anthurium makes a striking late summer garden centre display. p.16.
b. Using horticulture to change lives: Oldham's social inclusion project provides parks and social service departments with a win-win situation. p. 18.
HORTTECHNOLOGY 16 (3) July-September 2006
a. Development of organic and sustainable agricultural education at the University of California, Davis: a closer look at practice and theory. p.426.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 24 (3) September 2006
a. Influence of biostimulants and water-retaining polymer root dips on survival and growth of newly transplanted bare-rooted silver birch and rowan. p. 173.
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (6) June 2006
a. Off the beaten path: parks with accessible trails lead users to new ways of discovering the natural setting. p. 42.
b. Defining a community: a town finds its identity through teen input. p.55.
PARK WATCH 226 September 2006
a. Climate change and biodiversity. p. 8.
THE PLANTSMAN NEW SERIES 5 (3) September 2006
a. Hydrangea serrata- the mountain hydrangea: despite a long cultural history in Japan, many of the cultivars are not well known in the Western gardens. p. 158.
THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST 123 (4) August 2006
a. Special edition - bryophytes.
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Journal Display 11.9.06
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 57 July/August 2006
AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 23 (185) December 2005
a. An Adelaide perspective: with particular emphasis on its street trees. p. 150 b. Southport Lagoon Conservation area: a very special place - future uncertain. p. 159.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS MANAGEMENT 8 (4) August-September 2006
a. Assessing the conservation value of Australian golf courses. p. 36.
b. C3 vs C4 turfgrasses: comparison of water usage during summer. p.42.
BOTANIC NEWS (Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne Inc.) Spring 2006
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. 445 September 2006
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 131 (9) September 2006
a. The perennial quest: how must-have plants have changed. p. 613.
b. Delicate looks, tough at the roots: hardy fuchsias and their cultivars. p. 616.
c. Sedums that tell a tall story: a look at larger sedum for the garden. p.632.
d. Tours de force: RHS recommended gardens in France. p. 636.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 53 September 2006
a. Designer profile: Arabella Lennox-Boyd. p. 23 b. Rain drain: permeable paving and sustainable drainage systems offer a big step in reducing flood risk in heavily paved areas. p. 29.
c. Better by design: therapeutic gardens. p.34.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (8) August 2006
a. Predicting turf performance: you don't need a crystal ball to tell your turf's future. A thermometer will work just fine. p. 13.
b. Chemical update: non-selective chemicals. p. 19. c. Fall into color: achieve striking autumn landscapes with research and planning. p. 20.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (9) September 2006
GROWING AUSTRALIAN 50.2 (197) September 2006
a. Mycorrhizas: there are several forms of mycorrhizas, with different forms of microscopic structures. p.38.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 17 August 2006
a. Brachyglottis: silver and gold, Brachyglottis looks after itself and is prized for both its foliage and flowers. p.18.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 24 August 2006
a. Antirrhinum: snapdragon is ready for a consumer revival. p. 18. b. Artificial turf. Real v fake: the debate resumes. p. 23.
HORTSCIENCE (American Society for Horticultural Science) 41 (5) August 2006
a. Bagged soil tested as an alternative for growing bedding plants in the landscape. p. 1272. b. The role of extensive green roofs in sustainable development. p. 1276. c. A new approach to fire blight control: mycorrhiza. p. 1309.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (9) September 2006
a. Art for rain's sake: designers make rainwater a central part of two projects. p. 24.
b. Bioretention - parting the waters: two award winning stormwater systems in one watershed - one is embraced by its neighbors, the other despised. Why the discrepancy? p. 34.
c. High-impact foliage: hardy herbaceous perennials with bold foliage add drama and texture to the garden. p.78. d. Update: post-Katrina recovery of public gardens in New Orleans. p. 90. e. A new heart: reviving its Heart leads to a cure for Hermann Park, Houston's ailing greenspace. p. 108. f. Moving beyond Mies: can a landscape redesign that invokes the spirit of Alfred Caldwell improve a modern masterpiece? p. 124
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL 20 (2) May 2005
PLANT DISEASE 90 (9) September 2006
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Journal Display 28.8.06
ARBORIST NEWS 15 (4) August 2006
a. Tree inventories, Part 2: Strategic decisions. p. 12.
b. Is there a role for trees in crime preventions? p. 26.
c. Unraveling the myth, mystery, and methodology behind landscape casualty claims. p. 29.
d. Climbers' corner. Speedline variations: a photo essay, Part 1. p. 40.
e. Student corner. Connecting with college students. p. 51.
ARNOLDIA (The Magazine of the Arnold Arboretum) 64 (2-3) 2006
a. Special issue. From temple to terrace: the remarkable journey of the oldest bonsai in America - the Larz Anderson bonsai collection.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 31 (4) June 2006
a. Buffering of native forest edge microclimate by adjoining tree plantations. p. 478.
b. Testing alternative models for the conservation of koalas in fragmented rural-urban landscapes.p.529.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 31 (5) August 2006
a. Interactive influences of fire intensity and vertical distribution of seed banks on post-fire recolonization of a tall-tussock grassland in Argentina. p. 608.
b. Effects of fire on the structure and composition of open eucalypt forest. p. 638.
c. Application and evaluation of classification trees for screening unwanted plants. p. 647.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 511 August 2006
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (8) August 2006
a. Pest notes. Break the snail trail. p. 12.
b. IPM - where are we at? p. 46.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 10 (5) February/March 2006
a. Managing and assessing ageing urban trees, Part 2. (By Martin Norris, PHD student at the University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus), p. 8.
b. Industry input: are local councils effectively enacting tree preservation orders or simply revenue raising? p. 16.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 11 (2) August/September 2006
a. Visual tree assessment & CODIT in action. p. 6.
b. Lowering devices: an introduction. p. 18.
c. Urban trees sustainable cities?: trees and development. p. 42.
d. Climbing & rigging. Crossing the line. p. 52.
FIELD NATS NEWS 157
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 16 (5) July/August 2006
THE GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131 (8) August 2006
a. A meeting of continental drifts: swaths of American -style prairie planting fill the borders of this German park. p. 540.
b. Late-season colour and banquets for butterflies: buddleja davidii and its cultivars. p. 552
c. Daisy diversity: choosing the best Asteraceae. p. 562.
d. Gone but not forgotten: plantspeople who risked life and limb. p. 568.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 48 March 2006
a. Analysis: What can second-career garden designers bring to the profession. p. 14.
b. Lady in the landscape: Stephen Anderton and Anne Wareham discuss the design strengths and pitfalls of Lady Farm, near Bristol. p. 22.
c. Movers and shapers: some of man's earliest interactions with his surroundings involved shaping the land. Today, landforms are gaining in popularity as designers appreciate the interest and atmosphere they can bring to a project. p. 34.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA September 2006
a. Easy orchids: expert guide to exotic and native orchids. p. 27.
b. The new lavender: spring-flowering lavenders revealed. p. 40.
c. All about hakea: an unsung hero among native plants. p. 56.f
d. Crazy for clivias: shade loving and desirable in your garden. p. 60.
e. Fertiliser facts: all about fertilisers with a trouble-shooting guide. p. 68.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 117 September 2006
a. Raising the standard: highlighting the best bearded iris. p. 36.
b. People: who's who - the founder and editor of Hortus, David Wheeler. p. 46.
c. Time stands still: Dan Hinkley, the renowned American plant hunter's private garden. p. 48.
d. Reclamation yards - New York community gardens: greening the city streets. p. 76.
e. Iconic gardens - the National Trust's first garden, Hidcote Manor: an arts & crafts masterpiece. p. 80
GENUS 18 (3) August 2006
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (9) August 2006
a. Pest management. Q-biotype: what does it mean? p. 66.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 70 (4) August 2006
a. Penstemon: advice on getting this perennial started. p. 32.
b. Water: pro-active solutions. p. 76.
c. Pest management: perennial disappointment? p. 86.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 3 August 2006
a. Ribes: the brief but eye-catching flowering period of Ribes livens up schemes when all else is dormant. p. 20.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 10 August 2006
a. Interview: Diarmuid Gavin, garden designer and TV presenter. p. 15.
b. Trillium: the shade-loving wood lily has prominent flowers and is great for woodland gardens. p. 18.
c. Landscape review. Taking play seriously: Modern play-area design is about access for all and creating stimulating spaces. p. 25.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE AUSTRALIA 110 May 2006
a. Comment: George Seddon. On one of landscape architecture's elders and his new book. p. 29.
b. Kyneton kaleidoscope: a country garden by Sinatra Murphy Landscape architects. p. 32.
c. Sites of significance: forty sites on the AILA's list of benchmark achievements. p. 48.
d. It isn't easy to be green: Japanese initiatives to green the urban environment. p. 72.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE AUSTRALIA 111 August 2006
a. A new formalism: review of the Australian Garden at Victoria's Royal Botanic Gardens, Cranbourne. p.38.
b. Even the best laid plans....:report on the problems facing the benchmark Oregon Garden. p. 46.
c. Trial mix: governments collaborate on a network of recreational trails across New South Wales. p. 62.
d. Lest we forget: a nationwide program to honour Australian servicemen and women. p. 67.
e. Soil searching: a Japanese park provides a spiritual as well as physical journey. p. 70.
LANDSCAPES VICTORIA 2 April 2006
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL 21 (3) August 2006
a. Nematodes. p. 7.
b. Knowledgeable management is the key to reducing nitrogen leaching. p. 22.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (8) August 2006
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 21 (3) 2006
a. Special edition: national asparagus weeds management workshop proceedings. Part 2.
PUBLIC GARDEN 20 (1) 2005
a. Special issue - garden stewardship: past, present, and future.
PUBLIC GARDEN 20 (4) 2005
a. Special issue - water management.
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 34 (2) 2006
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (8) August 2005
a. A climbing lesson learned: how to avoid a potentially serious incident. p. 9.
b. A B C D E: The business of educating commercial arborists. p. 24.
c. A lesson in proper shrub pruning. p. 35.
d. Ornamental vines (climbers) in landscape. p. 41.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (9) September 2005
a. Sharpen your plant health care diagnostic skills. p. 8.
b. Foliage for fall colors in a landscape. p. 32.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (10) October 2005
a. Urban forestry: windshield survey reliability. p. 24.
b. Differentiate or die: 7 non-negotiables of contracting. p. 30.
c. Update on insect pests and Integrated Pest Management. p. 44.
d. Give trees mitigation, or give trees death. p. 56.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (11) November 2005
a. An excellent preservation of an Oregon white oak. p. 12.
b. Hazard tree: when to say goodbye to a giant. p. 32.
c. How to prepare your business for a disaster - and why you must! p. 44.
d. Managing water: reduced stress means optimal growth. p. 64.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (12) December 2005
a. Sudden oak death continues to threaten California's coastal oaks: concerns growing it may spread to the East through nursery stock. p. 8.
b. Abiotic tree problems: management & strategies. p. 38.
c. Tree climbing can be for sport and profit. p. 42.
d. To license (arborists) or not to license? - that is the question, and there are a lot of conflicting answers. p. 50.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY 7 (6) June 2006
a. The fundamentals & fine points of footlocking. p. 8.
b. Pruning lilac for flowers & shape. p. 44.
YOUR GARDEN Spring 2006
a. Spring gardens: Australia and beyond. p. 26.
b. Spring flowers. p. 79.
c. Forgotten flowers: eight amazing plants that fell from grace are set for revival. p. 90.
d. Small space success: vegetables to grow in tight spots. p. 100.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 14.8.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (2) July 15 2006
a. Beyond acer palmatum: discover the many Japanese species of maple that can be used for Acer palmatum in the landscape. p. 14
b. Hot houses: the market for greenhouses with retractable roofs is booming. The reason: these structures enable nurseries to grow hardier plants faster. p. 29.
c. Garden design and maintenance business 101: whether you're just starting a new garden design and maintenance business, or adding this service for an additional revenue stream, here are some helpful pointers to avoid common pitfalls. p. 35.
ARBORICULTURE & URBAN FORESTRY 32 (4) July 2006
a. Silver Birch (Betula pendula) pollen and human health: problems for an exotic tree in New Zealand. p.133.
b. An analysis of the street tree population of Greater Melbourne at the beginning of the 21st century (by Stephen Frank, Glen Waters, Russell Beer and Peter May). p. 155. c. Comparison of structural and noncompacted soils for trees surrounded by pavement. p. 164.
d. Urban trees and traffic safety: considering U.S. roadside policy and crash data. p. 170.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 56 May/June 2006
a. Enlivening the Red Heart: Philip Drake explains how to extend the visitor experience beyond the core attraction. p. 58.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 510 July 2006
a. GWRDC trial to up stakes on native grass research. p. 19.
b. Researchers and growers employ environmental caretaking initiatives. p. 25. c. Companion crops. p. 30. d. Frost protection: fighting winter's ice.
AQIS BULLETIN 4/2006 June 2006
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. 444 August 2006
ECOS 131 June-July 2006
a. Solar cities generating new approach: the National Solar Cities program is set to trial the wide-scale deployment of solar technology. p. 12.
FIELD NAT NEWS 156 August 2006
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 48 March 2006
a. CAD: a flexible friend. P. 29.
b. Movers and shapers: sculpting the land. p. 34.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 14 (4) July/August 2006
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (8) July 2006
a. Bioadditives incorporated: media mixes that include beneficial organisms and biofungicides prior to purchase can lighten the load for growers. p. 34.
b. These are not your mother's perennials: new perennials offer superior genetics to keep up with increased consumer demand. p. 42. c. Herbaceous perennials use PGRs, too: as more growers take on perennials, there more of a call for perennial PGR power. p. 52. d. Integrated plant health management: using pesticides effectively. p. 68. e. The effect of planting date: University researchers study what effect planting date has on sunflower performance. p. 128. f. Q-Biotype update: greenhouse growers may be the first line of defense against the spread of this pest. p. 138.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (7) July 2006
a. R/ for turf - diagnosing your site: knowing when to renovate or re-establish. p. 15.
b. Chemical update - adjuvants/wetting agents. p. 22. c. Making amends: here's what to consider when choosing an amendment to perfect soil. p. 35.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (8) August 2006
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 70 (3) July 2006
a. Is gardening dead? Part 3. p. 44.
b. Industry stats. Unsettled times: which way is up? p. 92.
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 34 (3) July 2006
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY SPECIAL IHC 2006 ISSUE
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY 81 (4) July 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK PLANT SUPPLIERS GUIDE 2007
HORTICULTURE WEEK 13 July 2006
a. Nepeta: drought tolerance and attractive flowers all summer make catmint a consumer favourite. p.18.
b. How things will heat up: as parks managers prepare to debate how climate change will affect their work, Gavin McEwan rounds up the latest thinking on 10 key questions. p. 21.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 20 July 2006
a. The joy of Jasmine. p. 22.
b. Hothouse of development: at what point does extra light no longer increase plant mass? The latest kit from Holland can tell you this and much, much more. p. 24. c. Make your mark on the landscape: landscape design is crucial to our changing cities and open space, but what skills are employers looking for from new entrants? p. 27.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 27 July 2006
a. Erigeron: this sturdy easy-to-grow plant with attractive, daisy-like flowers deserves bigger sales. p.18. b. RHS plant trials - sweet peas: Graham Clarke reviews the most recent trial of sweet peas. p. 22.
HORTSCIENCE 41 (4) July 2006
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Winter 2006
a. Determing pace of sugar movement in plants. p. 14.
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (4) April 2006
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (5) May 2006
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (8) August 2006
a. A question of mitigation: landscape architects are increasingly involved in constructing wetlands to replace those wiped out by development. Is it an even trade? p. 24.
b. Icons revisited. Dump + Art = Park: in 1991, this sculpted landfill opened to critical acclaim. How's it doing now that the trash has settled. p. 44.
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (7) July 2006
RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER July 2006
STUDIES IN THE HISTORY OF GARDENS & DESIGNED LANDSCAPES: AN INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY 26 (3) July - September 2006
a. Place, time and movement: a new look at Renaissance gardens. p. 194. b. The picturesque as pejorative. p. 237.
TRUST NEWS 35 (1) August 2006
TURF CRAFT INTERNATIONAL 109 July-August 2006
a. Pests, weeds and diseases: know your scarab beetle grubs. p. 29.
WEED WATCH 2 (12) July 2006
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Journal Display 31.7.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 204 (1) July 1 2006
a. Weed control from a drier point of view: growers in the arid parts of the country must consider different control options when it comes to weeds. p. 20. b. Basic turfgrass management. p. 38.
ARBORIST NEWS 15 (3) June 2006
a. Tree inventories. Part 1. Objectives and tactics. p. 12.
b. Careers in arboriculture. Climbing ahead - a green-industry education: when I grow up, I want to be.....an arborist! p. 30 c. Climbers' corner - two-rope rigging. p. 62.
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 9 (2) Winter 2006
a. Future tourism - the age old question. p. 35.
b. Nuisance, necessity or asset?: national park rangers' perception of tourism, organisational policies and institutional support. p. 42.
THE AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 34TH ANNUAL TECHNICAL ISSUE 509a 2006
a. Poor soil physical properties can hinder nutrient uptake in vines. p. 19.
b. Where does the fertiliser go? Visualising soil-plant fertigation dynamics on grapevines (Vitis vinifera L. variety shiraz). p. 23. c. The spread of Eutypa lata within grapevines - implications for management of eutypa dieback. p. 27. d. Experience with amelioration treatments trialed on Petri disease (caused by Phaeomoniella chlamydospora) in vineyards in Victoria. p. 32. e. Manipulating fruitset in grapevines. p. 38.
f. Innovation in management of wastewater in the Australian wine industry. p. 41.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY June 2006
a. Special edition. Visions & voices: the Australian Garden History Society 1980 - 2005.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 18 (1) July/August 2006
a. Conifer charisma: One of South Australia's best preserved historic gardens and possibly the largest private mature pinetum in Australia, Forest Lodge, which AGHS members will have the chance to tour in October, is rich in conifers from around the world. p. 9. b. Dame Elisabeth's garden haven: Cruden Farm is testament to the garden knowledge of Dame Elisabeth Murdoch. But at the start there was another great gardener involved, Edna Walling. So who was responsible for what in this fine garden? p. 15.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (7) July 2006
a. Pest notes: introducing lacewings. p. 13.
b. Plant names with Roger Spencer: Lilly Pilly Willy Nilly. p. 24.
c. Lawrie Metcalf: more than just hebes. In New Zealand, Melanie Kinsey comes face to face with the author of a new book on hebes, Lawrie Metcalf. p. 37. d. Trees of life: high in protein and nutrients, there's a tree nut suited to almost every region of Australia. p. 48.
AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 23 (183) June 2005
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. NEWSLETTER 443 July 2006.
THE GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131 (7) July 2006
a. A living preservation: the Wollemi pine, a recently discovered 'living fossil' has just gone on general sale to the public. Phil Clayton looks at its past, talks to its discoverer and assesses its future in UK cultivation. p.474.
b. Choosing clematis: notable large-flowered clematis. p. 476. c. As nature intended: Nectar and pollen plants. p. 486.
d. Ways with water:the water garden, Wembworthy. p. 496.
e. Viewpoint. Calm waters run deep: James Hitchmough (Professor in the Department of Landscape, University of Sheffield). p. 502.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 51 June 2006
a. Sky's no limit: green roofs are a successful means to further green our local environments, but their use goes for beyond commercial applications. p. 17.
b. Designer profile: French garden designer and landscape architect Pascal Cribier. p. 24.
c. Sitting pretty: sculpture can make or break a carefully designed garden. p. 29.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 52 July/August 2006
a. Should garden designers freely share ideas and sources?: sourcing ideas and suppliers takes a great deal of time and energy. Three garden designers give their opinions on what to share with others. p. 14.
b. On the right path: Paul Dracott presents a technical article on the design and construction of garden paths, looking at practical considerations to bear in mind and user perception. p. 35.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA August 2006
a. Classic camellias : from tea to a garden classic - learn all about camellias. p. 20.
b. Urban jungle: this tropical oasis tucked away in the urban sprawl of Brisbane is a credit to its creator. p. 26. c. Water wise - recycling water: Josh Byrne shows you how to install a grey water recycling system in your own backyard. p. 42. d. Blueberry bonanza: grow and cook these delicious fruit. p. 52.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 116 August 2006
a. Monkshood: Marigold Webb champions the spooky delights of Aconitum. p. 36.
b. People: who's who: Andrew Fisher Tomlin, chair of the Society of Garden Designers. p. 44. c. Divine inspiration : Pheasant Barn, an inspired and inventive garden in Kent. p. 50. d. Iconic garden. Defining moment: after 100 years the distinctive style of Gertrude Jekyll and Edwin Lutyens' gardens at Hestercombe continue to define a pivotal point in design history. p.78.
GREEN PLACES 27 Summer 2006
a. Is enough being done to attract students to careers in urban design and landscape architecture. p. 12.
b. State of the art: education of landscape architects is a blend of codification and continuity. But can it survive current government strictures on higher education. p. 18. c. Did they do well?: the recent evaluation of two community-led green space funding schemes provide the opportunity to reflect on lessons learnt. p. 22.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (6) June 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 22 June 2006
a. Potentilla: good colour, toughness and drought resistance make cinquefoil a strong landscape choice. p. 18.
b. Roses for landscaping: breeders have created superb landscape roses that have strong colour and need almost no maintenance. p. 20. c. Hyacinthaceae bulbs: the latest round of RHS trials assessed members of the Hyacinthaceae family, including Scilla and Chionodoxa. p. 30.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 29 June 2006
a. Nemesia: a wide range of colours, scent and delicate form ensure Nemesia is a summer favourite. p. 16.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 6 July 2006
a. Robinia: beautiful flowers, an exotic appearance and light shade make Robinia a very popular landscape tree. p. 18.
HORTSCIENCE 41 (3) June 2006
a. Controlled environments for production of value-added food crops with high phytochemical concentrations: lycopene in tomato as an example. p. 522.
b. Potential implications of medicinal plant production in controlled environments: the case of feverfew (Tanacetum parthnium). p. 531. c. Aeroponic and hydroponic systems for medicinal herb, rhizome, and root crops. p. 536.
d. Pruning strategies to maximize mango production from the time of planting to restoration of old orchard. p. 544.
e. Mowing height, nitrogen rate, and biostimulant influence root development of field- grown "TiFeagle' bermudagrass. p. 805.
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Winter 2006
a. Determining pace of sugar movement in plants. p. 14.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (7) July 2006
a. Garden of Oz: a new garden in Australia celebrates local flora, contemporary design. p. 18.
b. Roof gardens. At the top of the escalator: can a plaza two stories up really attract the public? p. 24.
c. Why suburbs will never have tall trees: modern construction methods doom suburban trees before they're even planted. p. 44. d. Industrial revolution: at Lake Calumet, Chicago rethinks the boundaries between industrial development and nature. But can wildlife really coexist with heavy industry? p. 56. e. On the side of the angels: landscape architects restore the Olmsted Woods at the Washington National Cathedral. p. 66. f. Playground with a mission: landscape architects and an artist turn around an inner- city playground. p. 88.
g. What becomes a legend most?: In the case of a Getty Villa, a discreet landscape facelift softens the effect of extensive architectural implants. p. 110.
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 45 July 2006 a. The importance of not gardening. p. 41.
NATIONAL SAFETY MAGAZINE 77 (3) April 2006
PARKS & RECREATION 41 950 May 2006
a. Research update: the inclusion landscape. Park and recreation professionals can break down inclusion barriers. p. 22.
b. Designing against crime: time spent at the drafting table can make parks and green spaces safer. p. 34. c. Walk this way: Michigan launches a Safe Routes to School program. p. 40.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (7) July 2006
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 21 (2) 2006
a. Special : National asparagus weeds management workshop proceedings. Part 1.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 17 (5) May 2006
a. Biological control for the bad bugs. p. 38.
b. Ergonomically friendly tools and equipment for the arborist/landscaper. p. 58. c. In-ground soil preparation and planting. p. 62. d. Meat-bearing fruit trees, termite terror and other tales from the Internet. p. 68.
VITIS 45 (3) 2006
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 3.7.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (12) June 15, 2006
a. Plant health: earwig control in the landscape and garden. p. 8.
b. Alternatives to ash: is emerald ash borer affecting your ash trees? A Purdue University horticulture professor emeritus offers a list of 13 trees that could be used as substitutes for Fraxinus in the landscape. p. 14. c. Berry tasty groundcovers: vaccinium species are know for their edible fruits, like cranberry, lingonberry and lowbush blueberry, but they also double as ornamental groundcovers. p. 23. d. Trashy treasures: a sales and marketing pro gives landscapers and garden designers creative ways to trash tradition by turning everyday objects into garden accents. p. 28.
e. Getting the roots right: proper root depth has been widely accepted as crucial to tree health - and achieving that goal to a shared responsibility. p. 35.
AQIS BULLETIN 3 April-May 2006
ARBOR AGE 26 (3) March 2006
ARBOR AGE 26 (4) April 2006
a. Effective vegetation management: spring and summer treatment methods. p. 12. b. Understanding paclobutrazol: using the tree growth regulator to reduce tree growth, enhance tree health, and build a more profitable business. p. 28.
AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 23 (184) 2005
a. Native grasses - a natural choice for Australian agriculture. p. 99.
CUNNINGHAMIA (A Journal of Plant Ecology for Eastern Australia) 9 (3) 2006
a. Special edition: New South Wales vegetation classification and assessment.
FIELD NATS NEWS 155 July 2006
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 2006 - 2007 SOURCEBOOK
GARDEN HISTORY (Journal of the Garden History Society) 33 (2) Autumn 2005
a. The pleasures of the imagination: Joseph Addison's influence on early landscape gardens. p. 189. b. The garden designs of Edward La Trobe Bateman (1816 - 97). p. 225.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (7) June 2006
a. Energy series. Goldilocks in the greenhouse: natural ventilation, shading systems and variable-speed fans are teaming up to make the greenhouse environment "just right" for plants. p. 62. b. Integrated plant health management: safe pesticide use for healthy plants. p. 80.
c. Improving perennial flowering: cold and light are two factors that can greatly influence the flowering of some perennials. p. 86. d. Non-chemical PGRs: you don't have to rely on chemicals to tame leggy plants. Here are some tips on growing conditions that can affect plant heights. p. 100.
GREEN PLACES 26 June 2006
a. Sustainable suburbs: Nicholas Falk compares models of suburban communities in the UK and abroad to find an approach to managing and maintaining suburbs in the 21st century. p. 18. b. Ready for the chop?: despite public fears, tree clearing in public parks can be a necessary part of restoration. Dr. Stewart Harding of the Parks Agency explains why. p. 26.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (7) July 2006
a. Battling weeds to make industry and the environment winners. p. 6. b. Embracing the environmental challenge: the environment - and the preservation of it - is playing an increasingly large role in the daily lives of nurserymen. Successful businesses address key environmental issues to show long term vision. p. 10. c. Exploring new products and ways of selling helps businesses beat competition. p. 17.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 70 (2) Line 2006
a. Flowering Veronica: how to get your Veronica into flower. p. 34.
b. Is gardening dead? Part 2: new facts about "consumers" and their views on "gardening". p. 56. c. The scourge of the Japanese beetle: this devastating insect is now threatening floriculture crops in much of the eastern U.S. p. 98.
GROWING AUSTRALIAN (Australian Plants Society - Victoria) 49.3 (194) December 2005
GROWING AUSTRALIAN (Australian Plants Society - Victoria) 49.4 (195) March 2006
GROWING AUSTRALIAN (Australian Plants Society - Victoria) 50.1 (196) June 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 8 June 2006
a. Cotinus: this highly saleable genus is tough, pest-free and gives long periods of foliage and flower interest. p. 16.
b. State of industry: glasshouse sector. p. 18. c. Landscape review. Getting to grips with groundwork: from dealing with drought to cleaning up brownfield sites, preparations is the key to sustainable landscape projects. p. 27.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 15 June 2006
a. Interview. The people's gardener: Carol Klein, gardening TV presenter and writer. p. 13. b. Digitalis: not just a cottage garden favourite, many foxgloves can thrive in hot, dry weather. p. 16. c. Return of the elm: as breeders introduce more disease-tolerant species, high-profile plantings aim to inspire people to restore elms to the British landscape. p. 18.
HORTTECHNOLOGY 16 (2) April-June 2006
a. Research report. A daylight climate chamber for testing greenhouse climate control strategies and calculating canopy carbon dioxide exchange. p. 191. b. Response of selected nursery crop plants to inoculation with isolates of Phytophthora ramorum and other phytophthora species. p. 216.
c. Effects of pruning and cluster thinning on yield and fruit composition of "Chambourcin" grapevines. p. 233. d. Residential landscapes. homeowner attitudes, and water-wise choices in New Mexico. p. 241. e. Effects of a gardening program on the academic progress of third, fourth and fifth grade math and science students. p. 262.
f. Teaching methods. Assessing the preparedness of postsecondary graduates entering the landscape contracting industry. p. 312. g. Experiential education employed to demystify food irradiation as a viable technology for food industry professionals. p. 318.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 24 (2) June 2006
a. Consumer purchasing habits of environmental horticulture products in Florida. p. 68. b. Accumulation of a protein associated with plant defense in powdery mildew resistant dogwood (Cornus florida). p. 115.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 30 (6) June 2006
MUELLERIA 23 2006
NATIONAL SAFETY 77 (4) May 2006
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (4) April 2006 a. Special focus: playgrounds.
THE PLANTSMAN NEW SERIES 5 (2) June 2006
a. Stokesia laevis and its cultivars. p. 80.
b. Tree peonies - a review of recent literature. p. 88. c. Telopea and their cultivation. p. 114. d. The benefits of mycorrhizae: the intimate relationship between plants and fungi is becoming increasingly relevant to horticulture. p. 118.
e. Too much gardening in the wild: Graham Rice urges those involved in native planting to resist aliens and cultivars and do their homework. p.130.
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 27 (3) June/July 2006
PUBLIC GARDEN 21 (1) 2006
a. Research in Botanical gardens: with two-thirds of all species likely to become extinct by the end of this century, the one-third of the world's plant species already in cultivatin in botanical gardens are critically important for research and conservation. p. 16.
b. Botanical collections as a resource for research: the possibilities for collections-based research at botanical gardens and arboreta range from the modest to the major. The Arnold Arboretum is about to embark on a major investment in research into plant evolutionary history and functional biology. p. 18.
c. Botanic gardens & human well being: a new BGCI report links human well being to conservation and sees botanical gardens as uniquely placed to use plant diversity to promote human well being. p. 22. d. Designing great gardens: defying classification and seeking relevance: a round table discussion among several design and horticulture professionals defines what it is that makes a great garden. p. 24.
e. Starting a botanical garden or arboretum at a college or public institution. Part 1. p. 33. f. Gardens portraits - America's historic landscaped cemeteries. p. 38.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 17 (4)April 2006
a. Pre-climb tree hazard assessment. p. 24. b. Emerald ash borer: where is it headed and what do you tell your customer? p. 32.
c. Safe body mechanics & postures of the arborist/landscaper. p. 40. d. Crabapple scab can mute this colorful ornamental. p. 68.
THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST 123 (3) June 2006
a. Flowering, pollination, and fruit set in Tongue Orchids Cryptostylis spp. p. 128. b. Studies on Victorian bryophytes 3: the genus Leptodon D Mohr. p.166.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 19.6.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (11) June 1 2006
a. A war of weeds: a weed specialist provides tips you will need to battle weeds in perennial production. p. 22.
b. The great outdoors: homeowners now are spending more time making the outdoors an extension of their homes by adding fireplaces, furniture and TV to their decks and patios. And many industry experts believe the outdoor-living trend only has just begun. p.26. c. Planting ideas that really hold water: the owner of a landscape design/build business lays out why turf has troubles - especially when it comes to water management - and why perennial beds should prevail in certain areas of the landscape. p. 39.
ARBOR AGE 26 (5) May 2006
a. "With a little help from my friend": tree establishment success with mycorrhizae. p. 10.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 509 June 2006
a. Infrared thermography to evaluate stomatal conductances in grapevines: an overview of the method. p. 29.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (6) June 2006
a. Wireworms are pests - true or false? p. 14
b. Australian plants in dramatic display. p. 17. c. Do old horticulturists just spade away? p. 25. d. Prostrate lillypilly next in line. p. 28 e. One for all: designing a playspace for children with disabilities involves taking into account the needs of the entire family. p33. f. Bamboo in Melbourne: Victorian horticulturist Melanie Kinsey goes in search of non- invasive cool-climate bamboo for the playground of a Macedon Ranges primary school. p. 42.
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC NEWSLETTER 442 June 2006
ECOS 130 April - May 2006
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 16 (3) May/June 2006
GARDEN (THE) (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131 (6) June 2006
a. Irises from out of this world: a departure from traditional bearded iris, space-agers are worth considering. p.394.
b. Two in one: a modern garden on a sloping site. Mixing formal and informal design in a London garden. p. 396. c. The fragrant ones: roses for scent. p. 406.
d. Coming of age - The Laskett: following the development of Sir Roy Strong's garden over the past 30 years. p.414.
e. DIY green roofs: how to green your shed. p. 426.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA July 2006
a. Heavenly hellebores: discover the charms of this gentle bloom. p. 16.
b. A labour of love: land of contrasts - where intricate mosaics, edibles and ornamentals meet. p. 20. c. Magnificent magnolias: Pete presents a masterclass on this extraordinary tree, including a ste[-by-step planting guide, tips on how to care for your tree and a rundown of the varieties available. p. 24. d. Little Ausies - potted natives: enjoy indigenous plants, even in the smallest gardens. p. 38. e. Fabulous ferns: make the most of these shady characters. p. 43.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 115 July 2006
a. Geometry in motion: Herterton: artistry and horticulture at a National Trust property in Northumberland. p. 26.
b. Sedum here, sedum there: drought-tolerant ground-covering, multi-flowered-sedum is the unassuming hero of many a garden location. p. 34. c. Who's who - horticultural author, photographer and presenter Roger Phillips. p. 42.
d. An inclination to garden - designer garden: Karena Batstone"s elegant design for a steeply sloping site. p. 44. e. Iconic garden. The people's park: Birkenhead's People's Park, inspiration for New York's Central Park. p. 68. f. The Italian job: the gardens at Trentham in Staffordshire have undergone a significant transformation under the guidance of Tom Stuart-Smith and Piet Oudolf. p. 89.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 14 (3) May/June 2006
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (6) Mid May 2006
a. Inflatable invention: the light energy shutter system holds tremendous potential to help greenhouse growers achieve savings in energy costs. p.44.
GROUND MAINTENANCE 41 (5) May 2006
a. Chemical update - plant growth regulators. p. 26
GROUNDSWELL 17 (6) June 2006
a. Retail news: The art of selling to women. p. 17.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 18 May 2006
a. Oxalis. p. 16.
b. Growing concern: glasshouse growers need insurance against fire and other disasters as much as any other business. p. 19.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 25 May 2006
a. Quercus: species and cultivars. p. 18.
b. Playground equipment: a stimulating play environment aids child development and revives local communities. p. 27.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 1 June 2006
a. Plant trials: Clematis. p. 18. b. Developing a fertile future: manufacturers are working to create more effective fertilisers, but the latest products don't come cheap. p. 27.
INDIGENOTES 17 (1) May 2006
IFPRA WORLD (International Federation of Parks and Recreation Administration) June 2006
a. Tree stability and wind storms in urban parks (by Ken James, Lecturer, Burnley College, Faculty of Land and Food Resources, School of Resource Management, University of Melbourne). p.8. b. Creation of the Australian Garden. p. 14.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 131 (2) March 2006
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (3) March 2006
a. The advantages, and disadvantages, of drip irrigation. p. 33.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (6) June 2006
a. Botanic evolution: building on Marian Cruger Coffin's original design, landscape architects help develop a living collection in a historic landscape. p. 34.
b. Designing for the people: as public awareness of the power of landscape architecture increases, so do the demands places on Maryland nonprofit Neighborhood Design Center. p. 54.
c. Ethics, water conservation, and sustainable gardens: how a botanic garden and arboretum in Michigan started "walking the talk" of environmental conservation. p. 76. d. From base closure to new urbanism: can an innovative urban reclamation project in South Carolina transform a run-down older suburb into a nationally acclaimed sustainable community? p. 86. e. Free in Brazil: on the site of a former prison, a youth park offers multiple spaces and uses in a Brazilian metropolis. p. 114.
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE 67 (1) January/February/March 2006
a. Seven habits of a highly successful gardener. p. 15. b. Great plant picks for container gardens. p. 18. c. An unknown tree research site in Santa Clara valley. p. 25.
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE 67 (2) April/May/June 2006
a. The front gardens of Palo Alto. p. 3. b. Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands: little-known gems of the South Pacific. p. 18.
PARK WATCH 225 June 2006
a. Park mates enjoy birds, box-ironbark beauty. p. 16. b. Grampians National Park after the fire. p. 26.
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (3) March 2006
a. Research update - Mental restoration and recreation: taking time to visit a park may leave you a little more relaxed. p. 30. b. Bloom to grow: community gardening provides education, enrichment and eggplants all in one plot. p.52.
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 34 (1) 2006
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 17 (2) February 2006
a. The soul of a tree: a conversation with Alex Shigo. p. 8
b. The alternative elm story: injection with propiconazole. p. 40. c. The good bugs in your trees. p. 46. d. Contracting with municipal agencies. Part 1: Reasons for privatization. p. 52.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 17 (3) March 2006
a. Cabling and bracing standard proposed revision. p. 26.
b. Biofertilizers bring soil back to life. p. 32.
c. Understanding the relationship between trees and carpenter ants. p.40. d. Climbing: Single Rope Technique (SRT) . p. 60
TURF CRAFT INTERNATIONAL 108 May-June 2006
UNDER CONTROL (PEST PLANT AND ANIMAL MANAGEMENT NEWS) 34 June 2006
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 5.6.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (10) May 15 2006
a. Plant health: five commonly misdiagnosed plant health problems. p. 10.
b. Defining space with plants: a landscape designer explains how to connect people to outdoor landscapes by using different planting techniques. p. 16. c. Propagating explorer roses. p. 26. d. IPM in the landscape: a successful pest-management campaign requires more than just the means to eradicate pests. An IPM specialist outlines some methods to control aphids, thrips and red imported fire ants in the landscape. p. 32.
ARBOR AGE 26 (2) February 2006
a. Pest of the month: Common cankers of maple. p. 10. b. Tree maintenance: trunk injection - treatments come of age. p. 34.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 17 (5) May/June 2006
a. Carrick Hill - a twentieth-century garden. p. 7 b. 90th anniversary of our Avenues of Honour. p. 24.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS MANAGEMENT 8 (1) February-March 2006
a. The effect of nitrogen rates on ultradwarf bermudagrass quality.p.48.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS MANAGEMENT 8 (2) April-May 2006
a. Reclaimed water users study. p. 18. b. Evaluating irrigation practices on community sportsfields. p. 40.
c. Research: creeping bentgrass tolerance to summer stresses: the importance of carbon balance and root activity. p. 44.
FIELD NATS NEWS 154 June 2006
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 108 December 2005
a. Christmas bonus: In winter the glossy green foliage of sarcococca (Christmas box) is adorned with exquisite creamy flowers that exude a distinctly sweet, heady scent. p. 38.
b. Root cause: Carol Klein proved that root cuttings really aren't that difficult. She guides us through the process to ensure both satisfaction and success. p. 48.
c. Wild at art: Marcia Donahue's garden in San Francisco is an exuberant collection of art and plants.p.54. d. Garden history. Ladies in bloomers: from straw hats to pink wellies, garden historian Lorraine Harrison charts the changes in dress code for lady gardeners. p. 64. e. Serenity in symmetry: Cashel in New Zealand takes native plants and uses their structural shapes to dramatic effect. p. 80.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 109 January 2006
a. Interview - Christopher Lloyd: plantsmanship. p. 32.
b. A garden at play: restored and ravishing in its grace, Painswick Rococo Garden in Gloucestershire wears its snowdrops proudly. p. 34. c. Horticultural who's who: Tony Kirkham - head of the Arboretum, Kew. p. 42. d. Garden history. Moving earth and sky: Charles Quest-Ritson considers the influence and social implications of the Landscape Movement. p. 50. e. Special effects: a genus of adaptable and attractive shrubs, ELAEAGNUS produce fragrant flowers and colourful, edible berries amid a mass of foliage. p. 44.
f. Stones with spirit: Jonathan Gibbons heads for the Spanish Pyrenees where he discovers a gem of Gaudi's architectural genius. Here, adorning the side of a steep ravine is a distinctive garden. p. 54.g. Cactus obsession: an impassioned collector shows Cathy O'Clery around his remarkable nursery and gardens in South Africa. p. 66.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 110 February 2006
a. Mrs snowdrops: Veronica Cross has a passion for Galanthus. p. 22.
b. Interview - Christopher Lloyd: writing. p. 30. c. Private passion: Anouska Hempel, renowned for designing supremely stylish hotels, interiors and couture, also has a passion for gardens. p. 32. d. Horticultural who's who: Tom Stuart-Smith - garden designer. p. 38. e. Iconic gardens. History in the hedges: in an important new series, Jane Owen looks at key British gardens whose designs have greatly influenced garden-makers worldwide. p. 46
f. Acacia dealabata: Roy Lancaster is head over heels with this Australian golden-flowered beauty, a favourite with florists. p. 54.
g. Rocks and roses: Designer Torsten Wallin's Island garden off the coast of Stockholm in Sweden blends seamlessly with its setting . p. 56.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 111 March 2006
a. Iconic gardens. Landscape of the gods: continuing her series, Jane Owen tours the 18th-century gardens at Rousham. p. 24.
b. Interview - Christopher Lloyd: people. p. 32. c. Horticultural who's who: Rosemary Alexander - founder of the English gardening school. p. 40. d. A light sprinkling of magic: Tage Andersen creates fairy tales in the formal garden of Norrviken in Sweden. p. 58. e. Aerial sculptures: Paul Urquhart delights in Kerry Tate's eclectic bromeliad collection, which decorates the trees of her Australian garden. p. 66 f. Unusual suspects: an unassuming location belies the treasure trove of rare and exotic antipodean plants to be found at county park nursery. p. 75. g. The Mughal gardens: Noel Kingsbury is duly impressed by the presidential palace gardens in New Delhi. p. 82.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 112 April 2006
a. Christopher Lloyd, VMH, OBE 1921 - 2006. P. 24.
b. On a high note: perched on a cliff edge in France, a breathtaking garden was created in a fleeting visit from 17th-century designer Andre Le Notre. p. 30. c. Loveliest of trees: allow yourself to be charmed by the spring blossom of ornamental cherry trees, says plantsman Roy Lancaster. p. 38. d. Horticultural who's who: Carol Klein - nurserywoman and Gardeners' World presenter. p. 46. e. Where the wild things are: proving that biodiversity isn't all overgrown weeds and log piles, we visit a pretty wildlife friendly garden in the city. p. 48.
f. A bug's life: it pays to know which creepy-crawlie is destroying what - or who. Expert Richard "Bugman" Jones takes us into his bug-eat-bug world. p. 56. g. Iconic gardens. Mirror of society: the temples of Stowe have a wealth of history behind them. Jane Owen continues her series in this politically charged landscape.p. 70.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 113 May 2006
a. Pleasure in profusion: Goose Cottage, a self-seeding country garden with casual charm. p. 38.
b. Fragrance fills the air: the fragrance and grace of lilac. p. 44. c. Horticultural who's who: Piet Oudolf - designer, plantsman and founder of the New Wave movement. p. 52. d. Roald Dahl's BFG: BLISSFUL FLOWER GARDEN - a garden as magical as the author's stories. p. 58. e. Inner city sanctuary: Camley Street, a wildlife haven in King's Cross, London. p. 72.
f. Garden history: growth and change - how Victorian inventions changed our gardens. p. 78. g. Iconic gardens. Nature enhanced by man - the garden at Endsleigh. Jane Owen recounts how the 19th-century designer Humphry Repton conspired to bridge the gap between the Landscape Movement and Picturesque ideals. p. 89.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 114 June 2006
a. Over the garden wall: the walled gardens of National Trust property Grantham House. p. 30.
b. Pretty in pink - Dianthus: old-fashioned cultivars and modern hybrids. p. 40.
c. Who's who: Martyn Rix: botanist, plant collector, author and gardener. p. 48. d. Blurring the boundaries: a flowing New York-state garden by Oehme, van Sweden. p. 50.
e. A respect for nature: enthusiast Nanke Siebelink"s nature-inspired garden in the Netherlands. p. 68. f. Iconic gardens. Fortune favours the brave - Biddulph Grange: the world in one garden. p. 72.
GENUS 18 (2) May 2006
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (5) May 2006
a. Integrated plant health management: fertilizing plants to keep them healthy. p. 48.
b. Life after cold: researchers look at herbaceous perennials that require vernalization and long-day photoperiods to flower. p. 58.
GREEN PLACES 25 May 2006
a. Risky business: are we any closer to providing rich and wild places to play? p. 24.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 70 (1) May 2006
a. Is gardening dead?: why are some industry folks concerned that gardening is in trouble? We take a close look at the facts behind the commotion. p. 40.
HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY 81 (3) May 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 4 May 2006
a. Anthemis: this superb retail plant brings long-lasting bursts of golden sunshine to garden borders and rockeries. p. 18.
b. Explaining tunnel concepts: more growers are using polytunnels, but do we understand all the relevant terminology? p. 23.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 11 May 2006
a. Hardy fuchsia. p. 16.
HORTSCIENCE 41 (2) April 2006
a. Workshop - organic versus conventionally grown produce
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL 21 (2) May 2006
PLANT DISEASE 90 (6) June 2006
YOUR GARDEN Winter 2006
a. Camellia revival: Australia's Professor Waterhouse was a key player in rescuing the once- fashionable camellia from the oblivion into which it fell early last century. Roger Mann revisits his garden and shares his memories of the man himself. p. 28.
b. It's the spots that make the difference: snowdrops or snowflakes - which is which? p. 36. c. Tallis's wonderland: a lost garden comes back to life. p. 40. d. Small space-big idea: vertical ideas create space in the inner city. p. 70.
e. Playtime planning: intend on creating a child's paradise for her son Jess, garden designer Georgina Martyn relieves her own childhood memories and provides some imaginative playground surprises. p. 78 f. Native fanfare - Muogamarra: a mecca for native plant enthusiasts. p. 88. g. Versatile, variable and valuable: lillypilly. p. 92.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 22.5.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (9) May 1 2006
a. A shady love affair: by selecting and arranging foliage and flowers for colour, texture and tone, garden center operators and landscapers can bring sparkle and light into the dark areas of a customer's woodland garden. p.16. b. Building a powerful sales strategy: sales are an integral part of any business, especially for those specializing in landscaping. Having the right attitude and business plan will help your company reach its goal and look attractive to prospects. p. 26.
c. Ten tips for a productive trade show visit: the trade show floor offers unique opportunities for attendees to update their knowledge on and contacts in the green industry. p. 34.
ARBORIST NEWS 15 (2) April 2006
a. Identifying wood decay and wood decay fungi in urban trees. p. 12. b. Aspirin for trees: salicylic acid (which is chemically related to aspirin) shows promise in inducing disease resistance in urban trees. p. 20.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 55 March/April 2006
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 508 May 2006
a. Integrated pest management for long-tailed mealy bug in Hunter vineyards. p. 19.
b. Pruning to price point. p. 37 c. Pruning can be a prized skill. p. 44. d. Winery wastes; friend or foe?
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (5) May 2006
a. Pest notes. Solitary killers:praying mantids. p. 14. b. Australian plants: a fan flower with garden style. p. 16. c. Declaring war on weeds, bureaucrats. p. 22.
DISCOVERING STONE 5 (9) March 2006
THE GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131 (5) May 2006
a. The world's most influential gardens?: comparing the UK with overseas. p. 318.
b. Poppies from the lands of fire and ice: choosing Papaver nudicaule. p.324.
c. Sublime Sherwood: lavishly planted valleys in Devon. p. 330.
d. Demanding your individual attention: fern- or dissected-leaf Japanese maples make attractive ornamental additions to even the smallest of gardens. p. 340.
e. Trilliums without tribulation: growing trilliums species and cultivars. p.346.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 50 May 2006
a. How do you charge for your time on a project?: there is still confusion surrounding how to charge honestly and realistically for time. Should garden designers charge their time out per hour, per job, or should they simply charge a percentage of the total budget? Three professionals share their experiences. p. 14.
b. Water works: introducing water into a design brings the dimensions of reflection, sound and colour to a project. p. 17. c. Natures' way: Michael Littlewood explores the wonders of natural swimming pools in this technical guidance article, including their health and wildlife benefits; how they work, design tips, and their construction and maintenance. p. 22. d. Rainbow canes: red and yellow, pink and green: Stephen Gower sings the praises of bamboos and the rainbow of colour that they offer. p. 29.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA June 2006
a. Winter blooms: Peter Cundall reveals his favourite winter flowers. p.18. b. Native oasis: new native garden. John Patrick explores the fascinating new Australian native garden at Cranbourne. p. 24.
c. Unusual eats: delicious and rare fruit and vegies to grow in your garden. p. 32.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (4) April 2006
a. Keeping an eye on nitrogen: how excessive fertilizing can stealthily kill turf. p. 13. b. Chemical update: fertilizer/pesticide combinations. p. 20. c. Standing tall: controlling bermudagrass in turf-type tall fescue. p. C2. d. Grass roots: understanding what's at the base of turfgrass is essential for proper management. p. G1
HORTICULTURE WEEK 27 April 2006
a. Vinca: periwinkle is an excellent choice for landscaping and easy-care gardens. p. 22. b. The fashion on the ground: designers pick surfacing materials for suitability, but media- led trends influence what clients want. p. 26.
LAND FOR WILDLIFE NEWS 5 (10) April/May 2006
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (5) May 2006
a. The garden as a treatment milieu: two Swedish gardens counteract the effects of stress. p. 26.
b. A freeway runs past it: a revitalized public space makes a splash in Oakland. p. 44. c. Still walkable, still sitable: a pedestrian mall in Denver is a successful civic space. p.56. d. Sculpture(d) park: eighteen years in the making, Isamu Noguchi's park design is open for play in northern Japan. p. 108. e. Shared wisdom: nurturing everyday landscapes. As director of the nonprofit Neighborhood Design Center, Mark Cameron, ASLA, works to make common space more common in Baltimore.
LANDSCAPE JOURNAL 25 (1) 2006
a. Fragments of a poetic of gardens. p. 1.
b. Framed again: the picturesque aesthetics of contemporary landscapes. p. 22. c. Power of the picturesque: motorists' perceptions of the Blue Ridge Parkway. p. 38.
d. Patrick Geddes and the Edinburgh Zoological gardens: universal processes through local place. p. 80. e. Between tradition and modernity: the karesansui gardens of Mirei Shigemori. p.108.
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (2) February 2006
a. School in session: Park funding tough to find? Take a lesson from Boston Parks, who partnered with a city college to find the answer. p.61.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (5) May 2006
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 27 (2) April/May 2006
a. Small business management: finding & managing your employees - Part 3. p. 46.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF VICTORIA 117 (2) 31 December 2005
THE RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER May 2006
TELOPEA (Journal of Plant Systematics) 11 (2) 2006
TRUST NEWS 34 (4) May 2006
a. Visions of an Australian landscape: to the early colonist a garden had two purposes: the most immediate was to provide supplies, the second was to re-create home. p. 20.
THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST 123 (2) April 2006
a. The flora of Highbury Park, Burwood East, Victoria. p. 75. b. The Barwon estuary - an example of the estuarine management situation in Victoria. p. 84.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 8.5.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (7) April 1 2006
a. Improving root initiation of cuttings: a propagator explains the methods and techniques for encouraging proper root initiation of shade trees to ensure successful and durable planting. p. 36.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (8) April 15 2006
a. Guidance to go: will your garden centre benefit by offering consultation services? A garden consultant explains the advantages of such program. p. 26.
b. Optimizing the water relations of cuttings: a professor of nursery crop physiology explains how transpiration, vapor pressure deficit, environmental factors and propagation media can play a key role in rooting success. p. 30.
c. Beauty in the night: landscape architects and designers can use lights to bring their clients' gardens out from under a blanket of darkness. p.34.
AQIS BULLETIN 2 March 2006
ARBOR AGE 26 (1) January 2006
ARBORICULTURAL JOURNAL 29 (2) March 2006
a. Stem wounds - potential entry courts for wood decay fungi? p. 101.
b. A comparative study of community garden systems in Germany and the United States and their role in creating sustainable communities. p.121.
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 9 (1) Autumn 2006
a. Service quality at an Australian Botanic garden today. p. 45.
AUSTRALASIAN PLANT CONSERVATION 14 (4) March - May 2006
a. Special theme: fire for conservation.
FIELD NATS NEWS 153 May 2006
GARDEN HISTORY SOCIETY NEWS 77 Spring 2006
GREEN PLACES 24 April 2006
a. Yes, but is it art?: public art is increasingly seen as playing a vital part in helping to create and develop sustainable communities. p. 16. b. Blurring the boundaries: a personal view of the state of public art today - both official and unofficial. p. 22. c. Taken on trust?: local authorities are considering creating trusts to manage their green spaces. p. 24.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (3) March 2006
a. Special issue: new & emerging turf diseases.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (5) May 2006
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE (12) April 2006
a. Special issue: the bug issue.
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 34 (2) April 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 23 March 2006
a. Bougainvillea: the brightly coloured bracts of this tropical climber make it irresistible impulse buy. p. 16
HORTICULTURE WEEK 6 April 2006
a. Carex: with well over 1,000 varieties available, this durable plant gives landscapers many options. p. 18.
b. Growing media: from chemical nutrients to price and ease of use, a lot goes into picking a substrate mix. p. 29. c. 10 tips for transplanting trees. p. 33.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 13 April 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 20 April 2006
a. Silene: campions and catchflies: look equally great in formal border or loose wildflower planting. p. 16.
b. Assessing and managing risk: local authority tree managers are increasingly looking for an objective way to measure risk. p. 10.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 131 (1) January 2006
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION PRODUCT GUIDE 30 (1) January 2006
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 44 April 2006
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL 20 (4) November 2005
a. "Wetting agents": do wetting agents really save water? p. 12.
PARKS & RECREATION 41 (1) January 2006
a. Research update: components of urban park systems. Whether in U.S. or Hong Kong, urban parks play a vital role.p. 26. b. Winning recipe for volunteerism: mix college students, professionals and individuals with disabilities to create a winning program in North Carolina. p. 50. c. From animal advocates to allies: with some open communication, your dogpark advocate group can become a park and recreation ally. p. 56.
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 34 (1) 2006
UNDER CONTROL 33 March 2006
a. Weed watch warning: Gazania spp. p. 11.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 17.4.06
ARBOR AGE 25 (12) December 2005
a. Frequent hazards encountered during storm restoration. p. 18.
ARBORICULTURE & URBAN FORESTRY (Formerly Journal of Arboriculture) 32 (2) March 2006
a. Using key informant interviews to better understand open space conservation in a developing watershed. p.54. b. Response to oaks and elm to soil inoculations with mycorrhizal fungi and rhizobacteria in a nursery. p.62.
c. Investigation of fungicidal properties of the tree growth regulator paclobutrazol to control apple scab. p. 67. d. Branch union morphology affects decay following pruning. p. 74. e. Comparison of establishment methods for extensive green roofs in southern Sweden. p. 87.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 507 April 2006
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 10 (1) June/July 2005
a. Tree roots & infrastructure conflict in the urban jungle. p. 4. b. Decay detection: the application of decay detection equipment and the resistograph. p. 10.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 10 (2) August/September 2005
a. VTA: Visual tree assessment in a nutshell. p. 4.
b. The future: The future for trees in Sydney. p. 26. c. Rigging: prepare for the worst. p. 32. d. Mulch: the good, the bad and the ugly. Part 1. p. 42.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 10 (3) October/November 2005
a. The tree as a system. p. 19.
b. Climbing & rigging: learning to climb when you don't have wings. p. 30.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 10 (4) December 2005/January 2006
a. Managing & assessing ageing urban trees. Part 1. (by Martin Norris, Masters student at Burnley Campus, University of Melbourne). p. 16.
b. Where can I get that analysed?. p. 26 c. Mulch: The good, the bad and the ugly. Part 2. p. 30. d. New trees for new suburbs. p. 36. e. Rigging knots. p. 50.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 10 (6) April/May 2006
a. Managing & assessing ageing urban trees. Part 3. p. 8.
b. Introduction to cabling & bracing. p. 14. c. How accidents happen and why: arboricultural safety in the U.S. p. 24. d. SRIV - Sustainable Retention Index Value: a visual method of rating the viability of urban trees for development sites and management, based on general tree and landscape assessment criteria. p. 36.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (4) April 2006
a. Australian plants. Lomatia: an often-overlooked member of the protea family. p. 16.
b. Grapevine moth more than a grapevine pest. p. 21. c. Obituary - Anita Boucher: a life lived well. p. 37. d. Gardens help aged grow old gracefully. p. 60.
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. NEWSLETTER 440 April 2006
THE GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 131 (4) April 2006
a. Front to back - Hampstead garden suburb: in a quiet enclave of London, this verdant Arts and Crafts-style garden abounds with lush spring growth. p. 236. b. Keeping it simple - the Old Rectory, Duntisborne Rouse: avoiding fussy planting styles allow Mary Keen's garden to meld into the surrounding countryside, complementing the landscape beyond. p. 244.
c. American born and bred: investigating the range of flowering dogwoods suitable for planting in UK gardens, attractive for their vibrant floral spring displays and autumnal tints. p. 254.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 49 April 2006
a. Can garden designers meet the need for popular, low budget garden design? p. 14.
b. Designer profile - Mark Laurence: Mark Laurence has brought sustainable garden design into the mainstream through his projects. p. 23. c. Learning the ropes: over the last decade the number of garden design courses has proliferated, leading to possible confusion for the potential student as to which is most suitable. Here we look at the options available and discuss the merits of each. p. 28. d. Step on up: sloping sites usually involve the use of steps or ramps to negotiate the change in level. Paul Dracott summarises the main planning and construction issues surrounding them. p. 36.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA May 2006
a. Clematis: a guide to growing one of the world's stunning climbers. p. 22. b. Tropical treasure: visit a lush garden in the heart of Brisbane designed by Phillip O'Malley. p. 38. c. Autumn pest patrol: Josh Byrne tackles autumn pests. p. 43. d. Grevillea glory: Angus Stewart shares his growing tips. p. 47.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 14 (2) March/April 2006
a. Turf producers special.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (4) April 2006
a. Integrated plant health management: watering practices and plant health. Part 3. p. 42.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 30 March 2006
a. Cordyline: the market for these once-popular, fairly hardy exotic plants is starting to pick up again. p.20. b. Surface requirements: its moisture-retention properties make mulch an important consideration during dry months. p. 31.
HORTSCIENCE 41 (1) February 2006
a. Special edition - plant breeding and education.
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Autumn 2006
a. Recycled water: a great opportunity for horticulture. p. 10.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (4) April 2006
a. The final frontier: the creation of an educational adventure playground required a few custom features to send it out of this world. p. 46. b. Creating a private haven: a landscape architect turns his bleak site into cozy terraces that invite outdoor living. p. 52. c. Spotlight on tree bark: trees with colorful or texturally interesting bark shine in the winter garden. p. 62. d. Tea anyone?: a Chicago horticulturist puts compost tea to the test. p. 64. e. The bespoke landscape: Charles J. Stick's small practice thrives the old-fashioned way - on pen-and-ink technology, classical design ideals, and long-term relationships. p. 72. f. Playground for the senses: a garden in India seeks to provide a soothing antidote to the bustle of the nearby capital city. p. 105. g. Into the mangroves: a park brings the Amazon's aquatic landscape closer to urban residents. p. 122.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (4) April 2006
a. A soil inoculant inhibits Armillaria mellea in vitro and improves productivity of grapevines with root disease. p.439. b. Population dynamics of plant-parasitic nomatodes in golf course greens turf in southern New England. p. 501.
PLANTSMAN NEW SERIES 5 (1) March 2006
a. Camellia reticulata - the Kunming cultivars. p. 10. b. A flurry of snowlakes: John Grimshaw explains how several species of Leucojum are now included in Acis. c. Developing DNA markers for the identification of Penstemon cultivars. p. 52.
STUDIES IN HISTORY OF GARDENS & DESIGNED LANDSCAPES :AN INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY 26 (2) April - June 2006
a. Bartram's garden: a reception history. p. 99.
b. Belfield, Springland and early American picturesque: the artist's garden in the American early Republic. p. 118.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY magazine 18 (1) January 2006
a. Future nursery: cultivars - past, present and future. p. 20. b. Pruning ornamental trees. p. 36.
THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST 123 (1) February 2006
a. Victoria's living natural capital-decline and replenishment 1800-2050. Part 1. p.4.
b. Changes in vegetation structure and floristics under a powerline easement and implications for vegetation management. p. 28. c. Studies on Victorian bryophytes 2. The genus Bazzania Gray. p
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 3.4.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (6) March 15, 2006
a. Growing trees downtown: a researcher compared soil treatments under pavement to determine which provide a suitable rooting environment for urban tree plantings. p. 22. b. Educating the next generation of propagators. p. 43.
ARBORICULTURE & URBAN FORESTRY (Formerly JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE) 32 (1) January 2006
a. An assessment of three banding techniques to capture cankerworm defoliators of elm and ash trees in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. p. 10.
b. Deflecting roots near sidewalks. p. 18.
ECOS 129 February - March 2006
a. Emulating nature : the rise of industrial ecology. p. 22
FIELD NATS NEWS 152 April 2006
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 16 (2) March/April 2006
a. Australia. Dinosaur tree to hit world markets. p. 12. b. Using alcohol to reduce stem and leaf growth in narcissus. p. 17. c. Breeders rights. Genetic mutation and you: you think you may have found a genetic mutation in your greenhouse; p. 32. d. Breeders rights. The consequences of illegal propagation: breeders outline their procedures and evaluate their effectiveness. p. 38.
GREEN PLACES 23 March 2006
a. Special issue - exploring the psychology of public space.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (4) April 2006
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (11) March 2006
a. Pest management - watch list 2006. Here are four lesser-known diseases and disorders you should be keeping an eye out for. p. 82.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 9 March 2006
a. Doronicum: Leopard's bane grows naturally in UK woods, but growers have mixed feelings over its merits. p. 18.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 16 March 2006
a. Eucalyptus: this tough, highly adaptable genus is becoming popular as an amenity plant. p. 18. b. Glasshouse. Sustainable solutions: following months of low rainfall, growers need to find cost-effective and reliable ways to water crops. p. 23.
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Summer 2005/06
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 24 (1) March 2006
a. Night interrupted lighting accelerates flowering of herbaceous perennials under nursery conditions in the southern United States. p. 23. b. Estimation of U.S. bark generation and implications for horticultural industries. p.29. c. Invasive plant species: results of a consumer awareness, knowledge, and expectations survey conducted in Pennsylvania. p. 53.
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY 81 (2) March 2006
JOURNAL OF THERAPEUTIC HORTICULTURE 16 2005
a. An exploration of the meaning and effects of horticultural therapy on human health and well-being. p.1.
b. The potential on the doorstep: the importance of gardens in the psychological well-being of older people. p.29. c. A horticultural therapy probation program: community supervised offenders. p. 39.
NATIONAL SAFETY February 2006
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (12) December 2005
a. Destination: the multi generational park: a new trend in mega-parks that offer something for every age and interest surfaces in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. p. 41
PLASTICULTURE 6 (124) 2005
RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER March 2006
STUDIES IN THE HISTORY OF GARDENS & DESIGNED LANDSCAPES (An International Quarterly)26 (1) January-March 2006
a. Lawrence Halprin's public spaces: design, experience and recovery. Three case studies. p. 1.
TURF CRAFT INTERNATIONAL 107 March-April 2006
VITIS (Journal of Grapevine Research) 45 (2) 2006
a. Grapevine virus C and grapevine leaf roll associated virus 2 are serologically related and appear to be the same virus. p. 93.
WEED WATCH 2 (11) March 2006
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 20.3.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (3) February 1, 2006
a. Join the orchid craze: a professional horticulturist offers tips garden center staff can pass along to customers to ensure their success in growing and maintaining orchids. p. 19. b. Precautionary pesticide selection: health concerns are driving the availability of numerous resources to determine the proper and safe use of pesticides. p. 26.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (3) March 1, 2006
a. Redbug resurgence: recent years have provided some of the most exciting selections and breeding to date of Cercis, a fantastic group of small flowering trees. p. 15 b. Abiding by the rule: two noted Ohio extension specialists explain how following the basic horticultural laws can help control plant problems, pests and diseases. p. 21. c. Soil texture and water management: there is much underfoot to understand how water makes its way through the ground. p. 32.
d. Mountain magic: carving a natural-looking landscape out of a mountainside is tough business, but one Utah design/build company accepted the challenge and reaped the rewards. p. 36.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 54 January/February 2006
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 506 March 2006
a. Specialist degree on offer at NMIT. p. 8.
b. Producing high-end organic wines. Part 1: Post-harvest nutrition and stimulating myccorhizal fungi. p.19. c. Hunter Valley improves pest and disease management. p. 29.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (3) March 2006
a. Australian plants. Going for gold, silver and bronze. p. 16.
b. Tiny but tricky killer: helping hand - parasitic wasps work wonders. p. 18. c. Botanic bounty feeds new wave: using food plants as enticement, Geelong Botanic Gardens is introducing a new wave of people, young and old, to the joys of horticulture. p. 33.
d. Restructuring for different market: retailers who are still in denial about how radically garden centre trade has altered, might like to hear how one West Australian owner- operator has responded to the changes. p. 35. e. Crop protection. Permitted pesticides list expands. p. 43. f. Urban jungles: today's lighter, brighter homes and offices are the perfect setting for indoor plants - but not everyone has the time or inclination to nurture their own greenery, giving rise to a thriving hire trade. p. 47.
CUNNINGHAMIA 9 (2) 2005
THE GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131 (3) March 2006
a. Rivers of colour: one of the most effective ways of using spring bulbs is to naturalise drifts below trees, as often found in the wild. 166.
b. Vernal vetchlings: Lathyrus vernus. Often overlooked in favour of their larger-flowered sweet-pea relatives, these delicate border perennials have much to offer, being both versatile and tolerant of many different soil conditions, p. 148.
c. Learning from nature: Nigel Dunnett visits a garden in Germany inspired by natural ecosystems.p. 188.
d. Stellar attraction: among the most desirable magnolias for the garden, Magnolia stellata and its relatives are available in several choice selections. p. 194.
e. Guarding the landscape: should a gardener's right to plant what they want overrule that of visually respecting the environs? Noel Kingsbury believes it is time to slow down on the phormiums and speed up on sensibility. p.202.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA April 2006
a. Tree peonies: how to grow these stunning blooms. p. 18.
b. Fill your pots with colour: bulbs in pots. p. 30. c. True romance: Visit a stunning flower-filled cottage garden. p. 34. d. Contemporary elegance - a modern garden: see one of Peter Fudge's amazing contemporary designs. p. 38.
GENUS 18 (1) February 2006
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (3) March 2006
a. Day-neutral vernalization: the third article in a series on perennial vernalization, researchers explore plants that require vernalization and are day neutral following cooling. p. 38.
b. Growing people: inspiring the future. Make time for meaningful training and watch your employees blossom. p.63. c. Integrated plant health: proper use of soils and media. p. 66.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 41 (2) February 2006 Special edition - regional insect control.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 16 February 2006
a. Abelia: with attractive foliage and a long flowering season, abelias look good well into autumn. p. 18.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 23 February 2006
a. Crocosmia: with a vibrant array of colours and saffron fragrance, crocosmias liven up sunny borders. p.18.
b. Pests & diseases - plant viruses. p. 30.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 2 March 2006
a. Spiraea: bridal wreath offers more than just bright flowers. It also gives fine autumn colour. p. 18. b. Wise up to waste: recycling of waste materials raises practical issues, especially for smaller growers. p. 25.
HORTTECHNOLOGY 16 (1) January-March 2006
a. An after-school gardening club to promote fruit and vegetable consumption among fourth grade students: the assessment of social cognitive theory constructs. p. 24.
b. Visiting green outdoor environments positively impacts self-rated health among older people in long-term care. p. 55.
c. Children's garden consultants: a new model of engaging youth to inform garden design and programming. p.139. d. A survey of horticulture and plant sciences graduate programs and faculty salaries at North American Universities. p. 146.
IFPRA WORLD (International Federation of Parks and Recreation Administration) March 2006 a. Enhancement of the landscape within the City of Whittlesea, Australia. p. 14. b. Tree appraisal the South African way. p. 22.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (12) December 2005 a. The advantages of fertigation. p. 27.
b. Site amenities in the landscape design. p. 29.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (3) March 2006
a. A gem of a park in Portland's cultured pearl: an innovative master plan and its first park sen an optimistic course. p. 24.
b. Reflection on healing: a landscape architect tells how he designed Tampa's cancer survivors park. p.34.
c. The poetry of stormwater: rain gardens balance function and aesthetics in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. p.50. d. A bright future for wastewater treatment: near Seattle, a design team fits a major sewage treatment plant into the landscape. p. 76. e. Square deal?: Will impending changes to Washington Square Park offer needed improvements or impose a bogus take on history? p. 102
LANDSCAPE AUSTRALIA 109 28 (1) February 2006
a. Benchmark bypass: the new Craigieburn bypass creates a dynamic experience for the motorist and adds some significant works of landscape architecture to Melbourne's northern gateway. p. 17.
b. Water works: Mark Frisby provides an overview of some recent Melbourne projects incorporating water sensitive urban design (WSUD). P. 61.
PARK WATCH 224 March 2006
a. Protecting forests and woodland in far west Victoria - conservation in a time of global warming. p. 8. b. National parks and fire. p. 17.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (3) March 2006
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 21 (1) 2006
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Journal Display 6.3.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (4) February 15 2006
a. Worth their weight in gold: a conifer expert will help rekindle your love of these vivacious, gold beauties. p. 16.
b. Different from the norm: a plant pathology expert explains why alternative, environmentally friendly materials and products should be used in controlling plant disease. p. 22. c. Protecting employee information: the electronic age has made it a little harder to keep sensitive information in its place. Here are some ways to keep a lid on it. p. 26. d. Rooted in the real world: students at Michigan State University, East Lansing, learn what it's like to be in - and how to stay in - the nursery business. p. 30. e. Safe bet for the landscape: herbaceous perennial groundcovers are fairly easy to establish and maintain, making them a perfect alternative for turfgrass in a low- maintenance landscape. p. 35.
ARBORIST NEWS 15 (1) February 2006
a. Cool trees: surviving cold temperatures. p. 12.
b. The importance of science in arboriculture: how research science benefit the practicing arborist. p. 22. c. Writing effective reports: a guide for the consultant, Part 2. p. 39. d. It isn't just about noise reduction and oxygen...trees also provide social benefits. p.44.
e. Climbers corner: a systematic approach for testing new equipment and techniques. p.51.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 17 (4) February/March/April 2006 a. Greek gardens in West End - (Brisbane). p. 14.
BOTANIC NEWS (Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne Inc.) Autumn 2006
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. 439 March 2006
FIELD NATS NEWS 151 March 2006
GREEN PLACES 22 February 2006
a. Potential through participation: giving children a voice is a crucial part of the design process for school grounds. p. 22.
b. Holistic regeneration: Chris Calvert of the Wildlife Trust considers the value of Local Area greements in integrating green space projects into regeneration schemes. p. 28. c. Community-managed countryside: Doorstep Green programme manager Pete Johnstone looks at the lesson to be learnt from the experiences of two community schemes. p. 34.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (3) March 2006 a. The mysteries of mystery shoppers. p. 17.
b. New employees - your roles and responsibilities. p. 21.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (10) February 2006 a. A greener greenhouse. p. 38
b. Chilli thrips: the next major pest you need to look out for. p. 74.
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Journal Display 20.2.06
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AQIS BULLETIN 1 February 2006
ARNOLDIA (The Magazine of the Arnold Arboretum) 64 (1) 2005
a. Benjamin Bussey, Woodland Hill, and the creation of the Arnold Arboretum. p. 2. b. The (un)natural and cultural history of Korean goldenrain tree. p. 16.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 14 (1) January/February 2006
a. Natural inputs: American researcher, William T. Crow, investigates biologically derived alternatives to Nemacur. p. 28. b. Seed trends: breeding for multiple markets. p. 34.
AUSTRALASIAN PLANTS CONSERVATION 14 (3) December 2005 - February 2006
a. Special theme: THREATENED ECOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 505 February 2006
a. Interactive research project to strengthen grower capabilities in changing conditions. p. 39.
b. The journey towards the sustainable reuse of winery waste water. p. 44.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (2) February 2006
a. Australian plants: native options for succulent lovers. p. 19.
b. Pest notes. European invaders spreading out. p. 22. c. Dalliance with dahlias turns to livelihood. p. 36. d. Step-by-step: world-first Wollemi bonsai's birth. p. 40.
e. Sugar sweetens tree transplants. p. 49. f. School garden a growing inspiration: students, teachers and parents of a new Victorian primary school have worked together to create a haven of tranquility for future generations. p. 56.
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 16 (1) January/February 2006
a. The enforcement of breeders rights: the necessity, the theory and practice. p. 44.
GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 131 (2) February 2006
a. A bond with the landscape - Cae Hir gardens, Ceredigion.: this rural garden set among the Welsh hills is inspired by the Continental roots of its Dutch owner incorporating elements of formality into naturalistic planting. p. 88.
b. Cream of the characias: with its many distinct selections, Euphorbia characias will suit almost any garden. p. 94.
c. Carried on the wind...- catkins in the garden. p. 103.
d. Dressed for all occasions: the evolution of Great Dixter. p. 110.
e. In conversation. "We were at Sissinghurst because the ideas and design were already there" - Pamela Schwerdt and Sibylle Kreutzberger: a horticultural partnership grown from a love of gardening. p. 128.
GARDEN DESIGN JOURNAL 47 February 2006
a. Thoughtful environment: sustainable garden design is moving out of the shadows and into the mainstream. p. 24. b. Designer profile - Cleve West. Fuse together a passion for drawing, sculpture and nature and the result is the successful design practice of Cleve West. p. 34.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA March 2006
a. Nature's way: do something good for the environment by converting your garden into a permaculture paradise. p. 26. b. Clever courtyard:pots and tiny spaces. p. 33.
c. 2 part series: bulbs made easy. p. 47.
d. Plants for free: create more stock from what you already have - it's fun and wallet- friendly. p. 54. e. The good lawn guide. p. 61. f. Pruning fruit trees. p. 80.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 44 (2) February 2006
a. How chemicals come to market: EPA regulates the three-step process that takes chemicals from the lab to the greenhouse. p. 42. b. Integrated plant health management. Part 1: managing plant health. p. 66.
GROUND MAINTENANCE 40 (12) December 2005
GROUND MAINTENANCE 41 (1) January 2006
a. Special edition - the new herbicides
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Summer 2005/06
LANDSCAPE AND IRRIGATION 30 (2) February 2006
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (2) February 2006
a. Ecology tested on the national mall: but did enough students seize the opportunity to challenge the great American lawn? p. 34.
b. What to retain, what to emulate, what to toss: how to rehabilitate a classic Charleston garden without destroying its essence? One landscape architect shares her approach. p. 38. c. Brave new ecology: on the road to more sustainable urban landscapes, the natives- versus-exotics controversy. p. 46. d. Developing the path less taken: corporate land development can offer a satisfying - and lucrative - career option for landscape architects. p. 70. e. Grey urban center, green heart: this minimalist design wan awards, but have vending machines and rows of potted plants detracted from its integrity? p. 89. f. Because plants are at stake: Peter Del Tredici speaks up for plants because too many landscape architects undervalue them. p. 96.
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 43 January 2006
a. A tale of two gardens. p. 11. b. Gardening in pots in Melbourne. p. 17.
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL 21 (1) February 2006
a. Growth regulators - a New Zealand experience. p. 9.
b. Pythium diseases. p. 17.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (2) February 2006
a. Major gene resistance to blackleg in brassica napus overcome within three years of commercial production in southeastern Australia. p. 190.
TRUST NEWS 34 (3) February 2006
UNDER CONTROL 32 December 2005
a. Chemical control of cacti can be a prickly issue. p. 14.
YOUR GARDEN Autumn 2006
a. Tulips without tears: tulips even in warm climates. p. 26.
b. Healing garden: plant therapies are the basis for this garden of wellbeing. p. 54. c. Forging the way: native design pioneer Gordon Ford's own garden. p. 68. d. A bush romance: Passionate about native flora? You'll love this idyllic landscape. p. 74. e. Create an African garden: out of Africa and into your garden. p. 84. f. Beyond the lens: investigating the creative works of garden photography. p. 98.
g. Painted landscapes: two design professionals create a bold and abstract body of work. p. 104.
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Journal Display 6.2.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (2) January 15 2006
a. The witch's blight: some witch-hazel cultivars are more resistant to leaf blight than others. The integrated pest management team at Longwood Gardens, Kenneth Square, PA, examines which witch is best. p.40.
AQIS BULLETIN 10 December 2005
ARBORIST NEWS 14 (6) December 2005
a. Planting and transplanting best management practices. p. 12.
b. Arboriculture instructions in Northeast Iowa Community College. p. 33.
c. Writing effective reports: a guide for the consultant. Part 1. p. 39.
ECOS 128 December 2005 -January 2006
a. Private conservations. Land trusts: how do they work, what have they achieved, and where are they headed? - (12-page-special). p. 18.
FIELD NATS NEWS 150 February 2006
GREENHOUSE GROWER 24 (1) January 2006
a. Reading, writing and foliage: do plants help college students remain attentive in class? Or even help them retain learned material? p. 36. b. Educational series: Control your energy costs. Energy crisis, Jr. - necessity's child: the first true energy crisis of the 1970s spawned a wave of innovation still rippling throughout the green industry. What does the next generation of invention hold? p.58. c. Vernalization: life in the cold. p. 70. d. Flowering bulbs as specialty. p. 92. e. How to hire the right person: ask the right questions and stay on track for an effective interviewing process. p. 156.
GROUNDSWELL 17 (2) February 2006
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (9) January 2006
a. When the going gets tough: a close look at trends in energy, industry growth, retailing, consumers and the global marketplace. p. 58. b. 6 keys to building customer loyalty: make your customer's choice easy. p. 76.
c. How well do you know them?: Do you understand your pest control materials and how they work? p.120.
HORTGUIDE 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 12 January 2006
a. Begonia: with flamboyant flowers and foliage, begonias add interest to indoor or outdoor displays. p.16.
b. Pest & diseases - rust. p. 24.
INDIGENOTES 16 (4) December 2005
a. The use and abuse of tree guards. p. 6.
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY 81 (1) January 2006
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (11) November 2005
a. Popular retaining wall options: random-pattern segmental retaining walls offer heavy- duty soil retention and good looks in one wall. And with a geogrid, the sky is the limit. p. 30. b. Organic fertilizers: from increased turf density to improved stress tolerance and soil porosity. organic fertilizers help make other management practices more effective. p. 37.
MUELLERIA 22 2005
NUYTSIA (Western Australian Herbarium) 15 (3) 2005
RESTORATION ECOLOGY 13 (4) December 2005
a. Establishment of a vegetation cover on tundra kimberlite mine tailings: 1. A greenhouse study. p. 594. b. Establishment of a vegetation cover on tundra kimberlite mine tailings: 2. A field study. p. 602. c. Assessing simple versus complex restoration strategies for industrially disturbed forests. p. 639.
THE RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER January 2006
TURFCRAFT INTERNATIONAL 106 January-February 2006
THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST 122 (6) December 2005
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Journal Display 23.1.06
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AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 203 (1) January 1 2006
a. Grafting with care: a North Carolina nursery owner explains why before-and aftercare are important considerations in successful grafting. p. 18.
b. Drought and about in the Midwest: a professor of horticulture explains drought's effects on woody plants - the good, the bad and the ugly. p. 24. c. A hard look at the landscape: a Maryland landscape designer finds ways to turn one home's difficult hardscaping projects into a reality. p. 36.
ARBOR AGE 25 (11) November 2005
a. Tree maintenance - the key to growth and health. p. 22.
b. 10 marketing mistakes - and how to avoid them. p. 37.
ARBORICULTURAL JOURNAL 29 (1) November 2005
a. Transplanting mature trees - lessons from case histories. p. 19. b. A study of biodiversity in UK urban tree populations. p. 55.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (8) December 2005
a. Resprouting of saplings following a tropical rainforest fire in north-east Queensland, Australia. p. 817. b. Consequences of soil compaction for seedling establishment: implications for natural regeneration and restoration. p. 827. c. Coarse woody debris in Australian forest ecosystems: a review. p. 834.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 504 January 2006
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 104 (1) January 2006
a. Australian wattles take centre stage. p. 13.
b. No flies on these insects: sawflies. p. 17.
c. Climate control boosts quality: designing, constructing and maintaining cost and energy- efficient greenhouse is an exacting business. p. 35.
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 131 (1) January 2006
a. Digging deep - Dewstow House, Monmouthshire: uncovering the tunnels and grottoes of a hidden Edwardian garden, originally constructed by artificial rock garden specialists Pulham and Son. p. 18.
b. Living a gardening life - Sir Peter Smithers. A true plantsman with a diversity of interests, from lotus to magnolias, bamboos and tree peonies, explains the development of his fascinating garden, Vico Morcote in Switzerland. p. 28. c. Serpents in paradise - snake bark maples. p. 38. d. Pity the poor designer?: pitfalls pave the way of those who design gardens for a living, insists Anne Beswick, claiming that her profession gets a raw deal and deserves more credit all round. p. 58.
GARDEN HISTORY (Journal of the Garden History Society) 33 (1) Summer 2005
a. The picturesque at Brislington House, Bristol: the role of landscape in relations to the treatment of mental illness in the early nineteen-century asylum. p. 47.
b. Landscapers for the mind: English asylum designers, 1845 - 1914. p. 61.
c. The "pond garden' at Hampton Court palace: 'one of the best-known examples of a sunk garden'. p.87.
d. The building of the garden: arts & crafts gardens in Australia, 1880 - 1914. p. 118.
THE GARDEN HISTORY SOCIETY NEWS 76 Winter 2005
GARDENING AUSTRALIA February 2006
a. Connoisseur plants: discover and grow unusual beauties. p. 24.
b. Shady characters: simple shade solutions. p. 28. c. Pete's soil solutions: Peter Cundall shows how to get the healthiest soil. p. 44. d. 20 secrets of composting. p. 64.
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 34 (1) January 2006 a. Dying for a drink: red gums get rescue package. p. 24.
b. How to save precious drops. p. 34.
HORTGUIDE 2006
HORTICULTURE WEEK 5 January 2006
a. Pulmonaria: lungwort makes a good landscaping subject with a long season of interest in spring and summer. p. 16.
b. Pests & diseases - browntail and gypsy moths. p. 29.
HORTSCIENCE 40 (7) December 2005
IFPRA WORLD December 2005
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 130 (6) November 2005
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 96 (1) January 2006
a. Demilitarized zone: the Presidio makes room for a corporate headquarters designed by Lawrence Halprin. p. 32.
b. For the birds: In Boston, a park attracts birds, and the birds attract people. p. 36. c. Naturally secluded: how the high goals for Penn State's eco-friendly design school were brought down to earth. p. 46. d. An ecological vision for rebuilding New Orleans: planning for a cleaner, greener Crescent City. p. 64. e. Greenhouse effect: at this Key West vacation home, the garden makes the house. p. 78.
LANDSCAPE JOURNAL 24 (2) 2005
a. Special issue - "Teaching with culture in mind: cross-culture learning in landscape architecture'.
NATIONAL SAFETY 76 (11) December 2005
a. Risk management: bringing OHS into the risk management fold. p. 12.
b. Repetitive strain injury (RSI) lingers: RSI lingers under other names. p. 37.
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (11) November 2005 a. Natural collaborations: inter-departmental partnerships can help park and recreation agencies manage more efficiently. p. 60.
PLANT DISEASE 90 (1) January 2006
VITIS (Journal of Grapevine Research) 45 (1) 2006
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Journal
Display 9.1.06
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (12) December 15 2005
AQIS BULLETIN 9 October/November 2005
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 8 (4) Summer 2005
a. Trekking in the right direction: the Victorian trails strategy 2005-2006. p. 6.
GREEN PLACES 21 Winter 2005/2006
a. Where have all the flowers gone?: Alexandra Rook of the civic trust bemoans the dearth of soft landscaping in new public spaces. p. 44.
GROUND SWELL 17 (1) January 2006
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (8) December 2005
a. Rots and spots: fungicide evaluations for black root rot and Myrothecium blight. p. 74.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 1 December 2005
a. Mentha: with its colour and aroma, mint's many uses range from flower arranging to ant repellent. p.18.
b. Gaining training. Arboriculture's tight regulations make training and certification essential, but the increasing number of qualifications available in the UK and internationally can be confusing. p. 21.
c. Pest and diseases - damping off. p. 30.
d. Alternative growing media: whether you buy or mix your own, choose compost materials that suit your production. p. 37.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 8 December 2005
a. Hippeastrum: this easy-to-grow genus makes an attractive indoor plant during the Christmas period. p. 14.
b. Pest & diseases - red thread. p. 32.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 15 December 2005
a. Rubus: a fruity array of brambles forms a backbone for easy-care landscaping and winter gardens. p.20.
b. RHS plant trials - Begonia rex. p. 22.
c. Ground control: root anchoring systems enable landscapers to specify more mature trees. p. 35.
INTERNATIONAL PLANT PROPAGATION SOCIETY COMBINED PROCEEDINGS 52 2002
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 23 (4) December 2005
a. Evaluation of treated effluent as an irrigation source for landscape plants. p. 174.
b. Evaluation of herbaceous perennials as weed suppressive groundcovers for use along roadsides or in landscapes. p. 198.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (10) October 2005
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (10) October 2005
THE PLANTSMAN NEW SERIES 4 (4) December 2005
a. Hot tips for grafters: a summary of recent research into graft compatibility and a guide to simple techniques for achieving better grafts. p. 227.
b. Carolus Clusius and the ascent of botany: the development of botany through the activities of Renaissance scholars and their herbals and gardens. p. 230.
c. Who owns nature?: the implications and ethical validity of Plant Breeder's Rights. p. 191.
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 33 (3) 2005
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