October 18, 2000    Los Gatos, California  Since 1881

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Gardening







    Stock flowers
    Photograph by Kathy De La Torre

    Stock flowers are often grown for use in cut-flower bouquets, but they also make tall, colorful cool season annuals.


    Specialized garden tools are not interchangeable

    By Tony Tomeo

    When I celebrated my birthday in the summer of 1985, I received many gifts appropriate for the beginning of my college career later that same year--luggage, school supplies, etc. Then my father presented me with a small package that was too heavy to be the keys to my 1985 Buick Riviera. It was actually a new set of Corona pruning shears, which is probably the best quality garden tool I will ever acquire. I never got the car.

    Unlike most '85 Rivieras, these shears gave impeccably reliable service for 15 years until they were finally retired last year. The replacement set was identical except for the word "Japan" stamped in one of the handles, and it was more worn after three months than the others were after 15 years. Unfortunately, it is becoming increasingly difficult to find quality tools.

    Another problem with acquiring garden tools is the selection of those most suitable for their intended uses. Lawn tools and cultivating tools are not variable to confuse consumers, but to be functional for a variety of work. Each tool has its specific use. Many are specialized for very specific uses.

    Hook-and-blade shears (hand shears) are likely the most important of the pruning tools used in home gardening. When pruning, it is best to keep the blade toward the subject plant, with the hook toward the part being pruned off. This is done because the pressure of the stem against the hook may damage cambium. It is also easier to get a closer cut with the thin blade than with the bulkier hook. The hooked shape helps hold stems firm while the curved blade slices through, rather than chops.

    An option to hook-and-blade shears, which I do not recommend, is anvil shears. Anvil shears have a straight blade on one side and an "anvil" on the other. The anvil is only wide and long enough to accommodate the blade and works much like a chopping block. As the blade presses a branch against the anvil, a bit of the cambium is crushed. Half of the crushed tissue leaves with that which is pruned off, but the other half remains on the stem that was just pruned.

    Hook-and-blade shears are also known as "bypass" shears since the blade bypasses the hook. For larger branches that require more leverage on the blade than can be applied to hand shears, lopping shears, or loppers, may be employed. Loppers are simply larger shears with long handles. Anvil loppers are also available, but the gripping quality of the hook-and-blade shears is even more important with larger limbs.

    Fruit shears are another specialized form of bypass shears. The blades are straight, like those of the anvil shears, and there are two blades rather than one. They actually work like scissors with paper. They easily cut small stems but lack the hook used to hold larger stems. Their slender shape is easier to use in tight or delicate areas, such as clusters of grapes or small flowers. Even more specialized flower shears hold the stems of flowers as they are cut.

    Hedge shears are probably the most commonly misused pruning tool. They are designed with long handles for leverage and a pair of long, bypass blades for cutting many small stems at the same time. They are useful for formally sheared hedges composed of plant species with small, dense foliage. They should not be used for everything that becomes overgrown and too large. Plants that are sheared when they require proper pruning will likely present problems later on.

    The worst offenders are the "mow, blow and go" maintenance "gardeners." Their motorized hedge shears operate more like beard trimmers than any of the conventional pruning shears and are used on just about everything. One of my clients, who had her orange tree sheared into a semi-spherical shape and several Japanese maples hedged into cubes, recently told me that it looks as if Edward Scissorhands worked there.

    Flower of the Week: Stock

    Now that nurseries are marketing cool season annuals, stock, Matthiola incana, is becoming available. Stock, which is commercially grown for cut flowers, is unbranched and can get to three feet tall. More commonly available garden varieties are shorter, denser and branched. Height is as variable as variety. Some are limited to one foot; others grow up to two feet tall. Stock can be planted in sunny locations now that weather is cool. Good drainage is very important. Flower clusters are composed of fragrant, one-inch-wide flowers that may be single or double. Colors include white, pink, purplish-red, purple, lavender, purplish-blue and pale yellow.


    Horticulturist Tony Tomeo can be contacted at 408.358.2574.



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