Garden Detective
Jessica Damiano's award-winning garden blog gets to the root of things.
Jessica Damiano
Jessica Damiano is a journalist with more than 20 years experience in radio, television, print and online media.
She has worked on Newsday's interactive endeavors since 1994, and currently is senior editor of Newsday's ExploreLI.com website.
Jessica, who has trained as a Master Gardener, enjoys toiling in her garden -- an ongoing work in progress -- and helping local gardeners solve their horticultural problems in her column, Garden Detective, which appears every Sunday in Newsday.
The Garden Detective blog was awarded a 2008 Press Club of Long Island Society of Professional Journalists Online Features Reporting Award.
Jessica lives in Nassau County with her husband John, daughters Justine and Julia, dogs Maddie and Mikey, and a whole bunch of perennials, vegetable plants and weeds.
Plants vs. Zombies 2 coming soon
Photo credit: PopCap Games
OK, I admit it: I'm a zombie geek. I love zombie movies and folklore, and consider the question, "Vampires, zombies or werewolves?" to be a riveting party-conversation starter, as well as a testament to someone's character. As you know, I'm also somewhat of a plant geek. So it shouldn't be a surprise that I'm super-excited that a sequel to the video game Plants vs Zombies -- "Plants...
Read more »A trifecta of garden-related tidbits in the news today
Photo credit: AP
If you've been following the news today, you might have noticed an interesting trend: Gardening and garden-related topics have surfaced in a triplet of stories from around New York.
Exhibit A: As Newsday's Gary Dymski reports, a Greenport woman is facing a petty larceny charge after allegedly stealing eight perennial plants from an Agway nursery in Southold yesterday, according to police....
Read more »Back to basics: Learn about heirloom vegetables and seed saving
Photo credit: iStock
If you're interested in getting back to basics and learning more about heirloom vegetables and seed saving, your ship is coming in on Sunday: Steph Gaylor, owner of Invincible Summer Farms and farmer with the Peconic Land Trust-owned Charnews Farm in Southold, will be giving a presentation at Hallockville Museum Farm, where she'll discuss saving, archiving and growing heirlooms, as well as how home...
Read more »American Rose Society show coming to Long Island
Photo credit: Getty Images
Every gardener knows June is for roses, so it's only fitting that the Long Island Rose Society is holding its annual judging and exhibition on Sunday, June 9 from 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. at Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park (1395 Planting Fields Rd., Oyster Bay).
The show, titled "Fairy Tales and Roses," will feature hundreds of roses of all classes, from minis and hybrid teas...
Read more »Burpee's Grow Anywhere truck visits Brentwood
Photo credit: Burpee Home Gardens
Burpee Home Gardens has taken its “Grow Anywhere Tour” on the road, and Brentwood residents were on the receiving end yesterday of 1,300 pounds of produce and 450 vegetable plants.
The 10,000-mile tour across the country, which began in March, will distribute 13,000 vegetable plants and 30,000 pounds of produce by the time it wraps up its mission later this month. The company also is distributing...
Read more »Get ready for the 2013 Great Long Island Tomato Challenge
Photo credit: Nicole Horton
It’s time to prepare for the 7th annual Great Long Island Tomato Challenge! This year’s contest will be held at 7 p.m. on Aug. 23 at Newsday headquarters (235 Pinelawn Rd., Melville.)
Give your plants plenty of tender loving care all summer long, then bring your biggest, heaviest ripe fruit to the event. I’ll weigh your tomatoes personally and crown the 2013 Tomato King or Queen.
The...
Read more »Correcting Sandy damage in the garden
Photo credit: Nick Spangler
Many on Long Island whose gardens were flooded by superstorm Sandy are wondering whether it’s safe to eat vegetables grown in soil contaminated by water that not only contained salt but might have transported chemicals, bacteria and other pathogens to their gardens. Others fear plants may not grow there at all.
Both concerns are valid, but the situation is not hopeless: In the months since...
Read more »Brood II cicadas on the way; protect new trees and pets
Photo credit: AP
Ever notice how most years, you only see a few cicadas, and you don't hear them chirping all that much? And then other years you find their discarded exoskeletons on everything from gas grills and swing sets to front doors and mailboxes? Ever notice how those are the years when it sounds like an Alfred Hitchcock movie outside your window every night around Memorial Day?
That's because after...
Read more »Garden Poetry Contest: It's on!
Photo credit: Getty Images
It's time for our annual Garden Poetry Contest, and this year's topic is "Lucky Seven."
Send in your original poem of exactly seven lines that conveys seven things you love about gardening. Write an ode to your seven favorite plants, set your seven seed-starting steps to prose or rhyme seven uses for your homegrown radicchio. Use your imagination!
The best submissions will...
Read more »Long Island's first orchid festival coming this week
Photo credit: AP video
The annual Orchid Show at the New York Botanical Garden gets lots of well-deserved fanfare, but this year Long Island will get its own piece of the orchid pie.
The Long Island Orchid Society's first-ever Long Island Orchid Festival hits the scene this week, running from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on May 3-5 at Planting fields Arboretum State Historic Park in Oyster Bay. The festival will host orchid...
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