Vases
HomArt Parisian Ceramic Vase, Small, Apple Green
(Misc.) HomArt
Measures 3-1/2-inch length by 3-1/2-inch width by 5-inch height
Made of ceramic material; artistic, architectural and decorative
Available in small size and apple green color
This beautiful parisian vase has crackled paint to give it a vintage look
Use it for a herb pot or place it on a bookshelf for a bit of style
Price:
$11.00
$11.00
usually every winter it rarely snows here, but this year it was colder than the ones before. i have a little lemon tree i started growing 2 years ago. i have it planted in a big fat heavy ceramic garden vase.
The tree is probably still alive but the cold snap made it go dormant. Put the tree in a bright warm location and continue to water it when the soil is dry. You should see new buds in a few days but it could be as long as a few weeks.
( I really suck at writing essays, mostly because my paragraph structures suck and im missing a conclusion.)
Ceramics
“It’s like Christmas every time you open the Kiln.” – Ianna Frisby
It...
Very nice story.
I usually do not read long texts... but u got me pulled into it.
U give grabbing details and the best is for last, the venim is in the tail.
Congratulations on a very captivating report.
Food, beauty and peace are found in Belmont Garden
The bountiful Trotochaud/McDowell Garden and Everyday Pottery Studio will open to the public as part of Belfast Garden Club’s Open Garden Days on Friday, Aug. 12 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 103 Northport Road, Belmont.
“If people want to see what it is to garden, that it is not all glamour and successes [they should come to our garden],” said Mary Trotochaud, one half of this husband-and-wife gardening duo.
She and partner Rick McDowell show, through their gardens, that an abundance of beauty and sustenance can be grown in less-than-ideal conditions with hard work, conviction and a willingness to experiment.
After the feat of successfully growing an herb-and-salad garden while living in Baghdad, the creative gardening couple bought a home and a few acres in Belmont and began their most recent garden project. “There was no good topsoil to start,” Mary recalled, pointing to roots sticking out at the edge of the garden area. The property was filled with dense overgrown brush, and not much lawn or garden space existed.


