Hello friends! I took some time off from ETTGPro in preparation for 2015. As a result, we have a new, easier to read rate card, and I encourage you to take a look at it. This e-newsletter reaches almost 1800 green industry and allied professionals with each issue, and people routinely tell me they LOVE reading it. If this is your audience, advertise. You are simply not going to find a more cost-effective way of reaching these folks.
If home gardeners are your target, then the Upstate Gardeners’ Journal is your vehicle. 2015 prices are here.We’re currently working on our 2015 Directory, and today’s the deadline, though we have been known to be flexible in the past….
—Jane
- Welcome to our newest sponsor, the Ithaca Native Landscape Symposium! Check out the great lineup, and when you register, you can save ten bucks by using the promo code ETTGP. March 6 & 7, Cinemapolis on the Commons. If you’re interested in learning more, check out Michelle Sutton’s feature story on co-founder Dan Segal and the symposium in the most recent Upstate Gardeners’ Journal. Great piece, if I do say so myself.
- In light of Monroe County Cornell Cooperative Extension‘s recent move, “Some Thoughts on Extension” from Jeff Gillman, straight-shooting myth debunker of horticulture.
- Plants talk to each other using an Internet of fungus.
- Paperwhites. Like cilantro, lots of people either love them or can’t stand the smell. This season I forced a few and gave them as gifts, too. A lot of places don’t carry them this time of year though, or sell out early, so I am always happy to come across a stash. This is a little weird, but inspiration hit on Thanksgiving Day, when my host brought up a special bottle of burgundy from the
basementwine cellar. I sniffed and sniffed and sniffed and pondered…and it finally hit me! It smelled just like paperwhites!
- These gloves, found while researching holiday gifts for gardeners, are going to haunt me in my dreams for a while…ack…
- Did you love The Orchid Thief? Having a major “Serial” withdrawal? Check out this podcast about some mystifying unsolved plant crimes in North Carolina.
That’s it! More next week. Thanks as always for reading.
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