Thieneman's-Creativity grows here !

For garden variety that's anything but garden variety. 502-296-1499

Summer Solstice – Mother Earth says, “Work It Baby”

June11

I can’t believe it! We are right around the corner from the longest day of the year – June 21st. Do you know what that means? From then until December 21st every day of this year gets a little bit shorter. It feels as if someone turned up the treadmill speed while I wasn’t looking. And it’s times like these that I understand the value of ‘living in the moment’ so again I make that mid-year resolution to do just that.

Which brings us to our Summer Solstice Celebration – the 8th one so far. It’s a fair amount of work for our small crew particularly after a very busy Spring but we want to celebrate the year. We also want to show everyone how to stop and smell the roses as well as thank our customers for their continued support. It’s nice that we have a farm to do this on. It might help call to mind a simpler life style.

This year our focus is on food – preferably the home-grown or locally grown variety. Don’t confuse the term ‘simpler’ with the word ‘easier’. Growing your own food makes your life simpler because all the work involved in planting, sowing, watering, de-bugging, weeding, harvesting, and preserving eliminates all those other consumer focused activities that currently fill up our days. But on Friday night the l9th of this month we will make it easier and simpler to enjoy that harvest.

We have invited Mark Williams, the Spirited Chef and organizer of Slow Food Bluegrass, to come and offer picnic style fare with the emphasis on locally grown. He will be serving grass-fed beef burgers, veggie burgers, hot dogs and locally grown salads along with fresh cobbler, Elmwood Inn iced tea and organic lemonade. Come and support Mark and Slow Food Blugrass. The price is right, the food is great and it’s the green thing to do.

New this year! A Garden Hat Contest! Thieneman’s encourages creativity and we will be rewarding that effort with a $50.00 gift certificate. Be a horticultural fashionista and come strut your stuff. Judging takes place at 8 p.m. (Judges names will not be released prior to contest to prevent lobbying efforts.)

For the Next Generation of Gardeners we will have veggie coloring books, we’ll be planting seeds and Bernheim Park representatives will be there offering encouragement to kids to Get Outside! A bedtime story, “What the Wind Told” will be read at 9 o’clock and a bedtime snack – smores could also be found around the fire-pit.

Entertainment will be provided by the String Chickens and they are promising a new twist to their musical endeavors this year.

As always this will be the first big SALE of the year so come prepared to find some bargains.

Come and have some fun. Stuff gets crackin about 6pm and we won’t stop until midnight. Whew!

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Blooms on Sale

May18

Lose at the tracks?… Win at Thienemans!
Come in this week and get some color for your patio. Buy FOUR annuals ($4.25 each) and get the FIFTH one FREE. Keep ’em watered well and feed them occasionally, and you should have blooms all summer. A bigger pot and some deadheading wouldn’t hurt either. Sale runs thru Memorial Day. We still have a great selection of annuals.

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2009 HEIRLOOM TOMATO LIST

April19

Abe Hall
Ace 55
Amish Oxheart
Amish Paste
Amulet
Arkansas Travler
Aunt Ruby’s German Green
Australian Heart, ‘Joe Thieneman’
Barnes Mountain Pink
Barnes Mountain Yellow
Bear Claw
Beefsteak
Black Cherry
Black From Tula
Black Krim
Black Master
Black Mountain Pink
Black Pear
Black Plum
Black Prince
Black Truffle
Black Yum Yum
Brandy Sudduths Pink
Buckeye Yellow
Bulgarian Triumph Red
Butler Skinner
Calf’s Heart
Caspian Pink
Champagne Cherry
Cherokee Purple
Chris Ukranian
Clustermato
Cows Tit
Creole
Depinto
Depps Pink Fire Fly
Dr. Walter
Dr. Wyghe’s Yellow
Dwarf Champion
Early Girl
Frank’s Large Red
Fresh Salsa
George O’Brian
German Johnson
Giant Belgium
Giant Italian Paste
Giant Sicillian Paste
Gift from Woodland
Grandfather Ashlock
Grandma Viney’s
Granny Cantrell’s German Red
Green Grape
Green Zebra
Haley’s Purple Comet
Hasting Mildglobe
Hazelfield Farm Red
Hege German Pink
Hog Heart
Indiana Red
J.D.’S Texas Special
Kellog’s Breakfast
Kentucky Striped
Khaborosky
King Umberto
Kosovo
KY Heirloom
Ky. Beefsteak
Ky. Light Yellow
Ky. Pink Stamper
Ky. Plate
Ky. Wonder
Large Red Cherry
Lenny & Gracie’s Red
Lenny & Gracie’s Yellow
Lichi Cherry
Lime Green Salad
Lincoln Adams
Linnie’s Oxheart
Livingdon Globe
Lumpy Red
Mama Leona
Marglobe
Marianna’s Peace
Matina
Max’s Large Green
Mikado Ecarlote
Monk
Moraviqua Del mercato
New Jersey Championship
New Yorker
Old Kentucky
Opalaka Paste
Opal’s Homestead
Orange Strawberry
Ozark Pink
Pale Perfect Purple
Palestinian
Pan American
Pasture Cherry
Peacevine Red Cherry
Persimmon
Pike County
Pik’s Yugo
Pink Climber
Pink Ice Cherry
Pink Ruffle
Plum Lemon
Polish C Pink
Potato Leaf Cherokee Purple
Pritchards Scarlet Red Topper
Purple Dog Creek
Red Calabash
Red Grape
Red Kimberly
Red Lightening
Red Robin
Red Russian
Riesentraube (Red)
Romeo Roman
Rose Beauty
Royal Hillbilly
Rutgers
San Marzano
Santorini Salad
Sicilian Saucer
St. Pierre
Striped Roman
Sun gold Cherry
Sweet Baby Girl
Sweet Meat
T.C. Jones Yellow
Tappy’s Finest Pink
Thessalonia
Tigerella
Tondina Maremmano
Tony’s Italian Paste
Uncle Mark Bagby
Viva
Walzer
Wes
Williams Striped
Winsall
Winter Grape
Yellow Pear Cherry
Yoders German Yellow

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Hello all, Spring has arrived…

March26

officially on the vernal equinox, March 20th but hey, who’s looking at a calendar when you can feel it in your bones and nose.

Hellebores are here, dwarf hostas are popping up, herbs are making their tentative appearance, the violas are pretty and the first hardy perennials are marching into the garden center. Please…no tomatoes yet (it’s not even April BUT they are in the ground and we will have our usual massive selection of heirloom plants including lots of veggies). Look here for the list to be posted shortly and the plants to arrive on ‘mater day April 25th. We do have the makings of a fine salad garden however. Choose from lettuces, spinach, arugula, nasturtiums, watercress and kale. We are receiving some shipments of nursery stock right now and the Pieris japonicas are looking particularly fine.

Come in, smell the wonderful greenhouse smells, wander around, check out the succulents and start making plans!

P.S. We have a new telephone number. We want to be able to answer your questions faster and more efficiently. Even if you don’t have a question call us up and say hi to Lynda, Ursula, Julie, Becky, Mandy or Peggy. This knowledgeable staff is back again waiting expectantly for a new round of ‘Stump the Gardeners’. The number is (502) 296-1499!

– Peggy

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Thieneman’s Late Winter Class Series, 2009

February3

It’s time to look beyond the cold – a little bit of dirt in your hands, the green smells of growing plants, and some planning for your upcoming gardening year can help chase the winter grays for sure. Thieneman’s can help you turn winter into spring with our Late Winter Classes – and be advised that these classes can fill up quickly, so advance registration and payment is required. For registration or for more information, you can call Peggy at (502)640-2039 or visit www.thienemans.com (go to coconut’s corner, and then the classes button in the top right of the page) for a printable registration form.

Friday Feb. 6th, Saturday Feb. 7th, Friday Feb. 20th, Saturday Feb. 21st Sowing Seeds & Taking Cuttings, 10:00 a.m.
Once again, we’re sharing our green space with you! Peggy and Thieneman’s staffers will show you how to sow seed and take cuttings from our stock plants, and you’ll keep what you plant. We’ll even grow your baby plants till April in one of our greenhouses. Single session class; $30.00 fee includes all materials.

Friday Feb. 13th , Saturday Feb. 14th Planting Your Trough Garden, 10:00 a.m.

Learn to design a miniature, movable landscape for your hypertufa trough or other favorite container. We’ll show you how to use different succulents, miniature plants, alpines, and dwarf conifers in to make a little “world in miniature.” Single session class is free – plants and containers will be available for purchase.

Friday Feb. 27th, Saturday Feb. 28th Gardens that Multitask, 10:00 a.m.
The garden word we’ve been hearing this year is veggies! But, not all of us have room for a traditional vegetable garden. In this class, we’ll discuss ways to make a garden work harder, mixing vegetables and herbs in with the perennials and annuals. Plus, we’ll include a coupon to get you started. Single session class, $30.00 fee includes a coupon for six free plants – your choice of any combination of 4” perennials, herbs, or vegetables.

Friday March 6th, Saturday March 7th Sow Your Own Salad, 10:00 a.m.
Springtime means “green”, and what better way to celebrate the new season than with fresh, home-grown salad? We’ll show you how to grow container greens at home, and different ways to use them for the table. Single session class, $30.00 fee includes all materials, including a 12” planter that you will plant and take home, plus samples of and recipes for spring salads and dressings.

Saturday March 7th Preview of Coming Attractions, 1:00 p.m.

What’s new this year? Come on back to the farm, and we’ll show you what! This preview will give you an opportunity to see the new and unusual plant varieties that will be available this season, and think about how they might work in your garden. (Some varieties may be available for purchase, if they’re ready!)
Free, no registration necessary.


And don’t forget – our retail garden center opens for the season on March 15th – hope to see you here!

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Hours: Please call before visiting, our hours could change due to farmer’s markets, special events, etc.
Address: 315 Colonel Cox Road South 40013  ( Google Maps Link )
Phone #: 502-296-1499
Thieneman’s Greenhaus is a family owned and operated garden center, located in beautiful Coxs Creek, KY.
Two years ago we took a leap of faith and decided to relocate our garden center after the family farm sold.
We found a picturesque 10 acre farm just south of Mt Washington and we started settling in. After not quite 2 years now, we still feel like we’re moving in. But we thankfully didn’t have to skip a season.
We had a great first year, and it looks like we’ll have a great second year. We are extremely thankful our loyal customers followed us, and a bunch of new people have found us too.
We have been specializing in herbs and perennials for almost 60 years. Our herb collection is probably the largest in the area. For 15 years now we have grown a large variety of heirloom tomatoes, peppers and veggies. And we have a great love for succulents as well, our collection is ever growing.Our goal is to be your favorite local garden center known for unusual and hard to find plants. We love our plants!!