diff --git a/.nojekyll b/.nojekyll index d334196..21734fa 100644 --- a/.nojekyll +++ b/.nojekyll @@ -1 +1 @@ -6c8cf3b7 \ No newline at end of file +f0ae8b41 \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/01-the_really_really_short_version.html b/01-the_really_really_short_version.html index 8d1ee4a..1400e60 100644 --- a/01-the_really_really_short_version.html +++ b/01-the_really_really_short_version.html @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ -Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma - 2  The really really short version +Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma - 1  The really really short version + @@ -85,8 +31,8 @@ - - + + @@ -143,7 +89,7 @@ - + -
-
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Here is a nice figure!
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Reference a figure by its code chunk label with the fig: prefix, e.g., see Figure @ref(fig:nice-fig). Similarly, you can reference tables generated from knitr::kable(), e.g., see Table @ref(tab:nice-tab).

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knitr::kable(
-  head(iris, 20), caption = 'Here is a nice table!',
-  booktabs = TRUE
-)
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Here is a nice table!
Sepal.LengthSepal.WidthPetal.LengthPetal.WidthSpecies
5.13.51.40.2setosa
4.93.01.40.2setosa
4.73.21.30.2setosa
4.63.11.50.2setosa
5.03.61.40.2setosa
5.43.91.70.4setosa
4.63.41.40.3setosa
5.03.41.50.2setosa
4.42.91.40.2setosa
4.93.11.50.1setosa
5.43.71.50.2setosa
4.83.41.60.2setosa
4.83.01.40.1setosa
4.33.01.10.1setosa
5.84.01.20.2setosa
5.74.41.50.4setosa
5.43.91.30.4setosa
5.13.51.40.3setosa
5.73.81.70.3setosa
5.13.81.50.3setosa
-
-
-

You can write citations, too. For example, we are using the bookdown package (R-bookdown?) in this sample book, which was built on top of R Markdown and knitr (Xie 2015).

+ +

For more species and what they like, see Chapter 5.

- + + @@ -906,13 +727,13 @@

diff --git a/01-the_really_really_short_version_files/figure-pdf/nice-fig-1.pdf b/01-the_really_really_short_version_files/figure-pdf/nice-fig-1.pdf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9475401 Binary files /dev/null and b/01-the_really_really_short_version_files/figure-pdf/nice-fig-1.pdf differ diff --git a/02-from_the_ground_up.html b/02-from_the_ground_up.html index 8463f95..045f566 100644 --- a/02-from_the_ground_up.html +++ b/02-from_the_ground_up.html @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ -Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma - 3  From the ground up (aka soil, dirt, earth, etc) +Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma - 2  From the ground up (aka soil, dirt, earth, etc) + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
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6  Primrose family

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6.1 Showy Evening Primrose / Pinkladies (Oenethera speciosa)

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6.2 Fluttermill Evening Primrose / Missouri Primrose (Oenethera macrocarpa)

+ + +
+ +
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+ + + + + + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/garden_maintenance_by_month.html b/garden_maintenance_by_month.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4f8d091 --- /dev/null +++ b/garden_maintenance_by_month.html @@ -0,0 +1,685 @@ + + + + + + + + + + +Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma - Appendix A — Garden Calendar + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
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+ + +
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Appendix A — Garden Calendar

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+ + + +
+ + +

-Calendar of seasons and what to do when

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Gardening is not as scary as it seems

diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index 3cf8598..8db3a4f 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -23,7 +23,27 @@ margin: 0 0.8em 0.2em -1em; /* quarto-specific, see https://github.com/quarto-dev/quarto-cli/issues/4556 */ vertical-align: middle; } - +/* CSS for citations */ +div.csl-bib-body { } +div.csl-entry { + clear: both; + margin-bottom: 0em; +} +.hanging-indent div.csl-entry { + margin-left:2em; + text-indent:-2em; +} +div.csl-left-margin { + min-width:2em; + float:left; +} +div.csl-right-inline { + margin-left:2em; + padding-left:1em; +} +div.csl-indent { + margin-left: 2em; +} @@ -33,7 +53,7 @@ - + @@ -81,7 +101,7 @@ - +
@@ -90,7 +110,7 @@ - + + + + + + +
+ +
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+ + + +
+ +
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+

References

+
+ + + +
+ + + + +
+ + + +
+ + + + + + +
+
+Allaire, JJ, and Christophe Dervieux. 2024. Quarto: R Interface to +Quarto Markdown Publishing System. https://github.com/quarto-dev/quarto-r. +
+
+Odell, Jenny. 2019. How to Do Nothing. +
+
+Vogt, Benjamin. 2023. “Rewilding Suburbia in the +American Plains.” Ecozon@: European Journal of +Literature, Culture and Environment 14 (1): 174–79. https://doi.org/10.37536/ECOZONA.2023.14.1.5063. +
+
+ + +
+ + + + + + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/search.json b/search.json index 40a9d32..3b9870a 100644 --- a/search.json +++ b/search.json @@ -4,136 +4,182 @@ "href": "index.html", "title": "Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma", "section": "", - "text": "1 What’s the deal with native plants?\n\nHelp save the world\nSave money", + "text": "Introduction: What’s the deal with native plants?", "crumbs": [ - "1  What's the deal with native plants?" + "Introduction: What's the deal with native plants?" ] }, { - "objectID": "01-the_really_really_short_version.html", - "href": "01-the_really_really_short_version.html", - "title": "2  The really really short version", - "section": "", - "text": "2.1 Stop killing things\nStop killing insects and plants. If you have plants breaking your driveway cracks, pour boiling water on it. We’ll get to roundup/bermudagrass/poison ivy in a bit, but for now, just stop until you know what you are doing.", + "objectID": "index.html#why-should-i-bother-switching-to-native-plants-andor-putting-more-effort-into-my-yard", + "href": "index.html#why-should-i-bother-switching-to-native-plants-andor-putting-more-effort-into-my-yard", + "title": "Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma", + "section": "Why should I bother switching to native plants and/or putting more effort into my yard?", + "text": "Why should I bother switching to native plants and/or putting more effort into my yard?\n\nSaving the world\nSaving you money\n\n\nSaving the world\nSeveral big problems can be addressed with native plants\n\nThe biodiversity crisis in general\n\nThe insect apocalypse in particular\nInvasive species harming local ecosystems\n\nWater shortages\nCarbon footprints\n\n\nAre you really serious, I don’t think my garden can save the world.\nActually, it can! 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Leave the twigs. Leave stuff where it falls unless it’s a tripping hazard.", + "objectID": "index.html#book-info", + "href": "index.html#book-info", + "title": "Cast Iron Garden: Plants for Scared People in Central Oklahoma", + "section": "Book info", + "text": "Book info\nThis document was created are using the quarto package (Allaire and Dervieux 2024) to format this book. Some ideas from (Odell 2019).\n\n\n\nAllaire, JJ, and Christophe Dervieux. 2024. Quarto: R Interface to Quarto Markdown Publishing System. https://github.com/quarto-dev/quarto-r.\n\nOdell, Jenny. 2019. 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(NOT IN THE SUMMER)", - "text": "2.4 Add in new things between October and April. (NOT IN THE SUMMER)\nPlants are easy if you put them in the right spot, and it’s okay if some die. This book covers a very small area, so I can tell you almost exactly what’s going to work at some place in your yard. But, it’s still okay if some plants die. That’s how gardening works. We do our best and keep going.\nOkay, first determine where you are and what kind of soil you have. -Soil types in Norman area and pictures of them wet and dry and crumbliness\nAlmost anywhere in Norman that’s sunny and not touching standing water: - Maximilian sunflower\nShady: - White avens - Lyre Leaf sage - Inland Sea Oats\nIf you have the red soiland live on the “north” (loosely north) side of town, these are your keystone plants:\nIf you have the sandy soil and elsewhere in town, plant these:\nDark clay\nYou can label chapter and section titles using {#label} after them, e.g., we can reference Chapter @ref(intro). If you do not manually label them, there will be automatic labels anyway, e.g., Chapter @ref(methods).\nFigures and tables with captions will be placed in figure and table environments, respectively.\n\npar(mar = c(4, 4, .1, .1))\nplot(pressure, type = 'b', pch = 19)\n\n\n\n\nHere is a nice figure!\n\n\n\n\nReference a figure by its code chunk label with the fig: prefix, e.g., see Figure @ref(fig:nice-fig). Similarly, you can reference tables generated from knitr::kable(), e.g., see Table @ref(tab:nice-tab).\n\nknitr::kable(\n head(iris, 20), caption = 'Here is a nice table!',\n booktabs = TRUE\n)\n\n\nHere is a nice table!\n\n\nSepal.Length\nSepal.Width\nPetal.Length\nPetal.Width\nSpecies\n\n\n\n\n5.1\n3.5\n1.4\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n4.9\n3.0\n1.4\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n4.7\n3.2\n1.3\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n4.6\n3.1\n1.5\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n5.0\n3.6\n1.4\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n5.4\n3.9\n1.7\n0.4\nsetosa\n\n\n4.6\n3.4\n1.4\n0.3\nsetosa\n\n\n5.0\n3.4\n1.5\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n4.4\n2.9\n1.4\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n4.9\n3.1\n1.5\n0.1\nsetosa\n\n\n5.4\n3.7\n1.5\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n4.8\n3.4\n1.6\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n4.8\n3.0\n1.4\n0.1\nsetosa\n\n\n4.3\n3.0\n1.1\n0.1\nsetosa\n\n\n5.8\n4.0\n1.2\n0.2\nsetosa\n\n\n5.7\n4.4\n1.5\n0.4\nsetosa\n\n\n5.4\n3.9\n1.3\n0.4\nsetosa\n\n\n5.1\n3.5\n1.4\n0.3\nsetosa\n\n\n5.7\n3.8\n1.7\n0.3\nsetosa\n\n\n5.1\n3.8\n1.5\n0.3\nsetosa\n\n\n\n\n\nYou can write citations, too. For example, we are using the bookdown package (R-bookdown?) in this sample book, which was built on top of R Markdown and knitr (Xie 2015).\n\n\n\n\nXie, Yihui. 2015. Dynamic Documents with R and Knitr. 2nd ed. Boca Raton, Florida: Chapman; Hall/CRC. http://yihui.name/knitr/.", + "objectID": "01-the_really_really_short_version.html#stop-stuff", + "href": "01-the_really_really_short_version.html#stop-stuff", + "title": "1  The really really short version", + "section": "", + "text": "1.1.1 Stop killing things\nStop killing insects and plants. If you have plants breaking your driveway cracks, pour boiling water on it. We’ll get to roundup/bermudagrass/poison ivy in a bit, but for now, just stop until you know what you are doing.\n\n\n1.1.2 Stop doing so much unnecessary work\nLeave the leaves. Leave the twigs. 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(who said the dirt vs soil thing?)\nMap of Norman with geology maps\nPictures of red clay, sandy loam, sand, and black clay wet and dry\nSome plants like some soil. Some like others. We’ll tell you which are which based on what we have tested and read.", "crumbs": [ "Gardening is not as scary as it seems", - "3  From the ground up (aka soil, dirt, earth, etc)" + "2  From the ground up (aka soil, dirt, earth, etc)" ] }, { "objectID": "03-reduce_lawn.html", "href": "03-reduce_lawn.html", - "title": "4  Reduce, reuse, revegetate", + "title": "3  Reduce, reuse, revegetate", "section": "", "text": "Lawn clippings as mulch, compost Lawn post from blog here", "crumbs": [ "Gardening is not as scary as it seems", - "4  Reduce, reuse, revegetate" + "3  Reduce, reuse, revegetate" ] }, { "objectID": "04-trees.html", "href": "04-trees.html", - "title": "5  What about trees?", + "title": "4  What about trees?", "section": "", "text": "Tree post. 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A lot of work)", + "crumbs": [ + "Species accounts", + "5  Species Accounts Model/Example" + ] + }, + { + "objectID": "family_primroses.html", + "href": "family_primroses.html", + "title": "6  Primrose family", "section": "", - "text": "-Which plants look dead in the winter but will come back -Is the plant movable and when is best and how -Species accounts with pictures of all stages and seeds -How and when can it be pruned -What shape if left alone? what shape in a group? -What size of containers can it be grown in? -foot/dog traffic -“agreeableness rating” a la diboll/cox/voigt -Observed and published lifespans\nLinks to all sources (bonap, ladybird center, dave’s garden, hostplant database archive, which books have more info)\nWhere can purchase (maybe??)", + "text": "6.1 Showy Evening Primrose / Pinkladies (Oenethera speciosa)", + "crumbs": [ + "Species accounts", + "6  Primrose family" + ] + }, + { + "objectID": "family_primroses.html#sec-fluttermill", + "href": "family_primroses.html#sec-fluttermill", + "title": "6  Primrose family", + "section": "6.2 Fluttermill Evening Primrose / Missouri Primrose (Oenethera macrocarpa)", + "text": "6.2 Fluttermill Evening Primrose / Missouri Primrose (Oenethera macrocarpa)", "crumbs": [ "Species accounts", - "7  Species Accounts Model/Example" + "6  Primrose family" ] }, { - "objectID": "10-references.html", - "href": "10-references.html", + "objectID": "references.html", + "href": "references.html", "title": "References", "section": "", - "text": "Xie, Yihui. 2015. Dynamic Documents with R and\nKnitr. 2nd ed. Boca Raton, Florida: Chapman; Hall/CRC. http://yihui.name/knitr/.", + "text": "Allaire, JJ, and Christophe Dervieux. 2024. Quarto: R Interface to\nQuarto Markdown Publishing System. https://github.com/quarto-dev/quarto-r.\n\n\nOdell, Jenny. 2019. How to Do Nothing.\n\n\nVogt, Benjamin. 2023. “Rewilding Suburbia in the\nAmerican Plains.” Ecozon@: European Journal of\nLiterature, Culture and Environment 14 (1): 174–79. https://doi.org/10.37536/ECOZONA.2023.14.1.5063.", "crumbs": [ "References" ] }, + { + "objectID": "garden_maintenance_by_month.html", + "href": "garden_maintenance_by_month.html", + "title": "Appendix A — Garden Calendar", + "section": "", + "text": "-Calendar of seasons and what to do when", + "crumbs": [ + "Appendices", + "A  Garden Calendar" + ] + }, { "objectID": "buying_plants.html", "href": "buying_plants.html", - "title": "Appendix A — Favorite plant sources", + "title": "Appendix B — Favorite plant sources", "section": "", - "text": "A.1 Online", + "text": "B.1 Online", "crumbs": [ "Appendices", - "A  Favorite plant sources" + "B  Favorite plant sources" ] }, { "objectID": "buying_plants.html#in-person", "href": "buying_plants.html#in-person", - "title": "Appendix A — Favorite plant sources", - "section": "A.2 In person", - "text": "A.2 In person", + "title": "Appendix B — Favorite plant sources", + "section": "B.2 In person", + "text": "B.2 In person", "crumbs": [ "Appendices", - "A  Favorite plant sources" + "B  Favorite plant sources" ] } ] \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/species_accounts.html b/species_accounts.html index 98dd079..a0985ee 100644 --- a/species_accounts.html +++ b/species_accounts.html @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ - + @@ -120,13 +120,7 @@ - + @@ -198,8 +198,14 @@ @@ -647,13 +653,13 @@

Species accounts