Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vegetable. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query vegetable. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Groveland Volunteers Produce Community Vegetable Garden

UPDATE:

Check out Teresa's an in-depth article on Edilble Landscaping featured in Green Builder magazine on "Edible Landscaping 02" pages 31 - 37.

UPDATE:


Growing a Community - continuation of a Community Garden in Groveland.
"This is a new experience for me. Just to see these grow from the ground  --- it touches the soul."  
David Allen is speaking. He's talking about the community garden in Groveland's historically African-American community located south of State Road 50 and east of State Road 33. Allen is the younger of the two men who have taken on the daily care of the garden. His mentor and partner-in-gardening is Willy Dykes, who lives directly across the street from the South Street vegetable garden. As Dykes says of his gardening efforts, "It just makes me feel so good that I'm helping others and myself. They see things growing, big pretty greens, and they ask 'whose greens are these' and I tell them they're yours."  
Dykes estimates that 30 families in the community partake in the harvest from the garden: sweet potatoes, okra, peppers, Georgia collards ("the best," according to Dykes), scallions, Vidalia onions, kale, tomatoes, cucumbers, rosemary, and spaghetti squash...  
Support for the garden is high in the community in which it is located, as evidenced by the fact that at the February CRA meeting, at which the spring planting was approved, an estimated 40 people from the community, many of them young people, came to the meeting as a show of support. As Allen said at the time, "They volunteered to come out tonight and show you that this is a real community." Speaking in a recent interview, he added "There is so much respect for that garden, it blows my mind." As Marie Damato says, "the community garden as been a community-wide effort."

See more pictures here.

October 1, 2011

Q. What do you get when a Community Redevelopment Agency joins together with volunteers?

A. A wonderful neighborhood vegetable garden.

City Councilwoman Evelyn Wilson came up with the idea of redeveloping a grassy park area into a community vegetable garden during a Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) meeting two years ago.  Finding encouragement from fellow Trilogy residents, Marie Damato and Dr. Linda Jacobsen, Wilson went to the City of Groveland to secure a grant. Along with partners B and H Consultants, Inc,  Zion Lutheran Church,  Thrinvent Financial, Wildflowers of Trilogy Garden Club, Wilson was able to get the city's urban project financed in 2010.

Dr. Jacobsen noted how she was organized finances for the community gardens:
"... along with other members of Zion Lutheran Church, we were able to obtain funding from Lake-Sumter Chapter of Thrivent Financial for Lutherans for the 2010 planting. "
They were able to purchase plants, soil, raised beds, landscape timber, and hoses with the monies. The food, water, and other items needed were provided by Dina Sweatt and the city of Groveland.
This summer, the year-old community vegetable garden needed revitalization and a sustainable plan.

I designed the vegetable gardens to ensure successful maintenance and long-term future growth.  City staff and Smithwell, Inc. employees helped to remove the older landscape timbers, build the raised beds and prepare the overgrown gardens from the previous year.  Seeds and many of the plants were purchased through Thrivevent. Volunteers from the Thrivevent Financial for Lutherans, Zion Lutheran Church, the Wildflowers of Trilogy Garden Club, along with elected officials Mayor Mike Radzik, Vice-Mayor Jim Gearheart, District 3 Councilman Tim Loucks, CRA member Dina Sweatt, and former Councilman James Smith, helped to install the raised beds and mulched paths and then plant the vegetables that Groveland children grew from seed. HollyLou the clown, pumpkin decorating, making plant markers, and an inflatable bounce house entertained the children (and the Garden Club members). 


Vegetables and herbs planted included late summer and cool seasonal crops.  Cabbage, corn, collards, eggplant, green beans, lettuce, different kinds of peppers, okra, onions, rosemary, snow peas, spinach, and varieties of tomatoes, like Beefsteak, Cherokee Purple, and Super Sweet 100's. Cleome and salvia were used in the raised beds to fill in around the herbs. Fruit trees will be planted in the corner of the garden. A Kadota fig tree, Ficus carica, provided by Wendel Martinkovic, of Wendel's Farm & Nursery in Lake Panasoffkee, was planted. Wendel also donated the flowers and many of the vegetables from his permaculture nursery.  Assistance with mulch and garden soil were supplied by Reliable Peat of Leesburg.

Dr. Jacobsen said a huge grateful credit goes to Janet Shira of B and H Consultants, Inc for keeping all the diverse groups working cohesively together throughout the urban project.  More BIG thank-you's to all the volunteers and partners, those who helped on other days preparing the gardens, and today's planting day, including 8 year old Mollie Robinshaw, Master Gardener Barb Schroeder, Louise Willim, and Gigi Klemash from Thrivent Financial.

November events to celebrate the Community Vegetable Garden will include a Harvest Day and Picnic. The garden will be planted twice a year with spring and fall vegetables.  Future needs of the garden include arbors, fencing, irrigation system, signage, and fruit such as blackberries, apple, olive, peach, and pear trees.  If you would like to contribute assistance for this neighborhood project, please contact Janet Shira with B and H Consultants, Inc. in Clermont.

Preliminary Concept


Before and after photographs of the David Blanks Park Community Vegetable Garden.



Groveland Community Vegetable Garden

More great photos from Planting Day.

Read past Earth Shattering Gardening posts on vegetable gardens.

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Question: Planting Vegetable Seeds, Nematodes, How To Propagate Copperleafs

This week's email:
Jayne has two questions.
You have a great program on WLBE !!! One thing that confuses me is when you recommend vegetable and flower plantings, I'm not sure if you're talking about sowing seeds or planting transplants. I usually grow everything from seed, so I'm looking for that time table.
Your email is a very common problem here in Florida - thank you for writing and the kind words about "In Your Backyard." 

You want to plant seeds approximately 14 to 28 days (depending on species) before you want to transplant them in your garden. When I talk about vegetables this time of the year, I mean that you should either purchase or use your transplants that you seeded in July and August.

Tomatoes planted from seed 5 weeks ago.

Five different species of peppers planted August 27th.
This UF publication will make it easier for you to determine when to plant: Florida Vegetable Gardening Guide.
I brought my weird looking carrots into the extension office in Tavares and was told I had nematodes in my 12 ft. square foot garden (3 ft. off the ground). I also had green and yellow bush beans that didn't do well at all, but onions and shallots doing great! It has only been the second season of growing crops in this garden and I am so dissappointed. Do I need to kill the nematodes before planting again? If not, what vegetables would you suggest? If I need to kill the nematodes, how do I do that? I grow, eat, live, organically. 
Jayne, I'm so sorry!  Certain plant species release alleopathic chemicals that make growing some species next to others very troublesome.  Check out this great chart of compatible and incompatible garden plants.  I think it will help explain why some of your plants didn't do well.

Also, because of Florida's sandy soils in certain locations, destructive nematodes are a vegetable gardening problem. The key to controlling nematodes will be with your cultural practices.  Jayne, you can do one or all of the following:
  1. Change out or sterilize your vegetable garden area with solarization next spring before you plant for the summer.
  2. Add amendments to your soils, which will allow beneficial fungi to control nematodes.
  3. Add beneficial nematodes to your soil which will provide about three months of control against root-knot nematodes
  4. Buy nematode-resistant plant varieties. Look for the N in plant description (V = virus-resistant, F=fungal-resistant, N=nematode-resistant)
  5. Rotate your crops. Don't plant carrots or plants in the same family (tomato and peppers) in same location year after year.
  6. Last but the best way to grow vegetables in Florida's sandy soils? Raised beds -whether you build them yourself, use containers, or purchase a kit.
 More information on nematodes:
  
Nematodes and their management - UF/IFAS - Florida
Root-Knot Nematodes In the Vegetable Garden - Clemson University, South Carolina
Control Root-Knot Nematodes in Your Garden - University of Arkansas
Marigolds for Nematode Management (pros and cons - read before planting) UF/IFAS Florida
Nematode Control in The Home Vegetable Garden - Alabama A & M, Auburn University

Roberto asks:
Can you explain to me how to take a clipping from one of my existing Copper Leaf plants and use it to grow another plant?
Roberto, easy way to get more plants! Take a cutting of a soft tip of a stem of copperleaf approximately 5 to 6 inches. Cut the stem diagonally and place in Root-tone and then plant in potting soil. Moisten and keep moist (not wet) and in the shade. You can put the plant and pot into a clear plastic bag to keep the humidity in. Within six to eight weeks you'll have roots and can repot into a bigger pot. I would wait until spring before putting them in the ground as its so close to winter.

Here's more information with photos.

These are Cotinus coggygria 'Royal Purple' Smoke Tree cuttings that I took about four months ago. 

Cotinus coggygria 'Royal Purple' cuttings

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Vegetable Gardening Planted!

This Saturday was our family vegetable gardening project. Our grandchildren helped us prepared raised containers with some new vegetable seeds from the international Sakata Seed.   It's going to be a learning project for Jaxon and Mackenah to see how fast the vegetables grow and mark their progress on a calendar and graph.

Because of all the shade from old oaks in our backyard, we planted the vegetables in  full sun in our long driveway and border garden. We planted:

We also planted onions, garlic, strawberries, and nasturtiums.  Jaxon and Mackenah wrote the names of each plant on the label tags, along with Saturday's date and the approximate date of harvesting.

We'll let you know how they progress, but I was very impressed with the seed quality. I am anticipating a great harvest with enough vegetables and fruit to share with the whole neighborhood. 

You can see more of Sakata's Vegetable Seeds online - click here.  But if you would like to get these wonderful vegetable seeds, you have to order from their distributors here.  Check them out!

Free Park Seed Wholesale Catalog

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Updated - Don't Eat Your Vegetables In The Front Yard!

UPDATE:
I wrote an in-depth article on Edible Landscaping for Green Builder magazine on "Edible Landscaping 02" pages 31 - 37.

7/18/11 Update: Drudge Report is now reporting that the city of Oak Park, Michigan has seemingly dropped the anti-veggie fines but now wants to impose an unlicensed dog fine equivalent to the same fine and incarceration time. Sounds like a vendetta to me...

After Oak Park City failed in its bid to charge Bass with violating a local ordinance for using her front garden to grow organic vegetables, no doubt put off by gargantuan media attention on the case, they are now pursuing Bass for a similarly ludicrous misdemeanor that carries an identical penalty, 93 days in jail, for owning unlicensed dogs.


However, Bass’ dogs are fully licensed, the city is merely reinstating an earlier charge that Bass has already complied with.

7/15/11 Update: The city of Oak Park, Michigan is delaying any further action on the Bass's front yard vegetable garden.

7/11/11 Update:
My interview this morning with Julie Bass on WLBE 790am (My790am.com)  was very informative. Not only did Mrs. Bass check with the city of Oak Park, Michigan regarding any ordinances restricting raised beds, they told her there should be no problems if she did it. There is Michigan legislation that protects people who want to grow their own food.
And he gave it for his opinion, that whoever could make two ears of corn, or two blades of grass, to grow upon a spot of ground where only one grew before, would deserve better of mankind, and do more essential service to his country, than the whole race of politicians put together.
- Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels
Has the world gone mad? In an amazing turnip of events, Julie Bass, homemaker, mother of three, and simple gardener, could go to jail for three months for growing vegetables in her front yard. The Oak Park, Michigan resident was only trying to make a sustainable garden out of the front yard that had been demolished by the City of Oak Park utilities fixing the sewer system in the spring. Passers-by admired her efforts. A single complaint from a neighbor not green with envy - but with mean-spiritedness - encouraged the Code Enforcement department to issue a warning to Mrs. Bass to remove the raised beds of warm season annuals and vegetables.  When Mrs. Bass didn't comply, she was issued a ticket and charged with a misdemeanor. She goes to a pre-jury trial on July 26th. 

"In order to live off a garden, you practically have to live in it.
- Frank McKinney Hubbard
The reason for the citation is a code that says a front yard has to have suitable, live, plant material.  Oak Park City Planner Kevin Rulkowski stated: "That's not what we want to see in a front yard."  Is Mr. Rulkowski a horticulturist, landscape designer, or a landscape architect?  Does the City of Oak Park have a horticulturist on staff to help them dig through all the dirt on what is a suitable plant or not?  Is it based on USGBC green certification, best management practices, asesthetics or personal opinion?  Is turfgrass a suitable plant? Are cookie cutter designs a government regulation? Everbody has to have the same landscape?

See Julie Bass's edible front yard here.

Edible landscaping is still a popular gardening trend in the United States with 43% of households surveyed by the Garden Writers Association Foundation planning on establishing a vegetable garden this year. Vegetable gardening is even being encouraged by the White House - why does the City of Oak Park even want to get involved in such a pickle?

 
This is not the first case of gardening interference between a regulating body and residents.  Confrontations between HOA's and homeowners has increased over the last few years with homeowners emboldened by new water conserving ordinances.
I'm interviewing Mrs. Julie Bass on "In Your Backyard" tomorrow, at our new day and time: Mondays at 11:30am to 12:30pm.  Please plan to tune in  about this outrageous attack against individual homeowner's property rights. You can also check out the Bass family's Facebook page: Oak Park Hates Veggies.  You can also sign the Bass's petition to stop the persecution.
 
The word 'vegetable' has no precise botanical meaning in reference to food plants, and we find that almost all parts of plants have been employed as vegetables - roots (carrot and beet), stems (Irish potato and asparagus), leaves (spinach and lettuce), leaf stalk (celery and Swiss chard), bracts (globe artichoke), flower stalks and buds,(broccoli and cauliflower), fruits (tomato and squash), seeds (beans), and even the petals (Yucca and pumpkin).
- Charles Heiser, Seed to Civilization


More with Teresa on edible landscaping: Edible Landscaping: So Good You Can Eat Them Right Up
More resources: 
The garden should be adorned with roses and lilies, the turnsole, violets, and mandrake; there you should have parsley, cost, fennel, southern-wood, coriander, sage, savory, hyssop, mint, rue, dittany, smallage, pellitory, lettuces, garden-cress, and peonies. There should also be beds planted with onions, leeks, garlic, pumpkins and shallots. The cucumber growing in its lap, the drowsy poppy, the daffodil and brank-ursine ennoble a garden. Nor are there wanting, if occasion further thee, pottage-herbs: beets,herb-mercury, orache, sorrel and mallows, anise, mustard, white pepper and wormwood do good service to the gardener.- Alexander of Neckham, Of the Nature of Things, 1187

Monday, August 29, 2011

Vegetable Garden Planted

Well, its done!  Our front yard, in the unused portion of our driveway, is now home to our vegetable gardening.  Due to the large oaks and "North Carolina" themed landscape in the backyard, the front and side yard is one of our sunniest locations.

We used a pre-cut cedar raised bed product from Home Depot. At approximately $80, the raised beds were reasonably priced factoring saving time, labor, and cost versus buying the materials and sacrificing to the wood gods. We also reused our cleaned aluminum tubs and rectangular plastic containers from springtime.

We checked last season's low-volume irrigation, changing out the emitter heads for good distribution uniformity.

What are we expecting to harvest from our edible landscaping?

First bed:
  • Pasillo Bajio Chile Peppers
  • Cow Horn Peppers
  • NuMex Joe E Parker Peppers
  • Cubanelle Peppers
  • Ancho/Poblano Peppers
Second bed:
How many tomatoes does it take?  Check out how you measure your fresh tomatoes for your cooking recipes.

First Tub:
  • Gourmet Baby Greens Mesclun Lettuce
  • Bibb Lettuce
Second Tub:
  • Bloomsdale Spinach
  • Red Malabar Spinach
Rectangle container:
  • Onions
  • Leeks
We only used half or less of the seed packets so we will save the seeds in dry envelopes and place them in our refrigerator to keep for spring.  As the plants emerge, we will thin them out and place some in containers for our children and the neighborhood, and keep some for our table.


We have to wait about ten days to see any green shoots! Will be taking photos from sprouting through harvesting.  Let us know how your vegetable gardening is doing.  We'll post your photos.

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

In Your Backyard: "Spring Vegetables"

Still enjoying the cooler temperatures with highs in the 80's and lows in the upper 50's at night. Landscape shrubs and trees are busting out with leaves and returning to their normal growth patterns.

We'll be talking about growing vegetables today with Jerry Carris, former Mayor of Winter Garden, beloved West Orange High School Agriculture teacher, and UF/IFAS's 2009 Master Gardener of the Year.


We will talk with Jerry about his love of gardening, how and what to plant for a great spring and summer vegetable garden, and his newest project, the Winter Garden Community Garden.

Want more information on growing vegetables here in Florida?




Last Friday, my husband and I, and our two Scottish terriers trekked a portion of the Florida Greenways, the Marshall Swamp Trail. With the abundance of rainfall in March, this truly was a swamp adventure. The trail is very well laid out but we did have to slosh our way through some lower portions of path. Beautiful native rain lilies, Zephyranthes spp. were blooming just in time for Easter Sunday.


I'll post the link to all of our hike's photographs this afternoon.

Call in to "In Your Backyard" with your gardening questions.

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

The Key To Great Citrus Trees


All gardeners know that fertilization is necessary for plants to be bloom, produce fruit, vegetables, and to be healthy.  Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are what plants need most, but to be the most productive and reduce susceptibility to pests and disease issue, micronutrients are vital. 

The easiest way to explain micronutrients in a way that non-gardeners can understand is to correlate them to vitamins.  We don't just take a vitamin B1 tablet or a potassium pill to be healthy; we need to take a multivitamin with the major vitamins and nutrient supplements.  It's also true for all plants, especially citrus. Yes, they need the nitrogen for foliage growth, phosphorus for flowers, fruit, and a good root system, and potassium for thicker cell walls making them less likely to succumb to stress, but they also need micronutrients, such as  boron, copper, chlorine, iron, manganese, molybdenum, and zinc.  These elements are needed less often and in smaller quantities but are just as important.


Micronutrients in growing citrus is essential yet is often overlooked by homeowners. A new product on the citrus scene may be the affordable and easy solution to fertilizing citrus in your backyard.  KeyPlex Citrus HG is a foliar nutritional supplement that allows the homeowner to provide important micronutrients to their citrus trees. KeyPlex Citrus HG is derived from alpha-keto acids, an energy compound. Alpha-keto acids are the primary element in the production of amino acids, carbohydrates, lipids, and hormones. When plants are healthy and have access to micronutrients, plants are able to create thicker cell walls. Thicker cell walls allows the plant to be stronger and less susceptible to stress, which enables the plant to ward off diseases.




It seems citrus has taking a beating the last few years from canker and citrus greeening. But it wouldn't be Florida without orange and grapefruit trees. Providing micronutrients is a great way to have healthier citrus trees. I've even used it on my vegetable beds successfully. Costs for KeyPlex products range from $5.99 to $29.99 for larger garden beds. Homeowners can find KeyPlex HG and KeyPlex Citrus HG online at KeyPlexdirect.com and locally in Orlando at 1-407-459-7682.
 
KeyPlex has even chosen pink flamingos as their mascots.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Jerry Carris, The Master Gardener



Jerry Carris, harvested more than vegetables and flowers.  An Orange County master gardener for over 20 years, Jerry harvested love, good will, and friendships. He loved everybody and encouraged them to be their very best. My heart ached when I heard that Jerry passed away yesterday.

Jerry, a redhead - with freckles, too - would stop by my office at the Orange County Extension office and give me hugs and encouragement. He was a strong supporter of myUF/IFAS Florida Yards & Neighborhoods program through the City of Winter Garden, and of my weekly gardening radio show, "In Your Backyard. Jerry would call in frequently into "In Your Backyard" with answers to my audience's vegetable questions and to promote the Master Gardener clinic open on Tuesdays at the Mid-Florida Research Center in Apopka.

Jerry was recognized in November 2009 as the Florida Master Gardener of the Year by the University of Florida.

I will miss you, Jerry. God speed home.

Jerry's Obituary - Orlando Sentinel

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

January Garden Sightings

In Central Florida gardens, you can plant these shrubs and flowers with colorful blooms in your backyard.

  • Annuals:  alyssum, baby's breath, calibrochoa, calendula, cleome, carnation, cyclamen, delphinium, dianthus, dusty miller, foxglove, gaillardia, geranium, godetia, hollyhocks, Iceland poppy, johhny-jump-ups, lobelia, nasturtium, ornamental cabbage and kale, pansy, petunias, Shasta daisy, statice, stock, sweet pea, and viola.
  • Bulbs: African iris, Asiatic lilies, amaryllis, blood lilies, crinum, day lilies, Louisiana iris, society garlic, spider lilies, rain lilies, tulips, daffodils, hyacinths.
  • Herbs: Anise, bay laurel, cardamom, chives, coriander, fennel, garlic (bloomin too!) ginger, lavender, mint, oregano, parsley, rosemary, sage, sweet marjoram, thyme, and watercress.
  • Shrubs: 'Fashion' azaleas, camellias, roses, and serissa.
  • Vines:  Caroline jessamine
  • Colorful foliage:  Persian shield, poinsettia
  • Vegetables: Asparagus, beets, broccoli, Brussel sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, collards, endive, horseradish, kale, kohlrabi, lettuce, mustard, onion sets, peas, potatoes, radicchio, radishes, roquette, rutabagas, spinach, Swiss chard, and turnips.
The UF/IFAS Lake County Extension Office in Tavares will be offering a Vegetable Workshop on Saturday, February 5th, from 9:30am to 12:00pm. To register and for more information, please call 352-343-4101.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Citrus Tree Leaves Are Curling


Teresa:

My lemon and grapefruit leaves are curling and it looks like a snake design on the leaves.  Could you tell me what this could be.  Thank you.

Barbara
The squiggly lines and curled leaves are an indication that your citrus trees have had a visit from citrus leafminers. Now... once you see the damage, the moth has laid its eggs, the larvae have hatched and are gone and there's no reason to use a chemical. There are parasitoid biological controls in Florida.

Leafminers like new tender foliage. It doesn't hurt the citrus tree or the fruit but can be a problem for young trees trying to leaf out. As your citrus trees get new leaves, you can spray with Bayer Advanced Fruit, Citrus, and Vegetable Insect Control.  It provides from one to three months of protection from the insects. Follow the instruction label to make sure that you have the best effectiveness.

Make sure you're fertilizing your citrus on a consistant basis every three to four months with a balanced fertilizer with micro nutrients.

Leafminers can also attack ornamental plants and vegetables. Make sure that the insecticide you use is certified for home use and edible landscaping.

Monday, January 02, 2012

Ring Around the Carrot


A Swedish woman harvesting carrots in her vegetable bed, also found her jewelry.  Lena Pahlsson lost her wedding ring sixteen years ago. Despite looking high and low for it, she never found it until last week when digging in her garden.

What a lucky day for her!  I wonder how many other jewelry pieces have been lost while digging in their backyard? This is where a metal detector would have paid off!

Medieval jewelry found in Vienna garden.

Things I've found in my garden.

Interesting things found digging.

Myself personally, I've found marbles, old plastic army toys, golf balls in my yard (I think they flew off an I-4 truck and bounced into my garden.)

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Leu Gardens Plant Sale Spectacular

The annual spring plant sale at Leu Gardens, in Orlando, never fails to be spectacular.  We went with wagon in hand looking for a plant we couldn't live without.  Hundreds of people were there, scooping up plants as fast as they could because if you blinked, someone might buy the plant you were looking at.  On sale were tropical fruit trees, ferns,  succulents, roses, herbs, orchids, flowering tropical and subtropical shrubs and trees, and many more types of plants.

We were able to get nice international variety of herbs:  African blue basil, French thyme, Spanish lavender, dill fenneleaf, pennyroyal, lemon-scented thyme, chives, extra triple curled parsley, and Foresteri rosemary ,that I'm going to add to flowering containers, while Tony found 'Window Box Roma' tomatoes, cubanelles, serrano 'del Sol', and banana peppers for his raised vegetable beds.

I was going to be stalwart and not buy anything else, but I eventually succumbed to getting Kangaroo Paws, Macropidia fulginosa an unusual Australian  xeric native in full bloom and a lovely  'Green Velvet' Alocasia, Alocasia frydeck. 


Kangaroo Paws

My determination to not buy any more plants was easy to keep under control through most of my search until I came to the Orlando Area Rose Historical Society's boothAntique roses are great to grow in Florida with very low maintenance, no pest - no disease issues. Depending on the variety, they can bloom over and over again all year round.  Reading the sign's descriptions, one caught my eye:  "Heavily fragrant, long-lasting pink cabbage roses." I fell for the 'Duchesse de Babrant' tea rose.  Into the wagon it went with my other terrestrial indulgences.

Another unique find was a bamboo obelisk that folded up easily.  Tony was adamant that the $15 cost was a bargain for all the details, material, and labor involved in making it.  We'll use it to allow our beans to grow up.  

Unusual plants and finds were the 'Mammalaria plumosa' and Episcia  cupreata 'Pink Brocade' hanging baskets, terrariums with fluttering butterfly devices, pvc bird garden accents and wrought iron plant holders.

Great start to our spring garden.




Episcia cupreata 'Pink Brocade'


Mamallaria plumosa

www.huntcountryiron.com

All three wrought iron pot holders are connected at bottom.

PVC Pelican and heron garden art

Leu Gardens Plant Sale Vendors

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Great Seed Catalogs


Here are some of my favorite free seed catalogs:
  • Abundant Life Seeds: Certified organic and biodynamic seeds. OMRI listed fertilizers and pest controls.  Out of 2011 Catalogs but get on their list for the 2012 catalogs.
  • Bakers Creek Heirloom Seeds: Open-pollinated pure seeds1400 heirloom garden variety from the largest seed grower in the United States.  Family owned, the seeds are descended from original 19th century seeds. Jere Gettle and his wife Emilee created an authentic pioneer village called Bakersville.Their most recent project is the restoration and preservation of the Wethersfield, Connecticut landmark, Comstock, Ferre & Company, the oldest continuously operating seed company in New England. The Gettle family is featured prominently in the colorful and interesting catalog.
  • Botanical Interests: Family owned. Organic seeds. Guaranteed untreated seed germination.
  • Bountiful Gardens:  Certified organic. Rare and unusual varieties. Medicinal herbs. Super-nutrition varieties.
  • Brent and Becky's Bulbs: Perennial bulbs and seeds.
  • Burpee:  One of the oldest seed catalogs in the United States. Vegetable, perennial, and organic seeds.  Great website with gardening videos and information on growing vegetables.  

Enjoy seed catalog artwork? The Smithsonian has an online database of original seed catalog artwork to enjoy. Take a look at them here.

Growing your own vegetables is easy and satisfying.  It can also save money by reducing grocery bills and not having to work out at the gym.

Monday, April 10, 2006

With Easter around the corner this is a little suspect

A monster rabbit eating vegetable patches has been terrorizing villages near London. The reported oversized lagomorph has been touted to look suspiciously like Wallace of the Wallace and Grommet fame. But then again, maybe it's Harvey. In this day and age of unabashedly shameful marketing ploys, maybe the name is just a case of splitting hares.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Reader's Digest Indigestion

I have been an avid Reader's Digest for over decades. I have been blessed to have my mother-in-law give us a gift subscription to RD every year for the last ten years. With my limited time to leisurely read, RD is perfect to take with me to my bath at the end of the day, and then over the month, I am able to read RD page by page till the next one lands in my mailbox.

The RD’s new feature, “13 Things Your _________ Won’t Tell You” is one of my favorite reads in the magazine now. With a different career or industry featured each month, I have learned something and at times, been horrified by the other blatant and honest responses the various industries have submitted.
Being a horticulturist/landscape expert, I was professionally disappointed in May’s issue of “13 Things Your Landscaper Won’t Tell You.” While half of the responses were good insights and tips for readers; Number 4,5, and 11 either provided misinformation or only half of the facts. With the other numbered points – some of them great selling points for the benefits of hiring a landscaper - if a landscaper doesn’t tell their clients Number 1, 3, 6, 12, or 20, then the landscaper doesn’t have their clients’ best interests at heart and shouldn’t be hired.

What am I talking about?

#1: Ditch the mower bag. Clippings do add nitrogen to the soil and can reduce the need for fertilizing is true and important to remember, but that’s not the dirty little secret of landscape maintenance. The real fact is that landscape maintenance lawnmowers can be the reason that clients, with maintenance contracts each month, have weeds in their lawn.

Helpful tip: Big question to ask before hiring a potential landscape service: Do you blow, sterilize, or clean off your equipment after each lawn mowing and pruning?

Helpful tip: Leaving the grass clippings on the lawn and fertilizing during the summer contributes to your lawn getting thatch. Grass clippings decompose and add nitrogen to soil. Fertilize in spring and fall, then don’t bag the grass clippings in the summertime. If you need to green up your lawn in summer, use an iron-only product, not nitrogen.

Helpful tip: If you have a severe weed problem, bagging your lawn clippings will keep the weed seeds from going back into the soil to re-germinate again next season.
What #1 should have said: “The reason your weed-free lawn (before you hired me) now has weeds is that my crew doesn’t have time to clean their equipment off after each mowing so weed seeds are spread from house to house and neighborhood to neighborhood.”
 #3: Don’t fill every inch of your space with plants and flowers. The real problem is that homeowners expect “instant landscapes” instead of waiting a short period for the plants to mature. Weeds aren’t an issue with filling every space – in fact – you’ll have less weeds because there will be more competition for water and nutrients from the ornamentals. Landscapers make their profit on installing more plants than is needed.
Helpful tip: Find out the mature size of the plant. Divide the mature width of the plant by half for installing on center and to determine the amount of plants needed for the size of the landscape bed.
What #3 should have said: Except for specimens and standard plants, you can take the estimated plants in your proposal and cut amount in half. Spaced appropriately you’ll have a more natural-looking, more water-conserving, low-maintenance, healthier landscape, within a year.
OR:
What #3 should have said: “Don’t ask me to overplant your landscape beds. By next year, you’ll be paying me more for pruning and chemical spraying that you didn’t want because of competition stress, insects and disease.”
#4: That “pretty”red mulch you love? This tip insinuates that red mulch is bad for the enviroment. Not all red dyed mulches have arsenic! The only mulches with arsenic in it are the CCA (chromate copper arsenate) wood mulches from plywood material. Not all red mulches are from CCA woods. In fact, the process of using CCA wood was made illegal in all states in 2003. Read the mulch bag label to find out where the wood in the mulch originated.

Helpful tip: Use organic mulches from virgin wood or trees from your own property or other locations that you know where they came from. If dyed with oxidized rust (harmless) or food coloring (think about your dog’s red food), they are safe. Look for any indoor or outdoor products you need with low VOC's. Wood mulch from recycled palettes, construction, or salvaged wood contains high percentage of arsenic even with food-safe dyes.

Worth knowing: Arsenic can be found naturally in rainfall and soils, or depending on location, also in major urban areas with history of agriculture and stormwater runoff.

Resources:
What is CCA Wood?
CCA Treated Wood Poster 
CCA Research On Red Mulch
What #4 should have said: “If the mulch is the most colorful thing in your landscape, you need to rethink your landscape design.” Mulch should be the aesthetic framework to your landscape picture. It should coordinate with your home design and flower colors. There are landscape design situations where red mulch works, there are many more landscape designs that red mulch does not work.
#5: Hate bagging leaves? You don’t have to. This can be true with understory or tropical trees with small leaves. If the tree is a large oak, elm, sycamore, or other tree species, or you have multiple trees within a close proximity, or you fertilize your lawn frequently with nitrogen applications, then you need to bag those leaves. Year after year, leaf litter can accumulate and decompose, block sunlight, increase soil over important surface roots, increase elevation of yard to create unlevel areas higher than nearby sidewalks and driveways, and cause thatch.
What #5 should have said: Hate bagging leaves? Use your mulching mower and bagger or reverse your leaf blower to suck up leaves during autumn and winter. Use your own bagged leaves in your compost pile and later reuse as mulch or soil amendments for your landscape beds in spring and summer.
#6: Send a sample of your soil to a local agricultural agency to have it tested. Soil samples can be taken to your local agricultural agency but they will usually only test it onsite for pH. Soil analysis to test for nutrient content and fertilization recommendations must be shipped or taken to a professional or land grant university soil lab. There are no soil tests for nitrogen calculations. So you are testing for macro-nutrients of phosphorus, potassium, sulfer, and micro-nutrients that are important for plants to be able to absorb the other nutrients.

Worth knowing: Mulch does not change the pH of soils and soil pH will always revert back to its’ original state. Unless you want to continually have to amend soils to correct pH (not referring to vegetable gardens which need correct soil pH), it’s better to work with the pH you have and select plants that will thrive in that soil condition.
What #6 should have said: Soil pH affects the way plants absorb nutrients. Before I install a landscape or fertilize, ask me to take a pH test of your soil from a local County Extension office or agricultural agency to determine right plant selection for location and correct fertilization applications.
#11: Watch out for a gorgeous plant called purple loosestrife. This tip could be important where loosestrife is invasive and still legal to sell. But loosestrife is illegal or listed as invasive in 34 states. Invasive plants differ from region to region, state to state so naming one plant when there are hundreds of invasive species is not helpful.

Worth knowing: Exotic and native trees or grasses (like bamboo) with underground rhizome root systems can spread hundreds of feet, or more near water bodies.

Check out the Exotic Pest Plant Council’s website for your state to review a landscape proposal or the plants in your yard.
What #11 should have said: Ask me if any of the plants I have on my landscape proposal are invasive or will take over your yard. You dont want the new landscape species to take over your yard and become a high maintenance issue or an issue where you have to apologize for making a problem for your neighbors.
Here are some other “things” your landscaper won’t tell you:
  • "We’ll send the most knowledgeable person to sell you our services, but we’re going to have to send an uncertified, hourly paid, member of the crew to mow your lawn and trim your plants but they don’t know how to identify diseases or insect problems. "
  • Helpful tip: Hire only certified and licensed contractors with crews that are knowledgeable about pest identification. It would be better for you and your landscape if you could hire a landscape professional to come by your house once a month to inspect your property and tell you plants are healthy or find a pest problem before it becomes a major expense and you need expensive renovation.
  • "When I say something needs done – like routine pesticide spraying – I’m not going to tell you that there is no pest preventative out there and routine pesticide applications kill beneficial bugs that could help you easily manage your minor pest issues."
  • Helpful tip: Ask your landscaper if there's an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) control that will be effective for your pest problem.  Declining turf and plants should only be spot-treated after determination pests are still in landscape. Most pests appear and disappear quickly and there is no need to treat with chemicals. Make sure any damaged areas of turf are replaced quickly so that weeds do not germinate and take over.
  • "When you ask me to perform certain tasks, like ‘crape murder,’ you don’t believe me when I tell you that it doesn’t need to be done. Now your crape myrtle looks like a dead stick for months, grows out in ugly, long, branches, suckers more around the trunk, and if it blooms normally in June, now it will bloom months later, and you paid me to do it."
  • Helpful tip: Unless it’s a topiary or bonsai plant, there is no need to prune plants on a monthly or bi-monthly basis. Routine pruning causes die-back and increases stress of the plant. Crape myrtles only need selective pruning if necessary for air circulation, improper direction of limbs, or to cut off seed pods. If a crape myrtle is hitting your house, it’s in the wrong place. No need to hat-rack dormant crape myrtles at the end of January – we don’t hack off the top of other dormant trees like maples, sycamores, or elm trees in early spring, do we?
  • "I’m not going to tell you that the fertilizer we apply too often and around your lakefronts and common areas during the summertime increases the algae bloom in your lakes and retention ponds making the top of the lake scummy; because you then hire us to help clear the algae up by spraying expensive chemicals."
  • Helpful tip: Install native wetland plant species around lakes and retention ponds to absorb excessive fertilizer run-offs and reduce algae blooms. Then show landscaping companies where the 10’ – 15’ buffer zone around lakefront and retention pond area where no fertilizer is to be applied at all. Your lake will be healthier, less maintenance, more natural, and more abundant with birds and wildlife.
The rest of the Reader’s Digest article's "13 Things” your landscaper won’t tell you are either good design tips, proper planting practices, or benefits to the homeowner in dollar value or beauty for their landscape, so why wouldn’t they tell you? A true professional landscaper knows the latest information in best management practices, beneficial and environmental pest control, and how to create a beautiful, low-maintenance landscape for their clients, and they can be trusted.
Homeowners should know how to make sure they get a licensed landscaper who cares about the environment and knows his industry well. They should ask and check references on anyone they interview and remember, the lowest price doesn’t ensure quality – you will get what you pay for. My clients' trust is very important to me and while I don't do landscaping maintenance, I help HOA communities and private clients with their landscaping contracts, issues, and designs.
I sadly doubt that I will hear a response from Liz Vaccariello, the Readers Digest editor-in-chief. Once articles are printed, there’s rarely interest in rehashing content, especially if it’s incorrect. The last time I wrote to a company regarding horticultural misinformation, Snapple advertising agency showed a Chinese panda bear eating the lucky 'bamboo' plant out of the porcelain pot from the middle of the board room desk. It was supposed to be funny (and it was, sort of) except that lucky 'bamboo' that florists and nurseries sell in this country is not real bamboo at all, but poisonous dracaena sanderiana that, if fed to a panda at a zoo by an unknowing person, could hurt them. The marketing company for Snapple never thought to make sure that the "plot" was feasible or correct, and obviously, Snapple thought the marketing company knew what it was doing. Luckily, I didn't hear of any pandas being hurt and, of course, "Don't Feed The Animals" is posted everywhere at zoos.

The Reader’s Digest article "13 Things… series" is a little bit more important and should be reliable and fact-based. Homeowners and everyone who needs to hire a landscaping maintenance service across the country need to really know the facts so they can make good decisions on the lawn care.