the 57th annual Zilker Garden Festival
Transcription
the 57th annual Zilker Garden Festival
IN THIS ISSUE... FEATURES FEATURES 2014 ZILKER GARDEN FESTIVAL 2014 Zilker Garden Festival Saturday March 29 and Sunday March 30, 10:00 to 5:00 A Guide to Flower Shows for $7 Adults, $3 Children (age5-12) Novices Growing Irises Caring for African Violets Plant Division A Brief History of The Garden Club of Austin CLUB NEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS President's Message Spring Plant Shows and Sales Spring Workshops Austin Pond Society Goes Ice Fishing for Dell Childrens Medical Center Travis County Master Gardeners - Inside Austin Gardens Tour The First Austin African Violets Society Austin Organic Gardeners - The 57th Annual Zilker Garden Festival For over 50 years, the annual Zilker Garden Festival has been a one-stop, garden shopping destination when spring arrives in Austin and Central Texas. A family-friendly event, the garden festival offers something for everyone: Garden Heroes ZILKER BOTANICAL GARDEN • Annual Flower Show in the Garden Center, featuring judged designs and an array of horticultural specimens. Events at a Glance The Chrysalis Gift Shop at • Gardening Talks where novice and seasoned gardeners will enjoy talks from local gardening experts. Zilker Botanical Garden The Walk of Friends City of Austin Newsletters KLRU's "Central Texas Gardener" Yelp Reviews • Vendors selling a variety of plants and garden-themed arts and crafts, ceramic pottery, custom jewelry, handmade artistic clothing, herbal products, garden hats. • City of Austin Information tables where you can learn about growing healthy, earthfriendly, sustainable gardens, caring for trees, and using environmentally safe pest management. • Live music from the Soundstage in the Rose Garden – with a variety of musical offerings both afternoons • Enjoy tasty food offerings at the Food Court in the Oak Grove on the Escarpment Trail • The always fun and interactive Kids' Corner in the Rose Garden – where kids can build a birdhouse, or bird feeder, make butterfly wings and masks, have their faces painted, and learn about plants from Master Gardeners. There are many activities for the whole family to enjoy! Go to the Zilker Garden Festival web site for all the information on activities, schedules, list of vendors, parking information and more. 1 A GUIDE TO FLOWER SHOWS FOR NOVICES As Explained by Harriet Houston, Violet Crown Garden Club, to Steve Blackson, Austin Pond Society Editors Note: I have attended flower shows in the past, but never really knew what I was looking at. The flowers were all very pretty, and some of the exhibits were interesting, but I didn't understand why or who got which ribbon or what award. At last year's Zilker Garden Festival, Harriet Houston was gracious enought to take me on a guided tour of the Flower Show and explain to me what the flower show was about. I'm indebted to Harriet for all her help and explanations, and her patience for putting up with my questions. So here, I thought I might pass along to other flower show novices what I learned. ZGF Flower Show Awards Divisions The first thing to understand is that a flower show is divided into 2 Divisions: Design and Horticulture. Design Division The Design division is what a novice might consider to be flower 'arrangements', but it is much more involved than that. There are different sections and classes. • Sections are related to the size of the design. • Each section has classes for grouping similar designs, like an arrangement for a small tea party, or for a dinner table setting, or a floor design for a large, stand-alone plant. (Note: At the end of this article are links for more information about the various sections and classes.) Place Setting From my novice viewpoint, I learned that dinner table settings compete against dinner table settings, and tea party settings compete against tea party settings. Horticulture Division The Horticulture division is exactly what you would expect it to be: the best plants grown by the entrant in their respective section and class. In the Horticulture division, sections are divided by the plant variety or their uses. Examples would be sections for Roses, for Cactus and Succulents, Orchids, Annuals and Perennials, Hanging Containers, or Potted Plants. Horticulture Classes in the Horticulture division are divided by groups specific to that cataegory. For example, the Orchid section is classified by the different genus of orchids, like Cattleya, Cymbidium, Vanda, etc. Roses are classified by Grandiflora, Miniature, Hybrids, etc. Show Theme The other important item to understand is that all flower shows have a theme that sets the tone of the show. Past themes have included "Children's Nursery Rhymes", with classes like "A Tisket, a Tasket, a Design in a Basket". The theme for this year's Flower Show at the Zilker Garden Festival is "From Grandma's Kitchen". Design classes will include "Vegetables from Grandma's Garden", "Family Holiday Celebration", and "Oktoberfest". 2 Judging and Awards Lastly is judging the entries. The entries will be judged by Nationally Accredited Flower Show Judges using the National Garden Clubs Handbook for Flower Shows, 2007 edition, or the National Plant Society Scale of Points in sections where they apply. I wasn't familiar with either method, but when Harriet showed me the NGC Handbook for Flower Shows, I was amazed! It's an inch-and-a-half thick... with tiny type! There are several prestigious awards that can be bestowed by the judges: Design divison awards include: Horticulture division awards include: • Petite Award • The Award of Horticultural Excellence • Tricolor Award • The Award of Merit • Designer's Choice Award • The Arboreal Award • Table Artistry Award • The Award of Appreciation Both divisions have a Sweepstakes Award that is presented to the winner with the most blue ribbons in their division. The most interesting thing I learned about judging is that Austin judges do NOT judge an Austin flower show. All the judges will be from out of town - Houston, San Antonio, or Waco for example. So there is no chance of hometown bias like the Dowager Countess of Grantham (Maggie Smith) enjoyed in Downton Abbey's annual flower show! In Conclusion If you didn't know your way around a flower show before, I hope you can now appreciate all the different floral designs and plants, as well as all the effort the entrants put into their exhibits. The Flower Show at the Zilker Garden Festival will be a colorful burst of beautiful flowers and designs for your enjoyment. Show this article to your significant other and friends, then bring them with you to the Flower Show. We hope to see you there! For More Information If you would like to enter the Flower Show with an exhibit or plant, or just want all the details about the show, you can download the "From Grandma's Kitchen" PDF. You can also visit the Zilker Garden Festival web page for a summary of the Design sections. Or you can ask Harriet like I did! Thank you for all your help and patience Harriet! Harriet Houston, Violet Crown Garden Club as explained to Steve Blackson, Austin Pond Society 3 GROWING IRISES by Nelda Moore, Iris Society of Austin Planting and Growing Bearded Iris Bearded irises — the beautiful flowers having three standards, three falls, and three beards that are like fuzzy caterpillars — are very easy to grow with a minimum of care as long as the rhizome or fleshy root has good drainage and the plant has plenty of sun. Any soil should be built up with the addition of compost, bone meal, and sand. If the soil is acidic, some agricultural lime can be beneficial. If using fertilizer, the mix should be higher in phosphorous for root growth, solid rhizomes, and strong bloomstalks, and low in nitrogen to prevent rot. The best time to plant the rhizomes is during their semidormant period or during the fall, especially in September and October. Bearded Iris They should set their roots before the first freeze in this area. • Plant the rhizome in the raised bed with the thoroughly mixed amendments by creating a mound of dirt in the planting hole and pressing the rhizome down and spreading the roots over the mound. • Then fill in and firm the soil around the rhizome, leaving the soil just slightly over the rhizome with the foliage trimmed in an upside down "V". Usually the rhizome has evidence of a new increase or two. • Soak the ground after planting and allow the soil around the top of the rhizome to become dry before watering again. Most often the rhizome will show itself after watering. That is perfect because if the iris is planted too deep it will not bloom. Soon after this, the roots should anchor the plant. The increases should produce bloomstalks in the spring, but sometimes it takes a year before blooms appear. • Use bone meal or super phosphate to feed the plant again in the spring before bloom season. This feeding is usually on or about Valentines Day. Patience and a clean garden area are attributes of an irisarian. Do not use companion plants that will shade the rhizome, and try to divide a clump after a couple of years. Louisiana Irises are Native Wildflowers Louisiana irises have a long rhizome with thin foliage that can be held up to the light so that one can see the tiny black flecks scattered throughout the sword-like leaf. The dots seem like pepper, and after all, these plants are from the swamps of Louisiana. This iris ranges in color from blues and purples to white and dark purple to yellow and red. The flowers can be spider-like to doubles with no beards, just signals or patches of yellow on the blossom. Louisiana Iris Their rhizomes are planted about an inch or a little deeper in acidic soil that is kept moist. Mulch, but not pine bark, can be used to keep the rhizomes from drying during the summer or for protecting them from freezing. These plants are heavy feeders; therefore, they need to be fertilized at least three times per year — at planting time, after they bloom, and again in the fall. They like the azalea food or miracid. These irises can be grown in pots as long as there is no hole in the bottom of the container. The soil should be near the top so that the plants are not submerged if it rains. To prevent rainwater from standing in the pot, drill a few holes in the top of the container so that water can escape. Nelda Moore, Iris Society of Austin 4 CARING FOR AFRICAN VIOLETS by Glenda Williams, Vice-President, First Austin African Violets Society Light African violets require approximately 10-12 hours of bright, indirect light per day - one of the most important factors in bloom production. Natural light from windows facing east is an option as the morning light works well for your plants. Windows facing the other 3 directions may work as well but care should be taken to minimize direct sunlight as it can burn plant foliage. Amethyst The most practical lighting for growing violets is artificial or fluorescent lights. Inexpensive fluorescent light fixtures are readily available at your local hardware or home improvement stores. Violets require approximately 600 foot-candles of light for 12-14 hours per day. For best results, use fluorescent tubes especially made for plants and aquariums. • Place standard size plants 12 to 14 inches below the lights. • Place mini and semi-miniature varieties 8 to 10 inches below the lights. • Lighter or variegated leaf varieties require less light while darker leaf varieties will require more light. • Timers can be used to automatically turn your lighting on/off based on your prespecified lighting requirements or schedule. • Keep lighting dusted, being careful not to get the dust on plants. Temperature African violets grow best in temperatures between 60 to 80°F and humidity between 40% and 60%. In essence, if you are comfortable in a room, your plants will be as well. • Use a fan to provide gentle air circulation if needed. Circulating air helps keep the temperature even in the room as well as to help minimize powdery mildew. • Variegated varieties prefer the cooler temperature range which supports their variegation and tend to do better on the lower/bottom shelves of a plant stand. Celina Dark Velvet Watering African violets can easily maintain on a once a week watering schedule. Violets like to keep their "feet" (roots) evenly moist — never soggy. The easiest and quickest way to kill a violet is to over water and let it stand in a saucer of water — it will rot. Violets will tolerate drought better than soggy roots. Watering can be done from the top (under the plant-avoid the crown) or from the bottom, by wicking, or by matting. Wick or capillary mat watering is a method which delivers water continuously to the soil mix, minimizing soil dry out, as well as allows you extended periods of time without the worry or work effort of watering. • Water should be room temperature (tepid), preferably left to stand 24 hours prior to use. • Water only when the top of the soil feels dry to the touch. • Rainwater and reverse osmosis water can be used. • Never use water from a water softening system, as salts added to this water process system will harm your plants. Optimara Stephanie 5 For More Information about African Violets The First Austin African Violet Society has information on its website at http://stonewall/aagc/www.avsa.org, along with links to websites of other organizations that are interested in the growing, showing, and educating the public on African violets and other gesneriads. by Glenda Williams, Vice-President, First Austin African Violets Society PLANT DIVISION by Rachel Matthews, Heart of the Hills Garden Club The Long and Short of It - Plant Division Math teachers claim that 1=1 but gardeners know that 1 can equal 2 or 3 or 4 or more through plant division. Dividing plants is one way to propagate quickly and fairly easily, and it is beneficial for the plants as well. • Why divide plants? • Which plants can be divided? • When should I do it? • How do I do it? Here are a few tips to help keep your plants healthy, happy, and prolific. Plant Division Why divide plants? Plants can become crowded, and when they get too crowded they suffer. Dividing plants lets us manage the size of the plants, helps keep them healthy, and gives us additional plant material for our gardens or to share with friends. Which plants can be divided? Many perennials, excepting those with taproots, can and should be divided. Iris, daylilies, hostas, ferns, herbs like mint and chives, almost any plant with a "clumping" or "running" nature can benefit, and your garden will benefit from "new" plants as well! If you are not sure about dividing a plant in your garden, call your local extension service or a local nursery. When should I divide plants? Early spring or late fall, depending. Simply, you want to divide your plants when they are not blooming or are relatively dormant. Most well established plants can and should be divided every few years. See the resources below or call your local extension services for specifics about the plants in your garden. Dividing is, as you can imagine, stressful even though it is necessary for the healthy growth of a plant. Divide your plants when they are looking good as a healthy, strong plant will have the best chance of a full recovery. Don't wait until they are looking overgrown or dead at the center. And, even if you lose a few of your "new" starts, you will still have more than you started with! How do I do it? Plants are tougher than you may think. The trick in dividing plants is to cause as little shock to the plant as possible. If you are dividing in-ground plants, dig wide and deep around the root ball. That way you can lift the entire plant out without too much trauma. Lift the plant out using either a spading fork, a shovel, or by hand. Work on a tarp if you like, as it can get a bit messy. Cut or gently pull apart the roots to make new plants, remembering that cleanly cut roots are more likely to heal disease-free than torn or broken roots. 6 Once divided, be sure to keep the roots covered and moist until you can get the plants back into the ground. Much the way I prepare my cookie sheets or bread pans before starting a recipe, I try to figure out where I want the new plants and prepare the new beds before digging out the original material. That way the newly divided plants spend only a few minutes out of their element. Divided Plants I have had good luck dividing Boston ferns with a bread knife. If you buy a hanging pot of ferns from one of the box stores you can generally get at least four healthy plants from it. Water it well, then remove it from the pot. You can pull the roots apart to a degree, but I simply quarter the rootball then replant into four clean pots, using good well draining potting soil. Wait a bit before fertilizing, but keep the new pots well watered. If you follow these tips, use good common sense, and tend the newly planted material, you should have fuller beds and happier, healthier plants. See? One can equal many! Rachel Matthews, Heart of the Hills Garden Club Helpful Resources: Fine Gardening http://www.finegardening.com/how-to/articles/dividing-perennials.aspx Better Homes and Gardens http://www.bhg.com/gardening/dividing-perennials/ Clemson University http://www.clemson.edu/extension/hgic/plants/landscape/flowers/hgic1150.html Burpee Seeds http://www.burpee.com/perennials/dividing-your-perennials-article10375.html Travis County Extension Service http://www.co.travis.tx.us/agext/garden/veggies/planting/ Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of articles on the history of the Austin Area Garden Center and the clubs that comprise the Austin Area Garden Council. The Men's Garden Club of Austin was one of the original clubs who were instrumental in establishing the Garden Center and creating what we now know as Zilker Botanical Garden. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE GARDEN CLUB OF AUSTIN From Wilburn and Annie Hackebeil, The Garden Club of Austin Founding as The Men's Garden Club of Austin The Garden Club of Austin was originally known as The Men’s Garden Club of Austin, which was founded in 1953 by more than 90 men. The first Club President was Dr. S. W. Bohls. In 2002 it changed its name to The Garden Club of Austin, opening up membership to anyone interested in gardening. Membership Milestones Some time following organization, the club membership dropped from 90 to 50 and had no real growth until 1969. A gradual increase became evident during the next five years: • Membership almost doubled in 1973 to nearly 200; • from 1974 to 1979, it remained above 200; • the eighties ushered in memberships of more than 300 from 1980 to 1984; • however, membership during the past five years has been below 100. 7 For several years the Austin Club had the largest membership of clubs in the country. It won the Woodson K. Jones Memorial Plaque (for outstanding club) six times; the last three years were 1983, 1984, and 1988. Thus it has been among the top clubs based on member recruitment, garden projects, and other related activities. National and Regional Affiliations The Garden Club of Austin is affiliated with: • The Gardener’s of America/The Men’s Garden Club of America, Inc. (TGOA/MGCA), • Southwest Region-MGCA, Inc. • and Austin Area Garden Center, Inc. (AAGC) Austin’s Leonard Guerrero served as the National President in 1980. Presidents of the Southwest Region were H B Mendieta (1969), Jesse E Fox (1974), Leonard Guerrero (1984), and Sol Steinberg (1992). Several other club members have served in regional and national posts. The Austin Club hosted the Southwest Region Conference in 1960, 1969, 1974, 1980,1984, and 1990. It hosted the National Convention in 1981. The Garden Club of Austin Today The Garden Club meets monthly on the fourth Thursday of each month at the Zilker Botanical Garden Center Auditorium, with the exception of March, November and December. In March the meeting usually has to be rescheduled due to the Zilker Garden Festival. In November the monthly meeting is held jointly with the Cactus and Succulent Society on the Thursday before Thanksgiving. In December, no monthly meeting is held, only an awards presentation and Christmas Party. Programs for the regular club meetings have been centered on Horticulture, which has been one of the main objectives and has aided in recruiting new members. The obtaining of speakers and programs has been done with this objective in mind. There are programs and demonstrations on gardening topics and “how to tips”, plant auction, silent auction, trips, and an ice cream social, and door prizes. During the last few years the Club has been very active in providing volunteer labor to help enhance the beauty of Zilker Botanical Gardens and other areas of Austin. MGC-Austin’s Summer and Fall Flower and Vegetable Shows, which are open to the public, have attracted considerable attention and helped to publicize the Club. Also, the two plant sales each year have provided significant funds for the Club. Spring and Fall bulb sales the past four years have attracted many buyers. The Garden Club of Austin uses the proceeds from their sales to fund scholarships to Central Texas area students majoring in Horticulture, and other worthy activities. You can get more information about the club and its current activities at their website: http://www.thegardenclubofaustin.org/ from Wilburn and Annie Hackebeil, The Garden Club of Austin 8 CLUB NEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE from Marion Alsup, President, Austin Area Garden Center The Austin Area Garden Center - a 50 Year Legacy Let's remember 1964: • Gasoline cost 30 cents a gallon. • Bread cost 21 cents a loaf. • Average annual income in the U.S. was $6,000. • The average cost of a new home was $13,000. • The Dow Jones Industrial average closed the year at 874. Marion Alsup • Funny Girl and Fiddler on the Roof premiered on Broadway. • Mary Poppins, Dr. Strangelove and Goldfinger were among the top movies of the year. • Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. won the Nobel Peace Prize. • Newcomers on the scene were the Beatles, Rolling Stones, Beach Boys, Supremes, joined by the Ford Mustang, BASIC computer language, IBM's System 360 computer, Pop Tarts, Lucky Charms cereal, Sharpie markers. • and the Austin Area Garden Center opened its doors on Oct. 25. 1964 was quite a year! Fifty years went flying by, and the Austin Area Garden Center is still going strong, with 30 affiliated garden clubs. Our clubs and their members are still sharing the joys of gardening after all these years! Our neighbors can learn about gardening and the environment through meetings, workshops, flower shows and the 57th annual Zilker Garden Festival, which will be held this year on March 29-30. Support the Austin Area Garden Center I'd like to ask for your support in the year ahead. We need about 300 volunteers for Zilker Garden Festival. There are so many jobs to do and so many wonderful folks working hard and having a great time. Many have signed up already, but there are still a lot of jobs waiting, especially taking tickets at the front gate and helping with crafts and activities in Kids' Corner. AAGC Underwriting KLRU's "Central Texas Gardener" We have a new opportunity to reach the viewers of Central Texas Gardener on KLRU through a mutual sponsorship, which covers 10 and 15 second spots on CTG programs during the coming year. How are we going to fund the $10,000 cost of this worthwhile project? We have a matching challenge grant of $5,000 and are asking for donations from clubs and members to fund the rest. For example, your $50 contribution will be matched with an additional $50 for a total of $100. And you get to promote the Garden Center and donate to KLRU at the same time! You'll be glad to know that we're already well on our way to reaching our goal. Help us continue our legacy and extend our outreach to a new audience. Austin Garden Center 50th Anniversary Soon we will start planning a fall celebration/open house/plant sale to celebrate the 50th birthday of the Austin Area Garden Center building! I'm not sure yet what this celebration will involve, but I am sure that it will be a fun and rewarding event that everyone will want to participate in. We'll need a lot of help with planning and managing this event! Let's all pitch in to support the Austin Area Garden Center so we can continue the legacy and share the joy of gardening for another 50 years! Marion Alsup, President, Austin Area Garden Center 9 SPRING PLANT SHOWS AND SALES Many of our clubs hold plant shows and sales as fund raising projects in the spring. There will be a wide variety of different types of plants available, from cactus and succulents to orchids! Visit the club's web site for more information. March Austin Organic Gardeners Plant Sale Saturday March 1, 9:00 am to 2:00 pm http://www.austinorganicgardeners.org/ First Austin African Violet Society Show and Sale Saturday, March 15, 10:00 am to 4:30 pm Sunday, March 16, 11:00 am to 3:30 pm http://www.faavs.org/ Heart of Texas Orchid Society Show and Sale Saturday, March 22, and Sunday, March 23 10:00 am to 5:00 pm http://www.hotos.org/ April Austin Cactus & Succulent Society Show and Sale Saturday, April 5, and Sunday, April 6 10:00 am to 5:00 pm http://austincss.com/ Iris Society of Austin Show Saturday, April 12, 1:00 pm to 3:30 pm http://www.kenfuchs42.net/isa_index.html May Austin Bonsai Society Show and Sale Saturday, May 17, and Sunday, May 18 10:00 am to 5:00 pm http://www.austinbonsaisociety.com/ Austin Daylily Society Show Saturday, May 24, 10:00 am to 4:00 pm http://www.austindaylily.org/ SPRING WORKSHOPS In Addition to flower shows and sales, there are interesting gardening workshops scheduled. Visit the club's web site for more information. March Travis County Master Gardeners (TCMG) Educational Workshop Heirloom Plants in the Spring Garden Saturday, March 8, 10:00 am to 12:00 pm http:/www.tcmastergardeners.org 10 AUSTIN POND SOCIETY GOES ICE FISHING FOR DELL CHILDREN'S MEDICAL CENTER by Linda Tinsley, 2013 President, Austin Pond Society Recently, one of my co-worker's 11-year old daughter, Makayla, was undergoing tests and treatment at Dell Children's Medical Center (DCMC) for some serious medical issues. During a visit to her and her mother while she was in the Medical Center, we stopped to admire the pond that is located in the courtyard of the main building. Dell Children's Medical Center and Pond It was a beautiful water feature with large rocks and water falling around the boulders. But it was a pond with no fish! Makayla told her mother "This pond needs some fish!." Makayla's mother responded "I'm sure Ms Linda can get that done!" As President of the Austin Pond Society, I often receive calls from people with pond problems or fish issues. One Saturday morning, not long after my visit with Makayla and her mother at the medical center, I received a phone call that brought the Austin Pond Society's community involvement to a whole new level. A Pond with a Problem The caller described a problem with their pond; there was a leak, they couldnt locate it and they had about 50 or so goldfish in the pond that had to be moved. Their plan was to move the fish to a local pond retailer and the call was to ask advice. As I was talking to the pond owner I remembered Makayla's lament at the medical center, "This pond needs some fish!" I asked if the fish could be relocated to a different pond and if I could make some phone calls and get back to her on Monday. The pond owner agreed and I knew that I had the solution to something that I had been trying to do for a long time. Here was the opportunity to bring the joys of the DCMC pond to children and their families. The Pond with a Leak Meeting with Dell Children's Medical Center Monday I went to DCMC to search out the appropriate person to talk to. Luckily, standing at the information desk was one of the members of the Dell Children's Medical Center Foundation Board. I explained the purpose of my visit and she was excited at the prospect of adding fish to one of the ponds on the medical center campus. I left my contact information with her and my only thoughts were "Is this going to happen? Is this going to work?" Much to my surprise and delight I received a call that afternoon from the Facilities Manager at DCMC. I explained to him the situation with the fish and that we would like to relocate them to their BIG pond that was just completed this summer. He thought it was a great idea and that he would be happy to work with me to coordinate the move. 11 Anybody Want to Volunteer? That very night was the General Membership meeting of the Austin Pond Society (APS). It was the annual end of the year celebration and everyone was there. I explained the situation to everyone and asked for volunteers. APS members are famous for volunteering for pond related projects, so I was not surprised when the usual volunteers stepped up to help with the fish move. But then brand new members, and members who have volunteered for other types of projects, also raised their hands. I couldnt write down names fast enough. I was thrilled! After speaking with the pond owner and with the people at DCMC, the big move was set for the following Saturday morning. Anybody Check the Weather Forecast?? Friday night the temperature dropped, the winds came up. By Saturday morning it was very cold, windy and a bit of drizzle was in the air. Not exactly the kind of weather for playing in the water. But, did that deter these valued volunteers? NO WAY! Everyone showed up and were ready to get the job done. People brought nets, buckets, waders for catching the fish, large coolers for transporting the fish, and a great willingness to get the job done. Have you ever watched "Yard Crashers" on cable? Thats what we looked like when 10 people, 5 vehicles and loads of equipment showed up at the pond owners' home. The Ice Fishing Brigade Transferring Water Catch... ...and Release The work went quickly. Water from the pond was transferred to the various coolers so that the fish would be in the same water that they had been living in. The guys went to work with nets and caught all of the fish in the pond and got them moved into the coolers in about a half-hour. Once all of the fish had been moved to coolers, and the coolers loaded into the trucks, the trek to DCMC started. Even the pond owners and their daughter joined us on the relocation trip. 12 The Fish Meet Their New Home Arriving at DCMC Adding "new" Water Releasing the fish When we arrived at DCMC, the gate was open and the facilities staff were waiting for us. The coolers were then moved to the edge of the pond, and water from the big pond was added to the coolers. This was done to help the fish acclimate to their new habitat. After waiting for a while and exploring this huge pond and surrounding area, it was time. Carefully, 69 fish were gently moved from the coolers to the pond, and they were on their way. All of the fish took off in different directions, exploring their new home, but eventually they gathered in schools and swam up and down the pond. This was a good move! Fish now in new home at DCMC A pond that needed fish now has some! I am so excited and happy that there are fish in the big DCMC pond. This is a great place for families to relax and enjoy the water, the plants and, finally, that pond that needed some fish has some! My thanks to all of the volunteers that showed up that miserable Saturday morning and to the pond owners who were so excited that their fish were going to a place where they would definitely be enjoyed by many. For more information about the Austin Pond Society, visit their web site at: http://www.austinpondsociety.org/ Linda Tinsley, Austin Pond Society 13 TRAVIS COUNTY MASTER GARDENERS - INSIDE AUSTIN GARDENS TOUR Saturday, May 3, 2014 from 9:00 am until 4:00 pm. You are invited to the Inside Austin Gardens Tour featuring six gardens of exemplary quality and design. The tour is presented by Travis County Master Gardeners Association in cooperation with the Travis County AgriLife Extension Service on Saturday, May 3, 2014 from 9:00 am until 4:00 pm. The Inside Austin Gardens Tour includes gardens to explore, continuous one-on-one educational offerings, kids' activities, and book sales. The gardens are a unique expression of the gardeners personality and interests. Here is a glimpse of what to expect at these gardens. Imagine a free-spirited modern artist had a fling with an introverted cottage gardener. The resulting love child garden excels in using tough, easy-care plants to achieve a lush and exuberant mix of textures and colors, tamed by the sculptural solidity of cactus, agave, and yucca. Grasp what can happen when gardeners take on a neglected yard. dedicated Share the thrilling pleasure of fresh vegetables, luscious fruit blended into a vibrant landscape anchored by a pond filled with serenading frogs. See what results when high tech and water conservation cross breeds. The garden has tropical looking vegetation, vegetables, herbs, roses, hanging baskets, and lush green lawn. But the star is the watering system! Creativity!... It oozes from the pores of this garden which highlights three water features. LOL when you see how new life has been breathed into rejected items. 14 Discover a Texas style perennial border garden punctuated with whimsical garden art, family garden treasures, plants from educators and friends. Examine the actual plants which are featured in Grow Green Native and Adapted Landscape Plants booklet. Trial beds compare tomato varieties and effects of different watering frequency. Join us on the tour! Complete tour information including addresses, educational topics, maps, kid's activities and ticket prices can be found at http://www.insideaustingardens.org/Purchase tickets online or at each garden on tour day. Cash or credit cards are accepted at gardens. Rosalie Russell, Travis County Master Gardeners THE FIRST AUSTIN AFRICAN VIOLETS SOCIETY by Glenda Williams, Vice-President, First African Violets Society In 2014 the First Austin African Violets Society will celebrate 50 years of violet history! The First Austin African Violet Society (FAAVS) was established in 1964 in Austin, Texas. The FAAVS is a member of the African Violet Society of America (AVSA), Lone Star African Violets Council (LSAVC), and the Austin Area Garden Council (AAGC). FAAVS goals are to: Stimulate public interest in growing and showing African violets and other gesneriads; Provide a convenient association for people interested in African violets; Provide education about propagation, culture, and showing African violets and other gesneriads; Promote distribution of all varieties and species among members and others interested in growing them; and Publish reliable, practical information about the organization and African violets and other gesneriads. FAAVS Membership FAAVS members work to stimulate interest in African violets by providing educational activities and judged African violet shows in the Central Texas area. Membership is open to all interested individuals,in particular, the Central Texas (Austin) areas. As a member you will receive this yearbook and all opportunities offered to FAAVS members so join today! Joining FAAVS is easy! Individual annual memberships are currently $30.00. This fee includes annual memberships to LSAVC and the Austin Area Garden Council (AAGC). Simply forward your name, address, phone number, and email address either by mail or email to the FAAVS treasurer who will contact you with information on mailing payment. 15 What do FAAVS members do? African violet enthusiasts not only participate in FAAVS, AVSA, LSAVC, and other African Violet Affiliate activities but also get together with growers in their local and statewide communities. FAAVS members participate in determining the 25 Best African violet varieties. FAAVS offers the public a chance to win African violet promotional items through a raffle at both the fall and spring shows. FAAVS has an AVSA promotional display at our fall and spring show each year along with an educational display. Sport of Caribbean Sunset The FAAVS provides a financial gift to the Austin Area Garden Center. FAAVS members vote annually to support an Annual Holiday Charity. The FAAVS and members make donations to the Boyce Edens Research Fund, the Building Fund, Conventions, or other special memorials. The FAAVS offers numerous seminars to educate the public on propagation and culture of African violets and other gesneriads. Club project plants can be grown by members and brought to meetings to help educate on the different growing methods and environments. A revised edition of the culture handbook written by FAAVS members is available at shows, displays, and through mail order. Sinningia Bright Eyes xconcinna Members are available to give presentations to outside groups on various aspects of African violet culture. FAAVS members can participate as officers and committee chairpersons with the Austin Area Garden Council (AAGC), Central Texas Judges Council (CTJC), Lone Star African Violet Council (ISAVC), and the African Violet Society of America (AVSA). Members assist in State and National conventions when asked. Members are available as Judges and Clerks for AVSA affiliate shows. To find out more about FAAVS activities, visit the FAAVS website at http://www.orgsites.com/tx/faavs. FAAVS Information is also posted on the Internet at http://stonewall/aagc/www.avsa.org with links to other websites of organizations that are interested in the growing, showing, and educating the public on African violets and other gesneriads. Streptocarpus Heartlands Baby Egrets by Glenda Williams, Vice-President, First African Violets Society 16 AUSTIN ORGANIC GARDENERS - GARDEN HEROES by Catherine Robertson, Austin Organic Gardeners JIMI CHOW I got to visit with Jimi Chow at the seed exchange at Milberg Farms. Jimi had brought Cherokee Tomato seeds she had grown and collected to bring to the exchange. Her enthusiasm was contagious as she instructed the group in various methods of growing the plants and she put everyone at ease. Jimi has been in the Austin Organic Garden Club for twenty years and professes to be self-taught in gardening. Jimi Chow She is looking forward to volunteering at the plant sale and finds it fun meeting new people and helping others. We spent time discussing some new ideas she has for the club that left me inspired as well! RUSSELL KOHLERT Garden Hero... or should I say the man about Zilker Gardens. Russell belongs to eight clubs: Austin Butterfly Forum Austin Bonsai Society Austin Cactus and Succulent Society Austin Daylily Society Austin Organic Gardeners Austin Rose Society Iris Society of Austin and The Garden Club of Austin. Russell Kohlert Oh, did I mention that he also used to be the night attendant for the Austin Area Garden Council for thirteen years. That is where most people got to know Russell as he walked they safely to their cars. Russell joined the Austin Organic Gardeners first in 1980 when John Dromgoole was speaker for the Ted Fisher summer school. We always see Russell cleaning up after meetings, selling soil amendments, and volunteering for any other duties clubs may need help with. His favorite volunteer job is with the Butterfly forum where kids play with caterpillars at the Lady Bird Wildflower Center. Russell also raises plants for our March First Organic Plant Sale at Zilker and claims to do so just for the fun of it. I for one don't know where we would be without Russell at Zilker. The Austin Organic Garden Club has shown their appreciation by awarding him a lifetime membership. by Catherine Robertson, Austin Organic Gardeners 17 ZILKER BOTANICAL GARDEN EVENTS AT A GLANCE March 2014 Saturday, March 1, 9:00 am to 2:00 pm Austin Organic Gardeners' Plant Sale Sunday, March 2 Kite Festival ZBG Open but No Parking Sunday, March 2, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden Saturday, March 8, 10:00 am to 12:00 pm Travis County Master Gardeners (TCMG) Educational Workshop Sunday, March 9 Daylight Savings Times Begins ZBG hours: 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Saturday, March 15, 10:00 am to 4:30 pm Sunday, March 16, 11:00 am to 3:30 pm First Austin African Violet Society Show & Sale Sunday, March 16, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden Saturday, March 22, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Sunday, March 23, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Heart of Texas Orchid Society Show & Sale Thursday, March 27, 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm ZBG Closes at 5:00 pm Zilker Garden Festival Setup Friday, March 28, 7:00 am to 7:00 pm ZBG Closed to Public Zilker Garden Festival Setup Saturday, March 29, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Zilker Garden Festival Sunday, March 30, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Zilker Garden Festival April 2014 Saturday, April 5, and Sunday, April 6, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Austin Cactus & Succulent Society Show and Sale Sunday, April 6, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden Saturday, April 12, 1:00 pm to 3:30 pm Iris Society of Austin Show (No Sale) Sunday, April 20, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden 18 May 2014 Sunday, May 4, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden Saturday, May 17, and Sunday, May 18, 10:00 am - 5:00 pm Austin Bonsai Society Show and Sale Sunday, May 18, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden Saturday, May 24, 10:00 am - 4:00 pm Austin Daylily Society Show June 2014 Sunday, June 1, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden Saturday, June 7, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Sunday, June 8, 10:00 am to 4:00 pm The Garden Club of Austin Show and Sale Sunday, June 15, 12:00 noon to 4:00 pm Afternoon in the Garden Saturday, June 21, 10:00 am to 12:00 noon Travis County Master Gardeners Educational Workshop Events scheduled at the Zilker Botanical Garden-Austin Area Garden Center are always posted, and kept updated, on the Calendar of Events page on the web site. THE CHRYSALIS GIFT SHOP AT ZILKER BOTANICAL GARDEN Where can a visitor purchase post cards, cookbooks, jewelry, puzzles, Gatorade, framed prints, and unique gifts? Drive to Zilker Botanical Garden and shop at The Chrysalis Gift Shop, where your shopping experience will be satisfied with such great gifts as Remarkable Plants of Texas, The Garden Guide, Food by Design from the Violet Crown Garden Club, New Braunfels Garden Club Cookbook, books about trees, butterflies, snakes, or dragonflies. Then there are cool towels, shopping bags that can be stuffed inside themselves to form a ball that can be attached to a purse, tee shirts, very special Austin gifts for the person who has everything, beautiful jewelry, night lights of nature, boxes that look like flowers. Bring your birthday child along and let him shop for himself in the children's section for wooden snakes, dinosaurs, puzzles, books, cardinals that sing their song, or perhaps he will purchase a framed nature print for his room. It is all there and some of the items are fashioned here in Austin by Austin artists The Chrysalis Gift Shop 19 THE WALK OF FRIENDS DONATE A BRICK TODAY! Order forms are available at the Garden Center or downloaded from http://www.zilkergarden.org/. Click on Support and then Walk of Friends. It's easy! Select the size of brick you would like, choose your message and return the form with your payment. Contact Sandra Holt at 512-345-3164 for more information, or visit: http://www.zilkergarden.org/support/friends.html. AUSTIN NOTES The Walk of Friends KLRU'S "CENTRAL TEXAS GARDENER" KLRU's "Central Texas Gardener" Sign up for Austin Notes, the City's dynamic e-mail update system and get news about Austin neighborhoods, parks, road closures, and more. Read More... This weekly gardening show is a rich source of information for all Austin and Central Texas gardeners. Check out their weekly show schedule for topics and air times, the "To Do List" for monthly gardening tasks, and much more... Read reviews from visitors to Zilker Botanical Garden on Yelp.com. 4½ stars out of 5 makes our garden sing! "Down the Garden Path" is a publication of the Austin Area Garden Council, Zilker Botanical Garden. Contact us at Down the Garden Path with comments or suggestions. ©2014 Austin Area Garden Council, Zilker Botanical Garden http://www.zilkergarden.org/ 20