April 2015 Grapevine - Escambia County Extension
Transcription
April 2015 Grapevine - Escambia County Extension
April 2015 | Vol. XXVII, No 4 Calendar of Events MG MONTHLY MEETING Thursday, March 26, 2015 9:00 a.m. Program: Botanical names of Plants – Tina Tuttle MASTER GARDENER PLANT CLINIC Saturday, March 28, 2015 10:00 a.m to 2:00 p.m. Lowes Garden Center Fairfield Drive and Mobile Highway GARDEN TALKS April 10, 2015 9:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Harvesting Vegetables Register by calling 850-595-3460 or email: bbolles@ufl.edu You must preregister 3 days prior to the program to receive handout materials EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING April 16, 2015 9:00 a.m. Conference Room MG MONTHLY MEETING April 30, 2015 9:00 a.m. Program: Garden prep for Extension Spring Festival and Open House ESCAMBIA EXTENSION SPRING FESTIVAL AND 4-H OPEN HOUSE Saturday, May 2, 2015 8:00a.m to Noon Educational demonstrations, garden tours, and plant sale 3740 Stefani Road Cantonment, Fl 32533 ESCAMBIA COUNTY Master Gardener’s Grapevine Beth Bolles, Extension Agent III, Horticulture Carol Lord, Horticulture Technician Editor, Shelby Kalin This newsletter is written and compiled by Master Gardeners in support of the Escambia County Master Gardener Volunteer Program. Master Gardeners have contributed more than 161,077 hours of service to the Extension Horticulture Program since 1987, providing services worth $3,005,696. Escambia County Master Gardeners Association Officers – January 2015 – December 2015 Ann Luther, President Annie Guthrie, Vice President Russ Poerner, Secretary Carolann Holmes, Treasurer Extension Programs are open and available to individuals and institutions without regard to race, color, gender, age, handicap, or national origin. No discrimination is intended and no endorsements by the Cooperative Extension Service is implied for specific products. Reference to commercial products or trade names are for educational purposes only. Pursuant to the provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act, any person requiring special accommodations to participate in any meeting or workshop noted herein is asked to advise the University of Florida at least 5 working days prior to the meeting or workshop by contacting Beth Bolles at 850-475-5230. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the University by calling 352-846-1046(TDD). Beth R. Bolles Beth Bolles, Extension Agent III Horticulture President’s Remarks… WOW….a big Green Thumbs Up! I am so grateful to all for being there for every activity that has been thrown your way. It truly exemplifies the meaning of Escambia County Master Gardener Volunteers. So take that “ah ha” moment and know that you are great! Now that you have taken that moment let’s get to work. April is our busiest time at the Extension. The weather started off very cold and rainy but with the end of March the sun emerged and brought new growth in the Demonstration Garden. It is hard for me to believe that some people in the community still don’t know that we have a garden! I know that will change with this year’s Spring Festival/Open House. The County is advertising the word and we are all excited to see the 4H building completed and the grounds coming together. “Together” is exactly the word that we needed to complete the transition year. TOGETHER, we can do just about anything. Beth and her MG crew have been planting new hardy trees and shrubs around the new 4H building. Low maintenance was the goal and they have achieved this first stage. It is all coming together. Green Thumbs Up! Doug McCrary and his work crew have taken on the task of the pavers around the Extension Sign. The sign will get a new facelift with painting from the county and with the addition of new pavers it will stand out. With their engineering expertise it will be there for years to come! Thanks guys. Thanks to Lennie Foster who was able to have the pavers donated. Green Thumbs Up! The propagation area is getting a new face lift….well actually a roof lift! Bob McLaughlin and James West are raising the roof of the propagation area’s shade cloth. Finally, small E S C A M B I A C O U N T Y M A S T E R G A R D E N E R G R A P E V I N E | April 2015 PAGE 2 or tall can comfortably stand to propagate! No excuses…..Green Thumbs Up! Lo Sitton and Mollie Armes are helping the Baptist Hospital Wellness Center with starting their raised and container vegetable gardens. The Wellness Group is very enthusiastic and really appreciates the help from these two MG’s ladies. Lo and Mollie will also check on them to see their progress. Green Thumbs Up! If you need all the good dirt, see Dave Peck. He is now the Soil Leader. Whenever the soil gets low in the propagation area, please contact him. Gwen Conley will coordinate the pickup and delivery by our own MG’s. Green Thumbs Up! Big Green Thumbs Up to the Chairs of the Watering Team: Karen Carr and Carol Wilson. And of course all those that are on the team. Our plants thank you for helping tend to their growth. Tom Morgan is working on a raised bed of exotic vegetables. That’s a great educational area for not only the public but also MG’s. Take a moment to talk to Tom about his garden. Green Thumbs Up! Since we are all busy in the garden and with activities, please think about your budget for this year. I hate to bring up money, but it is something we all need to think about. It also is a way to educate the community on lower budget gardening!? Hmmm….it can be done. GREENHOUSE has been whispered since last year. Even though the original plan was voted down, it didn’t mean that one was totally off the table. I always say things happen for a reason….and since our mission of education is even louder this year, the plans for some kind of “plant shelter” have changed. Beth has asked Bob McLaughlin to check into one with certain footage. Stay tuned for more on this soon. Remember to “Plant it Forward.” I challenged all to make sure they write down their contacts this month. At our April 30th General Monthly Meeting, we will see how many contact totals we have made and talk about the different community educational activities. “Plant it Forward” isn’t about actually planting a seed or plant in the ground, but how many seeds of horticulture education have you planted in the community. Let’s make the numbers soar! Whew, it is so exciting this month…..Spring Festival, Plant Clinics, Speakers Bureau, Garden Talks, Extension Phone Clinic, The Beulah First Grade Field Trip- “Do the Rot Thing”, and the ongoing Demonstration Garden Activities. If you haven’t found something to volunteer for PLEASE see me! We need ALL Master Gardeners now! See you in the Garden, Ann Luther A garden is a grand teacher. It teaches patience and careful watchfulness; it teaches industry and thrift; above all it teaches entire trust. Gertrude Jekyll From Beth… Roll out the Unwelcome Mat for Formosan Termites Join a team from the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and UF IFAS Extension to learn about protecting your home from Formosan termites. Topics covered include: Formosan termite biology including simple ways to ID them Available Formosan termite pest control protection for you home Florida law and building code pertaining to termites E S C A M B I A C O U N T Y M A S T E R G A R D E N E R G R A P E V I N E | April 2015 PAGE 3 What you can do-identify and fix the weaknesses in and around your home Bring your Pest Control Contracts for review by FDACS experts. Program will be Tuesday, April 7 at 6:00 p.m. at Escambia County Extension, 3740 Stefani Road, Cantonment, FL 32533. The program is free but participants must pre register by calling 475-5230 or emailing bbolles@ufl.edu New MG Office Master Gardeners have a new office at Extension to research recommendations and work on projects. The lobby area will be used to talk to clients that visit about their gardening problems and requests. Why Don’t We Apply Nitrogen to Lawns Before mid April? Research from UF IFAS shows nitrogen applied to turf areas before mid April is prone to leaching. Don’t waste your money and increase potential for nitrogen pollution of water systems by fertilizing before April 15. Vice President Comments Admittedly, as addictions go this one does not rank as detrimental to ones health... Regardless, it certainly has a hold on me. It goes by the name Pinterest. Which if you have never experienced this phenomenon, take my word, it surpasses my ability to describe and accurately portray. So let's agree it has to do with the internet and lovely photography. This morning as I was Pin -ing away (Pin-ing known as the actual act of indulging in said addiction) I came upon a word that set my mind off into all sorts of machinations. PETRICHOR...yes petrichor ! If you have heard of it I am impressed. It is a word that was coined in 1964...and it has an almost poetic meaning: a scent that is produced when rain falls on dry ground. It is something we all know but I never considered I would need a word to describe this event. However, it intrigued me. Musing about petrichor brought to mind another word that has been kicking around in my mind.... scent. I am coming to conclusion it is one of the elements that least matters to me in the garden. I am all about color, shape, texture... but scent? NO! I blame it on ligustrum. Never, ever liked that plant and most often refer to it as builder grade. When we lived in New Orleans, we had a privacy fence of very mature ligustrum. As soon as it started to bloom, my allergies would go wild. I got to the point I cut the blooms before they had even a hope of maturation. Now I would just dig it up! Perhaps you will relate to the fact that, regardless of where I am or what I am doing gardening always comes up in the conversation. So I was not surprised during a regular check up, when my Internist revealed her own passion... Roses. With obvious delight, she made a list of her favorites. One of the categories she included was fragrance. Reinforced by master gardening E S C A M B I A C O U N T Y M A S T E R G A R D E N E R G R A P E V I N E | April 2015 PAGE 4 studies and getting to know folks who love roses, I am beginning to think it is time to go beyond Knock Out Roses! Recently, I was at one of the big box stores when they unloaded the latest shipment of plants. To my delight I smelled the most delightful scent....kind of musky and maybe there was a hint of cinnamon... Did I just say that I was never going to consider scent for the garden? I urge you to check back to see in the coming months whether the scent of rain on dry earth leads one crazy gardener to plant roses based on fragrance !...... KUDOS: Many thanks to Pamela Allen, Hank Bignell, Angela Hinkle. Carrie Stevenson, Libbie Johnson and our own Beth Bolles for taking the time out of their busy schedules to speak to us at our last General Meeting about what their jobs as County Extension Agents actually entail. It was absolutely fascinating and gave me even more respect for these hard working folks.....Submitted by Annie Guthrie Upcoming events in the area April 4 – FDSG meets at the Valparaiso Library at 9:30 a.m. Call Linda Henderson, 850-936-4950. April 10-Pensacola Federation of Garden Clubs indoor Garage Sale at the Garden Center, 1850 N. 9th Avenue 8am-2pm. Call 432-6095 for more information and to rent a table. April 10-11 The Santa Rosa County Master Gardeners annual plant sale: 6263 Dogwood Drive, 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. April 12-Tour of the grounds and greenhouse of the Marriott Grand Hotel in Point Clear. 2pm April 16 -Tri-County Horticulture Study Group presents: Location: DeFuniak Springs, Home of Dara Dobson of 7 Pines Native Nursery Topic: “Wildflowers, Native and ‘Good’ Plants” Activity: Tour 7 Pines Native Nursery, 2365 County Hwy. 192, DeFuniak Springs Lunch: Bogey’s at Hotel DeFuniak (400 US Highway 90 E, Defuniak Springs) contact marieharrison@valp.net (850-6782842). April 17 - Spring Fling, Navarre Conference Center. Lunch, plant and crafts sale. April 18-Pensacola Rose Society Spring Flower Show, Downtown Library on Spring Street. Free, open to the public. Noon to 3:45 p.m. April 21 -Pensacola Camellia Club membership meeting at the Garden Center, 1850 N. Ninth Avenue, 6:30pm. Demonstration of propagating camellias by airlayering. Demonstration of proper pruning of camellias. April 25-Valparaiso Garden Club participating in 'Saturday in the Park' with a huge plant sale. April 25-Honeysuckle Garden Club and the Barrineau Park Historical Society sponsor a Community Clean Up in celebration of Earth Day and the National Great American Clean Up. Briefing at 8:30, pick up starts at 9:00am. Lunch for all volunteers provided. Barrineau Park Historical Society building on Barrineau Park School Road, Molino. April 25-Bonsai Exhibit from 10 am to 3 pm. Presented by Fort Walton Beach Bonsai Society at The Meridian at Westwood, 1001 Mar-Walt Drive, FWB, FL. (Across from FWB Medical Center) Visit www.bonsaifwb.com for more information or call (850) 897-2622 April 28-FFGC District I Spring meeting, Chop House, Navarre. $20 with registration. E S C A M B I A C O U N T Y M A S T E R G A R D E N E R G R A P E V I N E | April 2015 PAGE 5 CHECK THIS OUT PRUNUS jacquemontii (bush cherry) You will find this deciduous flowering cherry in the Retreat Garden. Covered with pink blossoms, it grows about 5 ft. tall and wide making a beautiful pink rounded form in late winter or Spring. It prefers full sun or partial shade. Leaves emerge after flowering season and turn shades of yellow and gold in the fall. Small crimson berries develop from flowers, not edible but may be used in jams and jellies. Check it out. - Gwen Conley-ECMG . The filbert nut is edible, and is very similar to the hazelnut. Its main use is as a filler (along with peanuts as a small filler) in most containers of mixed nuts. Filberts are sometimes grown in orchards for the nuts. The purple-leaved cultivar Corylus maxima 'Purpurea' is a popular ornamental shrub in gardens. Here’s the Dirt on….. Corylus maxima 'Purpurea' Corylus maxima, the filbert, is a species of hazel, native to southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. It is a deciduous shrub or small tree, 20–33 ft tall, with stems up to 8” thick. The leaves are rounded, with a coarsely double-serrated margin. The flowers are produced in late winter. The fruit is a nut produced in clusters of 1–5 together; each nut is fully enclosed in a 3–5 cm long, tubular husk. The Purple Hazel, Corylus maxima Purpurea, is a variety of Filbert Hazel with superbly rich purple leaves. This ornamental tree is very productive and its big, tasty nuts have a pretty, wine-purple tinge inside them. It is very hardy and suitable for any soil, although it is not quite as good in the shade as ordinary Filberts. Purple Hazel is also a good hedging plant; however, if it is clipped to hedging, the amount of nuts is limited. SJK E S C A M B I A C O U N T Y M A S T E R G A R D E N E R G R A P E V I N E | April 2015 PAGE 6 Garden Talks April 10 – Harvesting Vegetables 9:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Plant Clinic There will be two plant clinics this spring conducted by members of the Class of 2015. Saturday, March 21, 2015 from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at Woerner Turf and Landscape, 1332 Creighton Rd, Pensacola, FL 32504. Topics include vegetable gardening, Seasonal Gardening. Saturday March 28, 2015 from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the Lowes Garden Center, corner of Fairfield Drive and Mobile Highway, Pensacola, FL. Education topics: Soil testing, Florida Friendly Landscape, Container gardening, Question/Answers. one with no or very little phosphorus unless a soil test indicates a need for it. A fertilizer containing slow release nitrogen will give longer lasting results and have less potential to leach nitrogen through the soil. Don't be alarmed if evergreen trees such as the live oak and Southern magnolia are shedding leaves – mature leaves are being replaced by new growth. If you have scale insects on camellias, hollies, ligustrum, or viburnum, use horticultural oil before temperatures go above 85 degrees. Fertilize trees and shrubs only if needed. Many established plants have root systems that will able to take up fertilizer that is applied to other parts of the landscapes and lawns. Instead of blooming annuals, try ones with colorful foliage such as sun coleus, alternanthera, Persian shield, and cranberry hibiscus this year. On The Wild Side….. The Wildlife Sanctuary of Northwest Florida will have its Annual Baby Shower and Supply Drive Saturday, April 18, 2015 from noon to 3:30 p.m… Please help us stock our shelves for all the baby critters that are already finding their way to us! Paper towels Freezer Ziplocs Pecans/Walnuts/Peanuts Pedialyte Meat/Fruit Baby Food Tissues Fleece Baby Blankets Sunflower Seeds Heating Pads (no auto off) Gardening Tips for April Lawns: Do not apply fertilizer any sooner than mid-April after new growth has started. Choose This is an ideal time to plant many bulbs. Consider planting blood lily, caladium, or canna. Louisiana iris makes a beautiful cut flower and thrives in most soil types although they prefer moist soils with a high organic matter content. E S C A M B I A C O U N T Y M A S T E R G A R D E N E R G R A P E V I N E | April 2015 PAGE 7 Plant heat-loving herbs, including basil, oregano, lemon grass, and rosemary. Herbs like lemon balm will benefit from a spot with some afternoon shade. Continue planting warm season crops. Plant okra and cucumber. Mulch well to prevent weeds and provide irrigation if rainfall is lacking. If rain is frequent make sure you routinely check the landscape for standing water in containers and areas/artificial containers. Mosquito populations can increase quickly and the best management is to reduce developing larvae that is breeding in artificial containers. Before mowing turf, sharpen mower blades so that turf is always cut evenly. This is healthier for the turf and also more attractive. Make sure you know the appropriate mowing height for your turf. Correct mowing can help the turf survive stress conditions and prevent weed growth. This spring, you may be see bees flying in and out of burrows in sandy soil. Do not be worried. These are often solitary bees that will only be around for several weeks and are very beneficial. You should remain aware of their presence but they should not be treated with chemicals. Solitary bees are important pollinators which are important to numerous crops and plant species. E S C A M B I A C O U N T Y M A S T E R G A R D E N E R G R A P E V I N E | April 2015 PAGE 8