gardening goings on by SherryBlanton
Aug 13, 2011 | 4175 views |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

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Lunch and Learn, May 22, 2013
by SherryBlanton
May 18, 2013 | 485 views |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Please join the Master Gardeners for our May Lunch and Learn program, May 22, 2013 from noon until 1 PM. The program is held the fourth Wednesday of the month at Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan from April through September. Our May speaker is Lisa Harris of Scenic Alabama and her program will be about "Alabama the Beautiful." This organization is doing some great things to improve our state. The program is free and open to the public. Please bring your lunch and join us.

First Plant Sale of the Season--Coming Up!
by SherryBlanton
Apr 14, 2013 | 5048 views |  0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Join the Calhoun County Tree Amigos Master Gardeners for the first plant sale of the season. Unusual perennials, trees, and shrubs will be featured at the sale, Saturday, April 20th,  8am - noon,  Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan. 

We are going to have some fabulous drought tolerant plants available. If you want plants with berries, we will have them; flowers, we will have them; plants for butterflies, we will have them. We are also going to have something absoutely wonderful--an 'Everblooming' Banana shrub. For those who have a banana shrub here is your chance to get another one. If you don't have one, take my word, you need one. The flowers smell like banana pudding--yum.

Sale proceeds  benefit the Tree Amigos program. So you are shopping for a very good cause. The Tree Amigos program is a therapeutic horticultural  program for the residents of the Coosa Valley Attention Home.
For information please call 256-237-1621. 

Take Pride in Jacksonville Day
by SherryBlanton
Apr 04, 2013 | 1963 views |  0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Please join the city of Jacksonville as we "Take Pride in Jacksonville." It is a day for the residents to spruce up their neighborhoods and their community. Stop by City Hall on Church Street and register at 8:45 AM on April 13, 2013 to help pick up litter around the city.We will take electronics for recycling including computers, monitors, fax machines, etc. Residents can also bring their recycling, including paint cans, to the Jacksonville City Hall beginning at 8:30. There will also be a large truck there to collect discarded household items. The Jacksonville-Piedmont landfill will be free from 7:00 AM until 11:30 for Jacksonville residents.Cub Scout Pack 19 will be at City Hall collecting aluminum cans.
 
The day is sponsored by the City of Jacksonville, RSVP, Calhoun County Recycling Center, Calhoun County Beautification Board and County Commissioner Rudy Abbott. For more information, please call RSVP at 256-435-5091,
 

SPRUCING UP YOUR LAWN
by SherryBlanton
Mar 26, 2013 | 2001 views |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Although the weather today on March 26th does not feel much like a spring day, the calendar says that spring is here. Many of you will soon begin to scrutinize your lawns and decide it is time to renew or replace. If your lawn is not healthy, your first step should be a soil test as your soil conditions have a huge impact on the state of your lawn. Your soil report will contain recommendations on how much and what type of fertilizer you might need to perk up your lawn. If you have lots of weeds, disease or fungus in the grass and are not sure what your plan of action should be, you can also send off lawn and soil samples to help identify the problems and possible solutions. There are many givens, such as the amount of sun or shade, that can’t be easily changed. At this point the homeowner may have to decide what level of imperfection he/she can tolerate.

If you have decided to replace your lawn (or perhaps are installing one for the first time), there is a lot of information that you should gather about your site before you choose a turf grass. Just as with ornamentals and trees where we strive to choose the right plant for the right place, we also want to choose the right grass for the right place. Please take note of your environmental conditions: whether the grass will be in sun or shade; whether you have poor or good drainage; whether you are able to keep your lawn watered, the type of soil (clay, sand) in your yard, and what your soil pH (acid or alkaline soil) is.

More questions need answers to help the homeowner determine the best turf for the site: how much time and effort and money are you willing to spend maintaining your lawn? How much work do you personally want to do to keep up your lawn? (Some folks refer to centipede as the lazy man's grass because fertilizing too much can ruin it; however, it is very picky about its growing conditions.) Do you enjoy watering, mowing, fertilizing, etc.? What kind of turf are you looking for: a lawn that looks like a golf course or are you happy with a peaceful green lawn with a few weeds here and there? Another important consideration is how much use will your lawn get. There are lawns, like centipede, which do not react well to lots of foot traffic; thus, if you have a team of young soccer players, perhaps centipede is not for you.

One of the most important considerations for the homeowner to evaluate is how much shade the lawn will get. Grass and full shade do not go hand in hand. The more light a lawn gets the better it will grow, but our blazing hot summers and continued droughts can also be very stressful on a lawn.

Once you have thought through some of these issues, consider consulting the many publications available either online at ACES.edu or at our local Extension Office on Noble Street for information regarding specific turfgrasses, planting times as well as the best planting and care techniques. A healthy lush lawn is a delight but like the rest of gardening requires thought, preparation, and continued effort.

Many thanks to Dr. David Han from Auburn University whose class on turgrasses for our MG intern training class was the inspiration and factual source for this blog.


Calhoun County Master Gardeners "Lunch and Learn" Series
by SherryBlanton
Mar 22, 2013 | 2113 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
 
YOU’RE INVITED TO LUNCH & LEARN….A series of free gardening programs sponsored by Calhoun County Master Gardeners & Calhoun County Commission.
Held the 4th Wednesday of each month at the Cane Creek Community Garden at McClellan from noon-1pm ; bring your own lunch!
 
 
                         April 24 “Batty for Bats”
 
 
                     Vicky Beckham Smith, A-Z Animals

 

May 22 “Alabama the Beautiful”

Lisa Harris, Scenic Alabama

 

June 26 “A Simple Water Feature for the Garden”

Hayes Jackson, ACES

 

July 24 “Herb Gardening”

Dani Carroll, ACES

 

August 28 “Getting to Know the Talladega

National Forest: Part 2"

Jonathan Stober, District Biologist

 

September 25 “Gardening for Dry Places”

Hayes Jackson, ACES

Speakers & topics subject to change.

Contact the Extension Office to confirm. 256 237 1621

 

 

 

 

 


Calhoun County Tree Amigos Master Gardeners Plant Sale
by SherryBlanton
Mar 22, 2013 | 1246 views |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Join the Calhoun County Tree Amigos Master Gardeners for the first plant sale of the season. Unusual perennials, trees, and shrubs will be featured at the sale, Saturday, April 20th, 8am - noon, Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan.

Sale proceeds benefit the Tree Amigos program. For information please call 256-237-1621.


It is Too Early!
by SherryBlanton
Mar 16, 2013 | 2477 views |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
In response to a question we Master Gardeners get this time of the year -- is it too soon to plant . . .  petunias, tomatoes, zininias, what have you. Yes it is too early. The last frost date for our climate zone is April 15th. Then it takes some time for the soil to warm up, especially at night. So even though this weekend may touch 80, it is way too early to plant anything which thrives in warm weather--including tomatoes and summer bedding plants. Not only will they pout, they may die; but they will not grow or flourish, causing the gardener to go back to the store for more. So wait a bit on warm weather plants. But you can plant some potatoes, maybe some lettuce, or a few onions. I have seen some beautiful perennials that can go in the ground now but they are early bloomers. Spend a bit of time at ACES.edu and see what the experts recommend for planting now.

 

Use these beautiful days to prepare your garden for your summer planting, apply fresh mulch to existing plantings, do a soil test, and think about what you are going to do. Then when the weather warms for good just do it. 

SOMETHING ELSE TO WORRY ABOUT
by SherryBlanton
Mar 07, 2013 | 2427 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Two weeks ago at our Master Gardener training class Dr. Jim Jacobi, an Auburn pathologist, discussed the many diseases–viral and bacterial, etc. that can afflict our beloved plants. One of those that really caught my attention was Rose Rosette disease. This is not a new disease but due to the widespread use of Knockout Roses in landscapes the plant pathologists are seeing a huge rise in outbreaks of this disease. Knockout Roses appear to be very susceptible to this disease. It is spread by a mite on wild roses but the mites are finding our Knockouts and having a field day. Symptoms of RRD are witches broom on the rose stem, red pigmentation of new growth, and excessive thorns. Before you completely panic, new growth on all Knockouts is red but when you have RRD the growth stays red. Up in North Alabama hundreds of roses were taken out of a park. There is no chemical to treat this disease. The only way to rid your garden of it is to get rid of the rose–root and all. Then throw it away, do not compost it. The disease is in the branches so good hygiene is really essential when you prune your roses. Clippers should be cleaned with chlorox.

Pay careful attention to the next sentence. If you are concerned you may have RRD in your garden, do not start tearing your hair and roses out. Please take a sample down to the great folks at our Calhoun County Extension Office and let them send the sample to the pathology lab.

Here is a link to a very informative article:

 PUBLICATION 450-620. Rose Rosette Disease. Chuan Hong, Extension Plant Pathologist, Hampton Roads Agricultural Research and Extension Center ...

pubs.ext.vt.edu/450/450-620/450-620_pdf.pdf


SOIL
by SherryBlanton
Feb 11, 2013 | 5948 views |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Our Master Gardener intern class recently had a soils class with Auburn professor, Dr. Charles Mitchell. Good soil is the backbone of a garden, whether that garden contains vegetables or flowers or whether the soil supports a beautiful stand of grass. When we talk about soil we are not talking about dirt (which is soil with all the nutrients and other good stuff removed) but about the soil.

 Soils can vary from one neighborhood to another and even from one house to another. Since some plants thrive in a more acid soil (like azaleas and gardenias) and others thrive in lower acid soils (lilac), it is important to know more about the soil you have in your garden. Thus, the first thing all Master Gardeners (as well as any Extension Agent) will recommend when asked most plant questions, especially as the question relates to fertilizer, is that the homeowner do a soil test. It is very easy, relatively inexpensive, and the best thing you can do for your yard and soil and even for the environment. A soil test costs way less than a bag of fertilizer. Phosphorous in fertilizers can end up in the groundwater eventually polluting our waterways. Too much of the wrong kind of fertilizer can even hamper the health of your grass or your plants or your vegetables. If someone comes in and wants to fertilize your lawn without a soil test, just say no. Be an educated consumer. Get a soil test first.

Soil test kits may be obtained from your County Extension Office.


Upcoming Garden Events
by SherryBlanton
Jan 25, 2013 | 6672 views |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
pampas grass fronds
pampas grass fronds
slideshow

Feb. 18, Monday, 12:30 to 2:30 p.m, Calhoun County Beautification Board Tree Give-away at Golden Springs (Fred's Dept. Store)

Feb. 21, Thursday, 3:30 p.m., Arbor Day Celebration at JSU International House

Feb. 22, Friday, 3 p,m to 5 p.m., Tree Give-away on the Jacksonville Square

April 20, Saturday, 8 a.m. until noon, Master Gardener Tree Amigos 4-H Plant Sale, Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan

April 24, Lunch and Learn (4th Wednesday of each month thru September), noon to 1 p.m. Cane Creek Community Gardens, McClellan. First program is "Batty about Bats" and Vicky Smith from A to Z Animals is bringing bats for her presentation.

May 3, Friday, noon to 3 p.m. and Saturday May 4th, 9 until 2 p.m., Master Gardener 4H Tree Amigos Volunteers and the Anniston Museum of Natural History Volunteers Plant Sale at the Longleaf Botanical Gardens

Jacksonville Garden Club Plant Sale, date TBA

 

 

 

 

 


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