Monday, October 21, 2013

October 2013

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Planters Punchlines

Men’s Garden Club of Wethersfield

October 2013



Next Meeting - Monday October 28th  @ 7:00 p.m.



Our speaker is Barbara Austin of Willington, who will present "Edible Wild Plants – or - You Can Eat Your Own Back Yard." She will provide samples of native edible plants, as well as dips and herbal teas made from them. This would be a perfect program to invite our wives, significant others, and other garden clubs to attend.



Mark Your Calendar:

Holiday Party @ the Solomon Welles House on Monday December 2nd



Compostable Matter

By Jim Meehan



First there was just one spontaneously generated bush.  Now Marsha and I seem to have a Rose of Sharon forest forming in the area of our new sun garden.  (This growing area was previously our modestly successful shade garden until the vagaries of Mother Nature necessitated the removal of the tall trees that were keeping the plot in perpetual daytime darkness.)

             
We don’t know how it got started but we are thrilled – but apparently not all gardeners would agree with us.  This is a fair sampling of what folks on the Inter-web have to say: “the shrub has a bad habit of covering the yard with seeds. The seeds quickly sprout into dozens of Rose of Sharon seedlings, and if left undisturbed, they soon crowd out other desirable plants in your garden” – “invasive” – “extremely invasive” – “if you let it, it will take over everything!”

             
To which I say, “Picky, picky, picky.”

             
Not to brag, but our property is already home to several plants that we knew by repute would strive to aggressively take over their surroundings and several others whose pedigree contraindicates such bellicosity but whose behavior belies their polite reputation.

             
And a large part of my gardening activities involves riding herd on these trespassers in order to (a) keep them confined to the area within which we have decided they should live and (b) preventing them from killing off their neighbors in that plot.

             
Sometimes that job is easy.  I’ve had a small Tansy plot for probably about a decade now – the result of a gift from (believe it or not) a Master Gardener who did, in fairness to her, caution Mars and me about the plant’s proclivity to spread.  Fortunately the slight root system of these herbs allows for easy plucking.

             
Not so true for Physalis alkekengi, aka Chinese lantern or Japanese lantern – the former name provided by a Japanese friend, the latter by a Chinese one.  I never pursued the reason for the cross-cultural nomenclature other than getting the impression that each of them considered the flower to me not much more than a weed with a colorful cover over its fruit and therefore was unwilling to grant the colorfully orange plant membership in their ethnic group.

             
This crop came from one of the plant sales of the Mens Garden Club o Wethersfield – not as reliable a source as the Master Gardener program, but still!  The Gardener’s Network website says “Once your Chinese Lantern plants are established, they will grow well, with little or no attention, for many years.”  This might be the understatement of the century.  With a root system that seems to extend to, well, China – and a propensity to pop up miles away from their home base – these peripatetic perennials provide at least two person-days of labor every year.

             
Other traveling plants in our domain include gooseneck loosestrife, goutweed (another Garden Club plant sale purchase), and False Dragonheads (ironically named Obedient plants – another plant sale boondoggle).

             
The most persistent invasives on our land however are the up growths of long-gone Flowering Crab trees, which were removed from our property as part of our retirement plan to re-landscape our yard.  These bushes had long predated our occupancy and had long ago ceased to be anything other than a tangle of flowerless crisscrossing, barbed branches with juicy little berries that tore and stained my shirt and skin every time I tried to prune it back – to the point where I could not tell the juice from the blood.

             
At least twice I hacked the two of them down to the ground in hopes that they would, like the Phoenix, arise in beauteous glory from their stumps – only to have them return to their previous condition only with more and sharper barbs.

            
 Finally we had them removed professionally – roots and all.

             
Or so I thought.  Familiar looking branches began appearing in random places across our property.  I would cut them back.  More would appear elsewhere. I would lop them down.  Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. – to this day.

             
We all want to feel that what we do matters. The best thing about invasive plants is that they really make a gardener feel needed.



Putting the Garden to Bed: Closing Down Your Garden in the Fall

By Marie Iannotti, About.com Guide



Fall is a great time to start a compost pile. Any garden debris that isn't diseased or infested can be tossed on the pile as you clean up the garden.  [A] 3-bin system keeps fresh debris separate from later stages of compost.

             
Putting the garden to bed simply means getting rid of the mess, cleaning up what's left, packing away the things you won't need until spring and making sure everything is ready to go when you need it.

             
Cleaning up debris, scouting for pests and disease and suppressing weeds will mean that much less work to do in the spring, when there are so many other tasks to be done - and all at once. The cooler weather makes fall an ideal season to spend some time in the garden. And you can settle in for winter knowing that when you look out the window, your garden will look contentedly tucked in.

             
How to Put the Garden to Bed

             
I've broken it down to: cutting back, cleaning up, planting, protecting and prepping for spring. Don't feel as though you have to do everything. If you've had a bad pest or disease problem, I would focus there. If you've been meaning to do something about your soil, take advantage of this calm season to get it done. And if you have a lot of tender new plants, you should focus on making sure they are protected. Bite off a little and be amazed by how much you actually get done.

             
Cutting Back

             
Most perennials can be cut back in the fall, although a few, like chrysanthemums, prefer to remain standing, to act as winter mulch.

             
Wait until a frost has caused the plants to dieback. You don't want to encourage new growth that will be hit again. Start with plants that were diseased or had a pest problem and dispose of that debris, don't compost it.

             
Don't prune woody plants, trees and shrubs until they are dormant.

             
Gardeners in areas where it rarely freezes should leave plants up until new growth starts, then remove the old leaves and stems.

             
Leave some plants for the birds and for overwintering beneficial insects.

             
Cleaning Up

             
Pull dead or declining annuals. It's hard to do, but they're not going to come back - get it over with.

             
Harvest everything above ground in the vegetable garden and under fruit trees. Don't leave fruits and vegetables out all winter to rot attract animals and set seed.

             
Clean up overgrown areas, to prevent animals and pests moving in and to make it easier in the spring. You know that out of control area behind the shed or where you piled some brush last spring? We all have areas we mean to get to and fall is a great time. Left messy, you'll not just invite animals, you'll invite weedy trees and shrubs.

            
 Don't forget your tools and containers. It's tempting to wait until spring, but who has time in spring to disinfect or sand?

             
Empty, clean, disinfect and bring in containers. You can store the soil elsewhere, if you plan to reuse it. An easy way to disinfect containers is by spraying them with a bleach cleaner.

             
Clean and store stakes, cages and garden ornaments. They'll last longer if you don't leave them exposed for the winter.

             
Clean and sharpen tools, before storage. Remove all caked on soil, sharpen edges with a file and give them a protective finish with a light coating of oil. And don't forget to clean and sharpen your pruners.

             
Plant

             
Yes, there's still planting to do. Get flowering bulbs, garlic and rhubarb in the ground, before it freezes.

             
If your plants are still looking good, pot some up to bring indoors, including herbs.

             
Take advantage of the cool weather and sow seeds of spinach and mache (corn salad). They start growing for you in early spring and you'll be harvesting when everyone else is just planting.

             
Plant a cover crop. We all know it's a good idea, but we never seem to get to it in time. Maybe this fall is the year you do it.

             
Your plant trees and shrubs until the soil freezes. Fall is a great time for planting trees and shrubs, because they can put all their energy into their roots. But those roots will need water. If the ground never freezes, you'll need to make sure they have water all winter.

             
And it's not just trees and shrubs that need water. All your perennial plants will need to be watered during dry falls. They may be going dormant, but they're not dead.

             
Protect

             
Shield plants animals might eat. Put fencing around shrubs. Use tree guards for trees pothered by deer, rabbits and voles.

             
Make sure all tender bulbs are stored for the winter. Most like to be hit by a frost, before you dig and dry them.

             
Mound soil or mulch around the base of grafted roses. Remember to remove it in the spring.

             
Warmer areas:

             
Be prepared for sudden swings in temperature and protect tender plants. You can either cover them or move them to a protected area. Don't forget to protect tender plants from drying winds.

             
Ease up on fertilizing plants, so new growth won’t get damaged by temperature drops.    

             
Prep for Spring

             
Weed, especially perennial weeds. I know, you thought you were done with weeding. But pulling those weeds now, when the conditions are poor for them to fill back in, will cut down on problems in the spring.

             
Tag plants you want to divide in the spring. You won't remember, when the time comes. I like to label plants while they're still in bloom, so I know what colors are where.

             
Compost & Soil

             
Test and amend your soil. At least test it for pH. Amendments18 can be slow acting and adding them now will make them available in the spring.

             
Prepare your planting beds now, with compost and manure, for planting in early spring. The freezing and thawing will work it into the soil for you.

             
Till the soil to expose insects trying to burrow in for the winter. You'll disturb their dormancy and put them in view of the hungry birds.

             
Start a compost pile. You've got all the stuff you've pulled out of the beds, why not?

             
Shred or mulch your leaves. They are free fertilizer, don't send them to the landfill. They practically compost themselves and the result, leaf mold20, is the most beautiful soil you've ever seen.

             
Consider mulching for less weeds in the spring and better soil. A layer of mulch in the fall will suppress weed seed germination in the spring, while it's protecting your plants. Just make sure you weed first.



Coexisting With Voles

By Sharon Harris – CT Horticultural Society Newsletter



Voles have become an increasing problem for some gardeners in
Connecticut, but these small members of the rodent family are often confused with moles. Because moles and voles are seldom seen, it is important to find out what you are dealing with.

             
Moles construct and use feeding tunnels, usually just beneath the surface of the lawn, and the tunnels appear as raised ridges. Moles enlarge these tunnels as they travel back and forth. The tunnels connect into networks that go deeper into the ground, and as the moles build them, they throw up the characteristic little mounds of earth onto lawns. Moles are carnivores, feeding on earthworms, beetles, ants and lawn grubs. Any damage they do to plants is inadvertent. They actually help to aerate the subsoil.

             
Voles, on the other hand, travel on surface runways that connect their shallow burrows, and they leave visible tracks. Voles are herbivores. Although they prefer the stems and blades of grass, they will attack the root systems and leaves of shrubs, trees, grasses, flower bulbs and plants. If you notice a plant drooping and

pick it up to discover no root system left, you have voles.

             
Their large and frequent families make them difficult to control, but there are some ways to lessen the damage. Keep mulch at least 1 inch to 3 inches away from trees and bushes to reduce hiding areas for voles. They are nocturnal and prefer not to venture into uncovered areas since their natural predators, including owls, will spot them quickly. Be sure your garden is weeded and your lawn mowed.    

Because voles do not hibernate, it is particularly important not to leave piles of sticks and twigs around for them to nest and hide in.   Protect young trees by wrapping the lower trunk with wire mesh. Vole boxes and bait are available at the nursery. Put out year round, they are proving helpful in reducing the vole population. You can also make it difficult for voles to gain a foothold in your garden by using plants that voles tend to avoid—or at least do not seem to prefer. Plants that have a dense root system appear to survive better than those whose root systems are loose and spreading.


Horti-Culture Corner

Vole is.... by K.O.



Mister Vole is a monogamous mouse
loving, living and setting up his house
with his dear stout hearted wife for life
through all manner of trouble and strife

love is for voles as well as mad fools
dyslexia and true romance still rules



The pokeweed: beautiful, poisonous and useful!

Hubpages.com


Pokeweed is one of the best-tasting vegetables on the planet. In United States, settlers learned from the Indians to eat pokeweed. Especially in the South, they made "poke salad"- young shoots boiled in several changes of water to eliminate toxins. The flavor defies comparison with any other vegetable, however there are some dangers in its use, here are some precautions:
             
Make sure you collect only the young stems and leaves only in the spring, never the roots, flowers, berries, or summer and fall plants, which are poisonous (in fact, pokeweed contains the glycoside phytolaccine, which produces gastrointestinal irritation and the concentration of phytolaccine increases as the plant matures).

             
Avoid plants that are more than one meter high. Never eat pokeweed raw or out season- prepare it always following the recipes, or you may get very sick. (Always discard the cooking water from preparing boiled pokeweed). Beginners should use this potentially dangerous gourmet vegetable only under expert supervision.

             
A basic preparation, that is a must for anyone using pokeweed, is:


8 cups young pokeweed leaves and stems,

collected only in springtime

(and without any pieces of the toxic taproot), coarsely chopped

4 cloves garlic, chopped

2 tablespoons olive oil

1/4 cup red wine vinegar (optional)


Bring one large pot of water and one medium-size pot of water to a rapid boil over high heat. Place the pokeweed in the medium-size pot and let it boil for one minute. Drain the pokeweed in a colander, discarding the cooking water. Transfer some of the boiling water from the large pot to the medium-size pot, add the pokeweed to it immediately before it can cool, bring the medium-size pot back to a boil, and let the pokeweed boil for another minute. Drain it again, discarding the cooking water. Refill the medium-size pot again with boiling water, add the pokeweed immediately, bring to a boil again, and let the pokeweed boil for 15 minutes. Drain the pokeweed again, pressing the pokeweed against the colander to press out as much water as possible. Discard the cooking water.              
Meanwhile, if desired, gently heat the garlic in olive oil, stirring, 2 or 3 minutes. Stir the oil, garlic and vinegar into the drained, cooked pokeweed greens and serve hot. You can serve the pokeweed so prepared like asparagus, perhaps with drawn butter and a dash of lemon juice or on toast with hollandaise or a light cheese sauce.

             
...some curiosities about it

             
This native North American plant was used by Native Americans in the eastern United States for the treatment of a variety of illnesses including dysentery, cancer and rheumatism, the powdered root was an emetic and cathartic. A salve for sores was made by combining roasted poke root, bittersweet, yellow parilla and elderberry bark to a base of boiled lard and beeswax.

             
The Indians also found pokeweed delicious, and some of the first post- Columbus adventurers on these shores were in such agreement that they took the startings back to England and southern Europe, where the vegetable became popular. During the 19th century, this herb was one of the treatments for syphilis. Indians of the eastern states thus used a poultice of powdered pokeroot to treat tumors and skin eruptions, and the colonists followed their example. It was believed that the plant's high toxic qualities were responsible for its medicinal effects.

             
Folk remedies containing pokeweed are used as a salve for pruritus and as a bronchodilator. The fresh root was applied as a poultice on bruises and painful joints.

Many a soldier writing home during the Civil War cut his own quill pen from the wing feather of a turkey, then squeezed some of the red juice from the ripe, deeply purple berries of the pokeweed to use as his ink. A few of these letters, still legible, can be seen in museums today, recommending the enduring permanence of what are often still called inkberries.

             
One eighteenth-century recipe for pokeberry ink called for boiling together pokeberries, vinegar and sugar; in twentieth century, country people still sometimes used this concoction for special writing purposes. However, the reddish juice from the ripe berries, as country boys confirm when school classes reopen in the fall, will serve as optimal ink for steel pen points.

             
Indians also made a dye with the plant's berries. Connecticut Valley natives stained baskets with it. Other Indians used pokeweed to color clothing, wooden ornaments, and sometimes their own skin...



The Worst Gardening Trends of the 2000s Decade

By Marie Iannotti ,About.com Guide



Gardening is still the #1 hobby in the U.S., which means it’s a huge market. That can be good and bad. On the plus side, there are plant and pest control improvements, lots of useful gadgets and tools and plenty of wonderful gardening web sites to share your enthusiasm and learn from other gardeners. On the negative side are the 10 trends listed below, which added nothing to the practice and love of gardening.

             
1.Buyout of Seed Companies: Over 95% of the seed business is owned by a handful of large chemical companies, among them: Aventis, Dow, Du Pont, Mitsui, Monsanto and Syngent. Aside from the more obvious questions of safety this raises, there’s a disturbing trend toward the elimination of seeds from inventories. It’s just not profitable for companies to sell seed of open pollinated plants when they can charge a royalty every time someone purchases a seed under patent. So we’re losing a lot of our heirlooms and variety in general.

             
2. Plant patents:  I’ve mentioned this in past years. I appreciate breeders wanting to recoup their R&D money, but come on. Half the fun of gardening is multiplying your plants. Doing so shouldn't make me a criminal. Surely the plant producers know that we'll keep spending money on new plants, no matter how many plants are already crammed into our gardens.

             
3. Decline of Honey Bees Honey bees have taken a big hit this past decade. They are extremely sensitive to the chemicals used in gardens and on farms. Mites have taken a toll on hives. Scientists are still trying to find the cause of honeybee colony collapse disorder. Even the radiation from cell phones is now thought to be interfering with honeybees sense of direction, making them forget how to get home to their hives. Yes, there are other pollinators that may fill the void, but it’s disturbing when the status quo shifts and we don’t understand the causes. What’s next?

             
4. Mulch Mania and Volcano Mulching: A little mulch each season is a good thing; it feeds the soil, cools the roots, blocks weeds and conserves water. But we’ve heard so much emphasis put on applying 3-4 inches of mulch each year that many of our plants are being buried alive. My favorite mulch is planting so closely no soil is exposed.

And how does volcano mulching - those hills of mulch at the base of trees - remain so popular in landscaping? Are the nurseries hoping the tree will die from rot or vole damage so you have to buy another one? Does someone think you need to pack soil around the tree base to keep it standing up?

             
5. Uber-Tidy Landscaping: The lawn is manicured, every leaf is blown, every shrub is trimmed, all exposed soil is topped with mulch, the walkway has the appropriate lamp post and hanging basket and there’s not a soul in sight. Even the squirrels are afraid to cross this lawn.

             
6. Ever Bigger Lawn Tractors, Chippers, Blowers...: It seems that as cars get smaller, lawn equipment gets larger. Lawn tractors will be coming with DVD players soon. Until recently, lawn equipment had no emission standards and were not only inefficient burners of fuel, they also exacerbate pollution problems. According to the Mid-America Regional Council, “In one hour, a push mower emits as much pollution as 11 cars, and a riding mower emits as much pollution as 34 cars.” Then there’s the noise. But the device that gets the most demerits from me is the leaf blower. It takes twice as long to blow a lawn clean as it does to send your kids out to rake. Rather than making lawn equipment larger and more powerful, how about making the lawn smaller?


7. Garden and Flower Shows Struggling:  Is there a more welcome smell than the scent of damp soil in late winter? What a wonderful way to work up enthusiasm for the coming season - attending the long anticipated local Flower and Garden Shows. Unfortunately economics forced several of the largest shows to close their doors last year. The New England Flower Show, the longest running show in the U.S., shut down after 137 years! San Francisco came close to shutting its doors and is still fighting for survival. Several others didn’t fare as well. These shows are more than splashy displays and marketplaces. They’re an opportunity to see what the industry considers the finest plants, the smartest gardening techniques and the latest research.

           
 8. New Pests & Diseases and Some Old Favorites: They say there are more types of insects in the world than any other animal and it seems we're destined to meet them all one by one. The Viburnum Leaf Beetle is creeping down from Canada, the Citrus Longhorn Beetle creeping eastward from the west coast and infesting trees other than citrus, the Balsam Woolly Adelgid picking up where the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid didn't go. And then there are the new diseases, like Sudden Oak Death, which is as depressing as it sounds.

             
On the other hand, invasive plants are holding their own. How much Creeping Charlie, Florida Bettuny, English Ivy or Perennial Pepperweed can one gardener be expected to pull? And why is it exotic insects never fly over to decimate the invasive weeds, only the cultivated plants?

             
9. Loss of TV Gardening: Gardening is still the #1 hobby in American and a huge and diverse market, yet try and find a gardening show on television. I’m not talking about those 2 day, mega-buck landscape renovation shows. I’m lamenting the loss of shows targeted toward the hands-on gardener who wants to see what other people are growing and learn more. Shows like A Gardener’s Diary, Gardening by the Yard, The Victory Garden, Rebecca’s Garden and Gardening Naturally. Remember them? Apparently gardeners aren’t a desirable demographic. Thank goodness for the web. At least we can still congregate here.

             
10. Garden Snobs: Garden writers often fall into this category, but I’m sure you’ve all encountered a garden snob on a tour or at a plant swap, too. They’re the gardeners who always need the new and unique, the ones who look down their noses at red geraniums and stripped petunias. Garden snobs don’t think you deserve to be considered a gardener unless you can rattle of Latin names and at least half your garden is from some expensive catalog or tucked away nursery. They don’t garden for pleasure, they garden for prestige.