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Meet the Artist: John Newman Garden Design

We may have another cold snap in our future, but for now early spring is in the air. For acclaimed garden designer John Newman that means Cornus, Hamamelis, and Thymelaeaceae. They’re better known as dazzling dogwoods, wonderful witch-hazel, and exciting edgeworthia, and in just a few weeks you’ll be able to see the fruits of John’s labors at the height of their spring season glory throughout Winston-Salem. John Newman Garden Design focuses primarily on residential garden design, but some  high-visibility projects include the Central YMCA and Augsburg Luthern Church. John and his team of eight co-creators share a fascination with architecture, Japanese gardens and design. For the past 20 years they’ve been artfully bringing together all of these elements in their water features, pathways, and beautiful stone mosaics.

David Ford talked with garden designer John Newman. He and his team of eight co-creators at John Newman Garden Design take inspiration from the beautiful natural scenery of western North Carolina and create contemporary landscapes with plants, stones and water. Their distinctive work in private gardens and public spaces is sprinkled throughout Winston-Salem including the Central YMCA, and Augsburg Lutheran Church. 

Town Council Meeting, March 10

The Nipawin Town Council held their bi-weekly meeting on Mar 10, during which several items were covered.

A delegation for the Nipawin Homecoming Comittee presented some of the ideas that have come out of their meetings. They would like to start a “Homecoming Park” in the area where the clock was set up in 2009. They are planning on asking the people of the town to put plaques around the base of the clock with their family name and when they arrived in the town. There was also talk of a statue. The declaration of the park was sent to the Recreation Board for further discussion.

Lisa Sholter was appointed to the Parks and Recreation Board for a two year term.

There was discussion of the need to spray for mosquitoes during the summer of this year as it looks like it’s going to be wet. However, health issues were brought up, both for people with respitory issues and for animals. It was referred to the Recreation Board.

The Town renewed the Road Maintenance Agreement with the RM of Nipawin for 3rd Street North for a three year period.

The wages for summer employees was raised three per cent in accordance with union contract. This was already budgeted.

The amendment process was started for the Dog Bylaw to allow for kenneling animals in doggy daycares and grooming facilities. However, the animals will not be staying overnight in the facilities.

Money that was unused in the budget was allocated into various reserves, including one for the landscaping of the doctor duplexes and for the Evergreen.

Lewis Robin and Chris Hudyma are going to be going to a series of meetings with ministers over the next few days, regarding Highway 55, regional planning and some annual conferences.

The Mayor and Hudyma met with Minister June Draude about the housing issues in Nipawin. They spoke on the group homes as well. 

Reinventing the Formal Garden

lewis-ginter-conservatory

The Lewis Ginter conservatory for exotic plants

by James A. Bacon

When a group of Richmond botanists, horticulturalists and interested citizens founded the Lewis-Ginter Botanical Garden in 1981, their vision was to plant formal, European-style gardens to rival the finest in the country. They succeeded in that goal beyond their expectations. Lewis Ginter is consistently rated as one of the Top 10 gardens in the United States. Of its 350,000 visitors in 2013, an estimated 20% to 30% came from outside the metropolitan region, making it the No. 2 visitor’s destination, after the Richmond International Raceway, in Henrico County.

President Frank Robinson, who joined the staff in 1992 and is planning to retire next year, could be forgiven for resting easy with that accomplishment. But he’s not. Society has changed over the past three decades, he says, and the organization has evolved along with it. The thrust of Lewis Ginter’s current $9 million fund-raising campaign is not to build more formal landscaping worthy of coffee-table books, rather it represents a return to nature — or, more accurately, a reconciliation of urban development with nature.

The Streams of Stewardship initiative, for which the garden is seeking $9 million in contributions, challenges expectations of what landscape design should be. Conventional Virginia tastes are heavily influenced by a heritage of gardens designed for French kings and English aristocrats from a very different era. But the challenges of 21st century America call for something new. The introduction of foreign ornamental plants and the voracious consumption of land by 20th- and 21st-century suburbs stresses Virginia’s natural environment, sterilizing the habitat for wildlife and polluting streams and rivers with fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides. A new landscaping aesthetic can reverse some of the damage.

Lewis Ginter’s intention is to transform the 30 acres not dedicated to formal gardens on the 80-acre site with two goals in mind: to show how landscaping can clean creeks and streams polluted by urban run-off and to re-establish indigenous plants that support local wildlife. Plans call for replacing acres of formal grass lawn and large mulched beds with ornamental grasses and shrubs. A native plant garden will be established along a restored stream, and a woodland garden will provide natural filtration for excess nitrogen, phosphates and other algae-feeding nutrients flowing from a neighboring subdivision, a nearby golf course and Lewis-Ginter’s own property.

As Executive Director Shane Tippett puts it, Lewis Ginter wants to demonstrate that it is possible to meet a triple bottom line of creating beautiful places, restoring the environment, and doing so economically.

It’s not enough to show that such things can be done: The garden also wants to drive aesthetic and cultural change in the Richmond region, educating its 350,000 annual visitors, connecting with local landscapers and horticulturalists and reaching out to developers and home builders. In sum, the botanical gardens want to be a resource for the community.

Frank Robinson standing in the kind of tall grass that will replace acres of turf lawns.

Frank Robinson standing in the kind of tall grass that will replace acres of turf lawns.

The organization has largely fulfilled its core mission, says Robinson. “We knew we had to create very fine gardens to draw people here. And we had to generate earned income to support the enterprise.” And that it has done. The gardens are magnificent, and people are drawn year-round by a series of events: beautiful tulips in the springs, light displays at night, bonfires, jazz concerts, hot chocolate and the like. “Ultimately, it’s about the aesthetics. We had to do that to build the brand, the audience. We wouldn’t have been so successful if we’d started with a field of native grasses.”

The garden leadership began moving toward the new vision a decade ago, starting with a $1 million investment in a system that collected rainwater from building roofs and funneled it into two lakes on the property. Except for one year of severe drought, the property no longer needs county water. Avoiding the consumption of more than 7 million gallons a year saves Lewis Ginter hundreds of thousands of dollars annually in water bills and frees up county water capacity for someone else. The investment paid for itself in three or four years.

The 2007-2008 recession put the “Streams of Stewardship” fund-raising on hold but Richmond’s philanthropic community has revived to the point where Lewis Ginter is getting new commitments. Rather than waiting for the full $9 million to start, Robinson says, the garden is phasing in pieces of the plan as money comes available.

Meanwhile, the garden is taking an increasing leadership role in the community. It has invited  Lynden Miller, a nationally recognized garden designer, to Richmond, and Doug Tallamy, author of “Bringing Nature Home,” author of a treatise on how home gardeners can restore indigenous species. Its Beautiful RVA program brings together tree lovers, gardeners and landscapers to share ideas and build enthusiasm for creating quality public places.

“We never wanted to become a monastic community,” says Robinson. “It’s a big city out there. We can impact so many people beyond this property.”

This is the first of a planned series on the Lewis-Ginter Botanical Garden to be published as time permits.

Pond’s future splits community

Tahunanui modellers' pond

Pond cleanup to cost $500,000



The community is split over whether the Nelson City Council should spend $500,000 fixing the Modellers’ Pond at Tahunanui.

The pond is being choked by out-of-control weeds and smelly algae and the council proposes spending the one-off payment of $500,000 to fix it with an on-going cost of $93,000 a year for maintenance and interest.

A Nelson Mail online poll with 1950 votes shows a sharp divide with 946 in favour of the $500,000 fix and 919 against, while 85 do not know or do not care.

The proposed one-off payment by the council will cover changing the shape of the pond, making it deeper, but with a smaller surface area to keep water temperatures lower and potentially reduce algae growth.

It is expected this will reduce water evaporation so the pond would not have to be topped up as much. Grey mullet could also be introduced to the pond to control the weed and algae

A weir between the pond and the sea would be changed to make sure the fish were not swept out at high tides and extra landscaping to make the area more attractive would be included.

The alternative is to fill in the pond for $260,000.

While councillors have to keep an open mind on all options until a final decision is made councillor Matt Lawrey said he has spoken to many people opposing the proposal.

“I recently went down to the pond on a Sunday afternoon and approached seven groups of people who were there enjoying the trains and asked them for their thoughts on the issue. None of them thought $500,000 plus $93,000 a year thereafter was a good idea and many had ideas about other things they would like to see in the area,” he said.

He said there were questions about the whether the measures proposed would actually reduce the weed and algae problems, which seemed to be an issue since the inception of the recreational area.

“For that price I am wary,” Mr Lawrey said.

He said he understood the people of Tahunanui might feel they were losing something if the pond was to be filled in, but it could also be an opportunity to bring something new to the area.

Deputy mayor Paul Matheson said he wanted a “reasonable solution.”

“Quite frankly, the amount of money allocated at the moment seems extremely high to me and I think we just have an open mind on every option possible to retain the pond and its recreational value. Not just for Tahunanui, but for Nelson city,” he said.

He said Tahunanui and the Modellers’ Pond area contributed millions of dollars to the city’s tourism.

Nelson Society of Modellers president Alan Malaquin said the club was working with the council to try fix problems and had recently fixed a windmill next to the pond to find a “sustainable” way to keep the pond topped up with fresh water.

Mr Malaquin was “absolutely” opposed to the idea of filling in the pond as he said it was one of the few safe calm water facilities in the city for families to use and was important to the modellers’ community.

He also said the pond was part of the city’s stormwater system, which reduced flooding in the Tahunanui area so it “deserved to have some maintenance on it”. The club had once been responsible for looking after the pond using chemicals to treat the weed issue in early years, but was stopped because of resource consent.

“The council needs to support groups like the Modellers and local Tahunanui community to find a solution,” he said.

Tahunanui business association chairman Mike Thomas said a majority of the association’s members still believed in the future of the pond and the contributions it brought to the community at the moment, but were open to other suggestions as they arose.

The pond has a long history in the city. Most accounts put the pond being built in the 1930s.

Nelson resident Claris Rackley said she can remember her father building the pond about 80 years ago as part of an effort to employ men after the depression.

However, she did not know if spending so much money on the historical pond was worth it.

“It seems a shame, but if it is as bad as people say is it worth it? There is much more that could be done with that money I suppose,” she said.

Mr Lawrey encouraged people to voice their views on the proposal when the council’s draft annual plan goes out for the public consultation on March 28.

– © Fairfax NZ News



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Waterwise alternatives prove a smart choice in gardens



Despite the recent rains, Cecilia Griego, the city of Redlands’ water conservation coordinator, warns that this is our third consecutive dry winter.

“We’re still in a drought,” Griego said.

Our limited rainfall, along with the increasing cost of water, is prompting more area residents to consider replacing some or all of their lawn with waterwise alternatives.

The timing is good. More extensive water-efficiency rebate programs are in the works by Redlands and other Southern California cities. Also, residents are becoming aware of other benefits of native plants and drought-resistant landscapes.

This is the first in a series of three articles on how to replace lawns and plan waterwise landscaping, featuring area residents who have done the process already.

In 2008, my husband and I embraced drought-tolerant landscaping when the Redlands home we moved into was great — except for the dead lawn. For Redlands resident Brenda Wolfe, the change to drought-tolerant landscaping was spurred by drainage issues in her yard and a longtime attraction to succulents.

Highland resident Molly Bogh urged water conservation for years in her job as a city planner. Then one day her son asked why they still had a large lawn, so she spearheaded a personal project to walk her talk.

Water and maintenance savings

Even though many of us wince when we open our water bills, are we really overusing water? In 2012, the most recent figures available, Redlands residents used 345 gallons per person every day.

While showers, laundry and dishwashing makes up some of that water use, landscaping accounts for about half, with lawns a primary use.

How this compares to other cities might be a surprise. The national average is around 145, meaning Redlands residents use more than twice the average. Chicago, which gets more than double the precipitation, uses less than 90 gallons per person.

However, we’re not the highest. According to the California Department of Water Resources, Palm Springs residents top the list, at 736 gallons.

Income plays a role. In the Bay Area, the affluent town of Hillsborough averages 334 gallons, while residents in working-class East Palo Alto 14 miles away use one-fourth that amount.

The 2001 book “Blue Revolution: Unmasking America’s Water Crisis” claims that lawns make up America’s greatest crop, evident in satellite images that show lawns encompassing about 63,000 square miles and using nearly 20 trillion gallons of water. The high prevalence of lawns in the arid Southwest is especially questioned.

Many residents who have replaced their lawns attest to water bill savings. The city of Santa Monica runs a demonstration project that features two gardens — a garden featuring native plants and a traditional garden with an irrigated lawn. A nine-year case study showed the native-plant garden used 83 percent less water, generated half the green waste and cut maintenance by more than half.

Additional rebate incentive in the works

Is the city getting calls about water-efficient replacements?

“Oh my, we’re getting so many calls. I’m assuming it’s because of the drought,” Griego said.

“We’re working on a rebate program for conversion from turf to drought-tolerant plants, and right now we’re researching the estimated savings to establish the rebate amount.”

Current city of Redlands rebates cover lawn replacements with no-water-use landscaping such as synthetic turf or decomposed granite, so this will offer a specific rebate that previously fell under an “other” category.

Griego said a waiting list exists, with a recent $25,000 allocation from the City Council allowing a continuation of this fiscal year’s rebate program. The program gives residents a 90-day window from pre-inspection to post-inspection, with both required for rebate eligibility.

More than financial benefits

The Theodore Payne Foundation in Sun Valley, which runs a non-profit nursery selling native plants and seeds, is reporting a brisk business these days. Lily Singer of the foundation reports that people are interested in creating habitat gardens that attract birds, native butterflies and other insects that appear with the native plants.

Highland’s Molly Bogh said her lawn was rarely used.

“It was flat, hot and boring out there. There was no place to sit and nothing to do. The new garden design includes a shaded courtyard with seat walls surrounded by trees. Now we love sitting out there with family and friends, watching hummingbirds while the kids play on the rocks,” Bogh said.

Bogh’s advice is to think about lawn conversion as a great opportunity to expand your outdoor living area, while cutting the water bill.

How to kill your lawn

There are a number of ways to kill lawns. Some start by cutting off the water supply — but it’s good to let neighbors know your plan first. With our lawn dead already, we hired someone to remove the top four to six inches. We did need to pull grasses that appeared for the first couple years.

Others use solarization, an especially effective method in spring through summer, in which plastic is stretched over the lawn for a month or more, which results in high temperatures that kill the grass.

Some opt for herbicides. Bogh chose this method to kill about 6,000 square feet of Bermuda grass because of Bermuda’s deep underground rhizome. The lawn was scraped and hauled away.

“Killing the lawn this way allowed us to start building the new garden within a few weeks, instead of spending months with a pick and shovel digging out Bermuda roots,” Bogh said.

There is information on the Internet about different techniques or you can check with a nursery that specializes in drought-tolerant alternatives, such as Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Gardens or the Theodore Payne Foundation.

Upcoming waterwise landscape contest

Aside from the rebate programs offered by more cities, Inland Empire residents who convert should consider applying for the Western Waterwise Landscape Contest, sponsored by the area water districts, which includes monetary rewards.

Redlands resident Brenda Wolfe was the local winner of the 2012 Western Waterwise Landscape Contest, chosen to represent the San Bernardino Valley Municipal Water District. Our yard won the previous year for the area.

For anyone who has already done a conversion, applications for the 2014 contest will be accepted April 1 through June 1.

Linda Richards lives in Redlands. Her website www.ifnaturecouldtalk.com is dedicated to speaking for the natural world. Contact her at linda @ifnaturecouldtalk.com

Historic Homes, Churches, Bar on This Spring’s Maryland House and Garden …

Explore
some of the state’s most historic and well-preserved properties when the annual
Maryland House Garden Pilgrimage
returns for six weekends this spring from Saturday, April 26 through Saturday,
May 31.

A
Maryland tradition for 77 years, the Pilgrimage offers the opportunity to
explore some of Maryland’s most fascinating and noteworthy properties,
including the grave of a man who played a key role in the creation of our
national anthem and other landmarks of great import in the War of 1812,
according to a news release.

The
2014 tour includes about 50 private homes, gardens, farms, churches and
historic sites across five areas in Maryland. They are Prince George’s County
(Saturday, April 26); Baltimore County/Parkton (Sunday, May 4); Talbot County
(Saturday, May 10); Calvert County (Saturday, May 17) and Kent County
(Saturday, May 31).

Each
tour is $30 when purchased in advance; proceeds help support preservation
projects in the host communities. Lunches will be available on all tours.
Purchase tickets and get more information at mhgp.org or 410-821-6933.

“In
this 77th year, we are proud to present so many unique and
vastly different types of properties,” said Meredith Boren, Chairman, Maryland
House and Garden Pilgrimage. “In addition to getting a glimpse of the important
role that these individual counties played in the history not only of our
region, but of the nation as a whole, guests on the tours will explore Prince
George’s County’s War of 1812 landmarks, experience examples of both white and
African American one-room schoolhouses in Calvert County, see an inn that
offers a visual explanation of the term ‘bar and grille’ (which does not
involve the cooking of food) in Parkton (Baltimore County), enjoy the flora and
fauna of Talbot County and take in the beauty of a church and grounds that date
back as many as 400 years in Kent County.”

Guests
will be offered lunch (at an additional cost) on each of the county tours.

Highlights
for each of the jurisdictions on the 2014 tour include the following.

Prince George’s County:

The
tour offers a mini history lesson about the War of 1812 and follows part of the
Star Spangled Banner National Historic Trail and Byway. Among the highlights of
the 15 attractions is Bellefields, the main block of which was built in the
first half of the 18th century. It was the home of Major
Benjamin Oden during the War of 1812 and the site of a meeting between Gen.
William H. Winder and then-Secretary of State James Monroe during the war.
Another site of interest along the tour is the grave of Dr. William Beanes, who
was taken hostage by the British and confined to a vessel on the Chesapeake
Bay. Francis Scott Key helped to negotiate his release, watched the British
attack on Baltimore, saw that the tattered American flag still waved at the end
of the bombardment and penned the lyrics to the National Anthem. The tour
concludes at Darnall’s Chance, another 18th century home that
played a role in the war, where locally produced wine and cheese will be
served. 

Baltimore County/Parkton:

A
standout on this eight-stop tour is the Castle Calder. The original dwelling
burned and was replaced by the two-story brick Federal-style home in 1876,
which was lived in by many generations of the Calder family. Calders are
undoubtedly included in the guest log of Wiseburg Inn, in existence since 1810
as a one-stop shop for travelers providing food, lodging, horse changing,
sleighs, animal tending and entertainment. The current owner retained the original
wooden grille work that protected the liquor, which was traditionally locked at
night, thus giving rise to the phrase “bar and grille.” 

Talbot County:

The
Historical Society’s Gardens are the first official stop on a tour that boasts
breathtaking flora and landscaping at almost all of the eight venues. The River
Bank offers an explosion of color inside and out, with vibrantly hued
needlework adorning the rooms and a riot of blooms ringing the pool and croquet
court. Wheatlands features 20 raised beds for organic vegetables and greens.
The grounds at Lombardy include many trees and boxwoods that are believed to
predate the original house, built in 1775. The tour concludes at the Wye
Heights Plantation, where the Federal-style plantation house is complemented by
10 acres of formal gardens. 

Calvert County:

This
11-stop tour offers a glimpse into Calvert’s past – including two very
different examples of one-room schoolhouses. The first, the Old Wallville
School, was used to educate African-American students from the 1880s until 1934.
Originally located in Wallville, the building was rescued from destruction and
relocated to its Prince Frederick site. Later in the tour is the Port Republic
School No.7, an all-white institution, which was built around 1876 and in
continuous use until 1932. The Calvert Retired Teachers Association restored
the facility in 1976 and it is now a living history site for children. The
other sites on the tour include Spout, Tynewydd and Windy Hill Farm, the latter
featuring gardens that date back to the early 1900s, and include daylily,
bearded iris, herbs and virgin forest trees.

Kent County:

There
are eight historic stops on the Kent County tour. Discover what “222 bushels of
good merchantable wheat” would buy in 1780 when touring the Simon Wickes house,
a Georgian home purchased with that quantity of grain. Today, the owner has
opened her riverside gardens to the tour providing visitors with a breezy stop
from the Chester River. Among the additional stops on the tour is 360 year-old
St. Paul’s Parish, one of the two earliest surviving Anglican churches on the
Eastern Shore.

For
more information, tour details and tickets, visit www.mhgp.org or
call 410-821-6933
between 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, or send an email
to mhgp@aol.com.

Maryland
House and Garden Pilgrimage (MHGP), a nonprofit organization, is dedicated to the
preservation and restoration of architecturally significant properties in the
State of Maryland. The Pilgrimage has remained constant with this purpose since
its formation in 1937. It is the only statewide house and garden tour
organization and the oldest tour in the State of Maryland, raising and
distributing well over $1 million dollars in its 77-year history to support
preservation projects in each host community.

Cooperative extension orchard helps educate adults and kids in gardening – Las Vegas Review

A 1-acre facility in North Las Vegas serves its surrounding community through researching and demonstrating fruit production under Nevada’s desert climate.

University of Nevada Cooperative Extension’s Research Center Demonstration Orchard, 4600 Horse Drive, tests and demonstrates a variety of tree fruits and vegetables such as grapes, blackberries, strawberries and nopales.

“The orchard has been here for the past 20 years,” said M.L. Robinson, horticulture specialist at the orchard. “We place a special emphasis on water conservation, and we do a lot of demonstrations to see which trees do best in this type of climate.”

The 10-acre orchard is a cooperative effort between the University of Nevada, Reno and UNLV.

New information is developed from research and demonstrations at the orchard, which is published in university fact sheets and distributed to the general public through mass media programs.

Jonathan Chodacki, who oversees approximately 25 volunteers and workers, manages the orchard.

“This climate is not made for great agriculture,” Chodacki said. “There are a lot of adjustments that have to happen to the soil and a lot of work that is involved.”

Research and educational activities are aimed at backyard and small-scale organic fruit production under desert conditions.

After much study, Robinson recommends that people plant deciduous fruits, such as pears, figs, apricots and peaches, which work well in the Southern Nevada climate.

In order to aid people with their gardening, the orchard provides horse manure and a stockpile of natural organic mulch for a donation.

The mulch helps retain water, provides nutrients for beneficial microorganisms and keeps the soil cool in the summer, according to Robinson.

He suggests people mix 3 to 4 inches of mulch with the soil in their gardens or around trees.

The orchard also provides a space for people to meet and learn about gardening through the Master Gardener program.

In order to become a Master Gardener, people must complete 80 hours of training, which consists of 20 classes of instruction.

Classes are offered from 8:30 a.m. through 12:30 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays in the spring and fall semesters. Classes include three hours of lecture and one hour of hands-on activities.

There is a $150 fee charged to offset program-operating expenses.

Volunteers must sign an agreement to volunteer 50 hours a year to the program in order to stay certified as a Master Gardener. They answer phone calls, send out informational materials and develop community gardens.

“I joined the program because I moved here from Florida, where the climate was very different,” said volunteer Nancy Grimm. “There’s always something new to learn. We’re always trying different techniques. It takes a lot of patience.”

Various workshops are also held throughout the year.

In the winter, pruning workshops are held, which focus on the selective removal of parts of a plant, such as branches, buds or roots. Most workshops range from one to two hours. A $5 donation is requested.

Upcoming workshops will focus on spring planting, Robinson said.

Past workshops have included water conservation training, ways to reduce pesticide and fertilizer chemical use, landscaping, grape crushing, wine making and gardening tools.

There are 12 beehives at the orchard. The bees aid in the pollination of fruits and vegetablesand provide honey for local chefs and the public through sales at farmer’s markets, according to Robinson.

For people interested in gardening, Robinson suggests that people plant fruit trees in their backyard.

“These trees are great for providing shade; they flower in the springtime, and they provide food,” Robinson said. “It’s better to grow food rather than wasting time and resources on plants (used for decoration).”

He also said grapevines and pomegranates can be used as ornamental plants that can provide fruit in the Nevada climate.

“People can not only feel proud of producing their own food, but they understand all of the work that farmers go through,” Robinson said. “Plus, gardening is much cheaper than therapy.”

The Research Center Demonstration Orchard is open from 8 a.m. to noon Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. For more information, call 702-257-5555 or visit www.unce.unr.edu.

Children can also participate in gardening classes through the University of Nevada Cooperative Extension’s Food for Thoughts program at 4600 Horse Drive.

Karen Johnson, Food for Thoughts School Children’s Demonstration Garden coordinator, is in charge of the school garden in North Las Vegas. The garden is open to schools and the community.

“We started the demonstration garden for teachers and their students to come out, learn and get ideas,” Johnson said.

The garden consists of apriums, apricots, pluots, apples and peaches. Grapevines decorate the walls, and there are also rows of artichokes, onions, broccoli, cabbages and garlic growing.

The garden is protected by cages and bird blocks, which avoid the use of pesticides.

“The biggest challenge of maintaining the garden has to be watering,” Johnson said, “especially when the weather gets dry.”

The 155-foot-long garden is also used to teach the Junior Master Gardeners program.

The two-year program occurs every spring and fall on the first and third Saturday of the month. A new program starts every semester.

There is also an optional summer program for anyone 6 or older.

Lisa Vargas has been teaching for more than a year. She said the program consists of 90 minutes of instruction inside the classroom and 90 minutes of hands-on projects.

“Children can learn so much through the program,” Vargas said. “We teach them about the cycle of life, nutrition, tool safety, discipline and patience. It also teaches them about where their food comes from.”

Every semester, the children must also participate in a community project.

Children who graduate from the program receive certificates and leadership opportunities.

The program is aimed at 7- to 12-year-olds. At the end of the semester, children can harvest vegetables and fruits to take home.

Efforts are being made to create a storybook-themed garden, which will create a space for families to relax during the summertime surrounded by blossoming flowers.

“This place is really dear to our hearts,” Vargas said. “Kids learn not to be afraid to get their hands dirty.”

For more information, visit www.unce.unr.edu/programs/sites/foodforthoughts or call Johnson at 702-257-5523.

Contact North Las Vegas and Centennial View reporter Sandy Lopez at slopez@viewnews.com or 702-383-4686.

From vegetables to hops, local gardeners share desert planting tips – Las Vegas Review

Urban gardeners who are new to the valley quickly learn that Las Vegas enjoys mild winters, making it possible to grow plants year-round. Mid- to late March are good times for plants such as artichokes, asparagus, beets, parsley, parsnips, radishes, spinach and turnips.

They also learn that plants don’t like our soil. Key to the process is mulch. For soil amendment advice and to learn locations offering free mulch, contact the Springs Preserve, 333 S. Valley View Blvd., at 702-822-7700. The University of Nevada Cooperative Extension is another source for planting advice. To reach its Master Gardener Help Desk, call 702-257-5555.

View visited a number of Master Gardeners to learn how they tamed the desert to grow a plethora of plants.

Valerie Godino’s Summerlin backyard is filled with plants of all types, including flowers and vegetables — peas, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, lettuce — and herbs such as chives and parsley.

“Yes, you can have a botanical garden in Southern Nevada,” Godino said, spreading her arms in a “voila” gesture.

She previously lived in Ohio and Colorado, where growing things was as easy as tossing a seed into the ground.

“I always loved to garden. Then I moved here, and I went, ‘What?’ “she said. “ … We have really bad soil here, really bad. Why? Because where we’re standing, this used to be an ocean.”

To bypass the alkaline-infused ground, she uses raised beds. She bought tons of “cheapy-cheap fill” and treated it with compost to fill them. Anything she planted soon started growing. A secondary benefit of raised beds was they’re easy on her back.

Grapes can handle the heat but must be cut back after they fruit to maintain their heartiness. Godino grows them to fill a wood frame on the sunny side of her house. The grape plants look pretty, cool her patio and keep her electric bill down, she said.

Michelle Miller dabbled in gardening for approximately 20 years in Summerlin while she and her husband raised a family. She chose trees — two apple varieties and a pear — to begin, and the whole family enjoyed the resulting fruit.

“Trees are easy … and I was a lazy gardener,” she said.

But Miller got serious about gardening three years ago when she became an empty nester and could indulge her hobby. She attended a session with the late horticulturist Linn Mills at the Springs Preserve after reading his Las Vegas Review-Journal advice column for a long time.

“I still had newspaper clippings (of his) from ‘92 when we moved here,” she said. “I started really small, with things like zucchini.”

Small tomato varieties such as cherry, plum, grape and yellow pear are great for first-timers and often bring success, she said. Miller fills her gardens with various vegetables and herbs. Her favorite, cilantro, goes into her homemade salsa.

She said vegetable plants also can be aesthetically pleasing.

“You can have really beautiful vegetable plants. Lettuces are pretty and some cabbages, too,” Miller said. “You can plant them in the front yard, and people won’t realize it’s a lettuce, it’s so pretty.”

Now residents of Desert Shores, the Millers are renting, and their landlord specified no changes to the landscape. Undeterred, she’s into container gardening now.

Diane Rowe’s family had a long history of growing and nurturing plants. One of her ancestors was Luther Burbank, a horticulturist who pioneered tree grafting and rotating crops in the 1800s. Her parents had fruit trees, and they gave her free rein with the front yard when she was a child. Later, she and her husband owned an 80-acre walnut orchard in California.

“Trees have always kind of been my thing,” she said. “I like to go out and pick and eat.”

But growing up in California meant Rowe took the weather for granted.

“After I moved here, I killed a lot of plants because of the heat,” she said.

Her northwest Las Vegas home has a backyard with an area for gardening and another filled with various trees — apple, plum, apricot — and “volunteer” plants, ones that just start growing and surprise her once they mature. She said she thinks they’re nectarines or peach trees. Time eventually will tell.

She uses paint to protect them from insects. After Rowe painted a bedroom purple, she slathered it on the bottom of her trees.

“It keeps the borers out,” she said. “The trees will get sunburned, and they blister like people. The borers (insects) will go in and eat, and they end up killing the tree. So, I had leftover purple paint. I mixed it so it’s half paint and half water.”

While hiking in Northern California, she brought home a sprig from a fig tree and planted it in her garden. Guess who now has figs for baking.

Joann Reckling has been gardening all her life. Her backyard has five raised beds, a number she is doubling for spring gardening. Currently she has artichokes, fennel, onions and broccoli growing.

This past season, she added hops from which she made beer.

“My son does home brewing, so I thought, ‘Why not?’ ” she said.

Hop vines grow from a rhizome, a piece taken from a mature plant. The rhizome is planted in the ground in the late spring.

Hops can reach 25 feet high. Reckling strung them up to the surrounding trees, and hers reached about 12 feet in height. Her hops crop will be ready for harvesting in late fall.

Reckling and her son, Chase, harvested them in early November and took them to the beer festival at Village Square, 9400 W. Sahara Ave.

“We walked around to all the booths and talked to over 10 local brew masters,” she said. “They all loved the smell and look of our hops and were really excited to hear that hops would grow in Las Vegas. Several of them told me that they would purchase whatever I grow so that they can make a custom batch of their brew and call it ‘local.’ Exciting things.”

Contact Summerlin/Summerlin South View reporter Jan Hogan at jhogan@viewnews.com or 702-387-2949.

Gardener: Tips for getting a jump on the gardening season, part 1 – Columbus Ledger

There is a season for everything, but this is ridiculous. Winter shows no signs of letting up in many parts of the country, and many people I know are “done with winter” as I’ve heard many times lately. Out of patience, many of us will try to defy the odds, throw care to the wind and accelerate the beginning of the planting season with reckless abandon.

Fortunately the downside of such a gamble is minimal. Perhaps a few flats of mushy annuals that will need to be replanted, along with repeating the time it takes to do so. Yet any time spent outdoors in the fresh air on a beautiful warm sunny day is never wasted. However, if you’d like to improve your odds of success in beating Mother Nature at her own game, try a few of these tricks to jumpstart your gardening season.

The first place to start if you’re digging in the dirt well ahead of the first average frost date in your area is to purchase plant varieties that are considered hardy. That’s a term that references a plant’s winter toughness for your area or growing zone. Keep in mind, a plant variety that is hardy in Atlanta’s zone 7 doesn’t make it hardy in Denver’s zone 5, for example. Know your zone and do your homework to seek out hardy varieties of the plants you want to add to your garden. The bonus is that you also will have plants more likely to last longer in fall and beyond than similar non-hardy options. If you still have seeds to plant, it works for this, too. Most seed companies list this information routinely in catalogues and online and frequently hype its hardiness tolerance.

Another technique I often use includes applying a thick layer of organic mulch around the base of all my plants. Not only does it keep the roots warmer, it also helps to maintain the soil temperatures at a more even level and can reduce the chances of the ground freezing or heaving. It’s important to note that mulch will do nothing for any winter damage above ground. Yet, as long as what’s underground is still alive, there is a good chance of partial or even full recovery above. On the other hand, when it’s practical, as with spinach or strawberries, you can cover the entire plant in a layer of straw mulch to add an additional barrier of protection for the roots and foliage. The mulch is light enough so as not to smother the plants and still allows enough light in for plants to function.

Physical barriers are another effective way to retain and capture a few extra degrees of heat while keeping killing frost off of young plants especially. There are numerous versions of protective covers you can place over plants for light protection, yet they often make the difference between survival or not, particularly for tender new plants placed in the ground before the last risk of frost has passed. One common choice is known as floating row covers. The material is typically made of fabric that is strong yet so light, it can actually lie directly on the plants as though it appears the fabric is floating, hence its name. Alternatively, you can support row cover material with metal wire, conduit, or PVC pipes stuck into the garden beds. The row cover material is placed over the frame supports, a few inches to a foot or so above the plants. It is then pulled tightly and secured around all the edges with bricks, soil or whatever you may have that is convenient and sturdy enough to hold it in place.

Row cover material made for such purpose is designed to allow light, water and air in but provide a protective barrier from frost and pests. When the sides are secured around the bed completely, several extra degrees of warmth can be retained and could make the difference in survival for marginally hardy plants.

Check back next week for more techniques designed to help extend your gardening season.

Joe Lamp’l is the host and executive producer of Growing a Greener World on national public television, and the founder of The joe gardener� Company, devoted to environmentally responsible gardening and sustainable outdoor living.

Good Samaritan rescues driver after truck tips over

Published: March 10, 2014 7:56 AM

The incident happened at the intersection of Stewart

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The incident happened at the intersection of Stewart Avenue and Merchants Boulevard yesterday. (3/10/14)

GARDEN CITY – Police say a Good Samaritan came to the rescue of a driver whose truck tipped over and caught fire in Garden City. 

The incident happened at the intersection of Stewart Avenue and Merchants Boulevard yesterday. 

In pictures obtained by News 12, you can see the Good Samaritan jumping in and climbing into the cab of the truck to pull the driver out. 

READ MORE: Long Island Top Stories

Witnesses say the truck caught fire moments later. 

It is unclear how badly the driver was injured, or what caused the truck to tip over. 

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