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Best of BC: 41st annual BC Home and Garden Show

41st annual BC Home and Garden Show
February 19 to 23, 2014

BC Place

Gearing up for a home makeover? CTV invites you to visit the 2014 BC Home Garden Show coming to BC Place, January 19th – 23rd. This annual event will offer real advice, real inspiration and real experts to help prep for any home improvement project, be it a basic décor update or a major renovation. Visitors will hear expert suggestions from the best in the biz, get style stimulation from a slew of exciting new features and shop the show (read: 425 top-notch exhibitors), all under one roof.

CTV is giving you a chance to win a pair of tickets to the show. Simply fill out the entry form and check back here on Monday, February 10th to see if you’re a winner!

Best of B.C.: 41st annual BC Home and Garden Show contest

SHOW DATES TIMES

  • Wednesday, February 19th        4:00pm – 9:00pm
  • Thursday, February 20th            12 noon – 9:00 pm
  • Friday, February 21st                  12 noon – 9:00 pm
  • Saturday, February 22nd            10:00 am – 9:00 pm
  • Sunday, February 23rd               10:00 am – 6:00 pm

 
BC Place Stadium, 777 Pacific Boulevard, Vancouver, BC V6B 4Y8
                                  
ADMISSION

  • Adults: $15
  • Adults: ONLINE $12
  • Seniors (60+): $12
  • Seniors (60+): ONLINE $9
  • Seniors Thurs. Fri. before 5pm: $5 (Box Office Online)
  • Children 12 and under: FREE 

Buy ticket online and save $3 courtesy of Homestars at www.vancouverhomeshow.com
 
STAGES
 
HGTV Main Stage
Spring cleaning takes on a whole new meaning with inspiration from Canada’s top design, renovation and real estate experts on the HGTV Main Stage. Armed with insight from past projects and years of on-the-job experience, duos are reigning supreme for 2014, including HGTV’s Bryan Sarah Baeumler, Mike Holmes Jr. Sherry Holmes, and Parker Barrow co-owners Janette Ewen Jef Hancock. Intimidating designspeak need not apply.
 
View the HGTV Main Stage schedule at www.vancouverhomeshow.com
 
Urban Fare Cooking Stage
Vancouver’s leading chefs will lay it all out on the table, with signature recipes that will leave the crowd hungry for more. Think all things spring, from BBQ and beer pairings to comfort food and cocktails, complete with local flavours and eye-pleasing plating that transfer effortlessly to any home kitchen. Who’s up for seconds? Presented by Urban Fare, Western Living Magazine and FortisBC.
 
View the Urban Fare Cooking Stage schedule at www.vancouverhomeshow.com
 
The Vancouver Sun Gardening School
Growing pains, begone! Led by Vancouver Sun gardening editor Steve Whysall and his team of gardening gurus, daily seminars will guide budding horticulturists through the nitty-gritty of plant growing with free seminars covering topics from seeding to composting. Dig in! Presented by the Vancouver Sun. Landscaping by Lily Design.
 
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS: ONE DAY ONLY!
 
Opening Night
The BC Home + Garden Show ushers in the latest showcase of home improvement must-haves with an evening of renovation-based revelry featuring snacks, sips and perks for all. Get the goods early at the hottest design party of the season while enjoying world-class entertainment from local band DNA6, the company of Vancouver’s creative insiders and plenty of surprises all night long.
 
Wednesday, February 19, 4-9PM
 
Chopping Blockpresented by Urban Fare
Ready those roasting pans! Competition will heat up the Urban Fare Cooking Stage when four home chefs go head-to-head in a culinary battle royale. Participants will prepare three courses using mystery ingredients chosen by public vote, with the loser of each round getting “chopped” from the competition. Last person standing will receive the ultimate bragging rights – not to mention an exclusive prize courtesy of Urban Fare. Chefs, start your stovetops! Presented by Urban Fare and 102.7 The Peak.
 
Saturday, February 22, 2-4PM
 
Dominion Lending Centres Day
Don’t break the bank! Financial issues are usually the least-sexy part of buying or renovating a home – until now. On Friday, February 21, investing and mortgage experts from Dominion Lending Centres, Canada’s national mortgage and leasing company, will act as knights in money-savvy armour on the HGTV Main Stage, doling out their top tips (and exclusive goodie bags for early birds) on how to keep your home financially fit for the future. Talk about a sweet deal.
 
Friday, February 21, 12 noon-5PM
 
MUST-SEE FEATURES
 
Ask an Expert
Stumped on style? Interior decorating experts, professional landscapers and certified contractors will tackle design dilemmas of all kinds with free, 10-minute consultations for beleaguered renters and harried homeowners alike. Come equipped with swatches and sketches to receive the best advice in the biz – no decorating topic denied! Presented by Intact Insurance. Styled by Friendly Decorator.
 
West Coast Power Smart Home
Home remodeling is the stuff of nightmares for many a homeowner – until now. Enter this year’s Dream Home, where home improvement, green living and modern west coast design will meet in a marriage of style and sustainability. Landscaped by Rob Spytz Design, this dwelling will inspire visions of the region’s breathtaking wood and seascapes, all while enjoying eco-chic comforts styled by the Friendly Decorator herself, Christine Friend. Presented by BC Hydro.
 
Living Melodies
Sight and sound will meet in living colour to create eight glorious garden plots inspired by famous tunes. Explore more than 7,000 square feet of green oases complete with breathtaking blossoms, eye-catching water and stone features, stylish outdoor furniture and the industry’s top local experts to tend to all your landscaping laments. Eden, eat your heart out.
 
Better Gnomes Gardens
Inspired by the world-renowned Chelsea Flower Show’s decision to lift a century-long ban on garden gnomes in 2013, Vancouver’s movers and shakers will show off their creative flair by turning a plain garden gnome into a whimsical treasure. Guests can bid on their favourites to benefit Sole Food Street Farms, an urban agricultural community dedicated to transforming empty lots into fruitful farming plots, empowering and employing the underprivileged along the way. All proceeds benefit Sole Food Street Farms.
 
The Twinings English Tea Garden
Traditional teatime gets a modern reimagining with a nod to our posh neighbours across the pond. Enjoy a piping hot brew and tip your hat to everyone’s favourite royal family while enjoying the sights and sounds of an expertly landscaped oasis. Jolly good, chaps! Presented by Twinings Canada and Cedar Rim Nursery.
 
Portobello West
Inspired by London’s world-famous street market, Portobello West is Vancouver’s best-known fashion and art market. A selection of top emerging talent will showcase their wares in a special pop-up edition, with enticing opportunities to increase the inventory of any closet, jewellery box or art collection. Shopping local has never looked so good.
 
m(ART)ket
Tired of all things boring and beige? This curated collection of artwork from Vancouver’s most talented up-and-coming artists is guaranteed to banish bare-wall blues without breaking the bank. With pieces ranging from simple to sculptural, there’s style and size to suit every taste and trend. Works of art, indeed.
 
BCLiving Magazine Lounge
Relax (sans guilt) in this luxurious lounge refreshment and BC Living Magazine in hand. Styled by Vancouver’s favourite local decorating duo A Good Chick To Know and conveniently located adjacent to the HGTV Main Stage, this chic space will invite you to press pause without passing up on any of the action. Grab a drink and snag some snacks while reading up on all the latest home décor trends!
 
Al Fresco Wine Lounge
Some home improvement projects, no matter how complex, are just no match for a wino’s sophisticated palate. Steal away to Gemstone’s chic backyard patio and indulge in a glass or two, complete with flavourful fare from a variety of vendors. Cheers to that. Presented by Gemstone Masonry Landscape Supply and Coast Spas.
 
DIY Done Right
Pinspirations realized! DIY divas will hear top repurposing recommendations straight from the source as the pros from Habitat For Humanity Greater Vancouver walk them through upcycling projects using pieces from the Vancouver ReStores. Visitors will earn a gold star for sustainability and major bragging rights by sharing their eco-friendly handiwork over social media. Move over, Martha Stewart. Presented by Habitat for Humanity Greater Vancouver and Greater Vancouver ReStores.
 
Help Desk
Hardwood floors desperate for a refinish? Master bath begging for fresh tiles? Look no further than the Help Desk, where a slew of experts will provide tips and trade secrets to nudge your home improvement project in the right direction. Stop by the concourse or east entrance to get started. Asking for help is the first step to success! Presented by HomeStars.com.
 
About the BC Home + Garden Show: The BC Home + Garden Show has been a staple in consumers’ calendars since 1971, attracting more than 56,000 qualified visitors every spring. Produced by Marketplace Events, the show features high-interest exhibits, high-profile industry personalities and the latest home and lifestyle trends. Marketplace Events produces 34 home shows in 21 markets that collectively attract 1.5 million attendees and another 1.7 million unique web visitors annually.

Keeping the garden native

ECOLOGY is on many gardeners’ minds these days. Gardeners who value the science of relationships between living things and their environments increasingly want to know more about those connections – how toxic chemicals worsen a yard’s overall health and why bees, birds and butterflies are crucial to our daily lives, for example.

“We have a responsibility to support the land that we depend on for our own survival, and that responsibility includes thoughtful choices about how we landscape our own tiny spot of Earth,” says Carol Heiser, habitat education coordinator with the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. She encourages public, private and corporate landowners to provide habitat for songbirds, mammals, amphibians and other native wildlife.

“Insects and plants co-evolved for millennia and have developed intricate inter-relationships. Unfortunately, over the past 300-plus years, we’ve replaced a substantial portion of the natural landscape with non-native plant species from other continents and the result has been an altering of the food web,” she says.

“This, in turn, has had the effect of depressing insect populations that depend on specific ecosystem patterns, along with an associated decline in bird populations which rely on insects to feed their young. Although land clearing and development are certainly contributing factors to the loss of habitat, the introduction of non-native species has had an insidious but far-reaching, deleterious outcome.”

Habitat gardening, which is more accurately called conservation landscaping, around homes is one way of “putting back”, or making an attempt to mimic the original native plant community, she continues. This means removing exotic invasive plant species and replacing them with native species.

To acquaint yourself with habitat gardening, Heisers suggests you first go online to look at photos of invasive exotic plants and learn to identify them. Then, take a clipboard and walk your yard, listing any invasive plants.

“When that list is done, make another column of all the other non-natives that aren’t invasive but exotic just the same. You’ll probably be surprised that most of your favourite ‘ornamentals’ are non-native,” she says.

“They’re called ‘ornamental’ because they’re just that: decorations without any biological purpose.”

Next, go back online to find out what native species are best for your growing needs, she advises. Select one non-native plant species in your yard, remove it and replace it with a native species.

“After you’ve installed the native species, pay close attention throughout the growing season to what insects you’ve never seen before that are now visiting these new plants,” she says.

“This should give you a huge sense of pride that you have done a good thing, because you’ve just added more insects for young birds to get their protein. Congratulations, you are now a ‘grandparent’.”

Finally, repeat the removing and planting process every year for the next several years — until your yard has been converted into a native plant landscape.

“Keep a journal of the insect species that visit your yard, which will represent an increase in biodiversity and evidence of your success,” she says.

“You can expect a renewed sense of personal connection to nature, knowing that you’ve taken part in … even if only a very small way … a change in our landscape ‘culture’.”

More information on conservation landscaping is available at: www.nwf.org, www.nativeplantcenter.net, www.abfnet.org, www.bringingnaturehome.net. www.dgif.virginia.gov/habitat. — Daily Press/McClatchy Tribune Information Services

Tips from Toby: Taking care of those Honey-dos

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – If you want to have the best lawn on the block, February is a key month. February is the month that we kick start our lawns.

The first step is to mow off that dead layer of grass on top of your lawns. Lower your mower height as low as it will go without scalping your lawn. Be sure to bag all the clippings when you mow.

This simple step of mowing your lawn short in February will get your entire lawn growing strong.

This top layer of dead grass is blocking the sun to the new grass growing below.

You will be amazed at how much green is already underneath the dead layer.

Of course if there is snow or ice on the ground or the lawn is really wet.

You will just have to wait until the conditions are better and that can be late February or early march depending on the weather, but get it done as soon as you can.

Now is the time to check for those little weeds that are already popping up.

Mix up a pump sprayer with Gordon’s Speed Zone concentrate, and spreader sticker per instructions with water and spray those small weeds and dandelions now so they don’t become big weeds this Spring.

With this cold snap not going away for a while, here’s a great February tip that’s so easy and will make a big difference.

Add Tang Instant Drink Mix to your washing machine’s soap dispenser and run the washing machine empty with hot water.

This will clean out your machine, keep it fresh and also clean the pipes. The acid in tang helps make for a clean washer and you should do this once a month. 

For your dishwasher add two cups of white vinegar to the bottom of your machine and run an empty load, then add two cups of bleach and run another empty cycle.

This will sanitize and clean out your dishwasher for a quick easy honey do once per month.

Copyright 2014 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Springtime in the city at Home & Garden Show

Springtime in the city

Springtime in the city

PMC Pools in Mechanicsville displayed some of its offerings at the MAC Events Home Garden Show in Richmond last year.



MAC Events Home Garden Show

Where: Greater Richmond Convention Center, 403 N. Third St.

When: noon-8 p.m. Friday ; 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Saturday; 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Feb. 9

Tickets: $5-$10; free for children 16 and younger

Details: www.macevents.com


Posted: Sunday, February 2, 2014 12:00 am


Springtime in the city at Home Garden Show

BY HOLLY PRESTIDGE
Richmond Times-Dispatch

Richmond Times-Dispatch

Cooking demonstrations might not seem appropriate at a home and garden show until you stop to think about one of the fastest-growing home improvement areas — outdoor kitchens.


Plus, who doesn’t love good food?

Officials with the 11th annual MAC Events Home Garden Show (Friday through Feb. 9 at the Greater Richmond Convention Center) decided to add some flair to this year’s show by adding new elements such as food demonstrations and celebrity DIY personalities, as well as bringing back the element of spring by having blooms galore throughout the show.

Relish magazine chef and cooking show director Brian Morris will delight attendees with his fun take on popular cooking trends. Morris worked at Le Cirque 2000 and Jacques Torres Chocolates as well as served as a private cooking instructor for such clients as Derek Jeter, Nicole Kidman, Clint Black and more.

Attendees also will get opportunities to hear from and talk to hometown DIY stars John and Sherry Petersik, who write the popular blog Young House Love. The duo will give talks as well as sign copies of their books.

“We’re so excited to do a (home and garden show) in our hometown,” Sherry Petersik said by email. “We’ve done a few as far away as Portland and Tacoma, so it’ll be nice to be in our area to chat with local RVAers.”

As usual, professionals in the home improvement and landscaping industries will answer questions and offer guidance about everything from security systems and custom closets to outdoor patios and pools.

But in an effort to give the show a springtime feel, show officials said MAC Events contributed 1,000 blooms as part of the displays around the convention center.

“We’re bringing the colors and aromas of springtime to Richmond with thousands of blooms in the garden and fresh ideas,” said show manager Chris Grubbs. “It’s going to be a fun and refreshing weekend designed to lift us out of the winter blues.”

hprestidge@timesdispatch.com (804) 649-6945

on

Sunday, February 2, 2014 12:00 am.

Auburn downtown plan meeting set Feb. 11

Downtown MTG 01

Downtown MTG 01

Auburn University juniors Sarah Lewis and Ashley Shorter create their own downtown master plan during the second Downtown Auburn Master Plan public meeting.



Posted: Saturday, February 1, 2014 9:26 pm
|


Updated: 9:29 pm, Sat Feb 1, 2014.

Auburn downtown plan meeting set Feb. 11

From staff reports

oanow.com

Next week, Auburn residents will have another opportunity to share their thoughts and opinions about the future of downtown.


The city is hosting the third and final meeting about the Downtown Master Plan on Feb. 11 at 6 p.m. The meeting will be held at the Harris Senior Center, located at 425 Perry St. Residents are encouraged to attend.

According to a statement from the city, the meeting gives residents the opportunity to help prioritize downtown projects they want to see completed first, and identify were they want to encourage certain uses in Auburn. Those attending will also be able to review the downtown plan process and the feedback that has been provided by more than 200 residents in earlier meetings.

“Serving as the connection between the city and the university, Downtown Auburn represents the city of Auburn’s historic, service and retail core,” the city states. “Since the Downtown Master Plan process began, over 200 people have attended public meetings to share their thoughts on the future of downtown Auburn. In November, over 75 people joined us to create their own personal downtown master plans, showing their ideas for how and where future development should be focused, and what types of streetscapes are desirable for different parts of downtown. The individual plans allowed city staff to better understand what residents value, how they envision the future of downtown, and how downtown improvements should be prioritized.”

“We know we can get better, and we’re striving for that,” City Manager Charlie Duggan told residents at the November meeting.

Bob Begle of Atlanta-based Urban Collage emphasized in the November meeting that downtown is “not a failing place.” Survey participants enjoy downtown’s proximity and association with Auburn University, but also expressed major concerns about parking.

“Parking is the No. 1 concern,” Begle said.

Seventy-nine percent of respondents said downtown can be improved.

Downtown’s “Main Street feel” along with sidewalk dining are considered positives to continue pursuing. So are wider sidewalks, landscaping and even pocket parks.

Respondents believe coordinated signal timing would help with traffic flow, but they do not want an additional travel lane. They also said they enjoy the special events held in downtown. Fifty-one percent of respondents would like to see more events, while only 5 percent believe there are too many.

College Street, Magnolia Avenue, Gay Street and Glenn Avenue are among areas that need attention, according to the survey. Some respondents also said the bar scene could be negatively impacting downtown.

A final plan could come before the Auburn City Council for a vote by this spring.

on

Saturday, February 1, 2014 9:26 pm.

Updated: 9:29 pm.

Astrodome plans

Whether you’re watching for the game, the commercials or the excuse to chow down on snacks, all eyes today are on the Super Bowl at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. Have fun while you can, Houston, but we have about three years until those eyes are upon Texas, when we host the 2017 Super Bowl at Reliant Stadium. That may seem like a long time, but not nearly long enough to solve the problem of the Astrodome. Harris County needs to ensure that the Eighth Wonder of the World will serve as more than an eyesore for football fans.

Plan A fell through for the county when voters rejected a $217 million bond proposal to transform the Dome into an event space. We continue to believe that Harris County Judge Ed Emmett and his fellow commissioners bear the burden of responsibility for the plan’s failure. After all, they couldn’t provide the hard numbers that voters needed to be assured that the whole scheme was financially viable.

With plan A in the dust, Judge Emmett is quick to say that there is no plan B. There is, however, a plan C. A hasty power wash will be no difficult feat to help clean up the Dome in preparation for Super Bowl guests. But why stop there? With a little extra planning, Harris County can upgrade that plan to at least a C-plus.

Time is probably too short, and money too tight, to restore the Astrodome to any serious functionality. But the underlying architectural aesthetics and record-breaking history are still as strong as ever. A power wash, coat of paint, landscaping and maybe even hard hat tours could make the Dome a sight worth seeing. The National Park Service just added the Dome to the National Register of Historic Places – certainly that’s worth investing in a few bronze historic plaques.

With the right touches, the Dome could stand as an artistic installation for visiting crowds – or maybe just the world’s largest lawn ornament. Either way, it would be an improvement on what we have now while preserving the building for any future ideas.

We urge Emmett to appoint a task force to consider ideas and to recommend a plan that will get the Dome into shape. Rome may have its Coliseum, but somehow an Astrodome ruin doesn’t have the same cachet.

Dubai garden contest sees big response


Nasser Khan

Dubai garden contest sees big response

Dubai, 3 hours, 28 minutes
ago

Dubai International Garden Competition (DIGC), the UAE’s first landscaping competition, has received a higher-than-expected number of garden designs before the submission deadline of February 16.

The event will take place from April 3 to 6 in ‘The Venue,’ along Mohammed bin Rashid Boulevard, adjacent to Burj Khalifa.

The competition is facilitated by Purelife Events, Conferences Exhibitions, under the patronage of Dubai Municipality with strategic sponsorship from Dubai Tourism Commerce and support from the venue sponsorship partner Emaar.

Internationally renowned landscape designers, architects, artists and property developers have been attracted by several factors, such as Dubai’s growing status as a lucrative property investment destination, and the irresistible challenge of overcoming Dubai’s arid desert land and skyrocketing temperatures throughout-of-the-box ingenuity.


The competition is the brainchild of Purelife Events, Exhibitions Conferences, who’s CEO, Nasser Khan said: “We passionately believe that when it comes to landscaping masterpieces, Dubai should not be limited by its climate or location, as our population and our business sector is a fertile ground for cultivating breathtaking creativity and dazzling technological innovations.”

“DIGC strives to ‘cross pollinate’ the best international practices into Dubai’s market, by attracting premier botanists, architects, landscapers and other experts from North America, Europe, Australasia and the rest of the world to inspire Dubai through knowledge transfer, investments and ‘green retail’ opportunities. As our reputation blossoms, we expect our competition to become the pride of the Middle East,” he added.

Besides the aesthetic beauty and massive environmental benefits of gardens, developers in Dubai’s resurgent property market are keenly aware that gardening creations can significantly boost a property’s value.

Real estate agents now use the term “curb appeal” to signify the beauty a property’s exterior, which adds resell value in the same way interior refurbishments do. According to the co-owner and president of a renowned gardening nursery, advanced landscaping also enhances privacy and minimizes street noise. Another avid landscaper said that gardening as an art form can inspire home owners and developers to create “their own piece of paradise.”

Nadeem Abbas, sales director of Purelife added: “Dubai prides itself in pioneering first-of-a-kind innovations – be it architectural, environmental, and technological – or in our case, all three in one. We now live in a concrete jungle of high rise buildings, and we are encouraging a greater appreciation of the ‘Green City’ way of life.”

In addition to artistic excellence, the competition judges will also consider factors such as eco-friendliness, technical and scientific ingenuity. Leading engineers and scientists will join landscapers and other professionals in vying for the prestigious Gold Award. – TradeArabia News Service


Tags:

Recycling nature: He makes rustic furniture from garden ‘debris’

PHILADELPHIA | David Hughes, a Doylestown, Pa., landscape architect with an affinity for native flora and natural landscapes, often finds himself ripping out dead, overgrown, or otherwise undesirable plants to make way for new.

But he doesn’t haul that nasty Japanese honeysuckle, Chinese white mulberry, or Norway maple to the dump, curb, or chipper. Hughes is that rare soul who prizes what other designers and gardeners despise, more so if it’s scarred by deer browsing, insect damage, or disease.

That’s because, in addition to designing ecologically responsible landscapes in the Philadelphia region, Hughes, 46, is a skilled woodworker who makes rustic furniture from garden “debris,” a kind of plant-world Dumpster diver.

“To me, it’s a nice marriage, landscaping and woodworking,” says Hughes, whose five-year-old business, his second, is called Weatherwood Design. It comprises about 70 percent landscaping and 30 percent woodworking.

Storm-felled trees and gnarly vines make good raw materials. So do pruned branches, old barn boards, and stuff plucked, with permission, from the side of the road.

An arborist friend scouts out intriguing branches and discarded trunks. Hughes helps the Natural Lands Trust and local preserves thin out invasives or dead trees. And every July Fourth, again with permission, he rescues unwanted driftwood from death by bonfire at a public beach on Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

The wood might sit for years on the one-acre property Hughes shares with his widowed dad, Merritt Hughes, a retired English teacher. Logs, planks, oddball sticks and scraps are stacked along the driveway, in the yard, and in and around Hughes’ densely packed, unheated 8-by-12-foot workshop.

“It’s hard to throw anything out,” he says a bit sheepishly of the jars of nails, screws, and bolts, the bits of this or that, and the saws, planes, and other tools of his trade.

Drying wood outside is challenging. But if rain and snow are his nemeses, water is also a friend. “My best ideas come in the shower,” he says.

Those ideas — for chairs, tables and benches, garden gates, and screens, trellises, arbors, railings, and birdhouses — are time-consuming. A simple-looking chair can take 35 hours to make, at $45 an hour, not counting time to find and dry the wood and do research.

“It’s like putting together a big jigsaw puzzle. There are no square edges to anything,” says Hughes, who is itching for some land of his own so he can grow hedgerows of the native trees — alder, sassafras, Eastern red cedar, black locust, Osage orange — he likes to work with.

He also wants to live off the grid and build native plant, meadow, and woodland demonstration gardens. Four acres, at a minimum, would do it, though so much real estate would involve a lot of deer-fencing.

But fenced it must be; deer are plentiful, and Hughes has had Lyme disease 14 times since the early 1990s.

That he has worked through such a scourge reflects a lifetime of loving plants.

Growing up in Glenside, Pa., Hughes was “always out playing and getting muddy and dirty,” often in Baederwood Park. Foreshadowing the landscape architect he would become, he spent hours in the attic constructing vehicles and buildings with Legos and Lincoln Logs.

As an 8-year-old, guided by his handy grandfather, Sylvester “Cookie” Cook, Hughes built metal cladding to reinforce a toy castle, and carved sticks to support a leather-covered tepee.

“I loved the outdoors,” he says, including time spent at his family’s vacation home outside Wellsboro, Pa.

Hughes is a graduate of Abington High School and Pennsylvania State University, where he knew almost instantly “I was doing the right thing” in studying landscape architecture. He also did graduate work at the University of Massachusetts.

His resumé includes jobs at plant nurseries, landscape architectural and planning firms, and the U.S. Forest Service. He has restored wetlands and woodlands and worked on suburban subdivision landscapes, meadows, and residential projects, including a highly idiosyncratic Bucks County, Pa., second home belonging to New Yorkers Todd Ruback and Suzanne Schecter.

The couple’s 2 1/2-acre property, overlooking the Delaware Canal in Upper Black Eddy, Pa., features a converted century-old barn that backs up to a gravelly 200-foot red shale cliff that was choked with exotic vines. Hughes cleared the cliff and literally carved a landscape into it, choosing wildlife-friendly plants such as Eastern prickly pear cactus, the region’s only native cactus, that grows almost exclusively along the high cliffs of the Delaware River.

“He’s not bringing in eucalyptus trees,” Ruback says. “He’s making use of what local, Bucks County nature is giving us.”

And much of what Hughes takes away from “Bucks County nature” goes toward his rustic furniture. The results, says a mentor, Daniel Mack of Warwick, N.Y., are both sturdy and playful, and demonstrate “a poetic sensibility.”

“Nobody actually needs any of these chairs. There are plenty of chairs in the world already, thank you,” says Mack, a rustic-furniture teacher and author. “You’ve gone beyond need, and you’re into another realm.”

It’s a realm, Mack says, that “engages us with the landscape in a way you don’t see with more-anonymous furniture.”

Visit The Philadelphia Inquirer at www.philly.com. Distributed by MCT Information Services

Like agriculture, the landscaping industry has suffered in past droughts.

As a landscaper, Kate Anchordoguy acknowledges the drought is giving her “a real moral dilemma.”

On the one hand, the owner of Kate Anchordoguy Landscaping in Santa Rosa wants to provide work for her three employees and herself. On the other hand, she believes that 2014 may become the year for customers to leave one key element out of their landscaping projects: The plants.

“I think it’s better than wasting water this year on establishing new plantings,” she said.

Like agriculture, the landscaping industry has suffered in past droughts when residents and businesses cut back on installing new plants and on maintaining lawns and gardens.

Landscape contractors in Sonoma County differ markedly on the outlook for 2014, a year where state and local officials already are calling for a 20 percent cut in water consumption.

“If we don’t get rain, it’s really going to affect our business,” said Jeff Pottorff, owner of North Bay Landscape Management in Petaluma.

Pottorff already has met with city officials in the East Bay and heard them say that without more rain they will dramatically cut back on the water they apply to the public landscapes that his 70-worker company maintains.

However, other landscapers believe their businesses will adapt and stay busy even through another dry year. They can do so by installing drought-tolerant plants and by working to help keep existing landscapes alive.

“I don’t think I’ll lose any business,” said Linda Gottuso-Guay, who with her husband James owns Manzanita Landscape Construction in Santa Rosa. “I think people will call me to help.”

Part of that help, landscapers said, may be to consider which plants to water and which to let die.

On the North Coast, the last 13 months have been the driest in 83 years of record keeping.

The next two months are considered the best hope for significant rainfall before summer. Santa Rosa on average receives nearly 90 percent of its rain between October and March.

In response, Gov. Jerry Brown has declared a statewide drought emergency.

Meanwhile, Sonoma County and its cities are preparing to cut water use by 20 percent this year. For communities receiving water from the Russian River, the voluntary savings would amount to roughly 3 billion gallons.

The state Department of Water Resources has estimated the landscape and gardening industry lost $460 million in gross revenues and 5,600 full-time jobs in the drought year of 1991, or roughly a 7 percent cut in the $7 billion industry.

Harold Berkemeier, owner of Harold’s Landscape Maintenance in Cotati, said he took a bigger hit in the 1976-77 drought, until now considered the most consequential dry spell for North Bay homes and businesses. Berkemeier estimated his business dropped about 25 percent as property owners came under strict water rationing and stopped watering their lawns.

“They let their landscape maintenance people go,” he recalled.

Berkemeier, a former Cotati mayor and council member, said without winter rains both landscapers and residents could find themselves in a tough spot again this year. But the region needs to conserve all the water it can, and cities “should be the first to show that they’re going to cut way back” on parks and other landscapes.

Sandra Giarde, executive director of the California Landscape Contractors Association, said many of her 2,000 members already are getting calls from customers seeking advice on how to keep their plants alive.

“The public is concerned about this,” Giarde said. “They have questions. They recognize the need for expert assistance.”

Already some are changing plans. Jerry Rovetti, owner of Rovetti’s Landscaping in Santa Rosa, said the drought recently prompted owners to have him install drought-tolerant plants rather than lawn in a home going on the market in Petaluma.

For 2014, Rovetti said, “We may be pulling out a lot of lawn.” Even so, he doesn’t expect a significant drop in business because property owners still will install new plantings.

Since 1977, the state has recorded droughts in 1987-1992, 2000-2002 and 2007-2009. The dry spells already have pushed changes in landscaping, as in virtually all areas of residential and commercial water use.

For example, the city of Santa Rosa reports that since 2007, it has paid homeowners and business to remove 2 million square feet of turf. The city pays up to $250 to take out home lawns and up to $2,500 for turf removal at commercial properties, plus other funds for upgrading irrigation equipment.

Darryl Orr, an owner of Pacific Landscapes in Sebastopol, said a decade ago roughly 60 percent of his company’s work involved lawns. Today that figure is closer to 35 percent.

Orr, whose business employs 65 workers, remains optimistic that landscapers can weather the water shortage, especially if the region gets some rain in the next few months.

“We can deal with a 25 percent water cutback,” he said.

Landscapers said property owners will hire them to figure out ways to use less water and still keep plants alive.

Frank Patane, general manager of Golden Gate Landscape Management in Santa Rosa, said he takes care of 30 acres of local athletic fields and already is suggesting that his workers save water this year by leaving the grass a little higher when they cut it.

For installers, a key factor will be whether property owners decide to hold off new planting this year.

In that regard, Santa Rosa officials are discussing whether the city’s lawn removal program should encourage participants to remove turf now but to delay installing new plants and shrubs until after the rains return.

In such a scenario, home and business owners still could tear out the lawn and install drip irrigation and other improvements, “but possibly hold off on the planting,” said Kimberly Zunino, a water resources sustainability manager for the city.

Peter Estournes, director of operations at Gardenworks in Healdsburg, said without rain, other cities also may consider discouraging or prohibiting new plantings.

Estournes, a former president of the state landscapers association, said he still hopes for a “fabulous February” for rainfall. But he expects that a key job of landscapers this year will be to prompt their clients to ask: “What is my landscape worth to me? What can I do without? What’s important to me?”

Pierre Marizco, president of Marizco Landscape Management in Santa Rosa, said he foresees a dilemma: Property owners will have less water this year while plants likely will get thirsty earlier because of the lack of precipitation. That could mean stretching the reduced amount of irrigation water over a much longer period.

“I believe some difficult choices are going to be made,” Marizco said. “Maintaining all your plants in a healthy vigorous state may not be possible this year.”

Top 6 Gardening Tips For Sowing New Seeds

Gardening is the most common and relaxing hobby that can earn joy and in some cases money. No matter whether you are planning to set up a flower garden or a vegetable garden, knowing the proper methods and techniques of gardening is crucial. Knowing some tips for sowing seeds is one among them.

Flower gardens and lawns are very popular choices of people who want to make their house and yard look beautiful. Indoor gardens and lawns are also becoming trendy. Now days, people are much health conscious and they prefer home grown vegetables and fruits. This also increased the need for knowing some tips for sowing seeds in a perfect way to get a good result.

Sowing a seed and watching it growing is one of the exciting experiences that any garden lover can have. You can make gardening an exciting experience if you follow some tips for sowing seeds. Here are some effective and useful gardening tips for sowing seeds that may help you to a great extend in this context.

6 Gardening Tips For Sowing New Seeds

Select the season: Selecting the best season for sowing your seeds has great importance. Different seeds grow well at different temperature and climate. So, find out the best season that provides maximum growth support for your seeds.

Dig the soil: It will be always better if you can keep the soil loosened before sowing the seeds. This will help in better rate of germination and growth of the seeds. Loosened soil will give a perfect rooting that will help support the further growth of your plant.

Add fertilisers: You can also add some manure to the soil after making it loosened, so that you will get maximum germinated seeds out of the sowed ones. Decide the type of fertiliser based on the type of plant and its growth requirements. This remains as one of the important tips for sowing seeds.

Perfect sowing technique: Throwing down your seeds simply to the soil is not the perfect way to sow it. You have to consider the type of plant that will come out of the seed. Arrange the number of seeds in a pit and the distance between the pits based to this consideration.

Watering: Watering at proper interval remains as one of the gardening tips for sowing seeds that determine the growth of your seeds. Understand the nature of seeds that you are sowing because while some seeds need more water, some prefer medium watering.

Protect the seedbed: Once you finished sowing seeds successfully, your task will be completed only with providing enough protection to the seedbed. Maintain a wet seedbed that is kept secluded from any sources that can destroy it.