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Grand designs on Ecohome garden

A green project is calling on garden designers to volunteer their time to help come up with some blooming lovely ideas for Harborough’s Ecohome.

The Sustainable Harborough group in partnership with Seven Locks Housing is asking for garden designers from the district for their expertise.

The Ecohome is a semi-detached house with extra insulation, state-of-the-art heating controls, solar panels, low-energy appliances and water-saving devices.

Its mission is to show people how they can reduce household emissions and reduce energy and water bills.

Now Sustainable Harborough wants to show how gardens can be used to grow food and encourage wildlife.

Spokesman Gavin Fletcher said: “This is a fantastic opportunity for a local garden designer to join us to design a garden which can be used for family life, encouraging wildlife and food growing as well as having parts which can be replicated by other residents hoping to achieve something similar.”

The garden is to be created in the new year with a team of volunteers and will be on display during special open days.

The Echome has been home since October to the Woolley family, who write an online blog about life in the home. Ayla Woolley (10) said: “The garden is my favourite part of my new home. I love wildlife and flowers and can’t wait to grow some fruit and veggies, although it isn’t wildlife friendly yet unless you like worms!”

Sustainable Harborough is keen to promote local businesses and any designer working on the project will be recognised for their contribution on its website.

Anyone interested in designing the Ecohome garden or becoming a volunteer gardener should contact Sustainable Harborough on 01858 466207 or email sustainableharborough@ruralcc.org.uk

For more information visit www.sustainableharborough.co.uk.

Four-part gardening series begins Jan. 8 in Eatonton

For gardners – or potential gardeners – who have issues with physical, time or space limitations, help is on the way.


The Oconee Master Gardeners Association and Putnam County Cooperative Extension are teaming up for a four-part series on “Gardening with Limitations,” with second-Wednesday-of-the-month sessions from January through April.

“We will introduce you to the latest tools and methods which will help you continue your love for gardening,” said Shawn Davis who volunteers with both organizations.

“All presentations are free and open to the public. All products demonstrated will be given away as door prizes.”

“Introduction and Garden Helpers” is scheduled for Jan. 8. The Feb. 12 session will cover tools; irrigation and chemical applications will be the topics March 12. The final session, set for April 9, will address plantings and container gardening.

Davis said Putnam County Extension Coordinator Keith Fielder’s annual needs assessment “showed that our community wanted additional programming information and ideas on how to make gardening and landscaping activities easier.

“Since a large segment of our population is retirement age, this made great sense,” Davis said. “Additionally, with people choosing smaller gardens and limited landscapes, this brought forth request for raised beds more efficient irrigation systems.”

Davis said the “excellent working relationship” between the two organizations provided “the perfect venue” for the program.”

Between OMGA’s monthly educational programs, Fielder’s needs assessment and feedback Davis said he’s received from local master gardeners “filled out an A-Z outline of a program we felt would address the community needs.”

Davis said similar programs across the state have covered individual topics, “but none have addressed the topics as a whole.”

Unique aspects of the program will be the chance for individuals to get Fielder’s “one-on-one instruction and advice” and the chance to see gardening products up close – and, perhaps, take them home.

“The companies participating in the presentation have provided us with unique gardening items that will address one or all of the limitations we will be presenting,” Davis explained. “We will be demonstrating tools, gardening helpers, automation, process changes and maintenance methodology from around the world.”

The items “will be donated to attendees by random drawing” at the end of each session, Davis said.

All sessions will be from 10:30 a.m.to 1 p.m. at The Hut community center, 400A W. Marion St. in downtown Eatonton.

Emphasizing that the presentations are free to participants, Davis said pre-registration “would be appreciated to ensure adequate attendee packets.” Call the Putnam County Extension Office at 706-485-4151.

For more information about the program, contact Davis by sending an email to mosshappyness@gmail.com

Volunteers return village landmark, redo old building

Through hard work and dedication, pieces of Port Jefferson’s history that were lost or crumbling have been restored, preserving tales of the village’s past for future generations.

The historic First Baptist Church building that was once languishing has been renovated and a landmark fountain that disappeared from its front lawn at East Main Street and Prospect Street has been returned.

For their efforts in keeping village history alive while beautifying the area, the Island Christian Church, led by the Rev. Pete Jansson, as well as community volunteers Kathy O’Sullivan, Ken Brady and Sandra Swenk, are 2013 People of the Year.

The Biddle Fountain, donated by famous village resident John Biddle in 1898, was once a gathering place in the village, a focal point of parades and other events. Unfortunately, a couple of decades later it became difficult to maintain and when Brookhaven Town removed it to widen the intersection at East Main and Prospect streets, it was lost to history. But our People of the Year stepped in, bringing in a replica of the fountain that currently sits in front of the church building, now the home of Island Christian Church, as it did before, many years ago.

Biddle_Fountain_dedicatThe parts of the new fountain were made in England with help from a company in Saugerties. Medford-based Powell Paving Masonry worked on the fountain’s base and brickwork and set the fountain. The replica’s installation included some landscaping and replacing a cement wall along the front of the church with stone. After the fountain was put in place, Laura Schnier, a member of the church who was on the committee for the Biddle Fountain project, added plants.

Each volunteer played a vital role in bringing the fountain replica to the village.

According to Jansson, Brady, the village historian, brought all of the knowledge about the original fountain, put out a search for the lost landmark and then searched for a replica of the old fountain.

The Rev. Joe Garofalo of the Island Christian Church, which also has locations in Northport and Holtsville, said Brady has “a wealth of information.”

Port Jefferson Village’s digital photo archive, which Brady set up and includes numerous historical images, proved helpful during the Biddle Fountain project, Brady said.

The historian, in turn, said Swenk, a former village mayor, was helpful in reaching out to people for fundraising.

“Sandra has really great ideas,” Jansson agreed. “She put tremendous effort into connecting with people in the neighborhood and soliciting money.”

Paul_Sandberg_church_stAccording to O’Sullivan, Swenk has always been involved in the beautification of the village and keeping the historical aspect of the town alive.

“Sandra is very concerned about the town,” Schnier said.

For her part, O’Sullivan “was the driving force in the whole project” and stayed with it through several setbacks, such as early trouble with fundraising, Brady said.

“She is a good leader,” the historian said. “She brings out the best in people.”

O’Sullivan has watched the church transform over the years, since her father was a minister at the First Baptist Church of Port Jefferson from 1978 to 1980. The struggling church had its last service on July 4, 2010, before it was renovated and became the Island Christian Church.

“It was such a small church with no money at all,” O’Sullivan said. “It was extraordinarily wonderful to see how they rebuilt the church.”

Ashleen_Betts_Island_ChShe said in a previous interview that though she is not a member of Island Christian Church, after she saw the building’s renovation and the good it did for the village, she decided to return the favor by lending her help to the fountain project.

Jansson, who began leading the Port Jefferson congregation once the Island Christian Church opened, said, “We wanted to restore it back to what it used to look like in the 1850s.” The goal was to redesign the church with a classic feel, while continuing to update the technology.

According to the pastor, that included the use of natural flooring and molding, and the incorporation of an organ to replicate the First Baptist Church’s. The church also plans to repair the baptistry, a tank in the floor with water to baptize people, which has been in the church since before the renovation and is leaking, Jansson said.

The renovation also integrated modern technology, such as upgraded air conditioning and sound systems.

“We want to make sure that [church members] do not feel like they are being shortchanged just because we are in a historic building,” Jansson said.

In a previous interview, the Rev. Paul Sandberg said the renovation included new bathroom facilities, as well as a new and safer stairway to the sanctuary.

Between the building’s renovation and the new fountain on its grounds, a historically rich location in Port Jefferson has been restored to its former glory.

O’Sullivan said Jansson “has brought so much life into this church.”

About the group that made it all possible, Swenk said, “We’ve all worked well together.”

Christmas Angels: Memory Gardens ladies

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KENNEBUNK — With the help of these Christmas Angels, Kennebunk’s downtown and Lower Village have the finishing touch that they need to pop.

“I like a lot of color,” said Joanna Sylvester of Memory Gardens, who with Julie Dunlap works through the spring, summer and fall to landscape and line the downtown with colorful, vibrant plantings throughout the seasons. “Even if they’re not flower people, they respond to color and I think it’s done the job. We’re just lucky to be a part of it.”

This is Memory Gardens’ second season beautifying the downtown. The company started as a retail greenhouse and transformed into landscaping, planting, pruning and otherwise beautifying local businesses and residences, Sylvester said. She has been doing the landscaping for Kennebunk Savings for the past 12 years, Sylvester said, before taking on Main Street, under a long-term contract with the town.

The ladies also fill the dories in Lower Village and plant flowers along the Mathew J. Lanigan Bridge. This fall, the women planted the flowers along the bridge three times after they were vandalized. An anonymous donor paid for the flowers.

“For me, it’s a dream job. A lot of people probably think I’m crazy,” Sylvester said.

In the spring, summer and fall, Sylvester and Dunlap can be found on Main Street from the all-too-early morning to late afternoon, rain or shine, working to keep the finishing touches of the downtown perfect. In Lower Village, they work between 4 and 6 a.m. to beat the traffic.

Sylvester said passerbys often honk and wave in support of their work.

“One woman said I used to walk down on the beach, now I walk down Main Street,” Sylvester said. “I consider it an honor. It makes me want to work even harder. It inspires you.”

Linda Johnson of the Kennebunk Downtown Committee said, “all we get is compliments” about the landscaping work.

“The timing worked well with the revitalization of the downtown,” she said. “It was a no-brainer adding Joanna and Julie to the mix of the downtown. They make it look so easy. It’s a seamless process and we don’t even have any snags.”

Looking at the revitalization of the downtown, Johnson said the landscaping and plants add the finishing touch and that she “couldn’t be more proud.”

“Downtown is everything to me, and this just adds a whole new level,” she said.

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The Garden Guru: Don’t count out non-Texans


Dr. Omer E. Sperry taught me, as a very young horticulturist (actually, a Cub Scout), that “a plant is native where you find it growing in nature.” I’ve never forgotten that little lesson, and it has kept me from making some very bad gardening decisions.

My dad had the credentials. He grew up in Oklahoma and eastern Nebraska. His Ph.D. in botany was from the University of Nebraska, but his thesis research work was done in the Rocky Mountains west of Denver. He and Mom moved to Alpine in the early part of the Depression, where he founded the biology department at the new Sul Ross State Teachers College. He continued his botanical research in the Chisos and Davis Mountains of West Texas, turning to (to use the title of his book) Plants of Big Bend.

And from there, when I was only 2, our family moved to College Station, where Dad co-founded the range and forestry department at Texas AM. For the next 30 years of his career, Dad was a range ecologist and weed control specialist for Texas AM. Most would have said that he was a Texas-native-plant expert.

At parties at our house, I was surrounded by his fellow professors, who spent the night talking about native plants they had come across in every corner of Texas. It was exciting for a young kid with a natural yen toward landscaping, and it taught me what a richly diverse state Texas is.

Now I turn to my own career. My dad taught me to follow my heart and to do what I really enjoyed — that it would never seem to be work. That has evolved, over the past 43 years of living around DFW, into giving advice about the best plant selections for Texas landscaping. One of the topics that comes up very often centers on the use of native plants in our gardens. The conversation usually begins something like this: “Neil, I’m planting my landscape, and I want to use only native Texas plants,” (pause) “so I’ll have the best chance of succeeding.”

Some of those people get fiercely defensive if I try to caution them that some of their choices may not be good ones. It soon becomes obvious that they’re going to plant whatever they wish, and that’s where I use another lesson I learned from my dad: patience. As a friend of mine once told her adult son in one of his crises, “I’m sure you’ll figure it out.” I run that thought through my mind as I wish the person well and step away.

As I’ve been typing, I’ve been trying to figure ways to illustrate that simply using “native” as the main or only criterion in choosing your plants might be a mistake.

In that light, it crossed my mind that I’m a native Texan, and I’m well adjusted to my life in North Central Texas. But as much as I love my home state, there are places and environments in Texas where I don’t think I’d be very happy. I hope nobody “transplants” me to any of those.

However, I still like my old explanation of why I prefer not to use “native” as a major criterion in choosing my plants, and that is that if a plant is not native to the part of Texas where you live, there’s probably a reason.

As one example, it’s probably too wet (at some times!) in the Metroplex for West Texas natives to survive, especially in our heavy clay soils. Sure, they can survive the dry times, but they’re intolerant of waterlogged soils.

Or, on a 20-year average, it’s too cold here, which is why you don’t see Texas mountain laurel, desert willow or Texas sage growing wild locally. I’ve even seen photos of century plant agaves that froze in the recent ice storm.

Perhaps it’s our alkaline soil. Indeed, that’s why you don’t see loblolly pines, dogwoods, sweetgums, bald cypresses and American hollies growing natively around the Metroplex. That particular line of soil demarcation is amazing. It can be just a few hundred feet wide. There are places in Hunt and Kaufman counties where Blackland soils abruptly change over to East Texas sands on the same pieces of property, and the native species change with it.

So, now the big question. If you don’t use “native” as a major factor in choosing your plants, what would be better? And that answer is simple and logical. Use plants that are “adapted.” It really doesn’t matter whether the plant is native to a local hillside or to some other continent. What you want is something that will jump right in and contribute to your landscaping efforts without complaining. Your chance at success as a landscaping gardener will be greatly enhanced if you’ll use that one simple measuring stick to size up all of your plants: “How well is this plant adapted to the setting where I’m going to use it?”

Neil Sperry publishes “Gardens” magazine and hosts “Texas Gardening” from 8 to 10 a.m. Sunday on WBAP AM/FM. Reach him during those hours at 800-288-9227.


Garden Calendar: Learn to use native plants in landscaping

LANDSCAPING WITH NATIVES: The course will explore native trees, shrubs and perennials. Participants will learn how to use drought-tolerant plants to add interest and color in the landscape year-round. 10 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and Thursdays Jan. 14-23. Collin College Courtyard Center, 4800 Preston Park Blvd., Plano. $59. Register at collin.edu/ce. 214-740-6252 or 972-985-3711.

MASTER NATURALISTS: The Indian Trail Chapter of the Texas Master Naturalists will hold its annual training classes next spring. Classes will meet 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays Feb. 25 to May 27. First United Methodist Church, 505 W. Marvin Ave., Waxahachie. Applications are due Feb. 1-972-825-5175.information@itmnc.com.

Event details are due at least 14 days before the Thursday publication date. Send to garden@dallasnews.com.

Gardening tips for January

OKLA. CITY —
• Cultivate empty or make new beds. Turn the earth and leave it rough to let winter’s freezing and thawing improve the soil texture. Add compost and well-rotted manure. Hold off working beds if the ground is soggy; soil will be compacted, doing more harm than good.

• Start cool season vegetable transplants now to ensure adequate growth prior to February planting dates.

• Plan for your spring garden. Visit with local garden centers about what they will be carrying.

• Be kind to the environment — recycle your Christmas tree and use it for mulch.

• Take care not to plow or shovel snow containing de-icing chemicals onto lawn or shrubs.

• Clear your greenhouse of dead and diseased plants to make room for spring transplants.

• Review garden mail-order catalogues and be sure to read the fine print. Remember to order early for the best selection and choose hardy, disease-resistant, drought-tolerant varieties.

• Do not plant the same crop family in the same location year after year. Plan for crop rotation to avoid insect and disease buildup with vegetables and annual plants.

• Apply dormant spray when temperatures are above 40 degrees F. to deciduous trees and shrubs to control scale, aphid, spider mites, borers and other insects. Follow label directions.

• Inspect houseplants for insect problems. Spider mites could have come indoors on Christmas greenery; thrips may have come through screens last fall to keep warm.

• Keep a water pitcher filled specifically for houseplants so it’s always room temperature. Cold water can damage roots and foliage.

• Don’t forget the birds. To survive the worst that winter dishes out, they need more than food. Provide a source of unfrozen water.

• Soak all landscape plantings several hours before drastically hard freezing weather conditions. Water all plants during dry spells in winter months. One inch of snow equals about one-tenth inch of water.

• Double check moisture in protected or raised planters.

• Pruning of deciduous trees will be shifting into full swing. Protect the trunks of newly planted trees from direct sunlight and rodents with some type of tree wrap. Use wire mesh collars, polyurethane wrap or rodent repellant paint. Remember snow fall will change the height of protection needed.

• Wait to prune fruit trees until February or March.

• Repair, sharpen and lubricate gardening equipment.

• Cover strawberries with a 3-4” layer of organic debris. Straw, leaves, compost, and old hay are good mulch materials.

• Plan fruit tree planting. Determine the best varieties and locate sources that can supply the trees you need in February and March.

The following workshops will be held at the OSU Extension Center, 930 N. Portland, Oklahoma City unless otherwise specified. They are free and open to the public. For more information, call 713-1125.

Third Thursday Gardening

Compost, Soil Worms — Oh My!

Thursday, Jan. 16

6-7 p.m.

Garden Boot Camp — 3 Saturdays (Jan. 25, Feb. 1 and Feb. 8) presented by Oklahoma County Master Gardeners. Cost is $35.

RAY RIDLEN is a horticulture/agriculture educator for the Oklahoma County OSU Extension Service. He may be reached at 713-1125.

Madison County news and events for the week of Dec. 26

Local blood drives set

The American Red Cross is seeking eligible blood donors. The Red Cross encourages eligible donors to make an appointment to give during National Blood Donor Month by visiting redcrossblood.org or calling 1-800-RED-CROSS.

Upcoming opportunities include:

  • Dec. 26, 2-6 p.m. at Wood River Public Library, 326 E. Ferguson, Wood River.
  • Dec. 26, 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. at Alton Memorial Hospital, 1 Memorial Drive, Alton.
  • Jan. 3, 3-6 p.m. at Revive, 1105 W. Beltline Road in Collinsville;
  • Jan. 6, 2:30-6:30 p.m. at Highland Hope United Methodist Church, 12846 Daiber in Highland;
  • Jan. 8, 2-7 p.m. at Alton Wood River Sportsmen’s Club, 3109 Godfrey Road in Godfrey.

Kids’ activities available at First Night 2014

The 19th annual First Night River Bend will offer a host of activities for children of all ages on New Year’s Eve at the Godfrey campus of Lewis and Clark Community College. Family-friendly entertainment will run from 3-7 p.m. in the newly renovated Hatheway Cultural Center. First Night concludes with a firework show at 7 p.m.

First Night buttons will are on sale at Party Magic and all Liberty Bank locations. Buttons are $10. Children 5 and under are admitted free.

For a complete schedule of entertainers and events, visit www.lc.edu/firstnight.

SIUE offers tour of Cuba

The Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Photographers Tour of Cuba is scheduled for March 9-15, 2014. It is the first tour to Cuba available to people in the greater St. Louis area. Travelers will experience a rare opportunity to explore Cuba from a photographer’s perspective. A tour guide and translator will lead the group. Highlights will include the Hotel Plaza in Old Havana, exploring Havana and the Morro-Cabanas complex, traveling to Cojimar, Regla and Fototeca (the Cuban photo archives). More information is available at siue.edu/cubatrip.

Prices are based on a Miami departure. Travelers must make their own arrangements to get to Miami for the flight to Havana, which leaves at 1 p.m. March 9. All prices are based on double occupancy: $3,000 for general community members; $2,800 for SIUE alumni basic members or SIUE faculty/staff; and $2,600 for SIUE alumni premium members or SIUE students. A $500 nonrefundable deposit is due Jan. 9 to reserve a spot. Final payment is due Feb. 7. Payment should be made to SIUE Office of Educational Outreach. The trip is restricted to those 18 years old and older. The trip is offered through a partnership between the SIUE Alumni Association and the SIUE Office of Educational Outreach.

Call Cathy McNeese (cmcnees@siue.edu) at 618-650-3208 in the SIUE Office of Educational Outreach or Photographers Tour of Cuba Coordinator C. Otis Sweezey (osweeze@siue.edu) at 618-650-2360.

Blood Center holding drives

The Mississippi Valley Regional Blood Center is holding several upcoming blood drives, including: 

  • Dec. 26, Scott Credit Union, 501 Edwardsville Road, Troy, 1-5 p.m.
  • Dec. 27, Scott Credit Union, 1067 Illinois Route 157, Edwardsville, 2-5 p.m.

Visit www.bloodcenter.org.

MCT announces holiday hours

MCT bus service’s holiday hours are: 

  • Dec. 26: normal bus service.
  • Dec. 31: normal bus service.
  • Jan. 1: no bus service. 
  • Jan. 2: normal bus service.

Call 6180797-4636, or e-mail info@mct.org.

Green industry conference announced

The Gateway Green Industry Conference will be held Jan. 14-15 at the Gateway Convention Center, Collinsville. The educational program has a track for sports turf, golf, landscape, arborist, plantscape, parks and recreation as well as green industry. Those who work in lawn care, landscaping, nursery, a garden center, golf course or any other grounds-related industry, can get new ideas and research-based information at the conference. Registration for the two days is $100 or $80 for one day if completed by Jan. 3. The fee includes lunch. Registration fees increase after Jan. 3. There is also a trade show featuring many local businesses that is free to the public.

To obtain a copy of the Gateway Green Industry Conference brochure and registration form, contact U of I Extension office at 618-344-4230 or web.extension.illinois.edu/mms. Online registration is available. 

Gardener program accepting applicants

Area lawn and garden enthusiasts can get intensive horticulture training in exchange for volunteer hours through University of Illinois Extension’s Master Gardener program. The training program consists of weekly sessions that run from January through April. Participants get more than 60 hours of in-depth instruction on such topics as soils; botany; insect and disease control; flowers, trees, shrubs and other ornamentals; fruit and vegetable production; turf grass; basic landscaping and a wide range of other topics. An internship of 60 hours of volunteer horticulture-related service completes the training requirements. Some Master Gardeners answer lawn and garden questions from homeowners. Others help design and operate demonstration gardens for the public and some make presentations to local schools and civic groups. The Master Gardener training will be held on Tuesdays, Jan. 7, through April 15, and rotates between Madison and Monroe counties. At all locations, classes run from 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Registration for the program is $225, which includes a copy of the Illinois Master Gardener manual.

Call Sarah Ruth at the Madison-Monroe-St. Clair Extension Unit at 618-939-3434 or 618-344-4230; or visit web.extension.illinois.edu/mms.

Volunteers needed to help with taxes

It may not be tax season yet, but the time to sign up to volunteer to help with tax assistance is now. United Way of Greater St. Louis’ tax coalition partners want to pair volunteers with low-income and elderly residents for tax assistance from late January through April 15 at various locations in the region.

Trainings take place during January 2014 at various times and locations in Madison and St. Clair counties. Volunteers must attend one or more certification trainings in order to greet, interview or prepare taxes. Previous tax assistance experience is not required. Registration in advance is required; contact the Gateway EITC Community Coalition at 314-539-4062 or info@gatewayeitc.org; Friendly Community Tax Coalition at 314-691-9500 or visit stlvolunteer.org/VITA. There are various volunteer positions available, with varying degrees of tax knowledge necessary. 

The purpose of the coalitions is to offer free Earned Income Tax Credit preparation and education to low-income residents.

County offers help for energy bills

Madison County has obtained funding through the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Development to assist low-income county residents with the cost of home energy bills. Applications will be taken through May 31, 2014, or until funds are depleted.

The Madison County Community Development Energy Assistance Office administers the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program and can help residents with the application process.

Call 618-296-6485 to get information about local offices where applications can be filled out.