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Your Life VIDEO: Picking and planting asparagus in your garden

DurhamRegion.com

DURHAM — Spring is here and gardeners are eager to start getting their hands dirty. However, gardeners need to be careful about what they plant since nights still tend to be cool and frost can develop. This week we are with Whitby horticulturist Ken Brown in his garden with some great tips and ideas about what to plant now, what to harvest, and things to look out for.

Mr. Brown’s web page, www.gardening-enjoyed.com, is a great source of advice, tips and updates on his own garden. He grows a wide range of vegetables and flowers in some innovative ways to maximize the use of space.

In today’s video, Mr. Brown shows you the tools you need to pick and plant asparagus. See how your asparagus can regenerate for the following year.

Series breakdown:

• Monday, May 26: Lawn

In this segment, Mr. Brown shows you how to top dress and overseed the lawn to fill in thin and bare patches, in order to restart the growing process.

• Tuesday, May 27: Asparagus

TODAY: Today’s video includes how to pick the first asparagus and how to plant your own asparagus patch.

• Wednesday, May 28: Planting cool season veggies

Mr. Brown has the tools you need in this video to plant cool season vegetables like kohlrabi, broccoli and pak choi.

• Thursday, May 29: Prune your clematis

In this video, we clean up the clematis. Mr. Brown has his plant growing up a trellis. He shows you where to cut and how much.

• Friday, May 30: The red lily beetle

With spring comes bug invasions. In this video, Mr. Brown shows you how to catch and destroy one of your garden’s arch enemies, the red lily beetle.

Is there a project or topic you would like to see us cover? Let us know what you want to learn. Drop us a line or post your information on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/newsdurham.

Designer garden pleases the judges at show

A GARDEN designer from Shiplake has been awarded for one of her latest creations.

Ana Mari Bull, of Mill Road, and design partner Lorenzo Soprani entered the Royal Horticultural Society Malvern Spring Show on May 10, where their design was named Best Festival Show Garden.

The pair have been working together for the last few years since graduating from the Oxford College of Garden Design where they completed a post-graduate course in residential landscape architecture.

Mrs Bull, who runs Ana Mari Bull Landscape and Garden Design, said: “The judges loved how we were able to tell our story in such a small space.

“They were particularly impressed with the choice of cloud pruned CarpinusBetulus trees, which attracted a lot of attention throughout the show, and also the way we had managed to make the planting seem so natural.

“The plant everyone was drawn to was a pink cow parsley called Chaerophyllum Hirsutum Roseum — they sold out of it in the floral marquee.”

Mr Soprani, who runs LSV Gardens in the Cotswolds, said their design offered a study of the relationship between man and the natural world.

He said: “The garden has a clean, geometric layout combined with neatly clipped planting to highlight the human need to organise and bring order to the natural world.

“In contrast, areas of naturalistic planting represent the uncontrolled growth that takes place when nature is left untamed. The design creates harmony and rhythm through the use of these two very different styles of planting.”

Mrs Bull is a Royal Horticultural Society-trained horticulturist whose work has been featured on Grand Designs.

She said: “We love what we do. It’s a real privilege to be able to work with a client to create an outdoor space which is personal to them, the house and its surroundings.

“Clients bring us in to help them make best use of all their outside space. Gardens are visible from every room of the house but often ignored or left to the end of a project when the entire budget has been spent.”

For more information, contact Mrs Bull at anamaribull@yahoo.com or 07876 060790 and Mr Soprani at lsv gardens@gmail.com or 07814 505762.

Published 27/05/14

BBC to film new Chelsea garden design series

By Matthew Appleby
Monday, 26 May 2014

RHS and BBC combine to work on flower show programmes

The BBC and RHS have launched a competition to find the best aspiring designer in the UK.

The winner will design a show garden feature on the RHS stand at Chelsea 2015.

Professional garden designers are inelgible.

The competition will be the basis of a BBC2 TV series called Designs on Chelsea. The BBC will film the series around the country in summer 2014 and the final will be at RHS Wisley.

The RHS hopes the programme will show the careers available in horticulture. Producers are Robi Dutta and Will Knott.

Meanwhile, the RHS has appointed garden designer Adam Frost as an ambassador for the charity.

Millennials are finding Kansas City a friendly place to be

— You can find them where there’s live music, trendy food, an affordable home and a friendly environment where they feel they can make a difference.

And in some very encouraging ways, both statistically and in the mysterious world of “buzz,” the Kansas City area is holding its own when it comes to appealing to the hot demographic called millennials. A study recently ranked us among the top 20 big U.S. metros when it came to adding young adults.

It’s not just about being hip. Attracting those people born roughly between 1982 and 2004 is considered vital to the metro’s economic future.

In April, MindMixer, an Omaha, Neb., Web-hosting firm, announced it was moving to the Crossroads Arts District and creating 85 jobs, citing the area’s urban vibe and pool of tech-savvy people.

To help further that favorable impression, the Kansas City Area Development Council launched a talent recruitment initiative to help local companies sell the area to young potential employees.

Among its tactics is a scavenger hunt aimed at getting summer interns – brought to the area by big local corporations such as Hallmark, Cerner and Garmin – off the couch and discovering the charms of places including Brookside, Westport and the River Market.

“We’re broadening our definition of what economic development is,” said Bob Marcusse, president and CEO of the development council. “Attracting and retaining that talent is important to company growth. If we can’t get that right, our ability to grow companies is lost.”

Having more young people around also makes this a better place to live for all generations.

Mayor Sly James, whose streetcar push is particularly appealing to the millennials’ affinity for urban living, said keeping and adding that age group to the local mix was a formula for a better future.

“The value and importance is that these are the people who’ll be energizing us,” he said. “We need that creative, young class to keep us sharp and keep us on the edge as we rapidly change.”

When it comes to hard numbers, the area ranked 14th among the nation’s 51 metros with populations exceeding a million when it came to adding young adults, according to a recent report from the Brookings Institution.

The Kansas City metro area had an annual net gain of about 2,200 people in the 25 to 34 age group during the three-year period from 2009 to 2012. Though far below red-hot places such as Denver, which added almost 12,000 young adults each year, it ranked ahead of Atlanta, New York, Boston and Los Angeles.

The area also is doing well in the online universe of social media, that place where buzz is generated and many younger adults pick up their impression of places.

Travel + Leisure named Kansas City the 10th best city for hipsters in the nation – ahead of Seattle, Boston and Minneapolis – while the Huffington Post included the area among “20 Awesome U.S. Cities You Need to Visit in Your 20s” and Vocativ ranked us 21st among the “35 Best U.S. Cities for People Under 35.”

That’s not surprising to Chel O’Reilly, who grew up in New England and lived in Brooklyn – considered hipster-central by many of her generation – for a year before coming here.

“I came to Kansas City three years ago to visit two friends for four days and when I left, I had a job offer,” O’Reilly said. “The music is great, and the camaraderie and friendly people here are great. . . . I find it to be very welcoming.”

At age 35, O’Reilly considers herself on the cusp of the millennial generation, but she shares the interests often cited by young adults when it comes to where she wants to live.

“I love it that there’s a great art scene in Kansas City, the Charlotte Street Foundation and First Friday is amazing,” she said. “These are things I like to show off to people.”

One of the bigger draws listed by Vocativ, which bills itself as a “take-no-prisoners” online news source, was Kansas City’s affordability. The average monthly rent for a two-bedroom apartment here was $710, making the city the eighth-cheapest place to live among the 35 cities that made the hipster list.

Adding to the inexpensive allure, Vocativ also found the seventh largest number of vintage clothing stores per capita here.

Living somewhere you can devote more time to your passions and less to paying rent is what appealed to Francisco Alarcon, a 31-year-old native of Spain.

He moved here last fall from Los Angeles after graduating from architecture school to work as a sports architect at Populous, but is an artist in his spare time.

“I was hesitant about the art scene here and I asked my friends in LA who told me Kansas City has one of the best art scenes in the U.S.,” he said. “It’s also cheap to live here.

“Making money in the creative world is a struggle. If you live in a city like New York, your rent is super-high. You don’t have the time to write or paint because you have to worry about paying the rent.”

Another architect colleague at Populous, Geoff Cheong, hails from Vancouver. After graduating from architecture school in British Columbia in 2007, he was invited by Populous to come to Kansas City for an interview.

“I didn’t know where Kansas City was,” the 30-year-old said. “On my first plane into town I was expecting the ‘Wizard of Oz,’ wheat fields and tornadoes. I was pleasantly surprised to see it was lush and green and there was water.”

Cheong’s first home was a downtown loft, and he quickly discovered Kansas City was no Vancouver when it came to urban living. One of the missing ingredients was mass transit.

But with a car, Cheong enjoyed the ease of getting around the area. He now lives in a suburban apartment complex at Interstate 435 and Roe Avenue.

“I enjoyed slowing things down a little,” he said. “The (low) cost of living also was huge. Kansas City blows other cities out of the water.”

And in a surprising twist for a Canadian, he actually has more opportunities to play hockey here than he did in his hometown.

“It’s more affordable and there’s more rink time available,” he said. “I meet other Canadian transplants at hockey rinks. . . . I’ve lived here six-and-a-half years now and I think that’s a credit to Kansas City.

“My friends in Vancouver ask when I’m moving back and I say I’m not.”

Alarcon also has found a welcoming place.

“I have a group of international expats and also artists,” he said. “It’s very diverse culturally and for me, it’s been very good.”

O’Reilly, the New England transplant, says it’s easy for millennials to find an “instant community” in Kansas City.

“Kansas City is rich with a lot of good people who open their arms to let more people in,” she said. “I don’t feel it’s a closed city.

“The tech and start-up community is fantastic, Google Fiber did a good job kick-starting that, and the Kauffman Center’s 1 Million Cups program is now in 32 cities.”

O’Reilly also belongs to a group of about two dozen younger adults who call themselves “Possum Trot,” an early historic name for the area. They include newcomers to the city as well as natives who gather regularly to socialize, discuss the city and invite speakers.

“It’s not an agenda-driven organization; it’s really about what’s happening in the city,” said Havis Wright, coordinator for the group. “It’s about familiarizing people who are new to the city and reacquainting people who’ve left and come back.”

Among those returnees involved in Possum Trot is Kathleen Bole.

The 25-year-old grew up in Prairie Village but left for graduate school at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia in 2011. Bole also did internships in Washington and Chicago, so she knows a bit about what’s going on elsewhere in the nation.

“I packed my bags and moved East and didn’t think I’d come back,” she said.

But after graduating with a master’s degree in city planning in 2013, she began to think more fondly of her hometown.

“Kansas City doesn’t have a lot of things other cities have in the way of walkability and transit, but I like the work-life balance you can have here, which you don’t have as much on the coasts,” Bole said.

“Living in Philadelphia, I realized a young professional just coming out of school was not the easiest way of life, and you have a better quality of life here.

“A friend from D.C. visited me last night and she was astonished at how pretty it was, how nice it was and how cheap everything is.”

One of the biggest challenges facing Kansas City when it comes to attracting millennials is it’s an unknown quantity to most people around the country, Marcusse said.

“They think it’s a cow town or flyover place,” he said.

“A lot just don’t have a perception of Kansas City, and you’re starting from ground zero. Once they’ve been here, they fall in love. It’s just getting them here.”

Marcusse traced the roots of the Area Development Council’s talent recruitment initiative to an incident when a local company was trying to recruit a talented thirtysomething executive from Atlanta. The firm spent a lot of time talking about itself, but not much was said about the community.

The candidate turned down the job.

“It struck me that they’d spent a lot of time introducing the person to the company and virtually no time with the community,” Marcusse said. “I thought that was a good role for the KCADC.”

Using the theme of “America’s Creative Crossroads” (KCCreativeCrossroads.com), the organization has developed marketing materials, both online videos and printed, aimed at appealing to millennials.

Attributes included the city’s music scene, restaurants and food trucks, the appeal of professional soccer with Sporting Kansas City, the tech scene and Google Fiber and, of course, the relatively low cost of living here.

One of the more fun initiatives is the scavenger hunt launched last year.

About 1,000 summer interns participated. Each received a booklet listing 11 areas of the metro from greater downtown and midtown, to southern Johnson County and the Village West area of western Wyandotte County.

Five different attractions were listed for each area, and participants were invited to find them, take photos and post them on Facebook to score points. Prizes were awarded based on the places explored.

“The idea was to give them an opportunity to see the city,” Marcusse said. “If they just stayed in their apartment, they may not know the city when it was time to think about a job.”

Looking forward, while Kansas City has done reasonably well attracting millennials, those interviewed agreed the community could do a much better job if it had more walkable neighborhoods and mass transit.

“I think the streetcar is a huge thing,” Bole said. “Knowing it was on the horizon meant a lot to me.

“I’m also someone who loves to walk and I’m used to walking a mile or more. Here, there’s so many dead zones which makes it feel less appealing.”

To liven things up at the street level, the Downtown Council has embraced what’s called “tactical urbanism.” It’s intended to be a low-cost way to show the possibilities of making the city a more enjoyable and engaging place.

For example, in 2012 design students from Kansas State University used inexpensive materials to temporarily transform two blocks of Grand Boulevard into a narrower, more attractive street with wide sidewalks, landscaping and sidewalk cafes. The idea was to offer a glimpse at how a more livable street could be created.

Mike Hurd, marketing director for the Downtown Council, said the new tactical urbanism being pursued by his organization is designed to create a downtown “eco-system” for millennials.

“What we find with millennials is a desire to see more activity on the streets and public spaces on an ongoing basis, not just big event nights,” he said.

This summer, the Downtown Council is planning on holding noontime events twice a month at Oppenstein Park at 12th and Walnut streets with food trucks and entertainment.

A plan also is evolving to hold monthly free concerts in the Crossroads Arts District on a Friday evening other than First Friday, the popular art gallery event.

Dave Scott, chairman of the tactical urbanism program, said the emphasis is on inexpensive ideas to improve the urban environment.

“We’ll win the battle if it’s a good place to live and work, and it’s fun and unpredictable,” he said.

The major reinvestments in making downtown more appealing plus the positive social media buzz have helped companies recruit new talent.

Bob White, director of international marketing at Populous, said his firm is finding it much easier these days, thanks to the improvements that have occurred in the city.

“Ten or 15 years ago, it was extremely difficult for us to recruit young people,” he said. “It was frustrating for us and it was based on ignorance and things they had heard about Kansas City and the Midwest from other people.

“That’s flipped the last six or seven years. There is a groundswell, an undercurrent of young people, making this happen. People are less resistant and more open-minded.

“They’re saying ‘yes, I’ve heard there’s good things happening in Kansas City,’ hearing it from their peers that’s it’s worth a second look.

“We’re delighted by it.”

Inspiration will be in full bloom at OC Spring Home Garden Show

If you go

When: Noon to 7 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday

Where: Anaheim Convention Center, Hall C, 800 Katella Ave., Anaheim

Cost: Free, parking is $12

More information: 800-358-SHOW or home

showconsultants

.com

Need inspiration for all of the home and garden projects filling up your summer calendar? Check out the OC Spring Home and Garden Show this weekend at the Anaheim Convention Center.

Hundreds of exhibits and displays will feature home improvement, remodeling, decorating and landscaping ideas, including Thompson Building Materials’ backyard display. Foodies can catch some tips and inspiration from watching cooking demos from “Fit Chef” Katy Clark and Susan Irby, the “Bikini Chef.”

Get there early each day and you … Click here to login or subscribe and see more.

More from Anaheim – Anaheim Hills

Ocean Springs aldermen to hear plans for permanent fix to Front Beach sidewalk

Ocean Springs aldermen will hear plans Wednesday night for repairing and reinforcing the city’s damaged Front Beach sidewalk. 

OCEAN SPRINGS, Mississippi — Engineers and contractors will pitch their ideas to Ocean Springs aldermen Wednesday night as the city works to come up with a plan to repair and provide a permanent solution for its Front Beach sidewalk problem.

A section of the sidewalk collapsed roughly two weeks ago after beach erosion in an area of Front Beach left the sidewalk with no support. Jackson County supervisors spent some $30,000 to haul in 2,500 cubic yards of sand to replenish that area of the beach, but officials say that’s only a temporary fix.

Last Friday, Ocean Springs Mayor Connie Moran and alderman John Gill met Dax Alexander of Brown, Mitchell Alexander engineering firm, as well as county Road Manager Joe O’Neal and a concrete specialist brought in by Alexander to view the damaged sidewalk and begin the process of developing a plan to fix it.

The first step in the process is to determine how much of the sidewalk has been compromised by erosion due to wave action and stormwater runoff from the properties north of Front Beach Drive.

“The recommendation was to do a radar scan of the areas (of the sidewalk) which appear to be compromised to determine where there are cavities,” Moran said.

The seat wall which runs along the sidewalk only extends four feet into the sand and is not designed to withstand “waves pounding against it,” Moran said, noting erosion in that section of Front Beach has long been a problem.

The long-term solution which will be presented to aldermen Wednesday night calls for a urethane resin to be injected into a cavity beneath the sidewalk and extending eight feet from the seat wall to provide extra protection from erosion. The remainder of any cavities found would be filled with a special concrete.

Moran said the county has agreed to assist with pulling up the sidewalk panels where cavities are found.

Jackson County Supervisor John McKay and alderman Matt McDonnell have both suggested moving the sidewalk north so that it can tie into the toe of the seawall, but both Alexander and his concrete specialist told Moran there would be no real benefit to making that change and moving the sidewalk would likely be far more costly than repairing it.

The $1.8 million sidewalk was built in 2010-11 and paid for through a Community Development Block Grant.

Moran has asked for cost estimates to repair and reinforce the sidewalk and said the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources officials have visited the site and indicated they may be willing to help pay for the work.

“I’m just trying to get everybody on the same page,” Moran said. “The county, engineers, aldermen — and come to an agreement on how to proceed.

“I want to put the info in front of (the aldermen) and let them make a decision. But it’s a pretty quick fix and a permanent one.”

Another ongoing issue affecting Front Beach is the condition of the landscaping around the sidewalk, much of which has fallen into a state of disrepair.

“We haven’t had the manpower to maintain it,” Moran admitted. “But the Summer Youth Corps is here working with Public Works. They’ve been out trimming the crepe myrtles on the highway and I expect they’ll start working on Front Beach soon.”

Moran said the Youth Corps workers will assist city landscaper Josh Dudte in “thinning out and weeding” areas of the beach landscaping which are in need.

“Once they get it thinned out, it will be easier to maintain,” Moran said, adding that pulling some of the healthy vegetation would simply create another problem by adding to beach erosion. The vegetation helps keep stormwater runoff from eroding the beach.

How to protect pets from yard dangers

Everywhere you look on the weekends you see people digging, planting and puttering in their gardens and lawns. While they may make for a pretty panorama, not every product or plant that goes in the garden is good for your pets.

According to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Animal Control Center, experts field thousands of calls about pets that have had potentially hazardous contact with insecticides, weed killer and pet-toxic plants.

The best way to insure you aren’t potentially putting your pet in danger is to do a little research before you begin your lawn and garden projects, says Dr. Reid P. Groman, critical care specialist at Veterinary Specialty Center of Delaware.

Story: Big cats strut their stuff at Philadelphia zoo

Story: Lending PAWS to patients in Illinois hospital

“Do your due diligence,” Groman said. Here are some things to consider:

Cocoa mulch

Cocoa mulch has become increasing popular for landscaping the past few years. It’s made from cocoa bean shells, which gives it that enticing chocolate aroma people seem to love. And that’s just what attracts your dog to it.

Cocoa mulch contains caffeine and theobromine, the same ingredient that causes chocolate toxicity in dogs. It is not as toxic as baking chocolate but, depending on the size of the dog, how much it ingests and how much theobromine is in the mulch, it can cause vomiting, diarrhea, hyperactivity, muscle termers and elevated heart rate. In severe cases a dog can have seizures. It can be fatal.

If you know your dog has eaten cocoa mulch, call your vet right away.

Groman advises watering the mulch as soon as you put it down to help prevent ingestion. “Watering it well forms a crust on the mulch and makes it harder to eat and less palatable,” he said.

The ASPCA recommends considering less-toxic alternatives, such as shredded pine, cedar or hemlock bark, but always supervise curious canines in yards where mulch is spread.

Plants

The plant that pops up most often when looking for toxic effects on pets is the sago palm, which is popular for gardens and patios. The entire plant is toxic – the leaves, nuts and seeds. Ingestion can cause vomiting, bloody diarrhea and gastric ulcers.

“The most severe problem we see is liver failure that can be irreversible,” Groman said. “It carries a more guarded prognosis, especially if they go into liver failure.”

Other plants that can sicken pets include alocasia, aloe, amaryllis and African daises. Check out aspca.org for a more comprehensive list.

Compost

Going green with a compost heap is great for Mother Earth, but not so much for your pets.

“If you are trying to do the right thing by the environment you need to be careful that the pets do not get into,” Groman said. “The overwhelming number of dogs won’t get sick, but when different plant matter decomposes there are mycotoxins that grow from moldy food.”

If your pet becomes ill from eating compost or garbage, you’ll know it within 30 minutes, Groman said. Symptoms include hyperactivity, panting and drooling. Your pet likely will end up staying at the vet for several days receiving supportive care until it improves. There is no cure.

Also, do not dump grease from your barbecue or kitchen in your yard.

“Dogs love it, but it makes them sick, and they can get pancreatitis,” Groman said.

Insecticides/fertilizers

While most insecticides are seldom toxic in small doses, snail bait, which contains metaldehyde, is extremely dangerous. Other dangerous products include fly bait with methomyl, systemic insecticides with disyston or disulfoton, mole or gopher bait with zinc phosphide and most forms of rat poisons.

If you’re planting roses or other plants that require bone meal or any other meal-based fertilizer, make sure your pets can’t get to it. When they ingest it, it will become solid in their gastric system, which requires a trip to the vet immediately.

Read all the labels on fertilizers and pesticides before you purchase them. If you have any concerns, call your vet or visit aspca.org.

Groman suggests applying chemicals to your lawn before a soaking rain or watering your lawn thoroughly before you allow your pets to walk on it. Consider keeping them off the lawn for a couple of days.

If you spot any symptoms of illness, call your veterinarian immediately, Groman said. Also, keep all packages and other information for any product or plant you place in your yard indefinitely.

If you cannot reach your vet, call the ASPCA hotline, (888) 426-4435. There is a $65 consulting fee, but that call could save your pet’s life.

Manny got his surgery

Recently, I wrote about what great pets greyhounds make and a fundraiser for Manny, whose leg was broken racing. Gail Rys, vice president and foster coordinator for Greyhound Pets of America – Delaware Chapter, emailed me to say Manny had his surgery and is doing well. His baby-blue cast should come off next week.

The rescue is still raising funds. Donations can be sent to 701 Cambridge Drive, Newark, DE 19711.

Going wild about baby animals

Rys also let me know that the recent column on leaving alone wildlife babies was a hit with her granddaughter, who took it to her preschool class and engaged her classmates in a discussion about it.

I also got a sweet email from a reader whose 5-year-old grandson found a nest of baby bunnies and literally stood over the nest, reading the advice in Delaware Pets from experts with the statewide Delaware Council of Wildlife Rehabilitators Educators about how to observe, but not interfere, with the bunnies. Can I tell you how much I love that?

Pleased to help

When I toured the new Gibney’s Doggie Kingdom at Faithful Friends Animal Society last week, I noticed Soggy Doggy mats everywhere. I wrote about them and other products I had tested shortly before Christmas. Turns out board member Jill Cantera, who directed the Faithful Friends renovation project, read that column and contacted Joanna Rein, who invented the water-absorbing mats, about buying some for the shelter. Rein responded by giving the shelter a wholesale price.

This column and section is sponsored by Concord Pet Foods Supplies. www.concordPetFoods.com.

Delaware Pets is written by animal-lover Deb Lucas. Email her you news, events, column ideas and the results of column topics to dlucas@delaweareonline.com or call her at (302) 324-2852.

Pet-related events

  • Delaware Humane Association will hold a Cat and Kitten Adopt-a-Thon 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at Concord Pet Foods and Supplies at the Shoppes of Graylyn, 1722 Marsh Road in Wilmington. Same-day adoptions of cats are available for qualified applicants. dehumane.org/adoptions

  • Until Saturday, qualified adopters at the Delaware Humane Association will be eligible to pay reduced adoption fees for all black or mostly black animals they adopt. Dogs 7 months and older can be adopted for $50 and cats of any age can be adopted for $20. dehumane.org/adoptus

Trade bodies celebrate Chelsea success

By Matthew Appleby
Thursday, 22 May 2014

Trade bodies BALI, APL and HTA have been celebrating the medal-winning success of their members at last week’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show.

Hugo Bugg's gold medal-winning RBC Waterscape Garden built by Landscape Associates.Pic: HW

Hugo Bugg’s gold medal-winning RBC Waterscape Garden built by Landscape Associates.Pic: HW

The Association of Professional Landscapers (APL) reported that members of the association built five of the gold medal-winning gardens at this year’s show.

They include Landscape Associates which helped Hugo Bugg to become the youngest ever show garden gold medal winner at the age of 26 for the Royal Bank of Canada’s Waterscape Garden, working with main contractor Himalayan Landscaping. The company also built silver gilt winner Patrick Collins’ A Garden for First Touch at St George’s.

The Outdoor Room built two gold medal-winning gardens, for Adam Frost’s The Homebase Garden – Time to Reflect in association with Alzheimer’s Society, and Jo Thompson’s London Square garden in the Fresh area. It also helped designers Andrew Wilson and Gavin McWilliam’s win a silver gilt for the Cloudy Bay Garden.

Another gold medal went to Charlotte Rowe’s No Man’s Land ABF The Soldiers’ Charity Garden built by Brian Herbert Outdoor Options. Outdoor Options in collaboration with Living Landscapes also helped to secure a silver gilt flora for The Wellchild Garden.

In the Artisan Gardens, Frogheath Landscapes built gold winning DialAFlight Potter’s Garden with the theme of bringing to life a garden that had been abandoned for the war in 1914.

David and Harry Rich and landscape company Rich and Sons won silver gilt for Bord Na Mona’s Vital Earth The Night Sky Garden with a planting scheme echoing the feel of the Milky Way and two pools symbolises black holes, reflecting the sky and surrounding planting.

Landform Consultants built silver winning Chris Deakin and Jason Lock’s House of Fraser Fabric Garden. 

The Brand Alley Renaissance Garden designed by Paul Hervey-Brookes and built by Big Fish Landscapes won a bronze medal.

APL chairman Mark Gregory said: “We are absolutely thrilled to win medals at RHS Chelsea.  It is such an accolade for our members to win at such a high profile show. It just shows what superb landscapers we have and enforces the credibility of our offering through hard work and landscaping excellence.”

Meanwhile, BALI members totted up five golds, seven silver gilts and seven silvers, plus a silver flora at the show.

Wins included: The Outdoor Room which built the gold medal-winning Homebase garden and London Square, plus the silver gilt-winning Cloudy Bay garden.

Outdoor Options which built gold medal-winning ABF The Soldiers’ Charity and silver gilt-winning WellChild.

Landscape Associates, with Himalayan Landscaping, which built the gold medal-winning RBC Waterscape Garden.

Bartholomew Landscaping, Bowles Wyer and PC Landscapes each received silver-gilt for their Show Gardens – Positively Stoke-on-Trent, The Brewin Dolphin Garden, and The Extending Space gardens respectively.

Silver medals were awarded to designers Chris Deakin and Jason Lock and contractor Landform Consultants for the House of Fraser garden, Fabric, to Indoor Garden Design for The World Vision Garden, to designer Helen Elks-Smith and contractor Wycliffe Landscapes for the City of London Corporation Oak Processionary Moth Garden, and to Mark Wallinger for the Cave Pavilion in support of the Garden Museum.

Affiliates Silvadec, IOTA, Robin Tacchi Plants and Harrod Horticultural also won accolades.

In the Great Pavilion, The Perennial Garden won a silver-gilt, helped by BALI contractor Streetscape, and BALI training provider Sparsholt College Winchester won gold and best discovery exhibit for The Paper Chase, which looked at the plants linked to paper and the cycle of use and re-use. 

Capel Manor College was also rewarded for its exhibit, Small is Plentiful – the story of community food production across London – with a silver flora.

HTA member Hillier Nurseries Garden Centres won a 69th consecutive Chelsea gold medal for ‘The White Garden’.  Hillier also displayed RHS Chelsea Plant of the Year 2014 Hydrangea ‘Miss Saori’.

Gold also went to David Austin Roses which launched Olivia Rose Austin’ (‘Ausmixture’) at the show, a soft pure-pink named after the 19-year-old daughter of David Austin junior.

Harkness Roses also won gold for its modern rose garden and Hardy’s Cottage Garden Plants won gold for its stand where they launched three new plants Eryngium Neptune’s Gold, Gaura Freefolk Rosy and Trollius Dancing Flame.

Other golds went to Norfield Nurseries for its Japanese maples and Peter Beales Roses which launched its flagship addition to the Modern Classics range rosa “Frilly Cuff”.

Suttons Seeds, which provided the vegetable varieties for The South West In Bloom Garden at Chelsea this year won best gold winner in the Grand Pavilion, therefore winning the Diamond Jubilee Award, while Walkers Bulbs who launched the daffodil ‘Georgie Boy’ named after Prince George also won gold.

Scotts Miracle-Gro Company took home a silver-gilt flora for their Miracle Gro’wers Discovery and Learning Garden where school children had grown plants from seeds, plugs and cuttings to create a productive vegetable garden and flower garden.

Burncoose Nurseries also won Silver Gilt Flora for its ‘101 Plants from China’ display and Kelways Plants also won Silver Gilt Flora for its peonies and irises.

All Chelsea medal winners can be found at www.rhs.org.uk/shows-events/rhs-chelsea-flower-show/awards

 

 

 

Auction or bankruptcy in Catlin Gardens’ future – Times Herald

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SLATE HILL — Catlin Gardens, a romantically themed wedding venue on Route 6 that fell behind on mortgage payments and now owes its lenders $3.8 million, could soon be headed to the auction block.

In late March, Acting Orange County Supreme Court Justice Catherine Bartlett appointed a referee to sell the property to repay its debts. Now, all the referee must do is schedule a date for the sale, which will be held in the Orange County Courthouse.

If the property is sold, couples who have put down deposits for weddings may lose those deposits and have to find a new venue to recite their vows, said Lewis Wrobel, a bankruptcy attorney.

John Stack, one of the owners of Catlin Gardens, said in an email that the catering hall will continue to stay open for business while it restructures its financial situation.

“We are confident that we will be continuing our business and growing it well into the future,” he said.

Stack’s prepared statement did not respond to further questions, and did not address the security of customer deposits.

Bankruptcy possible

Robert Krahulik, the catering venue’s attorney, said Catlin has been “working hard” on refinancing its debt, a move that would likely cancel an auction.

The business may file for bankruptcy, he said. A bankruptcy would stall the foreclosure, allowing Catlin to continue operating and hosting weddings and other events, he said.

A bankruptcy would likely help Catlin get through this year’s wedding season, Wrobel said.

“They can certainly buy a good amount of time by doing that,” Wrobel said.

Last June, a few months after the foreclosure was filed, Krahulik said Catlin’s financial problems stemmed from property damage caused by Hurricane Irene and Tropical Storm Lee. Catlin Creek, a focal point at the venue, overflowed, damaging the gardens and grounds.

Mary Kay Martin, Catlin Gardens’ controller, said the business is “financially better off” than it’s ever been. Instead of using deposits as they come in, how the business ran before, it saves them until the event happens, Martin said.

The move has allowed Catlin to build up its operating cash, she said.

Behind on tax break

In addition to its delinquent mortgage, Catlin is behind on payments under its tax-break agreement with Orange County, according to the Orange County Industrial Development Agency, which granted the business a 10-year payment-in-lieu-of-taxes arrangement in 2009.

The last payment the county received from Catlin was in September 2012 for a January bill, according to a county spokesman. In April, the IDA unanimously voted to allow its attorney to compel Catlin to make payments, or else cancel the tax break arrangement.

Unhappy couples

Ian Lindars, an attorney from Fishkill, plans to file a lawsuit over the deposit he lost at Catlin. He and his fiance, Emily Kermani, signed a contract last February for a wedding this June, but after hearing about the foreclosure, they asked for their money back.

The Stacks refused, stating that the couple had signed a contract, Lindars said. He was upset that the owners never disclosed their financial problems and was concerned about the possibility of the Stacks losing the property in the foreclosure.

“In my opinion, they were agreeing to perform something they had no idea they were going to be able to perform,” Lindars said.

The couple set a date for July at a different venue. They had already booked a church on the same day as they had planned to have their wedding at Catlin Gardens, but it wasn’t available on the new date.

Lindars and Kermani also had to toss toasting flutes, gifts for the mothers and cake-cutting accessories, all already engraved with the date scheduled at Catlin.

“It made a stressful ordeal much more stressful,” Lindars said. “It put a damper on the whole wedding.”

Worry and aggravation

Another couple, Tim Smith of Highland and his bride, Leslie DeGroat, soon to officially become Leslie Smith, held their wedding ceremony and reception at Catlin Gardens May 18.

Like Lindars and Kermani, Smith and DeGroat had asked for their deposit back after hearing about the foreclosure. The Stacks refused, and Smith and DeGroat went forward with their wedding plans, not wanting to lose their investment.

In the weeks leading up to the big day, Smith saw that the landscaping, which had attracted the couple to the venue in the first place, wasn’t up to snuff. The fountains were dirty, tulips weren’t planted and trees needed pruning, Smith said.

Staff at Catlin Gardens addressed some of their concerns about the condition of the grounds a few days before the wedding, but not everything, Smith said.

He said the food at his wedding was great, but the aggravation and worry about whether or not the venue’s doors would be closed before his nuptials stressed him out.

“It was an enjoyable time,” he said. “Leading up to it was not an enjoyable time.”

jdinapoli@th-record.com


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