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A roomy yard: Each area has special features

About seven years ago, Michael and Sara Thoms decided to tear out most of the landscaping at their home in Rock Island’s Watch Hill neighborhood and start from scratch.

They had lived in the 1930s Tudor-style home for about 20 years and the look they had inherited had become dated and overgrown.

Following Sara’s vision for numerous “rooms,” or individual areas, within the larger yard, Meyer Landscape Design of Moline drafted a plan so that everywhere you walk there is something different to look at, and there is a sense of discovery because you don’t see everything at once.

You can see the Thomses’ garden for yourself Saturday, June 15, when it will be one of seven in the Illinois Quad-Cities open for tours as a fundraiser for the Quad-City Botanical Center, Rock Island.

In caring for the yard, Sara has hired help, but she’s also hands-on. She plants annual flowers and tends to a large number of potted tropical plants that she hauls into their greenhouse every fall and then brings back out again in the spring to add bursts of color and textural interest to the various “rooms.”

Among perennials adding color to her yard are numerous “Knockout” roses, known for their vigor and low maintenance.

“I’ve had the fancy roses,” she said. “I’ve gone to the ones I know will make it here.”

Favorite individual flowers are those that can be cut for inside arrangements such as black-eyed Susans, hydrangeas and salvia. “I like to do centerpieces,” she said.

She also tries to incorporate a few plants that are native to the nearby Black Hawk State Historic Site, buying them at sales of native plants.

In addition to color scattered throughout the yard, there also are dozens of rabbits … of the sculptural variety.

Because Sara’s birthday is around Easter, she latched onto rabbits as a motif. The first one you see entering the yard is blowing a horn, positioned atop an orb in the middle of the sidewalk leading to their front door.

Other sculptures populating the yard include three larger rabbits, a girl reading a book and a girl playing a flute, both nods to favorite pastimes of her daughters.

Sara credits other gardeners with teaching her about using art and color in the garden, such as pairing the red “Knockout” roses with yellow daylilies or planting shrubs of various shades of green rather than all one shade.

“It’s like someone’s doing a painting,” she said. “There are colors here, there and everywhere, like dabbing another color of paint on a canvas.”

Among those inspirational gardeners are fellow members of the Perennial Pals Garden Club, a group that shares plants and ideas, and the Tri-City Garden Club.

Being involved with the former Symphony in Bloom lawn, garden and flower show was also a good learning experience.

“Those ladies taught me a lot,” Sara said.

Felled but not forgotten


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  • Avenues of honour are drawing renewed interest in the lead-up to the 100th Gallipoli anniversary. Photo: Sarah Wood

A peculiarly Australian phenomenon, the avenue of honour, turns an age-old landscaping device into modern-day remembrance. Both garden and commemoration, avenues of honour pair the life of trees with the death of war.

Like any avenue, they frame and divide. But unlike regular routes lined with trees they symbolise service and sacrifice and, with the centenary of the Anzac Gallipoli landing in 2015, they are prompting a new wave of interest.

The Avenues of Honour 1915-2015 initiative aims not only to document and preserve the 547 known avenues around the country, but to create new ones as well. The goal is to see a tree planted for each of the more than 100,000 Australians who have died at war.

While most avenues of honour were established close to 100 years ago in the aftermath of World War I, arboreal memorials are returning to favour.

Darren Peacock, a social technology consultant for Avenues of Honour 1915-2015, attributes this to the growing popularity of Anzac Day commemorations and an increasing environmental consciousness around the planting of trees.

“There is a momentum around the convergence of these ideas,” he says. “Tree-planting has more cachet now than 50 years ago. We do need to plant trees and take care of them, but we can also use trees to express remembrance.”

While the Canadians have named lakes after those who went to war and Australians became more inclined to establish swimming pools and other community facilities as a form of remembrance after World War II, Peacock says the original avenues of honour were a “spontaneous” community gesture.

He says it was driven, in part, by the fact that the graves of the dead were so far away.

“It wasn’t possible to visit graves in France. So trees were planted locally,” he says.

While the earliest recorded avenues of honour were planted in response to Australia’s participation in the Second Boer War of 1899 to 1902, most avenues came about a couple of decades later. They were planted everywhere except for the Northern Territory, with about half of them located in Victoria.

About 3770 exotics were introduced along 22 kilometres of roadway in Ballarat from 1917 to 1919, while a 2.5-kilometre stretch of road in Woodend was lined with oaks in 1918.

The same year, 281 elms were planted (245 survived) over 3.3 kilometres in Bacchus Marsh, with an avenue of sugar gums planted in Melbourne’s Macleod in 1919.

Photographer and horticulturist Sarah Wood has been documenting avenues of honour for about five years and is now involved with the Avenues of Honour 1915-2015 project.

She says one of the most interesting aspects of these plantings is the role communities have played in establishing and maintaining them.

“Groups of people sat around tables all over the country; communities were united in this activity and it was ongoing,” she says.

“We are talking about years of care: people were planting saplings and even seeds, and who was going to water them every day and keep kangaroos away from them?”

But drought, compaction, neglect and the widening of roads and other forms of urban expansion have exacted their toll.

Peacock says Avenues of Honour 1915-2015 – established by Treenet, the urban tree research and education organisation based at the University of Adelaide’s Waite Arboretum – will also gather information about which avenues have done better than others.

Success, Peacock says, has depended on the suitability of the species selected (both exotics and natives) and the subsequent treatment of the site chosen. Even some of those avenues where trees have done well are coming to the end of the plants’ lives, with the focus now on how to replenish them.

Information gathered is to be shared on a website that was launched by Treenet last week.

The site (avenuesofhonour.org.au) maps existing avenues of honour (right down to the 100 oak trees that were recently planted in Willunga, south of Adelaide, in preparation for the Anzac centenary) and will provide a forum for people to discuss old avenues and propose new ones.

“Avenues of honour say a lot about our attitudes to life and death,” Peacock says.

“They talk about what we value, which trees we favour and what we destroy. These are locally cherished symbols that people really care about and now there’s a desire to continue the tradition, and also refresh it.”

People with information about existing avenues of honour, or those who are considering planting a new one, can email: research@avenuesofhonour.net.au.

Chautauqua Doing Its Part To Limit Sediment

CHAUTAUQUA – A plethora of flora is what’s in store for the Chautauqua Institution.

Recently, the Chautauqua Institution announced it has made plans to implement ecologically friendly landscaping practices this offseason. New practices include the construction of rain gardens and the designation of “no-mow zones.”

The promotion of practices such as “no-mow zones” are not new to the county. As the general population better understands humanity’s impact upon the environment, a greater number of county residents are doing their part to maintain an ecologically friendly lifestyle. According to Ryan Kiblin, Chautauqua Institution manager of grounds, garden and landscaping, the institution is happy to do its part.

Article Photos

The Fletcher Music Hall rain garden is the longest established rain garden in the Chautauqua Institution according to Ryan Kiblin.
P-J photo by Remington Whitcomb

No-mow zones have been established around the Chautauqua Institution grounds to help slow rain water as it gathers momentum flowing down hills on the way to the lake.
P-J photo by Remington Whitcomb

Informational signs have been placed around Chautauqua Institution explaining how rain gardens and permeable surfaces help mitigate sediment entering the lake.
P-J photo by Remington Whitcomb

Informational signs have been placed around Chautauqua Institution explaining how rain gardens and permeable surfaces help mitigate sediment entering the lake.
P-J photo by Remington Whitcomb

“We have a lot of steep hillsides in Chautauqua,” said Kiblin. “When you mow the lawn and it’s only a few inches long, it’s basically the same as a paved road. When it rains, all that rainwater gathers momentum, picks up sediment, and deposits it right into the lake. By allowing the grass to just grow, that gives you 12-18 inches of growth that slows that water down, creates some resistance, and gives the sediment a chance to settle out of it instead of rushing into the lake.”

Kiblin was quick to state that the institution is not “going to just stop mowing the lawn.” The institution has instead selected strategic locations which will best mitigate sediment flow into the lake, and the institution will do its best to make the zones attractive, as well.

“Instead of just leaving it unmowed, we’ve sculpted these areas,” said Kiblin. “The areas have paths cut through them so guests can walk past, and we’ve trimmed the edges of the roads, as well. From looking at the zones, it’s obvious that we’ve intentionally set these areas aside. It doesn’t just look like we forgot to mow.”

Kiblin said that when anything changes, people tend to question why, but so far no one on the grounds has been opposed to the no-mow zones.

“We’re not trying to save money on labor or fuel,” said Kiblin. “That’s not why we’re doing this. We’re doing this to save the lake.”

Additionally, the institution will be improving its stormwater management practices as well by building rain gardens – tiered terraces that use boulders and stones to slow down rainwater – reintroducing native species to the grounds and planting 11 new trees.

“The idea is to take this project along in baby steps,” said Kiblin. “We have a few rain gardens along the grounds, and we’ve done a few different buffer zones on the lake shore so far. It’s a matter of taking steps and showing people that we can make these changes in a small way, but they can have big effects on the lake. A lot of people are worried that these changes will limit use at the institution with regard to the lake and the grounds, but that’s simply not the case. These practices will help to ensure that Chautauqua stays beautiful so people can use it indefinitely.”

Kiblin was also quick to offer praise to Doug Conroe, Chautauqua Institution director of operations. According to Kiblin, Conroe has been promoting ecologically friendly practices around the lake for 15 years, however support was always limited. Now that many residents are able to see the problems that plague the lake and understand how human use has caused these problems, more and more people are willing to take steps to restore it.

“I’ve actually had homeowners from different areas on the lake stop me at (educational seminars) to tell me that they’re sorry they never better understood how they were impacting the lake, and have since installed a buffer zone on their shoreline, or installed a rain garden where their rain gutter drains. So what we’re doing here is affecting other areas of the lake. And that’s a true joy, to know that others want to follow our actions.”

A South Street garden of earthly delights, and others at Needham Garden Tour

Helen Peters doesn’t own your run-of-the-mill garden.

Her Old Colonial house on South Street is surrounded with birches, peonies, foxgloves, tiger lilies, stone paths, stone walls and a manmade waterfall that leads to a pond inhabited by frogs and koi.

The English country-style landscape was the result of five years of work. It’ll be one of six gardens featured in the 2013 Needham Garden Tour, hosted by the Needham Women’s Club and taking place from noon to 4 p.m. on June 9; tickets are available at Roche Bros./Sudbury Farms, Volante Farms, Babel’s Paint Decorating, Home Trends, Dedham Savings Bank, Prudential Advantage Real Estate and online at NeedhamWomensClub.org.

“The whole property was very different before we moved in. It was as a sleeping beauty that was still sleeping,” said Peters, who lives on South Street with her husband, her dog, and her foster daughter from Sudan.

Peters’ home sits atop a hill overlooking South Street. The garden is expansive, with walking trails running up the hill behind the house and down the hill to the street. The walls and steps consist of stone slabs that blend with the numerous flowerbeds to form a natural landscape.

She bought the home 20 years ago—the address won’t be revealed until the day of the garden tour—and found herself surrounded by steep hills and trees.

“I was in love with the house with all its nooks and crannies,” she said. “But we said to ourselves, ‘let’s do something with it.’”

Peters compared part of the process of transforming her untended yards into a landscaping achievement to an archeological dig. Workers were building raised garden walls, and as they dug they discovered garden walls and even a manmade pond underground, which Peters later renovated to the existing pond.

The most recent homeowner had had parts of the surrounding yards covered over. These buried “archeological” pieces were remnants of an old garden from a previous homeowner.

“This yard used to be spectacular,” said Peters.

Now, after five years of work, there’s more than enough to make a visitor stop and smell the roses.

Organizers hope those who see Peters’ garden may try something new in their own homes.

Susan Opton, who owns the Needham-based company Terrascapes Landscape Design, designed Peters’ garden and will be attending the Garden Tour to talk to visitors. A sharp observer may notice photos of Peters’ front and back gardens on the front page of Opton’s website, terrascapeslandscapedesign.com.

Of course, “every garden should fit the shape of the property,” said organizer Kate Maguire. Maguire added that local community organizations will also be participating by having individual planters on display. 

“We want the event to be more than just a tour,” said Maguire.

Bobbitts put years of work into gardens and landscape

Bobbitt garden

Bobbitt garden

The Bobbitt garden is located at 2280 Shawnee Trail.




Posted: Thursday, June 6, 2013 2:25 pm
|


Updated: 7:38 pm, Thu Jun 6, 2013.


Bobbitts put years of work into gardens and landscape

Rick and Dorothy Bobbitt bought their home at 2280 Shawnee Trail in spring of 2001. It was four years old with little landscaping and a gravel driveway. By the fall of that year, they had poured a concrete driveway and built a combination shed/shelter for entertaining and family gatherings.


Next came landscaping, including a large circular area in back which houses a variety of perennials as well as a water feature. A three-season porch was added with a small covered deck area for evening bird watching or just catching up on the day.

During the summer of 2009, the large barn at the back of the property was built. Most of the trees were added or moved over the years. Flower and vegetable garden beds were added and are very easy to maintain.

Rick built Dorothy a garden shed to match his barn and provided her a place to store garden tools and transplant materials. All improvements to the property were done primarily by the Bobbitts, with little help from professionals. Rain barrels have aided in watering.

Throughout the yard, you will find different areas to gather, relax or engage in a friendly game of horseshoes, corn hole or ladder golf. Rick discovered clever uses for clay pipe, including a table and chairs he made from the clay pipe.

Having been taught to never discard a flower, Dorothy once staked a flower until it grew four-feet tall before her father-in-law convinced her that it was a weed. Now she uses a transplant bed to divide and start new plants. Rick and Dorothy say the work has all been worth it and they love what they have created. Trial and error has been their best teacher.

email @ nradciff@circlevilleheraldcom

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Thursday, June 6, 2013 2:25 pm.

Updated: 7:38 pm.


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Bill’s Gardening Tips for June

Pest Patrol Duty is Back

Now is the time to be vigilant about the pest in our gardens. With the recent rains and cooler weather and now warming up we have quite a collection of pest attacking our gardens from all sides. We have the Fire Ants, Mosquitoes, chiggers, ticks, aphids, and a multitude of spiders and other creepy crawling critters. So lets attack these little pests one on one.

Mosquitoes

Boy are the mosquitoes out in force. This is part of being blessed by all that rain we have been enjoying. Now that mosquitoes are here let us protect ourselves from these flying little pest. On page 84 of my book “Gardening in the Texas Hill Country”, I have the solution.

First and the easiest is the white ceramic dish, water and Liquid Lemon Joy mosquito trap. This is really effective. However, please place the dish in an area away from where you are going to be, as this solution will attract the mosquitoes to it and therefore you if you sit next to it. So place the dish with the solution in it in another location some 25 to 50 feet away from the area where you will be. Fill a white ceramic dish with water adding several drops of Lemon Joy dishwashing soap and mix together. Mosquitoes will be attracted to it a drink the mixture. When they drink the solution they will die within fifteen feet of the dish. This solution is not harmful to pets or children. Is that cool or what, now you can enjoy being outside once again.

Fire Ants

One of the good things about a drought was there were no Fire Ants in our yards or gardens, now we that we have had some nice rains and the Fire Ants are back. There are some easy and effective ways to control them.

One of the best ways to control the Fire Ants in the yard and gardens is to apply Beneficial Nematodes. These little, they are microscopic, guys are called the “Marines” of their world.

They seek, kill, and destroy their enemies, and their enemies are Fire Ants, chiggers, and fleas. The difference in these guys and other solutions such as baits is that they go wherever the Fire Ants go, as they are after their food source. These Beneficial Nematodes are found in the garden centers, feed stores, or nurseries. Look for them in the refrigerators or ask the folks at the centers where they keep them. Instructions as to how to apply are on the box or the containers they come in.

Bugs in General

This recipe came from Sharon Cuyler who sent in to “Organic Gardening” this effective and inexpensive solution to our bugs in the garden. Sharon uses it effectively on ants, potato bugs, white flies and she says it even works on bugs she doesn’t know the names of.

The formula is simple, and approximate: 1 cup of water, 2 tablespoons of witch hazel, and 2 drops of liquid dish soap. She puts it in a spray bottle and uses it on everything, and it is safe for vegetables. She also sprays it around her house. Shelli Rosamond of Marble Falls, has been testing it as well, and says it is working for her. This is something that I have been looking for a very long time a solution to the bug control problem that is effective, inexpensive and easy to apply.

Aphids

Last year we had an abundance of Aphids attacking our plants and trees, as there was a shortage of Lady Bugs in the area to get control of the aphids. Last year the aphids were so bad that my Meyers lemon tree and my avocado trees were covered up and then there came the black residue from the infestation. Both of those trees were in serious trouble. No lemons were had and no avocadoes either. I used insecticidal soaps and pure water and some other products but to no avail. Two weeks ago, I was listening to John Dromgoole, of The Natural Gardener in Austin, on the radio and he had a caller with the same problem I had. John told his caller about a product called Serenade. I immediately bought some and tried it. Wow! One application and my trees are already responding in a very positive way. Many thanks John. This product is good for any fungus that attacks our gardens.

Remember: We have had a very unusual Spring even for the Texas Hill Country, and we have to be patient as the plants are just as confused as we are.

Till Next Month!

Keep your souls and your soles in your garden!

Remember the True Master Gardener: Jesus said, “I am the vine; my Father is the Gardener.” John 15:1

Have questions or comments? Contact Bill Luedecke at The Luedecke Group Realtors, P.O. Box 1632, Bertram, TX. 78605 (no Post Office in Oatmeal) or email bill@texasland.net. For additional gardening web sites, go to his web site; www.TexasLand.Net and click on links.

Winter gardening tips

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Gardening with a conscience – tips from expert George Long

Gardening with a conscience – tips from expert George Long

By George Daniel Long

Gardening with a conscience – tips from expert George Long

VIBE’S garden guru George Long, of Well Grounded Gardens, shares his tips for gardening with a conscience.

Ethical gardening can divide the horticultural community – on a small scale it can be effective and easy, but on a larger scale it can be impractical and take a lot of man power.

Wherever possible it is good to try and be environmentally friendly, for example; sourcing local products. Kentish Ragstone is quarried locally so you could use that as opposed to Cotswold Stone or Welsh Pennant.

Managing your garden organically can also be achieved. I have been asked many times recently how to tackle weeds and insects organically, so here are a few useful tips:

Insecticides

You can buy insecticidal soap like Savona but you can also make it yourself. Take three tablespoons of liquid, one tablespoon of vinegar and four litres of water and mix in a spray bottle. You can also use old bathroom soap and dissolve it in hot water but spray it on cold.

Companion Planting

Use companion plants which repel or distract pest next to ones you want to protect.
Tanacetum vulgare, Borage, Chives, Cabbage and French Marigolds repel certain pests and Yarrow attracts Hoverflies, Ladybirds and parasitic wasps which eat aphids.
If you have a snails or slugs, planting something like Hosta in a shaded corner will attract them and hopefully save other plants.

Nematodes

Nematodes are microscopic worms which feed on pests.

They are usually applied by adding to water and sprayed over damp soil. Nematodes will generally keep eating until they have exhausted their food source.

Various different nematodes are available that kill pests including: Slugs, Ants, Caterpillars and Vine Weevil.

Weeds

Weeds can be smothered with old News Shoppers, weed block or carpet.

Vinegar is a cheap and effective spray, It will not kill roots but some roots will not regenerate after the leaves are dead.

As with all weed killers, be careful: vinegar is not selective and may kill other plants it comes into contact with. Japanese Knotweed or Ground Elder as these are weeds that rapidly grow out of control and need more serious intervention.

Seasonal tips for June/July

  • Last chance to plant before summer heats up.
  • Water young plants well.
  • Dead head flowers to prolong display.
  • Feed lawns and mow regularly.
  • Cut down faded foliage of bulbs.
  • Leave water out for birds.

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Twinkle’s Garden | Tips for growing roses

Roses by far are one of my favorite flowers. So many sweet aromas, colors, petal structures and even sizes, sometimes roses get a bad wrap as the difficult child in the garden.

But really, roses are one of the most resilient plants you can place in your landscaping, bigger, brighter and more beautiful each year.

With these helpful tips, you’ll be on your way to a yard full of gorgeous blooms in no time at all.

  • Plant roses where they will receive at least five to six hours of sun a day.  Roses grown in shadier areas won’t thrive ultimately, and weaken as they grow.
  • Don’t overcrowd your plants. Make sure to dig a hole when you plant twice as big as you think it should be. Make sure you spread out each bush, as well.
  • If you are caring for already planted roses, then first things first. Prune any dead stems away and any weak growing stems. This will allow strength to build back up in the healthier parts of the plant.
  • If your plants are getting out of control by mid-summer, it’s OK to cut them back and give them some shape. Just don’t get crazy. Your plants will need the green leaves to keep their energy throughout the warmer months.
  • Roses are thirsty! Make sure you are diligent with your watering, soaking at least two to three times a week down to the roots, especially in a dry summer. Sprinkling can allow fungus to grow and won’t reach the roots, so makes sure your hose is placed where the roots can get a good drink of water.
  • Even with all the watering, roses can’t swim. So be careful to watch while you are watering to avoid creating a lake. Making sure there is adequate drainage is key.
  • Mulch is the perfect solution for conserving water and encouraging healthy rose bush growth. Allow and inch or so around the base of the plant and the mulch so your plant can breathe.
  • Roses need food. Feed your plants on a regular basis, and avoid any chemical-based fertilizers if you can. If you’re in harvesting your plants for any food use, you will definitely want to steer clear of any chemical fertilizers or pesticides.
  • At the beginning of summer, May and June, add a tablespoon of Epsom salts into your rose food to add a boost of magnesium sulfate. It’s like candy to your plants and will stimulate growth form the bottom of the bush.
  • Deadhead your blooms. If you want blooms to last throughout the spring and summer, clipping the old blooms will keep them from seeding out into rosehips. You’ll stop this three to four weeks prior to the first winter frost so new growth won’t be occur.

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Twinkle VanWinkle has over 20 years of professional cooking under her apron strings, feeding thousands of friends, family and other folks. She baked apple pies for the “Oprah Winfrey Show” and has appeared on Food Network’s “The Best Of…” Along with producing dynamic lifestyle content for LIN Media, she is a mother, urban gardener, chef, musician and social media fanatic.

Find out more on TwinkleVanWinkle.com or  Foodspotting, Tumblr and Twitter.  by Twinkle VanWinkle

What vegetables should you plant this month? Dan Gill’s garden tips for June

Vegetables to plant in June: cantaloupe, cucuzza, eggplant, luffa, okra, peanuts, hot peppers, pumpkin, Southern peas, sweet potato (slips), watermelons and heat-tolerant tomatoes. Although squash and cucumbers can be planted in June and July, production is difficult during midsummer due to pest problems.

Safety is important when mowing your lawn: Don’t use a power lawn mower when children are in the yard, even if they are well away from you. Mowers can throw objects considerable distances with great force, even into neighbors’ yards.

Prepare trees for hurricane season: Prune all weak, rotting or dead branches. Remove dead or rotten trees that might blow over in high winds.

Heat stroke isn’t fun: Adjust your gardening schedule to take advantage of cooler times of day. You know the drill, but it never hurts to have a reminder: Wear a wide brim hat, apply sunscreen often and don’t forget the mosquito repellent. Remember to drink plenty of water before, during and after you work.