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Simple ways to save water, money and your landscaping this summer

(BPT) – With many states facing drought this summer, homeowners across the country will be looking for ways to save their landscaping while conserving water at the same time. Even if you’re not in a drought-affected area, it pays to keep conservation in mind when it comes to watering outdoors. Using less water is good for the environment and your wallet.

Fortunately, maximizing the efficiency of your watering efforts and taking steps to conserve water outdoors can help trim your water bill this summer, even if you live in a severe drought area, such as in the western regions of the country. Here are simple ways to conserve water, save money and preserve your garden, lawn and landscaping this season:

Efficient, effective irrigation

Traditional watering methods for lawns, gardens and flower beds waste a lot of water through run-off, over-saturation and evaporation. Rather than spraying water over plants, use a method that delivers the right amount of water where it will do the most good – the roots of plants.

Drip irrigation systems, like those offered by Mister Landscaper, can help you water more effectively. These systems deliver water as close as possible to plant roots, allowing you to achieve better results with less water used. You’ll also lose less water to run-off and evaporation. Place the system on a timer, and you can also ensure you’re watering at optimum times of the day to reduce evaporation and waste. A starter kit with 50 linear feet of tubing – ample enough to handle most gardens and planting beds – costs less than $1 per foot. Visit www.misterlandscaper.com to learn more.

Water lawns, gardens and flower beds either early in the morning or as evening approaches to ensure you don’t lose moisture to the hot sun. And if a day is windy, hold off watering lawns altogether as the breeze could leave you watering the sidewalk or driveway, rather than your grass.

Reuse, recycle and preserve

Even during a drought, some rain and condensation will occur. Take steps to capture natural moisture. A rain barrel situated beneath a downspout ensures you can catch run-off from your home’s roof. While using barrel water may not be practical with most irrigation systems, it’s a great option for watering container gardens or even indoor plants. You can also use household water, such as water left over from boiling vegetables or pasta, to water potted plants. Just be sure to let the water cool completely before using it.

You can help plants retain more moisture by placing organic mulch around the roots. The mulch will also help keep down weeds that would compete with plants for much-needed moisture. Depending on where you live and the type of mulch you choose, you can buy a bag of mulch for just a few dollars.

Finally, adjusting the type and location of plants is a great way to grow a drought-resistant garden or landscaping bed. Check with your local agricultural extension or search online for naturally drought-resistant species that do well in your area. By planting these hardier varieties, you can help keep your environment green and growing through a long, dry summer – and avoid the money drain of high water bills.

May is Public Gardens Appreciation Month in Santa Barbara, California

As part of National Public Gardens Day on May 10 and throughout the month of May,  many of Santa Barbara’s garden treasures will offer discounts and activities, including a series of 10 free public Garden Talks featuring some of Santa Barbara’s most notable garden experts, listed below.

SANTA BARBARA’S EXTRAORDINARY CULTURAL LANDSCAPE:
People, Plants, Parks and Gardens
Thurday, May 9, 7:00pm, Faulkner Gallery, Santa Barbara Public Library
Susan Chamberlin, Virginia Hayes
Learn the story behind Santa Barbara’s rich horticultural history. Landscape historian and author Susan Chamberlin will share how cultural context and water, or the lack of it, shaped Santa Barbara’s unique landscape over the years. Virginia Hayes, Curator of Ganna Walska Lotusland and author, will talk about influential horticulturists and the plants they introduced to the Santa Barbara area.

FABULOUS HERBS FOR FLAVORFUL FOOD AND COMPOSTING SIMPLY DONE
Saturday, May 11, 10:00am – 12:30pm, Louise Lowry Davis Center, 1232 De la Vina
Presented by the UCCE Master Gardeners of Santa Barbara County Join Master Gardeners Steven Lewis and Katy Renner for an informative talk on preparing and selecting plants for your herb garden, unusual herbs, and tips for growing, harvesting, cooking and baking with your herbs. Learn simple steps for preparing your compost, how to incorporate com post into your garden bed preparation and some composting tips for culinary herb gardens.

FIRESCAPE GARDEN TOUR
Saturday, May 11, 1:00pm, 2411 Stanwood Drive/Route 192, corner of Mission Ridge Road. (Parking is allowed in the grass/dirt lot; do not parkat the Fire Station)
Presented by City of Santa Barbara Water Conservation Program and City Fire Department.
Join Jennifer Voss of Gardefacts Landscape Design and Care, and award-winning landscape designer Arianna Jansma for a tour of this firewise and water-wise garden. Learn how you can incorporate smart, beautiful firewise landscaping into your garden.

GROWING ROSES IN SANTA BARBARA
The Good, Bad Beautiful!
Tuesday, May 14, 7:00pm, Chase Palm Park Center, 236 E. Cabrillo Blvd
Presented by Dan Bifano and the Santa Barbara Rose Society
Everything you want and need to know about growing beautiful roses in Santa Barbara from noted rosarian Dan Bifano. Learn why Santa Barbara is the perfect place to grow roses, what locations are best for growing roses in your garden, proper preparation of a rose garden, organic rose gardening, and design tips such as height and bloom repeat.

HOW TO SAVE WATER AND HAVE AN OCEAN FRIENDLY FRONT YARD
Sat, May 18, 10:00am
12:00n, Louise Lowry Davis Center, 1232 De la Vina S treet
Presented by City of Santa Barbara Water Conservation Program and Parks and Recreation Department
Professionals will walk you through 3 gardens showcasing different approaches to water wise landscaping which can be incorporated into any front yard. The Water Wise Garden replaces turf with a diverse selection of water wise plants to add dimension and color to a front yard. The Subsurface Irrigation Lawn demonstrates how turf can be more efficiently watered with an irrigation system that delivers water right to the roots, significantly reducing evaporation and runoff. The Ocean Friendly Garden converted turfgrass to a native rain garden that receives water from a re- directed downspout.

THE TREES OF SANTA BARBARA:
A Global Collection
Wednesday, May 22, 7:00 pm, Chase Palm Park Center, 236 E. Cabrillo Blvd.
Bob Muller, presented by the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden
Gain a greater appreciation of the variety, origin, and horticultural aesthetics of the trees of Santa Barbara’s urban forest. Noted author and Director of Research at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, Bob Muller, will talk about the trees of Santa Barbara’s streets and parks – a legacy from the several plantsmen who contributed so much to the horticultural ambiance of our community.

SEEING ALICE THROUGH A DESIGNER’S EYE
Thursday, May 23, 7:00pm, Faulkner Gallery, Santa Barbara Public Library
Grant Castleberg and Billy Goodnick, presented by the City of Santa Barbara Parks and Recreation Department
Become a better garden designer by learning the fundamental visual concepts behind Alice Keck Park Memorial Garden, the jewel in the crown of Santa Barbara’s park system. Grant Castleberg, noted Landscape Architect who designed the park in 1976, will be joined by author and Landscape Architect Billy Goodnick for an evening of “Alice.” Grant will share some of Alice’s history and original design concepts and Billy will take you on a slide tour of Alice’s most beautiful planting combinations. Learn the how and why of Alice’s magic so you can take these ideas home to your own garden.

BACKYARD BEEKEEPING AND THE AMAZING HONEYBEE
Sat, May 25, 10:00am – 12:00p, Louise Lowry Davis Center
Presented by the UCCE Master Gardeners of Santa Barbara County
Join avid gardeners and beekeepers Barbara Hughes and Kathy Southard to learn about the history of beekeeping, the life of the honey bee, plants that bees love, and how to get started in beekeeping.

Native Plant Salvage offers class on sustainable landscaping

“Naturescaping for Water Wildlife” will be offered 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., May 11 at the First United Methodist Church, 1224 Legion Way SE, Olympia.

A classroom session will be followed by a field trip to three unique, local private gardens; bus transportation will be provided.
Professional landscape designer Linda Andrews and Erica Guttman of WSU’s Native Plant Salvage Project will lead the class.

Topics include how to make a landscaping plan; design ideas for outdoor living spaces; managing drainage, slopes and other trouble spots; how to reduce unnecessary lawn; how to create habitat for birds and butterflies; and selecting water-wise plants for all four seasons.

The class is free, but advance registration is required as space is limited. For details and registration call 360-867-2166 or email nativeplantsalvage@gmail.com. Register online at www.streamteam.info. The class is co-sponsored by Thurston County Stream Team.

Do-It-Yourself gardening, landscaping series offered

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Jerry Kluver, host of “Get Growing,” will offer tips for choosing the right plants for gardening and landscaping projects Saturday, May 18. The program, as well as two others, are offered through a partnership between Rock Renew and ISU Extension. (Submitted Photo)

Rock Renew and Iowa State University Extension will be hosting a series of do-it-yourself workshops this Saturday and next Saturday. The programs will be focused on how to garden and landscape like the pros.

The series consists of three sessions. The first, slated for 10 a.m. to noon this Saturday, May 11, will focus on hardscape. The second, which will take place 9 to 11 a.m. next Saturday, May 18, will focus on raised gardens.

Both sessions will provide how-to instruction, as well as tips on selection and products to enhance a property’s curb appeal. In the 1 to 2:30 p.m. session next Saturday, “Get Growing” host Jerry Kluver will present a session on landscaping and plant selection.

Participants will also receive special offers for products demonstrated during the sessions. Space is limited for the program. For more information, or to register, visit www.rockandrenew.org online, or call (641) 792-6432.

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‘America’s Romance with the English Garden’

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Thomas Mickey loves gardens and his new book “America’s Romance with the English Garden,” published by Ohio University Press, is a celebration of that love as well as a comprehensive history of how and why this county has so fully embraced the concept of an English garden.

The longtime Rye resident said he has been a garden aficionado for more than 25 years. The book is not, however, a gardening manual, although some tips can be gleaned from its pages. Rather, it is a history of how new technologies in printing and distribution of seed catalogues brought the products, influence and know-how of a traditional English garden to America, and of the ways we embraced the ideas of rolling, sweeping lawns, and using flowers to create beautiful living landscapes in this country.

Go DO

Thomas J. Mickey, author of “America’s Romance with the English Garden,” is scheduled to visit Barnes Noble, Crossings at Fox Run in Newington on June 1; the Discover Portsmouth Center, 10 Middle St., Portsmouth, on June 8; and, Rye Public Library, 581 Washington Road, Rye, on June 13.

“I have been writing about gardening for 17 years,” Mickey said. “I have written hundreds of articles on gardening and earned a graduate certificate in landscaping. I have a public relations background so got interested in the historical aspect of gardening. This book will not tell you how to grow tomatoes. It will tell you that to be a true English kitchen garden; tomatoes must be grown behind your house. This is the story of American gardening as told through the words and images of the seed and nursery catalogs of the 19th century.”

In an excerpt from his book, Mickey explains the concept of an English garden by saying “Here, the meaning of the phrase ‘English garden’ dates to the 19th century. Its landscape includes a lawn, carefully sited trees and shrubs, individual garden beds with native and exotic plants, and perhaps, out back, a vegetable or kitchen garden. The lawn and the use of exotic plants are relics of the English garden style we have loved for the past 200 years.”

Mickey made a proposal at the Smithsonian Institution, seeking and being awarded a grant to study the history of gardening. It is from that study that his beautifully depicted book evolved. An upcoming talk at the Smithsonian is in the planning stages, Mickey said.

“This book shows how the seed companies taught America to garden,” Mickey said. “They had to sell us on the English garden design and they did it very well. We use that design now from Maine to California.”

Plans are in process for a virtual book tour, a unique way for people to get a look at the book. Most of the illustrations come from original seed catalogs, printed after 1860.Other photos were taken by local photographer Ralph Morang. At the end of each chapter is a photo by Morang of a plant featured in that chapter.

Mickey is a professor emeritus of communication studies at Bridgewater State University. He is a graduate of Boston University, the University of Iowa and Harvard University’s Landscape Institute. He is a master gardener and has been a columnist for the Brockton Enterprise, the Quincy Patriot Ledger and for Seacoast Media Group.

His other books are “Best Garden Plants for New England,” Deconstructing Public Relations” and “Sociodrama: An Interpretive Theory for the Practice of Public Relations.”

“America’s Romance with the English Garden” will be available in early May and can be found through Amazon, Barnes Noble, and locally at RiverRun and Water Street bookstores. For details, visit Mickey’s garden blog at www.americangardening.net.

Mickey will be at Barnes Noble in Newington for a book signing event on June 1. He will be at the Portsmouth Discovery Center on June 8, and will give a talk at the Rye Public Library on June 13.

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Photos: Diggin’ the Arts Returns to the Florida Botanical Gardens

Diggin’ the Arts returned to the Florida Botanical Gardens Sunday. The gardens are well known for their beautiful flowers, vines and landscaping but art continues to be an integral part of the gardens

Sunday’s festivities included hands-on art and gardening demonstrations and activities by area art centers and museums. Visitors learned how to make melting orchid pots, transformed leaves with decoupage,  learned how to grow orchids and more.

As visitors walked around the colorful floral paths of the gardens, plein-air artists captured the scenery on canvas. Local artists participated in the non-juried painting competition.

Visitors could participate to win rain barrels, which were specially created for the event by area museums and art centers. 

The Museum of Fine Arts of St. Petersburg, Morean Arts Center for Clay, Florida Craftsmen, Dunedin Fine Art Center, the Dali Museum, Suntan Art Center and the Beach Art Center participated in the event. 

Have photos from Florida Botanical Gardens?  Click the upload photo button to add them to this gallery.

Sign up for the Largo Patch email newsletter to get our top local headlines, blog posts, announcements and event listings delivered to your inbox.

If you go:

The Florida Botanical Gardens, 12520 Ulmerton Rd., are open daily 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. Admission is free. 

Ashlander will help you go gray

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A great deal of household water can be recycled and piped outside for gardens and landscaping under a state law set up last year, and Ashland aquatic ecologist Malena Marvin, who installs graywater systems, will offer do-it-yourself classes in May.

“It’s easy to do, but it’s also easy to do wrong,” says Marvin, who has started the 100 Houses Graywater Challenge and is trying to get city planners interested in helping and promoting it.

“It’s important we do these right and that, if you do it yourself, that you have a consultant work with you,” she says, “so it will become talked about and accepted as a normal, good idea. We don’t want to have people winging it, then having problems, so then people think graywater is a problem.”

Laundry to Landscape

Marvin will offer a hands-on,

DIY “Laundry to Landscape” workshop May 17-19. Participants will learn to modify a washing machine’s drain line, set up

irrigation and design their

landscape to make the best use of the water. The workshop costs $135. Register at 541-821-7260 or www.elementaldesignbuild.com.

Graywater is household waste water diverted from one of four sources — washing machines, bathtubs or showers, bathroom sinks and kitchen sinks — and reused for irrigation. Water from toilets, dishwashers and garbage disposals can’t be used. Graywater can be used on trees, landscaping plants, compost, lawns and gardens, but not for edible root crops such as carrots and beets.

Until last year, graywater reuse was not legal in Oregon. In 2009, following the lead of several other states, the state Legislature passed a bill directing the Department of Environmental Quality to set standards and create a permit structure for graywater reuse and disposal systems. The agency completed the process in 2011 and began issuing permits last spring.

Costs for the permits vary depending on the type of system being installed. Costs and other details can be seen on the DEQ’s website at www.deq.state.or.us/wq/reuse/docs/graywater/PermitsQA.pdf.

Showing the system in her backyard, Marvin, 35, shows how the flow is controlled by a three-way valve inside the house, so waste water can either be sent to plants or to the normal sewage or septic system.

Waste water travels to landscaping through 1-inch high-density polyethylene pipe. In Marvin’s system, the water goes into 4-foot-long “mulch basins” that are filled with bark dust. Roots of nearby plants suck up the precious liquid, she says.

Marvin, who charges $595 to install a graywater system, was trained in graywater design in California. She says she plans to get a contracting license soon.

Marvin does consulting on the systems and notes she can help with the DEQ paperwork and site plans. Permits require homeowners to calculate how much water the plants will use, she says, and that determines how much water you can divert to yards.

They also require waste water to be 4feet above the summer water table. The systems are turned off in winter.

Marvin built an outdoor shower with mostly recycled materials and will hook that up with her graywater system.

“It’s about how to blend ecological design with esthetics,” she says. “It’s a great opportunity to interact more meaningfully with our own landscape.”

Marvin will offer a hands-on, DIY “Laundry to Landscape” workshop May 17-19.

Participants will learn to modify a washing machine’s drain line, set up irrigation and design their landscape to make the best use of the water.

The workshop costs $135. Register at 541-821-7260 or www.elementaldesignbuild.com.

John Darling is a freelance writer living in Ashland. Email him at jdarling@jeffnet.org.

We reserve the right to remove any content at any time from this Community, including without limitation if it violates the Community Rules. We ask that you report content that you in good faith believe violates the above rules by clicking the Flag link next to the offending comment or fill out this form. New comments are only accepted for two weeks from the date of publication. All comments are subject to moderation.

Beware Of Unwanted Garden Pests During Spring Cleanup

SOUTHFIELD (WWJ) – With the arrival of spring, homeowners and gardeners are beginning the task of cleaning up their yards and gardens to prepare for the growing season. Spring also can bring rain and wind, knocking down branches and trees.

Gardeners, landscapers, and anyone working outside this spring should know that tree branches, firewood,and cleared brush can harbor invasive insects and diseases, making proper use or disposal critical to preventing the spread of tree-killing pests.

Pests can hitchhike undetected on firewood and brush, starting new infestations in locations hundreds of miles away. These infestations can destroy forests, lower property values and cost huge sums of money to control.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, estimates for damage costs in urban areas for just one invasive pest, the Asian longhorned beetle, range from $1.7 billion for nine selected cities to $669 billion for the entire United States.

“Even experts can’t always detect a couple of pin-head size insect eggs or a few microscopic fungus spores hidden in wood. However, these tiny threats are enough to destroy an entire forest,” said Leigh Greenwood, Don’t Move Firewood campaign manager.

“Disposing of tree debris, brush, and other yard waste either on site or through municipal composting are the best ways that homeowners can prevent spreading tree-killing pests as they clean up their yards and gardens this spring.”

Tips for spring cleanup:

• If you don’t want to keep your firewood until next winter, don’t be tempted to take it with you when camping, and don’t bring it along on any road trips. Instead, you can give it to your next-door neighbor, burn or chip it on site, or dispose of it locally.

• Hire a tree service or rent a tree chipper to shred fallen trees and branches and brush into mulch for your own garden beds and landscaping projects.

• Many areas now offer a yard waste recycling program. Contact your municipal solid waste management department for information specific to your area.

• If a yard waste recycling or composting program is not available and you cannot keep it on site, brush, logs, and branches should be disposed of in a local landfill.

• Take care to respect all state and local regulations on the movement of firewood and other unprocessed wood – some areas are subject to serious fines for violations.

• During your spring cleanup, if you notice an insect or tree disease you don’t recognize, take a photo or obtain a specimen of it, and compare it to website photos of the suspected pest.

To learn more about how to prevent forest pests from destroying forests, visit www.dontmovefirewood.org.

 Beware Of Unwanted Garden Pests During Spring Cleanup

Beware Of Unwanted Garden Pests During Spring Cleanup

SOUTHFIELD (WWJ) – With the arrival of spring, homeowners and gardeners are beginning the task of cleaning up their yards and gardens to prepare for the growing season. Spring also can bring rain and wind, knocking down branches and trees.

Gardeners, landscapers, and anyone working outside this spring should know that tree branches, firewood,and cleared brush can harbor invasive insects and diseases, making proper use or disposal critical to preventing the spread of tree-killing pests.

Pests can hitchhike undetected on firewood and brush, starting new infestations in locations hundreds of miles away. These infestations can destroy forests, lower property values and cost huge sums of money to control.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, estimates for damage costs in urban areas for just one invasive pest, the Asian longhorned beetle, range from $1.7 billion for nine selected cities to $669 billion for the entire United States.

“Even experts can’t always detect a couple of pin-head size insect eggs or a few microscopic fungus spores hidden in wood. However, these tiny threats are enough to destroy an entire forest,” said Leigh Greenwood, Don’t Move Firewood campaign manager.

“Disposing of tree debris, brush, and other yard waste either on site or through municipal composting are the best ways that homeowners can prevent spreading tree-killing pests as they clean up their yards and gardens this spring.”

Tips for spring cleanup:

• If you don’t want to keep your firewood until next winter, don’t be tempted to take it with you when camping, and don’t bring it along on any road trips. Instead, you can give it to your next-door neighbor, burn or chip it on site, or dispose of it locally.

• Hire a tree service or rent a tree chipper to shred fallen trees and branches and brush into mulch for your own garden beds and landscaping projects.

• Many areas now offer a yard waste recycling program. Contact your municipal solid waste management department for information specific to your area.

• If a yard waste recycling or composting program is not available and you cannot keep it on site, brush, logs, and branches should be disposed of in a local landfill.

• Take care to respect all state and local regulations on the movement of firewood and other unprocessed wood – some areas are subject to serious fines for violations.

• During your spring cleanup, if you notice an insect or tree disease you don’t recognize, take a photo or obtain a specimen of it, and compare it to website photos of the suspected pest.

To learn more about how to prevent forest pests from destroying forests, visit www.dontmovefirewood.org.

 Beware Of Unwanted Garden Pests During Spring Cleanup

Beware Of Unwanted Garden Pests During Spring Cleanup

SOUTHFIELD (WWJ) – With the arrival of spring, homeowners and gardeners are beginning the task of cleaning up their yards and gardens to prepare for the growing season. Spring also can bring rain and wind, knocking down branches and trees.

Gardeners, landscapers, and anyone working outside this spring should know that tree branches, firewood,and cleared brush can harbor invasive insects and diseases, making proper use or disposal critical to preventing the spread of tree-killing pests.

Pests can hitchhike undetected on firewood and brush, starting new infestations in locations hundreds of miles away. These infestations can destroy forests, lower property values and cost huge sums of money to control.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, estimates for damage costs in urban areas for just one invasive pest, the Asian longhorned beetle, range from $1.7 billion for nine selected cities to $669 billion for the entire United States.

“Even experts can’t always detect a couple of pin-head size insect eggs or a few microscopic fungus spores hidden in wood. However, these tiny threats are enough to destroy an entire forest,” said Leigh Greenwood, Don’t Move Firewood campaign manager.

“Disposing of tree debris, brush, and other yard waste either on site or through municipal composting are the best ways that homeowners can prevent spreading tree-killing pests as they clean up their yards and gardens this spring.”

Tips for spring cleanup:

• If you don’t want to keep your firewood until next winter, don’t be tempted to take it with you when camping, and don’t bring it along on any road trips. Instead, you can give it to your next-door neighbor, burn or chip it on site, or dispose of it locally.

• Hire a tree service or rent a tree chipper to shred fallen trees and branches and brush into mulch for your own garden beds and landscaping projects.

• Many areas now offer a yard waste recycling program. Contact your municipal solid waste management department for information specific to your area.

• If a yard waste recycling or composting program is not available and you cannot keep it on site, brush, logs, and branches should be disposed of in a local landfill.

• Take care to respect all state and local regulations on the movement of firewood and other unprocessed wood – some areas are subject to serious fines for violations.

• During your spring cleanup, if you notice an insect or tree disease you don’t recognize, take a photo or obtain a specimen of it, and compare it to website photos of the suspected pest.

To learn more about how to prevent forest pests from destroying forests, visit www.dontmovefirewood.org.

 Beware Of Unwanted Garden Pests During Spring Cleanup