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Impatiens, a shade garden workhorse, goes lame

The official advice is that if your impatiens melted and died abruptly last year, skip them for this growing season. Even if they didn’t, planting them will be a big risk as humid and moist conditions — read, the Washington summer — will promote the downy mildew in the months ahead.

Finding them might also be tough: The disease is so devastating that some nurseries are not selling them in 2013 and major growers have cut back impatiens production drastically.

This is a big deal in the flower trade. In the past 50 years impatiens have become one of the major bedding annuals by volume and dollar value as breeders figured out how to grow impatiens that were bushier and had more flower punch.

Homeowners and commercial landscapers developed a large appetite for them.

“It’s one of our most popular annuals, second for us only to petunias,” said Gary Mangum, whose company in Elkridge, Bell Nursery, supplies Home Depot retailers in much of the Mid-Atlantic. His growers have reduced impatiens production by more than 50 percent this spring.

Meadows Farms, a major garden center retailer with 22 locations in the region, announced it was not selling disease-prone impatiens this year. Usually, the plant represents 30 percent of its sales in annuals.

“People don’t understand the extent of the problem,” said Barry Perlow, a designer at Meadow Farms Landscaping in Chantilly. “By planting them now, they’ll be compounding the problem. The spores live for years.”

Actually, even if everyone were to stop growing impatiens — an unlikely scenario — a moratorium might do little to block the disease, said Margery Daughtrey, a plant pathologist at Cornell University, because its spores appear to survive on other host plants. One of them is the native jewelweed, that rangy, orange-flowered wildflower found along streambanks and noted for its coiled, explosive seed capsules.

Daughtrey said the golden age of the impatiens may be over.

“Long-term, I think we’ll see impatiens being a minor bedding plant instead of a major bedding plant,” she said. “This is something that has changed it from a plant with almost no diseases or insect problems to a plant with a real Achilles’ heel.”

The long-term solution might be for hybridizers to breed resistant strains but “we are a long way from getting resistant . . . varieties,” said Mary Ann Hansen, a plant pathologist at Virginia Tech. “We need to learn a different approach, not planting those large beds of a monoculture.”

The fungal disease, which surfaced in Europe a decade ago, showed up in commercial greenhouses in the United States soon after, but was controlled by fungicides unavailable to consumers. The disease appeared in gardens in New York in 2009 and by 2011 it was widespread, discovered in California, the Midwest, Florida and the Northeast. It hit our region last year.

‘Garden of the Month’ awards to begin in May

LOCK HAVEN – The annual “Garden of the Month” award program, sponsored by the Dogwood Circle Garden Club of Lock Haven and The Express, will present its first award in May. This year is the 19th consecutive year for this popular community event.

The program recognizes area gardeners who live within a 10-mile radius of Lock Haven. This year’s garden categories include: commercial landscaping, pond gardens, porch and patio standouts, small eye-catching additions to the gardener’s landscaping as well as the usual street-front gardens. In order to be considered, any garden from these categories must be visible from street or alleyway.

Each month two different club members will judge and select the winning garden from nominations received. The owners of the selected garden will be asked if they wish to accept the award before it is presented. Owners of the honored garden will receive a commemorative certificate, a photograph of the owner and garden will be featured in The Express and photographs of the garden will be posted on the club’s website. In addition, the “Garden of the Month” sign will be placed in the winning garden and remain on the property for a month, until the next garden is honored.

Factors considered in judging gardens are: seasonally appropriate; street/curb appeal; variety of plants used; use of color and texture; overall design flow (height, form, harmony); integration of plantings with architectural features; and originality.

Enhancing the community, promoting community spirit and making the public aware of the relationship between landscaping and property value have been goals of the garden award program since its inception in 1994. The Dogwood Circle Garden Club is looking forward to another exciting and colorful season and the opportunity to recognize and acknowledge the pride and commitment of local gardeners.

Nominations for the month of May are welcome and can be submitted by calling May’s judges at 748-7334 or 748-8379.

For more information on the Dogwood Circle Garden Club, visit www.lhgardenclub.com.

The Garden Club of Forest Hills grows

Some memorable dates for the Garden Club of Forest Hills:

• 1923: The club was formed with a dozen women who called it the East Edgewood Acres Garden Unit. The group changed to its present name in 1938.

• 1933: The club joined the Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania.

• 1934: A delegation of members petitioned Forest Hills Borough Council to acquire land that became Forest Hills Park. Council bought the 26-acre tract for $25,000.

• 1936: In July, the club received a letter from council authorizing the garden club to assume the responsibility of planning and landscaping the park. In November, the club hired landscape architect Ezra C. Stiles to plan the park.

• 1942: Activities were directed toward the war effort, and victory gardens were planted. Trees and money were donated toward the construction of a Blue Star Memorial Highway marker and plantings located at the Irwin exit of the Pennsylvania Turnpike commemorating members of the U.S. military.

• 1949: Blueprints were drawn for a landscape design for the Forest Hills Junior High School by landscape architect Ralph E. Griswold; club members bought and planted trees and shrubs.

• 1982: The club was awarded the Hunt Trophy by the Pittsburgh Civic Garden Center for outstanding and exceptional community service activities.

• 1990: Since the white flowering dogwood is the club flower, then-club president Barbara Momo started the Dogwood Award. A dogwood pin is given each year to a club member who goes above and beyond club duties.

• 1991: The club was again awarded the Hunt Trophy.

• 1993: Members cleaned a hillside inside the entrance to the Forest Hills Park and started the Hillside Garden, which members have taken care of ever since.

• 2008: The club received a Community Greening Award from the Pennsylvania Horticulture Society.

• 2012: The club donated $1,968 to organizations in the Pittsburgh community, such as the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy and the National Aviary, Forest Hills emergency service providers and state scholarships.

Pasco, Hernando gardening notebook for April 17

Gardening | notebook

Plants and markets

Fresh Friday Night Farmer’s Market, 5 to 9 p.m. Friday at Railroad Square in downtown New Port Richey (on Nebraska Avenue between Grand Boulevard and Adams Street). Food trucks will make their debut at the market, parked on Missouri Avenue at Cavalaire Square. Vendors will sell produce, plants and specialty foods such as fish, meats, cheeses, bakery items, jellies and jams, honey, nuts, coffee and ethnic foods. This seasonal market will continue every Friday until April 26. For information, visit www.nprmainstreet.com.

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Longleaf Farmers Market, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. every Saturday in downtown Longleaf, off Starkey Boulevard and State Road 54, New Port Richey.

Suncoast Co-op offers fresh, locally grown, chemical-free produce. Register online at suncoastcoop.locallygrown.net to place your order; orders may be picked up from noon to 2 p.m. Saturdays at the Habitat for Humanity ReStore, 4131 Madison St., New Port Richey. The Suncoast Cafe, open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays at the ReStore, serves locally roasted organic coffee, homemade teas and baked goods.

Baker House plant sale and open house, 9 a.m. to noon this Saturday and the third Saturday of the month, October through May. The historic Baker House is at 5744 Moog Road, behind Centennial Park Branch Library. Plants for sale by Elfers Centennial Garden Club. For information, call (727) 372-9954.

Hernando County Farmers Market runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays at 2450 U.S. 19, Spring Hill.

Spring Hill Garden Club’s Plant Nursery is open from 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays and Mondays at 1489 Parker Ave., off Spring Hill Drive (four-tenths of a mile from U.S. 19). Local plants for sale; people may also visit the nearby Nature Coast Botanical Gardens, the “best kept secret in Hernando County,” which is open daily from sunup to sundown. For information, call (352) 683-9933 or visit www.naturecoastgardens.com.

Seminars

Common Garden Insects, 10:30 a.m. April 24 at the Spring Hill Branch Library, 9220 Spring Hill Drive. It is unrealistic and even unwise to strive for an insect-free yard. Learn which bugs are helpful in keeping other pests in check, and learn how to identify and control insect populations in your garden. No registration necessary. Sponsored by Hernando County Extension Services. For information, call Sylvia Durell at (352) 540-6230.

Bats: Creatures of the Night Garden, 10 a.m. April 27 at Home Depot, 10017 U.S. 19, Port Richey. Learn how to welcome insect-eating bats into your garden by providing food, water and shelter. Call Pasco County Cooperative Extension at (352) 518-0156.

• Plant Propagation Made Easy, 5:30 p.m. April 29 at Hernando County Extension Services, 1653 Blaise Drive, Brooksville. This program will demonstrate the secrets of growing plants from cuttings, seeds and division. No registration required. For information, contact urban horticulture agent Jim Moll at (352) 754-4433.

Rain Gardens, 9 to 11 a.m. May 4 at Pasco County Extension, Clayton Hall, 36702 State Road 52, Dade City. Design ideas, information on what plants work best and ideas for where to create a rain garden in your landscape. This free seminar is taught by a local Master Gardener. Call Pasco County Cooperative Extension at (352) 518-0156.

Celebrate Earth Day

New Port Richey: Vendors showcase the wide array of earth-friendly businesses and organizations in the west Pasco area at the New Port Richey Environmental Committee celebration from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday in the courtyard between City Hall and New Port Richey Public Library on Main Street. For more information, contact Kacey Atkinson at (727) 809-2306 or by email at kaceyatkinson84@gmail.com.

Spring Hill: The Spring Hill Garden Club and the Hernando Chapter of the Florida Native Plant Society will hold an Earth Day celebration from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday in the Nature Coast Botanical Gardens, 1489 Parker Ave. in Spring Hill. Master gardener Rita Grant will talk about “Wildlife in Your Landscape,” while Florida-friendly landscaping coordinator Sylvia Durell will discuss “Gardeners and the Gift of Water.” Tours of the botanical gardens will be available; and Brownies from Girl Scout Troop 317 will plant marigolds. No admission fee, but donations are greatly appreciated. Call (352) 683-9933 or visit www.naturecoastgardens. com.

Crews Lake Park: Join the Pasco County Cooperative Extension at Earth Day, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 27 at Crews Lake Park, 16739 Crews Lake Drive, Shady Hills. The Extension will offer gardening activities for kids and adults, rain barrel workshops at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. and the worm composting workshop at noon. Pre-registration required for workshops. $10 per rain barrel; 1 per household limit. For more information or to register, call (352) 518-0156.

Xeriscaping: A garden for the bottom line

In this era of conservation and sustainability, it seems indulgent and rather irresponsible to douse lawns and gardens unnecessarily.

That notion is spreading as one word keeps coming up on landscaping blogs and at garden club discussions over trends of the new millennium: drought.

And as Kamloops residents begin receiving new water meter bills this year, a reactive hyper vigilance over consumption may finally be the catalyst for a new wave in low water landscaping.

“The water meter is a good teacher in the sense that once you decide that you’re paying for every drip of water that runs down your driveway you start to become a little more aware,” said Rae Wilson, Kamloops Garden Club president.

Awareness may fiscal rather than environmental, but it’s still expected to further popularize the landscaping method of xeriscaping.

Pronounced “zair-i-scape,” the term combines the Greek word “xeros,” meaning dry, and “scape” for view to mean “water conservation through creative landscaping.”

The style of low water gardening is a relatively new concept in the mainstream but one that’s been on the City of Kamloops radar for 20 years.

“It’s one of my favourite topics. I love xeriscaping,” said Karla Hoffman, City of Kamloops integrated pest management co-ordinator.

Hoffman’s been in charge of educating the public on the low water gardening through workshops and brochures for years.

But so far, the effort hasn’t made a dent in the city’s water consumption, which is well above the national average.

“That’s partially why the water meters are moving ahead,” said Hoffman. “Even though there has been the education about it folks here tend to water their lawns a lot.”

The average Canadian uses 326 litres of water per day but according to City stats, the average Kamloops resident uses about 850 litres of water per day, peaking during the summer to a whopping 1,750 litres of water per person per day.

Eighty per cent of the water consumed in the summer is used outdoors to water grass as well as hose driveways and wash vehicles, according to the City.

And it’s not like the region is drowning in precipitation to make up for it. Kamloops receives about 21.8 cm of rainfall per year while Kelowna receives 29.8 cm and Vancouver receives 155.5 cm.

Xeriscaping originated with the Denver Colorado Water Department in 1981.

The City of Kamloops was not far behind with a demonstration garden at McArthur Island Park established in the mid 1990s and another at a water booster station on Westsyde’s Harrington Road planted in 2011.

Perhaps it’s taken a while to take off because it evokes notions of brown, brittle flora, thistles, tumbleweed and of course cacti.

A true xeriscape garden is no colourless affair however, as proven by City gardens that bloom with brilliant greens, yellows and reds in lush terrain. In fact xeriscaping can be applied to any form of garden, said Hoffman.

“It can be very, very attractive. You can apply it to a Japanese Zen garden, you can apply it to a traditional appearing garden, you can have your southwest style.

“You don’t have to go with just the yuccas and rocks and whatnot. It can actually be fairly lush looking just by choosing the right plants and putting them in the right spot.”

Xeriscaping incorporates seven principles, among them turf planning, appropriate plant selection and efficient irrigation.

But both Wilson and Hoffman say their favourite tip for effectiveness and simplicity is the use of mulch.

“Most water loss is through evaporation unless there’s some sort of mulch there to keep it place,” said Hoffman.

“And it also helps to keep weeds under control, so mulch is just a good way to go,” said Wilson.

Perfectly good and free mulch is right under our noses, but we consistently throw it away, said Wilson.

“A mistake people make is they cut the grass and take it up to the landfill,” he said. “It’s free mulch and people haul it all the way up to the hill and they go buy mulch. And acts as fertilizer because that’s all grass is, is nitrogen.

“A lot of it’s practical. Grandma did that but we just forgot about it.”

The amount of work needed to xeriscape a traditional garden runs the gamut from a few simple changes to entirely new landscape.

That said however, immediate and major improvements are possible by minimizing traditional lawns.

But try telling an average Canadian and watch the look of horror spread over his face.

The North American love affair with the lawn goes back to the early 19th century.

A famous myth has Thomas Jefferson planting the first American lawn at Monticello in 1806. Although untrue, the story reflects the real reason behind the early popularity of lawns — stature.

Since it took so much effort to tend, grass turf was typically reserved for the upper class. When the everyman saw an opportunity to emulate the gentry without all the labour, he jumped on board.

Thus lawns really took off in 1830 with the invention of the lawnmower.

Today, lawns are the most irrigated crop in the U.S. covering more than 40 million acres, as determined by NASA through satellite images.

Many conscientious gardeners have replaced broad swaths of lawn with smaller patches and covered the remaining grounds with native, drought tolerant plants including indigenous grass, shrubbery and trees.

The change turns the lawn into an accent on the landscape rather than the dominant element.

For those not ready to undertake a complete make over, however, becoming more knowledgeable and aware of existing landscape is a good start.

Two simple steps that could make a substantial difference are altering irrigation to match plants’ actual water requirements and making adjustments to minimize overspray onto hard surfaces.

Wilson suggests longer sprinkler stints a one to two times a week rather than every other day when the City permits it. That way longer roots form, which allows grass to access deeper wells of moisture from the ground.

Hoffman will provide more in depth methods to reduce water consumption during a City of Kamloops xeriscaping workshop at McArthur Island’s xeriscape demonstration garden on May 15.

The course is $15 and participants can register online at www.city.kamloops.bc.ca.

Hoffman said she’s been encouraged by the workshop’s increasing attendance over the years.

“It’s always the one that’s the best attended,” she said. “Sometimes we have wait lists and put extra ones one.”

No one wants an unattractive terrain, said Hoffman, but there are ways to maintain a luxuriant look without luxurious indulgence.

“If we can do both — have a nice landscape and conserve water — than that’s the way to go.”

HOW TO GET STARTED ON XERISCAPING

The City of Kamloops provides extensive advice on planning your own xeriscape garden on its website. Here are few steps to get your started.

Take an inventory

* Sketch a simple bird’s-eye view of your property.

* Take inventory, walk around your yard and note what works well and what could change.

* Measure and locate all elements that must remain (property lines, fences, driveways, walkways, retaining walls, utilities).

* Identify conditions that will affect planting and water usage (sun, wind, shade, slopes, drainage, soil variations).

* Note views you wish to maintain or eliminate and where an irrigation system could be connected.

Make a with list

* Determine what each member of the household would like from the available outdoor space (recreation space, a place for relaxation and entertaining, a showpiece, storage).

* Prioritize the wish list and decide when you would like to complete the project, and how much it will cost.

* Expand your horizons. Go for a drive and make notes on other yards. Visit the xeriscape demonstration garden at McArthur Island, as well as garden centres and nurseries.

* Consult magazines, the library and home and garden shows for ideas

Mobilewalla: Apps to help you in the garden

Whether or not spring has sprung in your neck of the woods, you still can start planning your summer garden with these helpful apps focused on growing flowers, vegetables and fruits and helping you design your landscaping.

For Apple

Fine Gardening (Free): Fine Gardening Magazine enlists designers, nurserymen and horticulturists to bring readers the best advice on how to plant and grow stylish gardens. (iPad only; the first issue is free, then it’s $29.99 per year.) (Mobilewalla Score: 90/100)

Landscaper’s Companion – Plant Gardening Reference Guide ($4.99)*: A gardener’s encyclopedia, featuring 26,000 plants for your garden. (Score: 83/100)

Eden Garden Designer ($1.99): Virtually design your landscape with this easy-to-use tool. (Score: 81/100)

50 Flowers to Attract Hummingbirds Butterflies ($1.99)*: With this app’s guidance, you can make your garden the favorite hangout of beautiful birds and butterflies. (Score: 69/100)

Garden Time Planner (Free)*: Plan your edible garden, and be alerted when it’s time to plant, transplant or harvest. (Score 69/100)

For Android

Garden Guide (Free)*: Garden advice from Mother Earth News, featuring tips on organic landscaping. (Mobilewalla Score: 77/100)

Gardenate ($1.99)*: Plant vegetables and fruits at the perfect time with Gardenate’s location-specific planting calendars. (Score: 77/100)

Garden Tender ($0.99): If you grow food in your garden, this app will track your yield and help you calculate your total costs. (Score: 71/100)

Vegetable Garden ($0.99)*: This app contains step-by-step guides to growing the top 52 common vegetables. (Score: 70/100)

Permaculture Magazine ($2.35)*: Permaculture Magazine focuses on organic gardening and sustainable agriculture (one issue with purchase; subscriptions or individual issues available at an additional cost). (Score: 69/100)

Apps with an asterisk* denote availability on Apple and Android.

Mobilewalla is a search and discovery engine using breakthrough technology to score every app to help consumers navigate the mobile application marketplace. Apps are scored using an algorithm that weighs several characteristics, including user ratings, position within category and staff recommendations. For more app intel, go to www.mobilewalla.com.

Preparations for McLean Kitchen and Garden Tour Nearly Complete

photo

Photo contributed

Col. Pete and Kay Burnell’s garden.

The Woman’s Club of McLean is in the final stages of preparing for the community’s first-ever Kitchen and Garden Tour, planned for Wednesday, May 1 (rain date: May 2), from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. A formal “kickoff” will take place at Holyrood Drive and Countryside Court in west McLean at 10 a.m., near the six large homes that will open their kitchens and extensive gardens for the tour. Tickets will be available on the tour day for $30 at any of the houses; before May 1 they can be purchased for $25 at Flowers and Plants, Etc., 1378 Chain Bridge Road in McLean; Karin’s Florist, 527 Maple Ave. E., in Vienna; Great Dogs of Great Falls, 9859 Georgetown Pike; and Vinson Hall Retirement Community, 6521 Old Dominion Drive in McLean.

ALL PROCEEDS of the tour will go to Vinson Hall’s Wounded Warrior Transitional Housing Project, which is supported by the Navy Marine Coast Guard Residence Foundation (NMCGRF; www.nmcgrf.org). According to the foundation’s executive director, Rear Admiral (Ret.) Kathleen L. Martin, “The vision for this program was established in 2011, with a plan to help young, wounded veterans who have returned home from conflict requiring a special kind of care in an environment that is well suited to their unique needs.” Handicap-accessible apartments are currently being renovated for veterans who have been discharged from inpatient care at Walter Reed Medical Center. With its population of some 200 military officers and government employees is a community “where older warriors can mentor younger warriors by providing a listening ear and words of encouragement,” said Vinson Hall Adm. Martin. The average age of the wounded service members, according to the foundation, is 22-35, with most in their twenties needing transitional housing.

Each tour ticket consists of a guide booklet with directions to the six houses, which are on 1-acre lots and are within close walking distance of each other. Visitors may begin the tour at any of the homes. Ample street parking is nearby. After entering the home, they will pass through the kitchen before exiting into the garden. Many of the large kitchens have recently been redesigned and updated. The booklet describes these and also details each home’s plantings and landscaping, which include such amenities as arbors, winding paths, decks, patios and large and small pools. Visitors will find a huge variety of flowers, shrubs and trees, ranging from “exotic” species to those native to Virginia. Some landscapes are reminiscent of English gardens; one property contains a pond area with lily pads inspired by the famous garden of the French artist Monet. There are 100-year-old tulip poplar trees and recent variations of universally popular flowers, such as the 29 varieties of roses growing in one garden.

THE TOUR NEIGHBORHOOD, known as Countryside Estates, can be reached by taking Old Dominion Drive from central McLean toward Balls Hill Road, bearing right, crossing Georgetown Pike and then taking the second right, Holyrood Drive. The intersection of Balls Hill Road with Georgetown Pike is near Exit 44 of the Beltway.

For more information, call the Woman’s Club at 703-556-0197 or send an e-mail to sheridan2@cox.net.

Petersburg garden tour blooms next week

PETERSBURG – If it’s spring, then it’s time for the annual Historic Garden Week.

Once a year, the owners of several of Petersburg’s private historic homes open their front doors and gardens for public tours. The 2013 Historic Garden Week – in its 80th year – is sponsored by the Garden Club of Virginia and the Petersburg Garden Club and will take place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Tuesday, April 23.

Properties showcased on the Petersburg Historic Garden Week Tour span four centuries of American architecture, history and landscape design. This year’s theme, “Blooming Through the years,” features a variety of residences – from historic properties to stately brick homes to an architectural studio and gallery with sustainable elements. Enjoy admiring the interior furnishings, architecture, or take a stroll through the colorful gardens.

In addition, the Centre Hill Mansion Museum, a historic Federal style brick house, will be open. This home was visited by two of our country’s presidents, Abraham Lincoln and William H. Taft.

Featured on the Petersburg Garden Tour are:

– 2001 Woodland Ave., owned by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas. Located in Petersburg’s Walnut Hill District, this brick Williamsburg-style home built in 1954, was purchased by the current owners in 2012. They have completely revamped the property’s exterior. The walks and driveway were reconfigured and landscaped. The exterior of the home has been repainted in traditional Williamsburg colors. The backyard now holds Virginia flagstone, a stone fireplace and water feature. The interior of the home features dentil, crown and chair rail molding throughout, as well as plantation shutters, a large formal dinning room and a wood paneled library, and is finely and uniquely decorated. Open for the first time for Historic Garden Week.

– 1578 Westover Ave., owned by Mr. And Mrs. Wright. Visitors to this brick home will have the rare opportunity to see on display originals from The Petersburg Garden Club’s Lee Park Herbarium collection, including the famous watercolors by Bessie Niemeyer Marshall. The collection also includes pressed and dried specimens of Virginia wildflowers. This home is a perfect setting of showcasing the collection, with many nature inspired arrangements and elegant botanical art. Watercolors painted by Mrs.. Wright are featured throughout, as well as a collection of porcelain fruits and vegetables by Pamela Vieuxtemps Tidwell, This love of nature continues to the backyard retreat, containing a glorious English shad Garden.

– The Marie Bowen Garden, Fairfax, Arch Street and Arch Circle. While in Walnut Hill, walk inviting paths of the Marie Bowen Garden, filled with flowering shrubs and trees that are nestled in this neighborhood. The Raleigh Parish Garden Club named this garden in honor of Marie Bowen, who along with club members and neighbors, tamed this area by working over 1,000 hours to propagate and establish native plants.

– 131 Franklin St., owned by Conard A. Kruger and David F. Toth. Built in 1899, this clapboard Victorian-style home was originally used as the parsonage for the 3rd Street Baptist Church. In 2008, the house was purchased and completely remodeled. This included a large modern gourmet kitchen, with marble floors, a six-burner stove, a dishwasher built into the wall, floor to ceiling black cabinets and a granite-topped island. Design elements include inlaid hardwood floor patterns and multiple elaborate fireplaces. Another informal garden features flower beds throughout. This home historically marked by the city of Petersburg is open for the first time for Historic Garden Week.

– Centre Hill Mansion Museum, 1 Centre Hill Ave. As a Garden Club of Virginia restoration site, Centre Hill exemplifies the benefits received from the Historic Garden Week, notably in landscaping restoration. Centre Hill, steeped in its own history, was recently featured in Steven Speilberg’s movie “Lincoln.” This year, there will be a special anniversary display covering the Petersburg Garden Club’s long history of participation in Historic Garden Week, and its own restoration efforts. The Petersburg Garden Club’s Herbarium Committee will also have their publications and prints available.

– 109 Bank St., owned by Ann Adams and Terri Ammons. This historically marked building, built in the 1820s, was former headquarters for the first daily newspaper, The Petersburg Intelligencer. Until 1854 it was used as the press room and editorial office of notable newspaperman, John Syme. Various other commercial businesses have occupied it through the years. The current owners purchased the building in 2006 with intention of creating a model for the use of historic properties. The building is a showcase for preservation. It illustrates a new concept in restoration by intergrating urban living needs and historic preservation. This eclectic urban living quarters are both satisfying and inspiring. This home is historically marked by the City of Petersburg and is open for the first time for Historic Garden Week.

– 235 Market St., owned by Studio Ammons and Terri Ammons. Renovated in 2004, this facility features a lobby/gallery space, meeting rooms and a large open studio space. Sustainable design elements include the use of a waste oil furnace for heat, natural lighting, and vegetable gardens. A special display of the Studio’s work will be on site for viewing. Open for the first time for Historic Garden Week.

– 319 High St., The Taylor Goodwin Sanctuary Gardens owned by Zelma Taylor and Gordon Goodwin. Renovation of this garden began in 1993, the day after Petersburg was decimated by a large tornado. The organic garden is a haven for birds, bees, and butterflies and features plants with berries, pollen and blooms to attract a wide variety of fauna. The garden’s large amount of undergrowth continues to provides a natural habitat for ground-nesting birds. Expect to see woodland phlox, ferns, trillium, double-bloom bloodroot, Virginia bluebells, yellow primrose, quince and spring camellias to be in bloom. The owners bee hives will be open for demonstration on the lower lot in the afternoon.

Visitors will be greeted by hostess guides at the properties open. Tour houses will feature fresh flower arrangements created by Petersburg Garden Club members with emphasis on colorful seasonal flowers and plants native to the area.

Proceeds from Historic Garden Week ticket sales continue to support the Garden Club of Virginia to help restore the grounds of Petersburg’s Centre Hill Mansion Museum. Centre Hill Mansion Museum was recently featured in Spielberg’s movie, “Lincoln.”

The members of Cockade City Garden Club will be offering a luncheon (Cost: $12) Thursday, from 11:30 to 2 p.m., at Historic St. Paul’s Episcopal Church at 110 N. Union St.. The luncheon will include a fashion show by SHE CHESTER of Chester. Blooming geraniums in a variety of colors will be available for purchase at the lunch site. Geranium and luncheon sale proceeds will be donated to Historic Blandford Cemetery in Petersburg to help repair the tombstones and ironwork.

Historic garden tours have been held annually since 1929, except during a period during World War II when members of the Virginia Garden Club took time off to tend their Victory Gardens.

Pricing for the tour is $20 for advance tickets. Tickets the day of the tour will be $25 and can be purchased that day at any of the properties open. The tour will be held, rain or shine. For tour house descriptions and how to obtain tickets, go to www.Facebook.com/ and search for Historic Garden Week in Petersburg.

Funds from Historic Garden Week tours are used to restore gardens and grounds of Virginia’s most prominent historic figures, including those of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James and Doley Madison, Patrick Henry, George Mason, Robert E. Lee, and Woodrow Wilson. These and other fine properties are also open to the public.

Water features, garden displays to inspire

CROWN POINT | Chainsaw carvings, wind twirlers, stone bird houses, and fire rock candles are just a few of the many new exhibits that guests will find at the 12th annual Waterscape Weekend Garden and Pond Expo, scheduled from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 27 and 28 in the Industrial Arts Building at the Lake County Fairgrounds, 889 S. Court St.

Sponsored by the Illiana Garden and Pond Society, the expo aims to inspire visitors to take backyards and landscaping to the next level and mesmerize others with incredible displays showcased by water features, lighting and garden experts.

“This show is a real destination for outdoor enthusiasts from all over the Midwest,” said Illiana Garden Pond Society Expo Chairperson Kathy Bartley. “Visitors to our show learn how to turn their backyards into their own sanctuaries. They might just want to add a few beautiful plants or a small koi pond, or build a meandering stream, but all of their resources are here, right under one roof.”

Other new exhibits featured this year include garden inspired jewelry, glass and copper dragonflies, yard art from recycled materials and hand crafted patio benches.

Water gardeners and aquarium hobbyists are invited to participate in a federally-funded research survey for the IL/IN Sea Grant to develop a campaign to protect the Great Lakes of aquatic invasive species.

Vendors will also sell fish, equipment for the water gardeners, plants including aquatics, garden decor, ironworks, gourd decor, lighting and irrigation options, hot tubs, and anything related to gardens and outdoor living enhancements.

In addition to vendors, visitors can connect with many local nonprofit organizations that will be exhibiting, including garden clubs that will be advertising their upcoming garden walks and rescue groups that will hold fundraisers.

Lake County Master Gardeners will be on hand to answer gardening questions and give away seed packets daily to the first 500 visitors to the booth. Many educational seminars and workshops will be available.

Adult admission is $5, while children 14 and younger attend free. Parking is free.

More information is available at www.illianagardenpond.org, or call Bartley at (219) 789-6207.

 

ANN LOVEJOY | Improving garden soil with good quality compost

Every spring, I get a zillion questions. An amazing number are about weed or pest controls, but almost as many focus on sourcing garden soil and compost.

It’s rare to find a home surrounded by beautiful loamy topsoil. It’s sadly common to discover that your new landscape has been prepped with an inch or two of decent topsoil layered over native clay (or sand).

Mature gardens may have decent soil, notably after a gardener has tended that soil for many years. Sadly again, it can take years to build up our acidic, heavy native soils. Even more sad, neglected soils rapidly lose their tilth and return to their natural stodgy state. Happily, the secret to repairing native soils is the same whether they are sandy or clay-based.

The best way to improve either kind of soil is to add compost annually. When a garden is new, you can count on buying in compost for at least a few years. It will take that long for most gardens to provide enough compostable material to supply the garden’s needs. Mature gardens can usually come close, but depending on the kind of gardening you are doing, you still may need to import

compost now and then.

When you are working with a new or long-neglected garden, you would be wise to bring in some good quality topsoil. My favorite way to convert a barren patch of nasty soil into a fruitful garden bed is to have a truckload dumped right where I want it. Rake it out, and presto, you’re ready to plant.

With Emu Topsoil closed, many gardeners are seeking new sources for good topsoil and compost. I really like both products made locally by Oly Mountain.

Oly Mountain Fish Compost recycles locally sourced fish waste, yard waste, and native hardwood logging waste. Certified organic and made in Belfair, Oly Mountain Fish Compost is aged two years. This nearly odorless compost provides a steady, slow release of nitrogen and other nutrients. I especially like that it contains no peat moss, since peat is really not sustainably harvested and makes a poor soil conditioner to boot.

Katie Bach, staff horticulturist for Oly Mountain, feels the same way and firmly states that none of the Oly Mountain products include peat.

After spending eight years at Seattle’s Cedar Grove facility, Katie is bringing a new level of professionalism to the already fine Oly Mountain product line. She also designs specialty mixes for local nurseries and landscaping needs, such as a Forest Mulch blend of organic compost from yard waste and bark which nurseries use for potting and container plantings, reducing the need for extra fertilizer.

She’s working on a potting soil mix for retail customers as well, though that’s still a project in development. The Oly Mountain Bio-Retention and Rain Garden Mix of coarse sand and compost was originally made for county projects, but is now available from several regional bulk dealers (see below).

So is the Oly Mountain 3 Way Lawn Mix, which combines their fish compost with loam and coarse sand. You will also find many retail outlets that sell the excellent Oly Mountain Garden Blend, which partners the fish compost with washed dairy manure, loam and sand. This is a very good combination for repairing and restoring native soils of any kind, and works well for both edibles and ornamentals.

Oly Mountain compost and soils are available in bags and in bulk at many retail outlets throughout Western Washington. For more information, call 206-940-8807 or visit olyfish.com/index.php/where-to-buy/ to find retail and bulk outlets near you.

Contact Ann Lovejoy at 8959 Battle Point Drive NE, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110.