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Restoring the work of landscaping pioneer Henry Nehrling

MIAMI – During the summer, the kudzu and air potato vines came creeping back, threatening to reclaim the ground that dozens of volunteers had cleared only months earlier.

By October, the vines were snaking up oak and magnolia trees, some more than a century old, that had once been the subject of federal research programs but had been overgrown by invaders. The volunteers launched a late-fall counteroffensive, cut back the new runners, then set to work uncovering more trees. They sawed through the sturdy vines, slowly peeled them back like a carpet from the trees they had taken over, used crowbars to pry their roots from the soil. Then they planned more workdays to fight the invaders.

In the midst of all this greenery, the tangle of desirable and the undesirable, stands the former home of Henry Nehrling, a botanist who nearly a century ago tested and introduced to Florida some of the plants that are now staples in landscaping throughout the state.

The historic Central Florida property is on the National Register of Historic Sites and has been certified as a Florida Historic Landmark. It is the headquarters of the nonprofit Nehrling Garden Society, which is rescuing and restoring the home and grounds.

But whether it is the invasive vines that keep returning, financing that vanishes just as it is on the verge of landing in the bank, or a compromise with the wary neighbors, the society’s efforts often sound more like a battle than simple conservation.

“We are doing it foot by foot, yard by yard,” said Theresa Schretzmann-Myers, the society’s vice president and volunteer coordinator.

On the grounds is a sago palm that was already more than 100 years old when Nehrling planted it a century ago. Enormous magnolias he hybridized. A tall eucalyptus that Nehrling planted and that has been dead for 30 years but is home to giant pileated woodpeckers. A huge golden bamboo with lime-green trunks and gold leaves, masses of amaryllis and caladium, towering bunya pine and bay laurel.

“It’s just such a treasure,” said Angela Withers, the society’s president. “It’s rare to find a place with such a combination of elements … the history, the science, the beauty – a site where a man who was really quite extraordinary did his work. It was an amazing passion and he grew these amazing plants. There are plants here that are over 100 years old. It’s a living laboratory.”

The property is a house of dreams. In an architectural rendering, the run-amok greenery has been curbed and neatly organized into a palm collection, a bromeliad collection, demonstration gardens. Walk the grounds with Withers and Schretzmann-Myers and they will point out the Nehrling Society’s ambitious vision. In addition to reclaiming the garden and the house, they want to turn the garage – added in the 1980s – into an education wing, build a gazebo, plant a palm allee, build a lakeside observation boardwalk and add Henry’s Bookshed, a small library.

“For me it’s been an unbelievable journey,” said Richard Nehrling, Henry’s great-grandson and a volunteer and advocate for the garden. “It’s really sad for me, knowing how important this garden was. David Fairchild was on plant-collecting trips all over the world and he was sending samples back to my great-grandfather to test. He tested over 3,000 species.

“As I look at that in 2012, I think how sad that nobody even knows about this garden, that it doesn’t have a place in our history. That story got lost for 70 years.”

Like the other society members, Nehrling wants his great-grandfather’s story known, his homestead to be a public garden again, a place for plant research.

But the society’s dreams are tempered by the cost. It needs to raise money to pay off the mortgage – right now, there’s only income to cover the interest – as well as to hire staff, renovate parts of the house, launch an educational program. Right now, all the work is being done by volunteers; the only person being paid is a fund-raising consultant.

It’s all part of the legacy of a man whose passion for tropical plants made a mark throughout Florida.

Late in the 19th century, Nehrling, a Wisconsin schoolteacher and naturalist, bought 40 acres in the German-American settlement of Gotha – about 12 miles east of what is now downtown Orlando – to grow tropical and subtropical plants. His land evolved into Florida’s first experimental botanic garden, which he named Palm Cottage Gardens.

Nehrling grew more than 3,000 species of plants for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. He wrote books and articles about horticulture. His expertise included palms, bamboo, bromeliads, amaryllis, gloriosa lilies, orchids and caladium. He is considered the father of Florida’s multimillion-dollar caladium industry.

Some of his work was for David Fairchild – the famous plant explorer and one of the founders of Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Miami – when Fairchild worked for the USDA.

In the archives at Fairchild’s gardens is this comment by Fairchild about Nehrling:

“I have known many with a passion for plants. I have met many who were keen to collect and dry their fragments. I have known others who lived to make gardens, but none who quite so fully combined their passion for observation with their skill in the propagation and cultivation of a variety of species, keeping them under their constant attention so that they were able to accumulate through many years’ observation clear pictures of their characteristics.”

Another visitor to Palm Cottage Gardens was Thomas Edison; Nehrling would later create an orchid garden at Edison’s winter home in Fort Myers, Fla. Some of the orchids he attached to trees are still there.

After Nehrling lost thousands of plants to a freeze in 1917, he bought acreage in Naples, Fla., for his most tender tropical plants. That garden is now known as Caribbean Gardens, home to the Naples Zoo.

Nehrling died in 1929, and the Gotha property changed hands several times. Pieces of it were sold off. There were periods when the house was unoccupied and vines poked through the walls. Many of his plants died; others were taken by neighbors who assumed the land was about to be bulldozed.

The nonprofit Nehrling Garden Society was established in 1999 by people who wanted to save the property and Nehrling’s legacy. The group tried for more than 10 years to buy the property, but each time a grant or other financing seemed about to come together, a new obstacle would crop up. Wary neighbors worried about noise and traffic had to be sold on the plan as well. Barbara Bochiardy, who owned the property, was willing to sell it to the society for significantly less than the asking price if they would save it.

Finally, in 2009, a local entrepreneur loaned the society $350,000. With that and $100,000 it had raised, the society bought what was left of Palm Cottage Garden: 5.9 acres, a house more than 100 years old, and a neglected greenhouse from a later era, with many of its glass panels broken or missing.

But buying the property did not solve the financial problems. Withers said the group’s biggest challenge is raising money to pay off that $350,000 loan, which doesn’t carry the cachet of donating money for a specific project – like converting the unfinished garage into an education wing – that the donor’s name could be attached to. The society is already doing other things or has plans to: offer classes for a fee; rent out the property for events; sell plant sponsorships; partner with a nursery to develop and sell Nehrling-branded seeds and plants.

The society took possession in May 2010 and began organizing volunteers – Boy Scouts; Girl Scouts; garden clubs; service clubs; arborists; middle and high school students; plumbers and roofers; Disney employees; church groups; even German studies students from Rollins College, where Nehrling taught.

“We have had unbelievable help from the community,” said Schretzmann-Myers.

They worked almost year-round, taking a break in the summer. For protection, they wore long pants and long sleeves, the kind of clothing that is unbearable after a few minutes working outdoors in Florida’s heat and humidity. They ripped up invasive plants – kudzu, dog fennel, cat’s claw, Brazilian pepper and air potato, the latter the very species Nehrling had warned in his writings not to bring into Florida. They pruned desirable plants and planted Florida native species in the newly cleared ground by Lake Nally at the back of the property.

As they did, they discovered some of Nehrling’s original plants, mostly trees and bamboos, still living. “These are plants that have survived with benign neglect for a long, long time,” Withers said.

And they found junk. In one spot, long ago overrun by plants, they found an old still used to make moonshine from orange juice. Cleaned up, it sits in the garage now.

“It’s exciting. Every time we do a clean-up, we find something else,” Schretzmann-Myers said. “There’s living history here on the property.”

As the restoration continued, neighbors came forward with cuttings or seeds from plants that originated in Nehrling’s garden. The group replanted Nehrling’s amaryllis garden at the front of the house with bulbs rescued from a nearby abandoned garden, almost 700 bulbs that were descendants of plants Nehrling had introduced. They planted a big bed of caladiums, too.

Right behind the house, they created a “pollinator garden” with thyme, blue sage, coreopsis, passion vine, milkweed and other plants to attract bees, butterflies and moths.

While most volunteers worked on the grounds, others worked on the house. They spent the first two years making the property safe, rebuilding stairs that had rotted through, building supports under the sagging back porch, replacing railings and screens. The society uses part of the house as an office, part for exhibits and part to sell Nehrling’s and other garden books.

The property is zoned for agricultural use. Unless it is rezoned, the society can give only private tours by appointment; it cannot set regular hours that the gardens are open. That is one of the society’s goals, which they hope to achieve in the next 12 to 18 months, but with the property set in the middle of a residential neighborhood, they must win over the neighbors.

So the Nehrling Society continues to work on that bridge between past and present, between the research that Nehrling did and the plants that go into Florida gardens today. They have done much but still have work to do – the constant battle against invasive plants, cataloging the plants they uncover, digging, cutting, clearing, planting, pruning. And perhaps most importantly, educating.

“The beauty of a place like this is it’s a place where you can get your hands dirty,” Withers said. “You go to these immaculate gardens and say, ‘Isn’t that lovely.’ We want to show people how they get that way. Very rarely do people understand the joy that comes from growing a plant from start to finish.”

SEEDLINGS OF HISTORY

Nehrling Gardens

What: The Nehrling home and gardens are in Gotha, Fla., about 12 miles east of downtown Orlando. They are open to the public only on private tours arranged in advance.

Help: In addition to cash, the Henry Nehrling Society is seeking donations of gardening tools, cleaning supplies and other goods. It is also looking for volunteers. The website has a wish list as well as information on how to donate or sponsor a plant identification marker.

Information: 407-445-9977, www.nehrlinggardens.org

Up close at the Tom Quinn Centre gardens

As I walked through the garden, the sound of birds filled the air. The footpath was clean and fresh, the garden beds meticulously cared for.

The general public came and went around me as they stopped in to admire the garden, or grab a coffee with friends at the centre’s cafe.

Volunteers and students care for the garden as part of the centre’s landscaping education programs. They get up close every day to the sights, sounds and smells, so I thought I would too.

City’s small business offers wealth of information via vegetables – Las Vegas Review

Bryan Vellinga was on a path to become an accountant when he took a horticulture class and discovered his green thumb. Vellinga owns North Las Vegas-based Garden Farms, a company that not only plants personal gardens in people’s backyards but also teaches them to care for the plants. Vellinga said his goal is to teach his clients how to tend their own gardens within a year.

In late December, Vellinga said he had about 40 garden clients, but it fluctuates. He started in landscaping in the valley, but when business declined with the housing market, he had to come up with a new game plan. He launched a vegetable garden business in early 2010. Personal gardens were a natural fit, he said. He and his family have raised everything from cantaloupe to peas in their own garden for more than 15 years, and people always asked how they were able to have such a fruitful garden in the desert.

“My wife and I thought, ‘You know, we should really start teaching people how to do this,’ ” he said. “Part of what is so fun is seeing people change the way they think about food.”

But it is not just homeowners who are interested in his services. Vellinga works with several schools to teach children where food comes from and the long-term enjoyment of a garden.

School gardens present an additional challenge: funding. Vellinga works with the schools to promote crowd-funding campaigns and to pay for the garden and their fees. He said he encourages schools to raise between $5,000 and $10,000 to “put in a really nice garden” but has worked with less. Most of the funding comes from local parents and businesses donating online, he said.

He would like to see the program expand statewide.

“Wouldn’t that be a cool thing to say it happened here,” Vellinga said. “The city of excess to become a city of sustainability.”

Vellinga and his team installed a courtyard garden in Detwiler Elementary School in North Las Vegas, planting everything from carrots to zucchini.

“We typically try to go with elementary schools, trying to teach them younger, so that they’ll keep it with them,” he said. “By the time they become an adult, with any luck, they’ll have a garden of their own. They can supplement their grocery bills.”

Other staples in a garden like the one at Detwiler Elementary include radishes, beets, lettuce, tomatoes, garlic, cabbage, turnip, kale and squash.

Detwiler principal Ryan Lewis said every class at the school has been out to the garden at least once, and the children get to eat what they grow.

“Planting, harvesting or eating, in some shape or form, they get to be part of the process,” Lewis said. “They come enjoy the green space. We have no air conditioning sometimes or no heat, so they come out here and use it.” This spring, each fifth-grader is to decorate a tile and add it to the wall behind the garden to leave his legacy, Lewis said.

Vellinga said that for a school garden to be successful, the principal needs to be supportive. With long periods of school breaks, he said he relies on good communication with the principal to ensure the garden is looked after.

There are some key tips to gardening in the desert, Vellinga said. First, any farm in Southern Nevada has to have irrigation, he said, and soil must be replaced.

“Trying to grow vegetables in our natural soil can be done, but you would have to amend soil so drastically that it’s cheaper to buy new,” he said. “Our soil is really quite bad.”

For beginners, he suggests growing zucchini as a starter.

Vellinga said that to plant a vegetable garden, the gardener must start early.

“The problem is our summers are so hot that people start planting gardens in May,” he said. Tomatoes, for example, should be in the ground by March. “Timing is everything; it’s the biggest secret,” he said. “If you plant the plant at the right time of the year here, you’re going to succeed if you have sunshine.”

Vellinga said the company’s most popular size is the 4-by-8-foot garden for $900. The price depends on the size, and some people have spent as much as $20,000 for a vegetable garden on their property.

Carrie Jones, originally from Florida and now a Centennial Hills resident, said she missed the taste of fresh vegetables.

“You can’t buy anything in town that tastes remotely like this, so fresh,” she said. She is a self-proclaimed “tomato person” and has been quite happy with the success of her Garden Farms plot. She had tried to plant a garden before in the shade without much success.

“I like to be hands-on, and I like to teach the kids, too,” Jones said. “They like to plant new stuff and watch it grow, and they love all the bugs.”

For more information on Garden Farms, visit mygardenfarms.com.

Contact Centennial and North Las Vegas View reporter Laura Phelps at lphelps@viewnews.com or 702-477-3839.

Middlebury removes invasive trees from Krider Garden

Click here to view in a gallery.

MIDDLEBURY The front of Krider Garden looks different after the removal of nine large Norway Maple trees on Monday, but town officials say it is an opportunity to improve the park.

The park department and the tree board received an urban forestry grant to pay for the removal of the trees, because if they were left alone, they would destroy the ecosystem of Krider and the surrounding area, said park board president, Jim McKee.

Their seeds spread all over the place, and they outcompete native trees, said parks and recreation manager, Tom Enright. The removal of these trees gives us an opportunity to landscape with native species of trees. We will be able to bring more diversity to this area of the park and plant trees that will add color in the spring and the fall. We will also add shrubs and landscaping to create a nice entrance into Middlebury on C.R. 8.

The ill-fated trees were marked earlier this year with large red Xs.

We waited until the ground was frozen to remove them to minimize damage to the ground and other plants, said McKee.

I am excited that they are down, said tree board president Larry Carlson. They drop a horrendous amount of seed pods, and the other plantings in the park will benefit from their removal.

Finding Inspiration for Your Next Home Improvement Project

The 38th annual Nebraska Home and Builders show showcased the latest in home improvement, design and landscaping. Taking place Jan. 18 through 20, many took the opportunity to find inspiration in an exhibit filled with home experts.  

“The house we live in now, we built ourselves,” homeowner Alice Stevens said, “but now we’ve lived there for 18 years, so it’s time to upgrade and fix things up again.”

Many shoppers came to the home show with a clear plan for what they need, but many said  they leave with new ideas.

“We also saw hot tubes and I’d like to have one of those,” Stevens said.

Slogans like “entertain, exercise or relax in any weather,” drew shoppers to outdoor renovations.

William R. Jackson, of the Jackson Group, produced the three-day event. Jackson said the biggest trends of the year are outdoor renovations like patios, gardens and sunrooms.

“A sunroom is an addition to your home that you can get your family in without bugs bothering you,” Ron Bures, of ABC Seamless, who builds sunrooms, said. “And you put a hot tub in them and you could do all kinds of things in a sunroom.”

Grand Island realtor Amber Gerdes, of Woods Bros Realty, said people are afraid to put their homes on sale because they may not find another home to buy. “124 homes were available at the beginning of the year,” she said. 

She said many renters want to become buyers but they’re having a hard time finding the best home in the best area with the floor plan of their needs.

Landscaping for the Homeowner Series: Gardening for Wildlife

This class will focus on creating specialized areas of the landscape for wildlife gardening including butterfly and bird gardens, utilizing native plants in the landscape. Beat winter’s chill by preparing for your spring garden! Back by popular demand, the Cincinnati Zoo’s 2013 Landscaping series is one of the most informative and complete courses for homeowners in the Tri-state area. Offering insight on design, preparation and plant selection, the classes can be taken separately or as a complete series building upon one another.

Where:
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
Phone: 513-559-7767
Address: 3400 Vine St.
Website: www.cincinnatizoo.org

Coir goes global, finds new usages in European homes

Thiruvananthapuram, Jan 21 (IANS): The humble coir, used in many Indian houses as doormats and carpets, has found new usages in Europe as a material for building sound barriers, stylish compound walls and garden landscaping, says a Kerala official.

In Europe, coir is being used for building modular acoustic walls and landscaping gardens, says K.R. Anil, director of the National Coir Research and Management Institute (NCRMI), the nodal agency for Coir Kerala that leads RD efforts in the state.

“Dubbed as greenscreen acoustic barriers, these lightweight modular walls are claimed to offer sound insulation of up to 35 decibels. Panels of the barrier are made of two rows of poles made of 100 percent recyclable material and with durable, natural coconut fibre filled inside,” Nair said.

In Germany, coir yarn walls are increasingly being used for landscaping as well as for sound proofing, he added.

Garden plants are trailed along the walls made of sturdy coir yarn, providing excellent support for creepers and vines.

Coir also retains moisture for long periods which means the plants trailing on a yarn wall need less watering than on other surfaces.

“In The Netherlands, coconut husk, from which the fibrous coir is extracted, is being used as a noise prevention solution in homes located along highways and other high-traffic roads, in offices and around sporting arenas,” Nair said.

Innovative applications of coir will be on display at the Coir Kerala-2013 exhibition, which is to be held at Alappuzha, about 150 km from here, in the first week of next month.

Besides, delegates from around 60 countries participating in the event would also get to hear discussions on some interesting new developments in the industry, Nair said.

Garden club talks about conservation – Bryan

Garden club talks about conservation

Garden club talks about conservation


Posted: Sunday, January 20, 2013 12:00 am


Garden club talks about conservation


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Carolyn Guillotte, a member of the AM Garden Club, Grimes County Master Gardeners and Daughters of the American Revolution, discussed conservation and the value of trees in the landscaping at the January meeting of the AM Garden Club. Members who have rainwater collection systems gave tips on collecting rainwater for use their gardens and for container plant. It was additionally announced at the meeting that Texas Garden Clubs Inc. would be giving a scholarship to a horticulture student from Texas AM University.

on

Sunday, January 20, 2013 12:00 am.

8 Things to check out for respite from winter at 20th Garden Expo in Madison

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The Garden Expo in Madison runs from Friday, Feb. 8, through Sunday, Feb. 10. Attendees get the chance to gather gardening information and advice from more than 150 seminars. Proceeds benefit Wisconsin Public Television.

The Garden Expo in Madison runs from Friday, Feb. 8, through Sunday, Feb. 10. Attendees get the chance to gather gardening information and advice from more than 150 seminars. Proceeds benefit Wisconsin Public Television.

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The Garden Expo in Madison runs from Friday, Feb. 8, through Sunday, Feb. 10. Attendees get the chance to gather gardening information and advice from more than 150 seminars. Proceeds benefit Wisconsin Public Television.

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If you go

What:20th annual Garden Expo

When: 3-9 p.m., Friday, Feb.8; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.,Saturday, Feb.9,and 10 a.m.-4 p.m.Sunday, Feb. 10.

Where: Exhibition Hall at the Alliant Energy Center,1919 Alliant Energy Center Way, Madison.

Admission:One-day pass, $7 in advance or $8 at the door. Two-day pass, $11 in advance or $12 at the door. Three-day pass, $16 in advance or $17 at the door. Children 12 and younger will be admitted for free.

Advance tickets are available at wigardenexpo.com   and locally at Rotary Botanical Gardens, 1455 Palmer Drive, Janesville.

Advance registration for hands-on workshops is available at wigardenexpo.com  . During the expo, registrations for remaining workshop openings will be taken at the Wisconsin Public Television booth. Workshop fees cover supplies and instruction.

All seminars and demonstrations are free.No registration is required, but seating is limited.

Parking: $6.

Concession stands: A variety of concession stands will sell food. Lunch options include sandwiches, salads, wraps and pizza.

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If you go

What:20th annual Garden Expo

When: 3-9 p.m., Friday, Feb.8; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.,Saturday, Feb.9,and 10 a.m.-4 p.m.Sunday, Feb. 10.

Where: Exhibition Hall at the Alliant Energy Center,1919 Alliant Energy Center Way, Madison.

Admission:One-day pass, $7 in advance or $8 at the door. Two-day pass, $11 in advance or $12 at the door. Three-day pass, $16 in advance or $17 at the door. Children 12 and younger will be admitted for free.

Advance tickets are available at wigardenexpo.com and locally at Rotary Botanical Gardens, 1455 Palmer Drive, Janesville.

Advance registration for hands-on workshops is available at wigardenexpo.com . During the expo, registrations for remaining workshop openings will be taken at the Wisconsin Public Television booth. Workshop fees cover supplies and instruction.

All seminars and demonstrations are free.No registration is required, but seating is limited.

Parking: $6.

Concession stands: A variety of concession stands will sell food. Lunch options include sandwiches, salads, wraps and pizza.

–>

— It’s January. It’s cold. The landscape is a bland palette of white, brown and gray.

It’s the time of year gardeners crave a fix of green.

The Garden Expo in Madison promises to deliver a hint of spring with gardening innovations, information and advice among lush plants, colorful flowers and vibrant designs, said Kristin Korevec, special events manager for Wisconsin Public Television.

Proceeds from the event Friday, Feb. 8, through Sunday, Feb. 10, support Wisconsin Public Television.

More than a dozen Janesville area businesses and experts will be among those offering exhibits and demonstrations.

Here is a list of eight things Korevec said not to miss while at the Garden Expo, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary:

1. More than 150 free educational seminars and demonstrations. The hour-long seminars and 45-minute demonstrations focus on gardening, landscaping and lawn care.

Presenters will be experts in their fields.

New topics include frugal gardens, home compost tea brewing, dealing with drought, backyard chicken coops and lawn care without pesticides, she said.

“So with the cost of admission you can attend educational sessions all day,� Korevec said.

2. Hands-on workshops. These cost between $30 and $50, and participants work on projects that they can take home.

Projects include garden jewelry, herbal vinegars and flavored oils.

“So not only are you taking home bottles of that, you’re learning how to do it at home,� Korevec said. 3. A 1,200-square-foot central garden. Wisconsin Landscape Contractors Association members will build the garden display of flowers and greenery in the middle of the show.

“It’s one of the great parts of the Garden Expo,� Korevec said.

4. Master Gardener Shelley Ryan, who is preparing her retirement season as producer/host of The Wisconsin Gardener. She will be available in the Wisconsin Public Television booths from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday, 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, and 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 3:30 p.m. Sunday.

“The whole concept of the Garden Expo started with Shelley and her show,� Korevec said.

Arthur Ircink and Kyle Cherek, producers and hosts of Wisconsin Foodie, will make 9 a.m. appearances Saturday at the Wisconsin Public Television booth, she said.

5. Discussions of innovative garden techniques at the UW Extension booth.

Experts on everything from insects to plant diseases will be answering gardening questions and offering information about enrolling in the Master Gardener program, Korevec said.

“Stopping at the UW Extension booth is one of the most valuable parts of the show and sometimes overlooked. They’re the source for unbiased university researched-based information,� Korevec said.

6. The latest in garden and landscaping equipment and services. About 350 exhibitors will include garden centers, nurseries, artists who specialize in gardening themes, garden clubs and nonprofit plant societies.

“So, if you’re looking to do a big landscaping project, there will be landscapers, landscape architects and arborists plus a number of book publishers that have material related to gardens. So, I think there’s something for everyone at the expo if they’re looking for a lawn mower or information on how to treat a certain disease,� Korevec said.

7. Opportunities to buy seeds, tools and the newest in gardening equipment, tools and services.

“If you’re just starting to think about spring, and the seed catalogs are starting to arrive in the mail, it’s time to start planning, getting ready and excited for the gardening season to begin,’’ Korevec said.

8. Plant a Row for the Hungry. Visitors to the Wisconsin Public Television booth can participate in this new service project. Seed packets will be distributed, and Garden Expo attendees will be encouraged to plant an extra row of produce and donate their surplus to local food banks, soup kitchens and service organizations.

Staff from Community Action Coalition for South Central Wisconsin will be present to answer questions and provide resources for donating produce.

LOCAL EXPERTS

Janesville area organizations that will be represented at the Garden Expo in Madison include: Agrecol, Evansville Blackhawk Technical College Formecology, Evansville KW Greenery, Janesville Kris Kraft, East Troy Rotary Botanical Gardens, Janesville Tallgrass Restoration, Milton Windows to the Garden, Lake Geneva Wisconsin Arborist Association Hanover Sod Farm, Hanover Badger Custom Curb, Janesville Blain’s Farm Fleet, Janesville TD Builders, Janesville Dvorak Landscape Supply, Janesville

Local experts will give free seminars and demonstrations at the Garden Expo in Madison:

Friday, Feb. 8

3:15 p.m.—Backyard Gardening: Vegetables and Fruits for Fun and Enjoyment by Richard Miller, Blackhawk Technical College in affiliation with the Wisconsin Landscape Contractors Association , at Mendota 4 location.

4:30 p.m.—Trendy Annuals by Mark Dwyer,Rotary Botanical Gardens, at Mendota 4 location.

Saturday, Feb. 9

9:15 a.m.—Cover Crops for the Home Garden by Jim Stute, UW Extension Rock County, at Mendota 4 location.

2 p.m.—Plant Propagation Basics by Richard Miller, Blackhawk Technical College, at Mendota 5 location.

2:15 p.m.—Annual Grasses for the Garden and Container by Mark Dwyer, Rotary Botanical Gardens, at Mendota 6-7 location.

4:30 p.m.—Gardening Vertically by Mark Dwyer, Rotary Botanical Gardens,at Mendota 1-2 location; Holiday Plants from the Past to the Present by Patty Bailey, Patty’s Plants, at Demo A location; Tree Pruning and Hiring a Certified Arborist by David Graham,Wisconsin Arborist Association, at Mendota 5 location.

Sunday, Feb. 10

12:30 p.m.—Trendy Annuals by Mark Dwyer,Rotary Botanical Gardens, at Mendota 8 location.

3 p.m.—Backyard Gardening: Vegetables and Fruits for Fun and Enjoyment by Richard Miller, Blackhawk Technical College, at Mendota 8 location.

Gardening catalogs and events help you cultivate green thumb

There’s something comforting and convenient about the feel of a gardening catalog while you sit near a window on a cold winter day and count the days until spring.

Many companies have gone “green,” putting out e-newsletters and online catalogs, which is admirable in terms of protecting the environment.

Even so, there’s still nothing like the inspiration and convenience of a print catalog with full-color photos and plant descriptions that you can keep on your work bench to use as the gardening season unfolds.

Several of my all-time favorite catalogs, including locally produced ones like Brent and Becky’s Bulbs in Gloucester and The Gardener’s Workshop in Newport News, can be consulted

as plant reference guides for selection, companion planting and year-round care. Best of all, most catalogs are free.

Here’s a list at my 10 favorite catalogs that you can order online, plus highlights of some major gardening events that will also help you grow the green thumb you’ve always wanted. Follow my Daily Press column throughout the year for more local gardening news; contact your local Virginia Cooperative Extension office for help, too – http://www.ext.vt.edu.

The Gardener’s Workshop — cut-flower and herb seeds, gardening tools and local programs, including March 23 organic gardening seminar, April 24 farm tour and pop-up shops; http://www.thegardenersworkshop.com; 757-877-7159.

Brent and Becky’s Bulbs — spring, summer and fall bulbs, gardening tools and local programs, including farmers markets, garden tours and kids events; https://store.brentandbeckysbulbs.com; 804-693-3966.

Select Seeds — heirloom flower and vegetable seeds, including my favorite purple hyacinth bean flowering vine and honeybee-attracting Verbena bonarensis reseeding tender perennial, as well as small plants; http://www.selectseeds.com; 800-684-0395.

Camellia Forest — fall-, winter- and spring-flowering camellias, including Camellia sinensis and recipe for using its tender growth to make homegrown green tea); http://www.camforest.com; 919-968-0504.

Fairweather Gardens — specialty, hard-to-find ferns, irises, sedums, hollies, viburnums, witch hazels, shrubs, grasses and flowering trees, including the native Franklinia tree, a member of the tea family, that bears fragrant flowers August-September and must have excellent drainage and light shade; http://www.fairweathergardens.com; 856-451-6261.

Bluestone Perennials — Clematis, coneflowers, bee balm, geraniums, ground covers, ferns and many more come in plantable coco pots that are 100 percent biodegradable. You’ll love the four pre-planned cut, butterfly, border and shade gardens; http://www.bluestoneperennials.com; 800-852-5243.

The Cook’s Garden — organic and heirloom vegetables you can grow from certified organic seed and plants, including lots of tomatoes for those tasty summer BLTs; http://www.cooksgarden.com; 800-457-9703.

Burpee — Catalog cover features actual size Super Sauce hybrid tomato, billed as the world’s largest sauce tomato; inside is On Deck hybrid sweet corn that grows in a patio pot, as well as Solar Flare sunflower with scarlet-red flame petals that finish in a gold; http://www.burpee.com; 800-888-1447.

Tomato Growers — Every size, shape and color tomato seed, including Mr. Stripey in yellow-orange stripes, several pages of cherry hybrids and beefsteak and bi-color beauties; http://www.tomatogrowers.com; 888-478-7333.

Renee’s Garden — Her online-only catalog offers a new line of organic seeds for vegetables, flowers and herbs. Many of Renee’s seeds are sold in local garden centers, too; http://www.reneesgarden.com; 888-880-7228

Gardening shows

Virginia Flower Garden Expo. Jan. 25-27 at the Virginia Beach Convention Center, Virginia Beach. Speakers, vendors, landscape displays and floral and decorated rain barrel competitions; more details and $2 coupon off $10 admission at http://www.vafgs.org. Free tickets: 1 per household at Daily Press, 7505 Warwick Blvd., Newport News, subject to availability, 8:30 a.m. Monday.

Mid-Atlantic Horticulture Short Course. Feb. 4-7 at the Marriott City Center, Newport News. Geared for professionals and hobbyists, sessions given by industry leaders, including local experts such as retired extension agent Jim Orband of York County, cover new plants, landscaping, maintenance and more, sponsored by Virginia Horticultural Foundation; http://www.mahsc.org.

Home Gardener Day. Feb. 7 at the Marriott City Center, Newport News. Landscape architects and designers share tips and trends, and then everyone splits into work groups to sketch out garden designers for future Habitat for Humanity homes; http://www.homegardenerday.org; 523-4734.

Hampton Road Home Garden Show. Feb. 8-10 at the Hampton Roads Convention Center, Hampton. Meet Mike Wolfe, star of the History channel TV show “American Pickers,” bring items for Dr. Lori to appraise and enjoy how-to programs on the Green Thumb Stage, starring Landscapes in Miniature of Harrisonburg (www.landscapesinminiature.com) and Gardens and Accessories by Teresa of York County (www.gardensbyteresa.com); http://www.hamptonroadshomeshow.com.

Mid-Atlantic Home Garden Show. March 1-3 at the Virginia Beach Convention Center. HGTV’s “Curb Appeal” expert John Gidding, Food Network’s “Sweet Genius” host Ron Ben-Israel, outdoor living spaces, 500 exhibitors and New Home Expo all part of the activities; http://www.midatlantichomeshow.com.

Colonial Williamsburg Garden Symposium. April 13-15, Theme “More Than a Garden: Creative Ideas to Enhance Your Life” features nationally known gardeners P. Allen Smith, David Culp and Tara Dillard who focus on fruits, herbs and gardens that are earth and pollinator friendly; http://www.history.org; 220-7255.

Historic Garden Week in Virginia. April 20-27, more than 250 statewide homes and gardens open for public tours, including downtown Smithfield on April 20, Kingsmill in Williamsburg on April 23 and Hilton Village and Brandon Heights in Newport News April 24 and Gloucester on April 27. http://www.vagardenweek.org; 804-644-7776.

CNU Gardening Symposium. April 20 at Ferguson Center for the Arts, Newport News. Keynote speakers Bob Goodhart, Jim Orband and Ken Druse. gardening.cnu.edu; 269-4368.

Norfolk Botanical Garden 75th anniversary. Special celebration April 6 with poet Maya Angelou at Chrysler Hall; tickets on sale Feb. 8. Plant sale May 10-12 focuses on azaleas, including native species, which honor the botanical garden’s first name, Azalea Gardens; http://www.norfolkbotanicalgarden.org with listing of special observances throughout year; 441-5830.

Thyme in the Garden. May 30-Aug. 29. Thursdays at the Virginia Zoo in Norfolk, an interactive program sponsored by the Virginia Beach Council of Garden Clubs, zoo docents and Norfolk master gardeners share the importance of horticulture at the zoo through stories, hands-on activities and living laboratories; http://www.virginiazoo.org; 441-2374.

Plant sales. April 20-21 and 27-28 is the spring native plant sale at Virginia Living Museum; http://www.thevlm.org. April 27 at site to be announced for Williamsburg/James City County master gardeners; http://www.jccwmg.org. April 20-21 Williamsburg Botanical Garden; http://www.williamsburgbotanicalgarden.org. April 26-27 for John Clayton Chapter, Virginia Native Plant Society. May 4 for York County and Hampton master gardeners; 890-4940 and 727-1401, respectively.

Know a great garden or event I can feature this year? Contact Kathy at kvanmullekom@aol.com