These weekly garden notes are written by Kim Willis,
unless another author is noted, and the opinions expressed in these notes are
her opinions and do not represent any other individual, group or organizations
opinions.
Day lilies after the rain. |
Hi Gardeners
It’s been a strange day with periods of sun mixed with
rain. When I went to the barn this
morning the sun was shining, the air was crisp and I could hear seagulls
crying- which is not common around here.
I guess they got blown in on the north east wind off the Saginaw Bay. I
like cooler weather- nothing wrong with 70’s for me. Fifties at night- that’s great too.
We have had a lot of rain this month- close to 5 inches
already. That’s more than all of last month.
The weeds are growing like crazy, I can’t keep up. Mosquitoes are getting bad again too. But the garden is pretty right now.
Heads up to those of you readers near Livingston
County. Giant Hogweed may have been
found there. You heard it here first. I am
waiting to hear some confirmation. It
may have been found on the property of a neighbor of my sister. The woman who found it is suffering from a
very bad rash. I haven’t seen even a picture of the plant. Someone from the DNR supposedly identified it
but refused to help remove it so I told them to contact the Extension office in
Livingston County. I’ll keep you
notified.
I think I am having a problem with coyotes. A couple of large ducks have gone missing,
now my momma barn cat has disappeared.
Her six babies are 5 weeks old and can eat pretty well. They get scrambled eggs every morning and
have dry cat food available all the time.
Since momma was a big hunter who brought them mice and baby bunnies I
have been bringing them a hot dog each evening as a substitute. They seem to approve but they need lots of
cuddling and reassurance since she has gone.
If anyone would like to raise a nice baby kitten with lots of love and attention
please let me know- they are free.
Renovating strawberry beds
If you have June bearing strawberries and harvest has ended
it’s a good time to renovate your strawberry bed. This will keep your strawberry patch
producing well for many years.
Renovating involves these steps, leaf trimming, thinning and
fertilization. Everbearing strawberries
do not need this treatment, but if you have had problems with good production
you can renovate these beds too, but you will not get any more strawberries this
year.
First remove all the old strawberry foliage to just above
the plant crown. Cutting the foliage
reduces foliar disease through the summer and causes the plant to have a spurt
of vigorous growth with healthy new leaves.
Make sure you make a sharp clean cut with a sharpened mower blade, or hand
trimmers. Don’t use weed “whackers”. Ragged leaf edges are more susceptible to
foliage diseases.
Rake debris out of the bed, including the trimmed leaves and
remove any weeds. Now thin the plants to
about 9” apart from center of the plant to the center of the neighbor
plant. You can make rows or ‘beds” where
plants are staggered 9” apart.
Strawberries can produce many daughter plants and you may find you have
enough new plants to start a new bed or fill in bare spots in your old bed with
the plants you thinned out.
After thinning apply a slow release granular fertilizer for vegetable
gardens. Water the strawberry bed well
and keep it watered if weather conditions are dry. That’s it- you have renovated your
patch. Keep it weeded through the rest
of summer and mulch with straw just before winter and you should have a great
strawberry crop next spring.
Antioxidants and cancer- good or bad?
We have all been told to eat more fruits and vegetables for
their antioxidant qualities. Foods high
in antioxidants such as blueberries are touted as “superfoods.” But
clinical trials of antioxidant supplements have routinely failed to show any
health benefits. In fact at least one
trial shows that using beta-carotene supplements causes an increased incidence
of lung cancer.
Research using whole foods such as blueberries or almonds or
tomatoes often shows some type of health benefit, but the research really can’t
tell us just what in the food caused the benefit, although it is often been
thought to be antioxidants. But now
researchers may be rethinking the benefits of increasing antioxidants,
according to a paper published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
Our cells use oxidants and anti-oxidants continuously as
they produce energy for cell growth.
There is a natural balancing system in a healthy cell. Oxidants are necessary for normal cell
functioning. But if oxidants build up in
a cell it causes damage, damage that was thought might lead to cancer. So extra antioxidants were thought to be a
good way to prevent diseases like cancer, resulting from cell damage.
However cancer cells need antioxidants to keep growing as
much as normal cells need them. Some think they may need more antioxidants
because cancer cells produce more oxidants and if they aren’t balanced by anti-oxidants
the cancerous cells would die. In fact
current chemotherapy and radiation treatments for cancer work by reducing
antioxidants so that cancer cells are killed by oxidation. It doesn’t make sense then that increasing
our intake of antioxidants would help to prevent or cure cancer.
This doesn’t mean you should stop eating fruits and
vegetables if you like them and they may provide some health benefits in ways
other than reducing our risk of cancer. There
is no evidence that the antioxidants in whole foods are going to cause an
increased cancer risk. However antioxidant
supplements that you buy in stores are probably doing you no good and may even
be doing you harm.
New species of plant found in Texas
Way back in 1974 and again in 1990 a plant was discovered
growing in Texas, in an area near the town of Valentine, that had botanists a
bit stumped. They knew it was from the genus
Solanum, and the nightshade family that includes tomatoes, eggplant, and
potatoes but they wrongly identified it as a variant of known species.
As what often happens now, many years after the original
plant specimens were found a botanist at the University of Utah was examining the
plants. From close examination and DNA
analysis it was decided that this plant was a new species- something very
rarely found in the US. They named the
plant Solanum cordicitum, (cordictum means heart, a tribute to Valentine
Texas.)
The new plant is about 14 inches high and covered with
prickly hairs. Even the flower clusters
are covered in tiny spines. The flowers
are similar to tomato flowers but are white. Each leaf has 3-4 lobes on each
side. Plants produce spiny seed
capsules.
After the plant was identified as a new species researchers
were eager to find new fresh specimens of the plant so they returned to the
property of Harold Elder, the man who discovered the specimen in 1990 and spent
days scouring the dry, desolate area.
They managed to find only one plant already wilted and dying. It had seeds but none of them germinated for
researchers. Searches in other areas
have also failed to find the plant, although there is still hope some can be
located.
It is sad to think that if we had been able to identify the
plant decades earlier it may have been preserved, but that now it may be lost
to us forever. It also makes you wonder how many more plants have gone extinct
as they sat in cases waiting to be identified.
And we may never know if this plant had any valuable traits or medicinal
uses we could have harvested.
Wildflowers blooming now
Daisy Fleabane
In June this pretty daisy like flower begins popping up in
Michigan meadows and on roadsides. Daisy
fleabane, Erigeron philadelphicus, is
found in moist areas in sun or partial shade.
It is a relative of horseweed, which is much taller, and has tiny
whitish flowers that lack the soft charm of fleabane.
Daisy fleabane is an annual plant that reappears each year
from seed sown the previous year. It
begins as a rosette of long, floppy leaves, rounded at the tip, then puts up a
bloom stalk about a foot high, with a few smaller leaves scattered along
it. The 1/2 to 1 inch flowers are shaped like a daisy, with
numerous rows of white or pink ray flowers , (petals to most people) surrounding
a yellow center of disk flowers. They
appear in clusters on the bloom stalk.
Usually June is the peak bloom season although they sometimes bloom
until August.
The dainty flowers are similar to asters, but have more
layers of “petals”. Asters bloom much
later than daisy fleabane. The plant
gets its name because people once tied the flowers in bundles to dry and hang
in the home, where it was thought that they repelled fleas.
Jewel weed
Jewelweed ( Impatiens
capensis) is an interesting native wildflower that grows in shaded to
partially shaded moist areas. In
Michigan, Jewelweed usually begins flowering in July and can continue until
frost. It is found in swampy woods,
marshes, ditches and wet fields. It is
sometimes cultivated in shade gardens.
As a member of the Impatiens family the Jewelweed leaf is
very similar to the leaf of the impatiens we plant in our yards. They are large, broadly oval, thin, and have
toothed edges. Jewelweed grows much
taller than garden impatiens, with stems up to 8 feet in height if conditions
are good. The stems are very succulent,
can become as large as a pencil or larger, and have prominent swollen joints.
The flowers of Jewelweed begin as small clusters of whitish
buds coming from a stem and leaf junction.
They are on top of the leaves as they begin but by the time the buds
open the leaves will have grown and the pretty yellow and orange flowers will
dangle beneath them on slender stalks.
The flowers are yellow and funnel shaped ending in a narrow,
curled tube called a spur. There is a flare of petals at the lower side of the
opening that are usually orange. The
yellow throat of the flower is speckled with orange and brown. There is another species of Jewelweed that
has flowers that are entirely pale yellow.
The flowers vary from 1/2 inch to an inch long.
The flowers turn into long oval seed capsules and the plant
gets another common name, Touch-me-not, because the capsules explode at the
slightest touch throwing the hard dark seeds far from the plant. The plant grows from seed each year.
Jewelweed is one of the noted native and folk remedy
plants. The leaves and stems contain an
astringent and a fungicide. The juice of
crushed plants is boiled with soft fat or lard and applied to hemorrhoids. The plant juice is said to heal poison ivy
rash and insect bites and is used to cure athlete’s foot. The plant should not be taken internally.
Neonicotinoid pesticides – I was wrong
You have heard me say or read things I wrote saying that treating
seeds with pesticides doesn’t make the plant tissue have pesticide in it after
they have grown. It turns out that seed
treatments from the class of pesticides called neonicotinoids can be applied to
seeds and the pesticide will be present in plant tissue and pollen after the
plant grows. (Other pesticides, such as
fungicides, don’t persist in plant tissue after seed germination.) So I am setting the record straight and
giving a warning here.
Neonicotinoid pesticides are fairly new (1980’s) and what
set them apart from other classes of pesticides was that they aren’t very toxic
to humans, animals or birds but really work well on insects. In fact we use them on pets and livestock to
control parasites quite frequently. Neonicotinoids include imidacloprid,
( one
of the most widely used pesticides in the world ), acetamiprid, clothianidin, nitenpyram, nithiazine, thiacloprid and
thiamethoxam.
Neonicotinoid pesticide treated seeds – and nearly all field
corn and soybeans are now treated with them- turn into plants that still have a
small amount of the pesticide in their leaves and pollen. This can harm pollinators like bees, although
it doesn’t seem to cause outright death.
But a far greater harm and many outright bee deaths occur in the spring
when fields are being planted. When corn
and other crops are planted by machines talc or other substances are added to
the seed to keep it from clumping. These
substances absorb the pesticides and then are often blown into the wind,
coating nearby plants like dandelions with pesticide laden dust. This dust is toxic enough to kill bees
immediately. The pesticide companies are
working to develop safer ways to keep seeds from clumping in planters.
Even if they don’t
die directly from the pesticide bees may get “brain damage” from pesticide
exposure. Exposed bees don’t forage
well, get lost when out foraging and the pollen and nectar they carry to the
hive may cause reproductive failure in the next generation. Other pollinators probably suffer similar
fates. It is widely agreed now that neonicotinoids
have a detrimental effect on bee populations.
Neonicotinoids persist in the environment for a long time
and may build up in the soil and water.
While they may not be very toxic to birds it is believed that many
farmland bird numbers are declining simply because there are fewer insects to
feed their young during breeding season.
Maybe that’s why the birds mob my suet feeder in the spring and summer and
it’s a good way you can help increase bird numbers- keep feeding suet all year.
While on the surface fewer bugs seems like a good idea, it
rarely turns out well when you upset natures balance. Bugs are here for a reason. You can do your part to help restore some
balance by reducing your use of pesticides since homeowners use a lot of neonicotinoids
and often use them less carefully than farmers and other professionals. Read
the article below under more information to see how neonicotinoids are used in
the flowering plants you buy for your garden and patio and how they may affect
pollinators.
Take the umbrella to the garden and pull some weeds.
Kim Willis
“He who has a garden and
a library wants for nothing” ― Cicero
More
Information
Planting garden center
flowers is good for bees and other beneficial insects
The discovery of neonicotinoid insecticide in
leaves and flowers of some garden center plants should not stop you from buying
and planting flowers because the benefit to bees far outweighs the potential
risk.
Posted on June 25, 2014 by Dave
Smitley, Michigan State
University Extension, Department of Entomology
Recently, some Internet and media
sources have suggested that buying and planting flowers from your local garden
center could be harmful to bees because traces of neonicotinoid insecticides
were found in the leaves and flowers of plants randomly purchased from garden
centers around the country. Although it is true that concentrations of over 100
ppb of imidacloprid in nectar or pollen are toxic to honey bees, and lower
concentrations (10 to 100 ppb) could affect their foraging behavior and immune
response, the potential harm to pollinators in the yard and garden from buying
and purchasing flowers from a garden center has been exaggerated. In fact,
planting annual and perennial flowers and flowering trees and shrubs is
expected to be beneficial for bees and other beneficial insects.
Greenhouse and nursery growers
started using alternatives to neonicotinoid insecticides this year, and
although the transition is not complete, the amount used is less than in
previous years, and the plan should be fully adopted in 2015. Michigan State University began
working with growers in March of 2014 to identify pest control strategies where
neonicotinoids have been used so that alternative strategies could be adopted.
Also, experiments were initiated to determine the risk to bees after treated
plants are sold and planted in yard and garden. Several experiments are in
progress now, where treated plants are put into screen cages with colonies of
bumble bees.
People should not become too alarmed
by the detection of neonicotinoids found in the leaves and flowers of some
garden center plants. This does not mean that the plants will be toxic to bees.
Here are several reasons why:
- · Michigan is home to some of the largest greenhouse flower growers in the country. In a recent survey we found most growers do not make soil applications of neonicotinoid applications to petunias, impatiens, marigolds, New Guinea impatiens, verbena, ageratum, celosia, dianthus, portulaca, salvia, snapdragons, vinca and other bedding plants grown in flats. They usually do not spray flowers with any insecticide in the last two weeks of production. So flowers sold by the flat should be safe for bees.
- · Many trees and shrubs, including all conifers, and many broadleaf trees like maple and oak trees are wind pollinated and are not usually visited by bees.
- · Perennial flowers, roses, flowering shrubs and flowering trees will be a valuable resource for bees and other pollinators for many years after they are planted, while the risk to bees will be limited to those plants that were treated with a soil drench, and only when they are flowering in the first year.
- · Bees feed on a large variety of flowering plants, and often forage as far away as a mile from their colony. Because they are feeding on many different plants, the presence of a neonicotinoid insecticide in one plant will be diluted when they feed on untreated plants.
Flowers bought in flats should be
completely safe to bees. If you are worried about some of the perennials or
flowering trees and shrubs that you purchase, the flowers could be removed during
the first summer after planting. Also, if you buy trees or shrubs in a
container you can reduce the amount of imidacloprid or any neonicotinoid
insecticide which may be present in the soil by watering them until you see
water emerging from the bottom of the container, and continue to run the water
for another ten minutes. This will flush any neonicotinoid insecticide residue
that is not tightly bound to the organic matter in the soil.
Another way to encourage bees and
beneficial insects is to avoid spraying insecticides in the yard and garden as
much as possible, and never spray flower blossoms. If you have a problem with
caterpillars chewing too many holes in the leaves of some plants, you can use a
product containing Bacillus thuringensis or B.t. without harming bees and other beneficial
insects.
Another bee-friendly option is to use
horticultural oil or an insecticidal soap. They are effective on most
soft-bodied insects and can be used on cool mornings, less than 50 degrees
Fahrenheit, after sunset, or at any time that bees are not present. The soap
and oil residue is not harmful to bees, but spraying them directly is. Soap and
oil can cause some plant injury, especially to open flowers, so do not exceed
the rate given on the product label. In rare cases where a plant needs to be
protected against damaging insects by using a broad-spectrum insecticide, it
should be sprayed after petal-fall (after the plant is done blooming).
You may want to read Michigan State University
Extension bulletin, “Native Bees & Their Conservation on Farmland,” by
Rufus Isaacs and Julianna Tuell.
Dr. Smitley’s work is funded in
part by MSU’s AgBioResearch.
This article was published by Michigan State University
Extension.
Events, classes and
other offerings
Please let me know if there is any event or class that
you would like to share with other gardeners.
These events are primarily in Michigan but if you are a reader from
outside of Michigan and want to post an event I’ll be glad to do it.
Master Gardeners if you belong to an association that
approves your hours please check with that association before assuming a class
or work day will count as credit.
Do you have plants or seeds you would like to swap or
share? Post them here by emailing me at kimwillis151@gmail.com
New- Weeds and Herbs from
the Wild Tuesday, August 19 at 7: 00pm at Seven Ponds Nature Center
3854 Crawford Road, Dryden,
MI
The Friends of Herbs at Seven Ponds will host speaker: Jim
McDonald- innovative Michigan herbalist and wildcrafter. He will share
with us what herbs and weeds can be harvested during this time of year.
Preregistration is required by calling 810-796-3200 to reserve your seat. Join us for a
wonderful informative program, cost is $5.00 per person.
New- Herb & Butterfly Garden Tours -Sunday, August 10,
2:00 pm Seven Ponds Nature Center, 3854
Crawford Road, Dryden, MI
We have the loveliest cultivated gardens totally maintained by
volunteer gardeners. This is a walk suited for those who cannot venture too far
from the center. Non-members- $3.00 adults, members and children 12 and under free.
New-Garden Party &
Daylily Dig- Sat, July 26, and Sunday July 27-
9am-6pm, Merrittscape, 5940 Cooley Lake Road, Waterford Township, MI.
Featuring over 200 varieties of award
winning daylilies for sale. You pick
'em, we dig 'em. 1000's of plants. We have over an acre and one half of
spectacular ponds and display gardens to enjoy and inspire. 248-681-7955.
New- Cool Plants for
Shady Areas- Sat, August 9, 10am English Gardens,
all locations (Ann Arbor, East Pointe, Clinton Twps., Dearborn Heights, Royal
Oak, Commerce Twps., West Bloomfield
call 1-800-335-Grow
Creating a beautiful garden is
possible even in the shade. This program
will cover basic information on planning, planting and maintaining flowers and
plants in the shade. Special emphasis will be given on perennials. FREE.
www.EnglishGardens.com.
Genesee County Master
Gardeners 2014 Bus Trip - Open to the Public!! Thursday, July 17, 2014- Please Park in the U of M parking lot on the
corner of Robert T. and Saginaw in Flint. Entrance to parking lot is on Robert T. (we will be leaving no later 8 am exactly, no refunds)
The tour will be to Brenda’s Butterfly habitat and Barson’s greenhouse (in Westland) and Matthaei Botanical gardens and Nichols Arboretum (In Ann Arbor)
Cost $60.00
(includes Lunch, snacks, water and fees)
Make Check Payable to: MGAGCM
Send to: P.O. Box 34, Flushing, MI. 48433
Please register no later than Monday, June 30, 2014
Contact person: Sabrina VanDyke at 810-407-0808
The tour will be to Brenda’s Butterfly habitat and Barson’s greenhouse (in Westland) and Matthaei Botanical gardens and Nichols Arboretum (In Ann Arbor)
Cost $60.00
(includes Lunch, snacks, water and fees)
Make Check Payable to: MGAGCM
Send to: P.O. Box 34, Flushing, MI. 48433
Please register no later than Monday, June 30, 2014
Contact person: Sabrina VanDyke at 810-407-0808
Schedule
9:00 a.m.
Arrive at Barson’s Greenhouse approximately
Presentation at Barson’s Greenhouse
Explore Brenda’s Butterfly Habitat
12:00 p.m.
Leave Barson Greenhouse
12:30 p.m.
Arrive at Matthaei Botanical gardens and Nichols Arboretum
Picnic Lunch/ Dinner
5:30 p.m.
Depart for home
Send the below information with the check - Thanks!!
NAME (s)
PHONE # (cell phone if possible)
Contact person: Sabrina VanDyke at 810-407-0808
9:00 a.m.
Arrive at Barson’s Greenhouse approximately
Presentation at Barson’s Greenhouse
Explore Brenda’s Butterfly Habitat
12:00 p.m.
Leave Barson Greenhouse
12:30 p.m.
Arrive at Matthaei Botanical gardens and Nichols Arboretum
Picnic Lunch/ Dinner
5:30 p.m.
Depart for home
Send the below information with the check - Thanks!!
NAME (s)
PHONE # (cell phone if possible)
Contact person: Sabrina VanDyke at 810-407-0808
Michigan Ag Expo 2014- July 22, 2014 - July 24, 2014
Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI
Ag Expo is
Michigan’s largest outdoor agricultural show. With more than 250 vendors,
demonstrations, educational sessions, and ride and drive equipment available,
there is something for everyone. Admission to the show is free!
Garden Day August 2,
2014, 8 am – 4:15
pm, Michigan State University Department
of Horticulture, East Lansing Mi.
MSU’s annual garden
day is on Saturday this year. The
keynote speaker is Amy Stewart, author of Wicked
Plants, Flower Confidential, and The Drunken Botanist and other books. Ms Stewart is also the concluding speaker and
you can also stay for a reception after the event where she will discuss the Drunken Botanist. You can choose from a
number of excellent workshops/classes, 1 morning and 1 afternoon session.
Classes include Herbal housekeeping, Best Herbaceous perennials, Creative
Containers, Dividing Perennials, Herbs at Home, Pruning Basics, Gardening in
the Shade, Unusual Trees and Shrubs, Creative Edge, and Going Native.
Cost of the event is
$85 until July 22nd , $95 after. Lunch
and free parking included. Additional $39 for evening reception. Go to hrt.msu.edu/garden-day-2014
for class descriptions and to register.
The Lapeer area Horticulture Society
is looking for new members. There are no
education or experience requirements to join; only a love of gardening is
needed. The Horticulture Society meets
the third Monday of each month for socializing, networking and a brief
educational presentation. Everyone is
invited to join. Dues are only $15 a
year. For more information on joining or
meeting locations contact Bev Kobylas at bkobylas@yahoo.com
Newsletter
information
If you would
like to pass along a notice about an educational event or a volunteer
opportunity please send me an email before Tuesday of each week and I will
print it. Also if you have a comment or opinion you’d like to share, send it to
me. Please state that you want to have the item published in my weekly notes.
You must give your full name and what you say must be polite and not attack any
individual. I am very open to ideas and opinions that don’t match mine but I do
reserve the right to publish what I want.
Once again the
opinions in this newsletter are mine and I do not represent any organization or
business. I do not make any income from this newsletter. I write this because I
love to share with other gardeners some of the things I come across in my
research each week. It keeps me engaged with local people and horticulture.
It’s a hobby, basically. I hope you enjoy it. If at any time you don’t wish to
receive these emails just let me know. If you know anyone who would like to receive
these emails have them send their email address to me. KimWillis151@gmail.com
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete