Hi
Gardeners
Hardy Gloxina |
It’s that time of year when I always feel like I’m
rushing. There’s all the new annuals to plant, the vegetable garden to get in,
the houseplants to be moved outside, the garden beds to be weeded and edged and
so much more. For a month or so I feel
like I’m always behind. My husband does
housework this time of year; he has to if he wants something done.
The weather we are having warm, overcast days followed
by good rains is perfect for planting. I
managed to get most of my seedlings for the cutting garden planted, with a few
things left to go. I’ve got some annuals
planted in containers, still two flats to go.
My sweet corn, tomatoes, peppers, cukes, celery, and the rest of the
potatoes are planted. I have one bed to
get prepared yet for melons and cabbage, some onion sets to plant here and
there and a popcorn and pumpkin patch to get done. The romaine lettuce is
almost ready to harvest.
Slowly some houseplants are getting moved outside. My water garden has some new plants and is
starting to look better. I still need to
get the solar fountain in it.
Its purple plant days, with Dames rocket, alliums, wild
geraniums and early iris in bloom. The
tulips are almost gone but the shrub roses are beginning to bloom. Common Lilacs are dropping all their flowers
now but the Korean lilacs have yet to bloom.
Lilies of the valley are blooming and flowering dogwood. The Mayapples are blooming.
I have one bud on my 2 year old, 3 feet high magnolia,
its deep pink. I thought it was supposed
to be white but I’ll take it. This is the first year I have grown hardy
gloxinia (Incarvillea). I planted some
in the ground and kept one in a pot. The
potted one is beautiful right now in flower. I really like these plants, the
flowers are larger than I thought they would be. I’m hoping the plants really are hardy.
I am still missing bees here. There are no bees floating in the hummingbird
feeders. No bees on the autumn olive and
dames rocket flowers or on the comfrey which is beginning to bloom. And that’s really starting to bother me.
I solved a mystery last night. The grape jelly in my oriole feeder was
disappearing at a rapid pace. I set a
trail camera on it last night and caught a big female raccoon standing on her
hind legs on the rail of the handicap ramp, where she was able to scarf down
the jelly and also munch on sunflower seeds from the other feeder. I have to decide where to move the feeder now
to stop this.
Moving
houseplants outside
It’s that time of year when many gardeners in zones 5-6
are thinking about putting the houseplants outside for the summer. Those of you in higher zones should consider
it if you haven’t done so already. Most
houseplants enjoy a vacation outside and it makes things easier for us
gardeners at a busy time of the year, at least once we get them moved outside
and situated. If the danger of frost has
passed in your area consider moving houseplants outside.
Many houseplants that appreciate all the light you can
give them inside will quickly sun burn if you move them directly outside to
full sunlight. Some plants can be killed
if you don’t move them to the correct location outside. All plants need a period of adjustment to
outside light levels and wind. Move them
outside to a covered porch, under trees or some other shaded, sheltered area
for a few days. Then you can move them to brighter places according to their
needs.
I’ve had plants sunburn before and it’s not nice to
look at. I like to look for a stretch of weather coming that’s going to be
cloudy, even rainy, and mild to put the plants outside. Even so most don’t go into full sunlight
right away.
Decide where you’ll place your plants before you start
moving them, both in the acclimation period and after. If you have gorgeous houseplants in expensive
containers you might want to consider if theft could be a problem. Think about what could damage them too,
playing kids, pets, wildlife, spouses with mowers, and so on. And you may need to decide how to move them;
do you need a hand truck or a strong guy or gal to help? Make sure it’s easy to get water to them in
dry spells.
The only plants I put in full sun after adjustment are
my citrus and pomegranate trees, the over wintered geraniums, mini roses and
rosemary. Sometimes a few spider plants go in sun too, they are hard to kill. My hibiscus, jasmine and brugs go on the deck
where they get morning and late afternoon sun but some shade in the middle of
the day.
The Norfolk pines, jades, kalanchoes, streptocarpus,
rex begonias and most succulents go in light, dappled shade. Other houseplants like peace lily,
stepmothers tongue, pothos, and philodendron go in full shade. Spider plants can go inn full shade as well as
partial shade or sun. If a plant was in low light in the house, and doing well,
it needs shade. If the plant was in a
sunny window and doing well it probably needs partial or dappled shade outside with
a few exceptions.
You may be able to put cacti in full sun after a few
days adjustment but I have found that most succulents like holiday cacti,
echeveria, burro’s tail, and so on like light shade or dappled shade
better. You’ll be amazed how they grow
in these conditions.
Water the plants well after you get them outside.
(Watering before a move makes them heavier.) You may want to remove saucers
under plants so you aren’t dumping them after every good rain. All plants outside in the weather MUST have
good drainage. Keep a careful check on
soil dryness in houseplants outside, especially those root-bound ones. They may get dry very quickly in hot windy
weather or too wet in rainy weather if they have saucers that collect water.
Don’t re-pot plants just before a move outside. That makes it even harder for them to adjust
to outside conditions. But after a month
outside it’s probably fine to re-pot those that need it. And give them at least a couple weeks after
re-potting before you move them back inside.
If you want houseplants to grow and/or flower while
outside, fertilize them regularly with water soluble fertilizer. Things you don’t want to get bigger are best
not fertilized.
Shelter from wind may be needed for plants whose stems
snap easily. Tall plants that could blow
over may need to be tied to a fence or post or put against a wall.
I like to try and mix my houseplants into other flower
beds or containers. I use some spider plants instead of “spikes” in
containers. They also make good filler
for bare areas in ground covers or large containers. My Norfolk pines are set in among ferns and
their pots disappear. My streptocarpus
bloom in sunken pots along a shady path.
Every year I try to find some new way to blend the houseplants into the
rest of the garden.
I haven’t found that houseplants suffer from insects or
disease very often when moved outside.
In fact some insects that bother houseplants, like spider mites, will
disappear when plants are in more natural conditions. But do watch over the plants and try to catch
any problems early.
If your houseplants are looking tired and straggly give
them a vacation outside. You’ll probably be amazed at how lush and tropical
they look by fall.
Poison
Ivy Primer
Oh the attention this plant gets when garden season
arrives. After a bad reaction to contact
with poison ivy people may be very wary about getting near it again. Because poison ivy can be a master of
disguise people can be unsure which plant caused their anguish and even contact
it again without knowing it.
The two species of poison ivy in the US are Toxicodendron radicans, usually a vine
or ground cover, and Toxicodendron rydbergii, the
non- vining more upright form. The two species of poison oak are Toxicodendron pubescens Atlantic poison
oak and Toxicodendron diversilobum,
Pacific poison oak. These species are
closely related and share the same irritating substance- urushiol. Even
experienced naturalists can have trouble telling the species apart. Thankfully some general identification tips
apply to all the species and help distinguish them from other plants.
poison ivy |
Poison ivy vine on tree |
Poison ivy is probably more common than poison oak,
especially in the north and east. It can
form a vine, a low spreading groundcover type plant or a small bush. In the southeast poison oak generally forms
small bushes and on the west coast poison oak is either shrub-like or a vine. These plants can grow in open sunny areas or
partly shaded woodland edge conditions.
Both poison oak and poison ivy have “leaves of 3”,
which are actually 3 leaflets forming one leaf. Poison oak leaflets do look
like oak leaves, with distinctly lobed leaflets, while the look of poison ivy
leaflets varies quite a bit. Generally
however poison ivy leaflets have more of a mitten shape, with one small lobe or
“thumb”. Or they have no
distinguishable lobes at all and are just oval in shape. Poison oak has fine hairs on both sides of
the leaflet, poison ivy leaves are smooth.
The leaflets can have margins which are smooth or toothed. Leaflets may look shiny, especially when
young. They are the same color, top and
bottom. Young leaves have a reddish
tinge and leaves turn red in the fall. Leaflets are 2-6 inches long.
The leaflet at the top or end of the cluster has a
longer stem than the other two. The
leaves attach to the stem in an alternate pattern. Stems are smooth and do not have thorns. Usually stems are green or slightly
reddish. When poison ivy vines climb
trees or posts and become older they turn dark brown and look hairy and
twisted, much like a rope.
The flowers of poison ivy and oak are produced on
stalks coming from the area where the leaf joins the stem. The tiny greenish
white flowers are in clusters but not very noticeable. They turn into white waxy berries in poison
ivy and a tan berry in poison oak.
Berries are lightly grooved. Birds love the berries, but humans should
never handle or consume therm.
Poison oak fall color |
The plants most often confused with poison ivy and oak
are brambles, Virginia creeper and young Box Elder trees. Brambles include raspberries, blackberries,
and dewberries. Brambles have 3-7
leaflets but the leaflets are rougher, have toothed edges, and are lighter
colored on the underside. Brambles have
thorny stems, which poison oak and ivy never do. Brambles have larger white flowers which turn
into red or black colored berries.
Virginia Creeper has 5 leaflets to a leaf, not three. It is a vine that sprawls on the ground or
climbs on trees and other objects. It
too can be reddish in spring and turns brilliant red in the fall. It has purple black berries rather than white
or tan. Some people get an allergic rash
when they handle Virginia Creeper but the rash isn’t as bad as the rash from
poison ivy/oak and is caused by a different chemical.
Young Box Elder trees also have 3 leaflets to some
leaves, 5 leaflets on others. Leaflets can be a bronzy red when young, but fall
leaves are generally yellow. Box Elder
is a member of the maple family and grows upright like a tree. The leaves attach to the stem opposite each
other, in pairs. Stems are greenish blue
and have a white waxy coating when young.
Older stems start to get bark and look like tree branches or
trunks. Box Elder produces winged seeds,
the familiar “helicopters” of the maple family.
(Poison
sumac (T. vernix), is related to poison oak and ivy but the leaflets are quite
different. There are 5-7, smooth velvety
leaflets to a leaf. Stems are reddish
and grayish berries hang in long clusters. It grows only on swampy ground as a bush or
small tree. Unless you are standing in a
swamp you probably aren’t in contact with poison sumac.)
Virginia Creeper |
That
awful rash
Interestingly only about 75% of people will get a rash
when exposed to urushiol for the first time.
Urushiol is the oily toxic chemical found in poison ivy/oak and it’s in
all parts of the plant at all stages, even when the plant is dormant. The rash which consists of raised red weepy
painful blisters doesn’t start immediately; it begins some 4- 48 hours after
contact. That can complicate looking for
the plant; because when a person starts getting the rash they may not remember
everywhere they handled plants.
Doctors and botanists believe that almost everyone will
eventually develop a reaction to poison ivy/oak if they are exposed often
enough. So people who do not get a rash
the first time they know they contacted poison ivy/oak shouldn’t continue to
handle the plants.
The rash from poison ivy cannot spread from person to
person, although if a person still has urushiol oil on their skin or clothing
that could cause a reaction in someone who is in contact with the oil. Pets and livestock can have the oil on their
fur and spread it to people and tools or other items can also spread the oil
unless they are thoroughly cleaned.
People may come inside before the rash develops and handle door knobs, cabinet
handles, and so on and spread the oil.
Someone can pick up clothing or shoes that have the oil on them and get
a rash.
What
to do if you think you touched poison ivy
If you wash quickly and thoroughly in the right way you
can avoid a painful rash. Even if you
think you aren’t susceptible I’d make washing a priority after knowing or
suspecting you handled poison ivy/oak.
Even if the rash is starting to develop a good washing may limit your
reaction. Until you can wash keep your
hands away from your face and “private” parts.
The oil of poison ivy/oak can be washed off if you use
a lot of warm, not hot water and soap.
Wash any part of your body that may have had contact with urushiol oil
from the plants vigorously with any soap, dish soap may help remove oil. Scrub with a soapy washcloth. Don’t use oily cleaning products and don’t use
hot water, which opens skin pores.
Before you get to washing yourself, get your clothes
and shoes off. Put the clothes in the
washer with hot water and soap and wash off the outside of the washer with the
same. If shoes can’t be washed, wipe
them with a soapy rag including the soles.
Wipe off anything you touched coming inside, and anything in your car if
you drove home after contact. Clean any
tools you were using including handles.
Now get to washing yourself.
If you can’t get to soap and water right away alcohol
based hand cleaner or wipes can help.
But do wash with soap and water as soon as possible. A good wash will stop almost all rashes from
forming.
If
you get the rash
If you didn’t realize you contacted poison ivy/oak and
you develop that nasty rash there are products that can help. Most people can handle the rash with calamine
lotion, oatmeal poultices and over the counter poison ivy meds until it heals
but some people with severe reactions may need to see a doctor. There are prescription meds that can help. The rash should be gone in about a week, if
not see a doctor.
There are herbalists who recommend a poultice of mashed
jewelweed, (Impatiens
capensis), for poison ivy rash. Scientifically it was found that a poultice of
whole, fresh jewelweed helped a little.
But jewelweed tinctures, teas, bottled potions and creams didn’t help at
all. No jewelweed or other herbal
products taken by mouth help. No other
herbal products have been found to help when applied to skin. If you have no other options you could use
fresh mashed jewelweed if you know where to get it. But jewelweed and poison ivy/oak often grow
near each other and you could contact more poison- so be careful. Many other remedies are much more effective
and easier to use than jewelweed.
Destroying
poison ivy
Although it’s a native plant, it’s not one you want in
the garden, near play areas, paths and other occupied areas. You can suit up with gloves and other
protective clothing and pull smaller plants, but large plants and vines may
need to be killed with herbicides.
Strong concentrations of glyphosate will work, read the label to see if
poison ivy/oak is listed for control.
Other weed killers can also be used if they list poison ivy/oak on the
label. These products cannot touch
plants you want to keep. You may want to
paint the products on.
For vines growing on trees you’ll need to cut through
the vine and put the weed killer on the end of the piece closest to the
roots. Even after poison ivy/oak has
been killed the plant may still have enough oil to cause you grief. Dormant plants also have the oil, so there’s
no safe season to handle the plants.
Goats are sometimes used to eat the plants in large
areas. Be careful handling the goats as
they get the oil on them. Goats also eat
everything else in the area. No
homemade “natural” weed killing concoction has ever been shown to be effective
in killing poison ivy/oak. Vinegar does
not kill the roots.
Do
not burn dead plants and vines or use flame throwers on
them. The smoke from burning plants can
damage your lungs and will cause a rash on any body surface the smoke
touches. You won’t want to use a weed
whacker or mower on the plants either.
They’ll throw tiny pieces of the plant everywhere and it’s hard to clean
the oil off the equipment.
Dispose of pulled plants by burying them deeply or
double bagging them in black plastic bags and sending them to the landfill. It’s not a good idea to compost poison
ivy/oak. If you used tools to cut or dig
poison ivy/oak they must be cleaned with hot water and soap before being put
away. The oil can linger on tools for
months.
Never
ever eat any part of a poison ivy/oak plant, including
berries. Don’t believe people who tell you to consume the
plant to build immunity to it or cure other diseases. You can seriously and very painfully damage
your esophagus and stomach this way.
That’s another good reason not to sample plants and berries you can’t
identify. Goats can eat the plants and
birds eat the berries, but people can’t.
Remember soap and water is your best defense against
getting a poison ivy/oak rash. Use them
quickly and abundantly after contact with the plant.
Orange
petunia controversy – FDA recall
Last week I wrote about petunias and this week talk
about orange petunias has been spiking on social media. People are talking about the FDA recall of
several genetically modified or engineered petunia varieties. The petunias identified so far are these:
‘African
Sunset’, ‘Trilogy Mango’, ‘Trilogy Deep Purple’, ‘Trilogy Red’, ‘Trilogy ’76
Mix-Liberty Mix’, ‘Fortunia Early Orange’, ‘Hells Bells Improved’, ‘Petunia Salmon
Ray’ and ‘Sweetunia Orange Flash’.
It’s important to note that these GE petunias are not
harmful to people, animals or the environment.
They are only being recalled because the producers did not get the
permits needed to sell these GE plants.
All GE/GM plants must have FDA approval before sale. The FDA says that people that have the plants
do not need to do anything but they are asking producers in the US to remove
them from sale.
Petunia African Sunset |
Petunia ‘African Sunset’ was an AAS bedding plant
winning selection in 2014. Many
universities have trialed some of these varieties in their annual flower
trials. Thousands and thousands of these
petunia varieties have been planted across the US and in other countries and no
harm has come from any of them. The seeds for most of these now banned
varieties have been sold by a number of well-known seed companies, both retail
and wholesale, for a few years. Many
gardeners may have purchased them and grown their own plants. This may throw a kink in the claims of some
seed companies that there are no GM seeds in their inventory.
The genes in the orange petunias come from corn and in
the purple varieties I believe from reading some research papers, the genes may
have come from delphiniums. However the
genes in the other colors may have been inserted for other reasons. The ‘Trilogy’ series is different because of
its very compact, mounded shape. These
are plants already in cultivation and pose no risk to people, pollinators and
other animals. Most petunias are treated
as annuals, allowed to die each year from cold.
And there are no native plants that petunias will cross with in the US.
so gene transfer cannot occur.
There is a suggestion that more GE varieties will be
found and I may be going out on a limb here but I suspect it won’t be just
petunias that are found to be out there as unannounced GE/GM varieties. The genetic modification of ornamental plants
has been going on since the late 1990’s. Some modifications are for color,
others for things like cold hardiness, disease resistance, shape and other
traits. People have been modifying
plants for thousands of years; we just have different tools to use now.
Personally I’m not afraid of these petunias and I can’t
imagine how they could harm wildlife as the hysterical are now claiming. How
can an orange color gene from corn harm a bee for example? And to prove it I went out to a greenhouse
that shall remain unnamed and purchased a 6 pack of well grown ‘African Orange’
petunias. I now need to find some other
plants to go with them, orange can be hard to color coordinate, and plant them
somewhere prominent so people can admire them.
Then I’ll inform them they are GM plants.
While I remain a little suspicious of inserting animal
genes into plants or vice versa, I think there’s nothing wrong about inserting
genes from one safe ornamental plant into another. That’s especially true if the plant is
unlikely to share its genes with a native relative. I think sites that are fear mongering that
orange petunias will harm wildlife need to provide some proof that this is so,
that it’s even possible.
We need to be careful about genetic modification of
food crops, but let’s face it, at least 90 % of US citizens are probably eating
some GM foods and don’t realize it. And
it isn’t harming them. It may have been
prudent for the FDA to hold the sale of these petunias until the genetic
modification was examined but since they were being sold for years, maybe a
fine on those who bypassed FDA rules would be more appropriate than destroying the
plants and taking them off the market.
Here’s the FDA link
Lime
use in the garden
Do you automatically add lime to your garden each
year? If you do you could be harming
your soil and plants. Lime should only
be added to soil when a soil test indicates you need it. Lime reduces soil acidity, and makes soil
more alkaline. It can also help correct
a calcium deficiency. But lime is not fertilizer, and won’t help plants grow
unless the soil pH (a measure of soil acidity) is too low or calcium is
significantly low.
Soil pH is measured on a scale of 0-14, with 7 being
neutral and numbers below 7 indicating acidic soil, numbers above 7 equal
alkaline soil. Most vegetable plants like a soil that’s neutral or slightly
acidic, a pH value of 6.5 -7. Perennial
flowers vary as to their needs in soil pH. The soil pH determines how much of other
elements in the soil plants can take up.
Neutral and slightly acidic soil support a wide range of plants and most
plants will adjust to minor soil pH fluctuations. Some plants require more specific soil pH to
do their best. For more about soil pH
read my article on it in the page listed on the right of the blog titled Soil,
Compost, Potting Medium and Fertilizers http://gardeninggrannysgardenpages.blogspot.com/p/soil-and-fertilizer.html
In some areas of the country the soil is acidic but if
lime has been added for many years it probably isn’t needed anymore. Soil that is too alkaline can affect plant
growth negatively, which is what will happen if you keep adding lime when the
soil doesn’t need it. You may have
gotten away with adding lime to the garden for many years but eventually you
may change the soil pH to where you begin to harm plant health.
So how do you know if your soil needs lime? Get a soil test done. Contact your county Extension office and ask
how your state Extension handles soil tests.
Usually a soil test done when you begin to garden a new area will be all
that’s needed for many years. If you
have never had a soil test done consider getting one done this year. It’s really better to get the test done very
early in the season, because if the soil does need amending it can take a while
before amendments like lime work. Your
soil test results should indicate what and how much of a soil amendment you
need to add to correct an imbalance.
Most things gardeners do to soil, like adding compost
and fertilizer don’t significantly alter the soil so a soil test isn’t needed
every year for home gardeners. But if
your garden experiences unexplained problems another soil test may be
indicated. If you needed a lot of
amendments you may want to redo the test the next year to see if you corrected
the problem.
Lime is an unnecessary expense and time is wasted
applying it if the soil doesn’t need it.
You can make your soil too alkaline for good plant growth if you apply
too much lime too often. So don’t add
lime to the garden unless a soil test indicates you need it.
Lemon
Buttermilk Pie
Local fruit may still be scarce in your area but here’s
a pie you can still make. I have been
doing some cooking with buttermilk recently, since I bought some to make
buttermilk pancakes and needed to use up buttermilk. This is a great use of buttermilk and a yummy
dessert.
Ingredients
1 ½ cup sugar
1 cup buttermilk
2 eggs
2 extra egg yolks
1 tablespoon flour
½ teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon lemon zest
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 unbaked pie crust
Directions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Put all the ingredients except the pie crust in a food
processor or mixing bowl and mix until well blended.
Pour the mixture into the pie crust.
Bake until the filling has set, but will still jiggle
when moved, about 50 minutes.
Cool before eating. This pie can be eaten chilled
also. Refrigerate left over pie.
Hope
your purple flowers are lighting up the garden too
Kim Willis
“He who has a garden and
a library wants for nothing” ― Cicero
© Kim Willis - no parts of this newsletter may be used
without permission.
And
So On….
Do you have plants or seeds you would like to swap or share? Post them here by emailing me. You can also
ask me to post garden related events. Kimwillis151@gmail.com
Join the
LAPEER AREA HORTICULTURE SOCIETY on our 35th
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION, JUNE 19th at 6 P.M., SUNCREST DISPLAY GARDENS, behind
the Lapeer County Medical Care facility, 1455 Suncrest Drive, Lapeer, Mi.
All Past, Present, and Prospective members are invited to attend
this special event. This will be a special time to meet old friends and share
some of our memories of the activities of this group.
Guests are welcome.
Displays will be set up showing past activities, as well as old
newsletters of the group. Refreshments provided.
For more information contact:
Dave Klaffer at 810-656-7770 or 664-8912
Find
Michigan garden events/classes here:
(This is the Lapeer County Gardeners
facebook page)
An
interesting Plant Id page you can join on Facebook
Here’s a
seed/plant sharing group you can join on Facebook
Newsletter/blog
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 or you can
comment directly on the blog. Please state that you want to have the item
published in my weekly note if you email me. 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. Contact me at KimWillis151@gmail.com
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 people and horticulture. It’s a
hobby, basically. I hope you enjoy it. If you are on my mailing list and at any
time you don’t wish to receive these emails just let me know. If you know
anyone who would like to receive a notification by email when a new blog is
published have them send their email address to me. KimWillis151@gmail.com
Hello Kimberly. I need help. I have what i believe is a hardy hibiscus with large pink flowers. It is showing several symptoms. Large leaves are turning yellow and some have brown edges. Now I'm seeing smaller new leaves that are yellow. I have been giving it fertilizer watering twice a day. Guess I should tell you I live in Phoenix Arizona. We do have very hard water here and the soil is very hard and sandy clay like. I've been reading a lot of articles and getting lots og info on the internetbut all that info gets a little confusing. Please help. What do i need to do?
ReplyDelete