Tuesday, January 26, 2021

January 26, 2021 vetiver and nostalgia

Hi gardeners.

                                                                           
Today in Michigan we have had snow. We got maybe 3 inches, it isn’t too deep because I was able to go out and get the mail without boots. It’s a major storm if I have to put on boots, which I hate.

One thing a fresh coat of snow does is reflect a lot of light back into the house, even when its cloudy outside. And when the sun comes out it really pushes the light inside. I’m sure the houseplants appreciate it as long as they don’t have to be out in it.

Many people are shopping out of boredom- a bad idea right now but that’s another story- and may decide to pick up a new houseplant when they shop. Stores know this and they tend to fill those half empty shelves left after Christmas with special bargains on houseplants. Everyone likes to see green and flowers and it’s a big impulse buy.

The only thing is, it’s a bad time to ship plants. If they sit in a trailer or on a loading dock in the cold, they can be damaged. Sometimes plants sit in front of doors that are being opened constantly in the front of the store. The cold can damage tropical plants and sometimes the damage does not show up right away.

But plants are often damaged after the sale is rung up, when customers carry them to the car. If the temperature is below freezing even a short walk can damage some plants. And they can’t be left in the car in the cold when you stop at another store.

When you buy a plant and its cold outside, make sure it’s wrapped in some way before you carry it out. Plastic bags work, some nurseries include a plastic sleeve. If this has been pulled down, pull it up. Otherwise wrap in paper or plastic before taking the plant outside.

Unlike animals, plants do not produce body heat, so the covering is only a small temporary aid.  If temperatures are in the single digits or below and you can’t pull the pre-warmed car up close to the door don’t buy the plant, unless maybe it can be stuck under your coat. And certainly, don’t leave the plant in the car thinking a cover will protect it while you shop or dine elsewhere.

After my fiasco with the roofers breaking a porch window and the open roof chilling some of my plants, I had a few plants die. The coleus I was overwintering is one casualty. The tuberous begonias shed all their leaves, but the bulbs may be ok. The elephant ear and taro lost their leaves, but I moved them inside the heated house, and they are putting out new leaves. My culinary ginger was damaged and I’m waiting to see if it recovered.

I am so glad winter is moving along and we are almost through with January. February is a short month, and we’ll have six more weeks of winter regardless of what the groundhog determines. But once March gets here there are a lot more days with sunshine and you can feel spring is close.

 

Vetiver, the reincarnation plant

Vetiver, Chrysopogon zizanioides is one of those plants that seem almost miraculous. It has dozens of uses and has been grown by humans for thousands of years. You may have never seen the plant, but you have probably smelled it. Vetiver is an ingredient in many of the world’s costliest perfumes and in numerous personal care products. The wonderful deep smoky, woodsy, earthy scent comes from an oil distilled from the roots of vetiver.

Vetiver essential oil is used in aromatherapy to help with shock, as it is considered to be grounding and calming. The oil has anti-nematode, antibacterial and antifungal properties. It repels termites. And of course, the oil is used in all kinds of products for its fragrance. It has a long-lasting scent and is often used in potpourri as well as some of the world’s most expensive perfumes.

The dried roots of vetiver are used in teas for hangovers and for menstrual cramps. Roots are burned for cleansing homes of “bad magic”.  It’s also thought to be lucky and attract money.  In Asia a piece of root is put in some cash registers to prevent theft and increase profits.

Vetiver roots are used to make a thick green syrup called Khus syrup, which is used to flavor things like milkshakes, ice cream and yogurt in southern Asia.

Plant parts of vetiver other than the roots are also used. It makes good grazing and hay for livestock. The leaves and stems are chopped for a great mulch. It’s grown as a cover crop to suppress weeds. The stems are also dried and woven into many things like baskets, matts, and blinds.


Vetiver 
wikipedia

About vetiver

Vetiver is a perennial grass.  It is native to tropical parts of Asia but has now established itself in many tropical and subtropical areas around the world. Vetiver is also grown as a commercial crop around the world. It looks like many of the clumping grasses that gardeners grow as ornamentals, forming clumps about 5 feet high and wide.

The roots of vetiver are different than most grasses. Instead of spreading a fibrous root system just underground, vetiver roots are thick and strong and extend deeply into the ground. In it’s first year vetiver can send roots 12 feet into the ground. Vetiver grass has neither stolons nor spreading rhizomatous roots.

The roots are the main commercial product, but vetiver grass is well known throughout the world as a plant that stabilizes soils, preventing soil erosion. It’s often grown on banks of drainage canals and rivers, along steep slopes, and in hedges to stop wind blowing soil away. Commercial sterile varieties of vetiver were developed for just this purpose and are sold around the world. A variety developed for the US is called ‘Sunshine’.

The deep roots of vetiver help it survive drought and the plant also survives being submerged in water for a long period of time. It’s also resistant to fires. That’s why vetiver has earned the reputation of a plant that can’t be killed and is used as a symbol of reincarnation.

The native varieties of vetiver reproduce from seed as well as offsets that develop at the base of the plant. Those native varieties can spread aggressively in warm climates by seed and that’s why sterile varieties were developed. The sterile varieties are reproduced by division. If you want vetiver make sure you only buy plants, not seeds. Plants grown from seeds will produce seeds and become invasive.

How gardeners can try vetiver

Gardeners who want to experiment with vetiver can plant it directly in the ground in zones 8 and above. It can survive some frost but is killed by freezing temperatures. To get it growing vigorously use a fertilizer for grass several times a year and keep it watered. It prefers full sun.

Gardeners in northern zones, zone 7 and lower, can grow vetiver in large pots, large and deep pots are best. One way to grow and harvest it for the roots is to use 12” diameter or larger plastic drainage pipes cut in about 2 feet “tubes”. The tubes are slit down one side and bound back together with tape or rope. They are set on something like a board or cement surface and filled with soil.

Buy vetiver plants (don’t use seeds) and plant them in your tubes. Let them grow until frost and then open the tube where it was slit to harvest the roots. You could also try overwintering the plants in a place above freezing for a second year of root growth. You will have to dry, and then steam distill oil from the roots, and it takes a lot of roots to get a little oil.

If you like to grow something different and are interested in herbs or making your own perfumes and soaps, growing some vetiver might be worth a try.

 

Below are a few places where you can buy vetiver.

https://www.agrifloratropicals.com/5-plant-vetiver-grass-chrysopogon-zizanioides-trial-pack/

https://www.theherbcottage.com/vetiver-grass/

https://www.greendreamsfl.com/online-store/Vetiver-Grass-Chrysopogon-zizanioides-p191341497

 

Heritage Flowers for nostalgic gardeners- part 1

I was working on genealogy this weekend and came across a picture of my grandmother. She was the person who nurtured a love of gardening in me.  As a child I followed her around as she worked in the garden, “helping” her and she would talk to me about plants.  By the time I was in first grade I could correctly identify most garden flowers.  I made my teacher very mad when I corrected her misidentification of some flowers someone had brought her.

Thinking about my grandmother I began to remember some of the plants she grew in her garden. While you can still get most of these flowers you don’t find them very often in modern gardens.  That’s a shame. It’s time we bring a little old-fashioned charm back into our lives. So here are some plants you should consider growing this year.

Hollyhocks (Alcea rosea)

Although not as popular now as they used to be, hollyhocks are a country charmer for gardeners who admire the cottage garden look or who are nostalgic for the old-fashioned flowers that Grandma grew. No garden should be without a few hollyhocks in the back of the border.

Hollyhocks are biennials, which means that they make a rosette of foliage the first year and then send up a long flower spike to bloom in the second year. There are some varieties of hollyhocks that will bloom the first year, especially if started early indoors.


Hollyhocks and harebells

Hollyhocks re-seed quite freely, and once established in the garden you should have some in bloom every year. Hollyhocks will grow in zones 3-9.  They should be planted in full sun. Bloom begins mid-summer and continues for a long time. Some hollyhocks can reach 6 feet high, normally they are 3-4 feet high. They have large, rounded, gray green leaves with a rough texture.

Single flowered hollyhocks are often sold as Old-Fashioned mix or Barnyard mix. Sometimes single colors are offered but after a few years you will find your re-seeded plants will be a variety of colors.

There are a couple of other species of hollyhocks that are sometimes seen. Alcea rugosa has light yellow flowers and some natural resistance to rust, a fungal disease of hollyhocks. It’s considered to be a perennial. Not as flashy as the common hollyhock, it is tough and easy to grow and blends into less formal, naturalistic gardens.

Fig leaf hollyhocks Alcea ficifolia, has decorative deeply lobed leaves and it too, is considered to be more perennial than common hollyhocks. It comes in a variety of colors and is also resistant to rust. Flowers are smaller than common hollyhocks.

Gas plant

Gas plant Dictamnus albus, is also known as dittany. It’s a perennial that makes a large bush about 3 feet tall when established. There are several horticultural varieties. In early summer stems of pretty white or lavender flowers pop up above the foliage.

Gas plant will grow in full sun or partial shade. It is a bit tricky to transplant- start with young plants and do not divide this plant. It can be slow to establish and is also slow to emerge in spring so mark it well. It can be started from seed but takes about 6 months for seeds to germinate. Plant parts are toxic.

The whole plant has a lemony scent but it’s claim to fame is a volatile gas the plant gives off on hot summer evenings. If conditions are right this gas can be ignited. After my grandmother told me this there were many furtive trips to the gas plant in the evening with matches in pocket. But I was never able to ignite any gas. Some say it’s the seed pods which give off the gas.

Gas plant is hard to find anymore. But for the gardener who wants something different it’s worth searching for.

Gas plant
Jorg Hempel

Bush balsam

Bush balsam, Impatiens balsamina, is another old-fashioned favorite.  As a kid I was told its name was Touch Me Not. That’s because when you touch a ripe seed pod it explodes. And believe me, kids love to do this, at least kids did before there were so many screens to capture their attention.

Bush balsam is an annual plant about 2 feet tall that has stems with small rose like flowers up and down it. (Most garden varieties have double flowers). Flower colors are shades of pink, rose, white and lavender. Bees like the flowers. It’s usually started from seed and it prefers partial shade.  

There are many herbal remedies connected to the plants so it could even be an addition to your herb garden. If flowers are crushed and mixed alum it produces a semi-permanent orange dye. At one time this was used to paint fingernails.

 

Bush balsam
Pinetree Seeds

Zinnias

Many people do still plant zinnias, especially if they want to attract butterflies. There are some new cultivars out there that are very attractive and that have resistance to powdery mildew, one of the reasons some people don’t like to grow zinnias. But the old-fashioned zinnias like ‘State Fair’ and ‘California Giants’ are still around and still good for cut flowers and attracting butterflies. If you want zinnias to attract butterflies stick to the single flowered types. For cut flowers double flowered zinnias and crested types are great.

Zinnias are annual plants. They can be started from seed in the spot you want to grow them after danger of frost has passed or you can start them inside about 6 weeks before your last frost. They usually begin blooming mid-summer and bloom until a hard frost kills them. They need a full sun location.

Next week I am going to write about a few more heritage/old fashioned garden plants.

 

Butterfly on zinnia

Tomato terminology

Are you buying tomato seeds this year? If you are new to seed buying looking at the descriptions in catalogs and online can be confusing, especially for tomatoes, Americas favorite garden crop. Here’s some help sorting out all that tomato terminology.

Hybrid is not a derogative term. A hybrid tomato seed has two different varieties of tomato as it’s parents. These hybrids are produced by natural plant breeding and are not GMO plants. Hybrids are generally more vigorous than their parents and combine many good traits from each plant. Plant breeders work diligently to improve tomatoes for disease resistance and flavor.

Hybrid plants have gotten a bad rap, mostly because some tomato breeders produce hybrids that stay firm during shipping and are more concerned with shipping quality than taste. But there are hundreds of tomato varieties and many hybrids are just as tasty as any heirloom.

In addition, hybrid tomatoes usually produce more tomatoes than heirlooms, and are easier to grow in a wider range of climate conditions.  Modern tomato breeding has turned back to home garden varieties that are just as juicy and flavorful as any heirloom. In fact, they often cross heritage or heirloom tomatoes with more disease resistant and productive ones.

Read the description of the tomato and choose those that promise good taste, juiciness, or what ever quality you are looking for in a tomato. Avoid those that talk about shipping qualities unless that’s what you need.

And by the way – hybrid does not mean it can’t be organic.

Heirloom is a subjective term. For some people it means the variety/cultivar has been around a long time. If you use this definition, then many hybrid tomatoes are heirlooms. But for many people heirloom means the tomato is open pollinated. That means if you isolate the tomato variety from other tomato varieties and collect the seeds the plant produces; you’ll get tomatoes like the parent plant produces.

What it really does not mean, despite the hype is that the variety tastes better or produces better than hybrid varieties. In fact, heirlooms often produce better in one specific area of the country and if you don’t pick one that suits your area, you’ll be disappointed. Many heirloom plants don’t have disease resistance. And many have low vigor and don’t produce as well as hybrids.

If you want to save varieties from extinction or enjoy growing odd things, heirlooms may be your style. There are some wonderful tasting heirlooms but there are some wonderful tasting hybrids too.

BOTH HEIRLOOMS AND HYBRIDS CAN BE GROWN ORGANICALLY.  A heirloom seed does not mean it was grown without pesticides.

Determinate and indeterminate – An indeterminate tomato keeps growing, upward and outward, and setting fruit until frost kills it.  A determinate tomato tends to set and ripen its fruit all at one time. It reaches a certain point of growth, then quits vegetative growth and concentrates on fruit production. Most garden varieties of tomatoes are indeterminate but if you can tomatoes, you may want to choose a determinate variety so you have a concentrated harvest.  Determinate tomatoes are shorter and bushier and can be better for container growing too. In short growing seasons indeterminate plants don’t have much advantage over determinate.

The letters behind the variety name of some tomatoes indicates they have resistance (not immunity) to certain diseases.  Not all tomatoes will have these letters. Most heirloom tomatoes do not have resistance to these diseases. In general the more letters after the variety name, the more disease resistance a tomato plant has.

V=verticillium wilt, F = fusarium wilt-( there can be 3 F’s indicating the 3 strains of fusarium wilt that infect tomatoes), N=nematodes, T = tobacco mosaic virus, A = alternaria stem canker, St= stemphylium gray leaf spot, TSWV=tomato spotted wilt virus.  LB and EB indicate resistance to late and early blight.

Potato leaf tomato- many species of tomato went into producing today’s varieties of tomatoes.  Some of those had a leaf shaped more like a potato leaf and some of the new varieties of tomato retain that shape.  It does not affect the plants growth qualities or taste of the fruit.

Paste tomatoes have thicker “meat” portions of the fruit and tend to be less juicy.  They are usually cooking tomatoes, used for sauces and paste.  Many are oblong or teardrop shaped. They are good for eating too. Oxheart tomatoes are larger meaty tomatoes, usually of European origin.

Cherry, grape, pear and currant tomatoes are all types of small tomatoes that grow in clusters.  Currant tomatoes are the smallest, very tiny 1 bite tomatoes.



Salad tomatoes usually refer to smaller smooth round tomatoes. Beefsteak can be a variety name or refer to tomatoes which are very large often with an oblong, flattened shape.

Tomatoes come in a variety of shapes, depending on variety.  Some are smooth and round; others have ridges or what appear to be segments joined together. There are also hollow tomatoes, which look like a pepper inside.  There are pear shaped tomatoes and very flattened oval shaped tomatoes.

Tomatoes also come in many colors, even though red remains the favorite.  Colors can be white, yellow, pink, orange, green, purple, brown, and striped.

Tomatoes also vary in taste, a tomato ripened in the sun always tastes better than one ripened in the store but the taste of tomatoes can range from sweet, non-acidic to very acidic and “robust”.  Taste is subjective and growing conditions can affect the taste of a tomato also.  Heirloom tomatoes don’t always taste better than modern hybrids, try many varieties of tomatoes to see what you like.

Indigo series tomatoes are a strain of tomatoes developed to have more anthocyanin, the blue pigment that is supposed to be so healthy for us.  Indigo tomatoes are a deep purple almost black with red highlights.  There are several varieties and sizes.  These are a bit different from older varieties of “black” or chocolate tomatoes.  They were developed with conventional breeding and are not GMO.

Grafted tomatoes are becoming popular.  These combine a disease resistant, hardy root stock (bottom portion) with a fruiting or top portion that may lack those traits.  Many times a heritage tomato is the top part.  One note on grafted tomatoes, don’t buy a tomato grafted on a potato unless you just want a novelty.  Despite the promises of both a tomato and potato crop, in reality neither crop grows well like this.

When choosing your tomato varieties, you may want to look into what part of the country the variety is said to do best in.  Some perform better in the north, others have a very long maturation rate and do better in the south. Check the tag or description for days to maturity. 

In tomatoes the days to maturity starts when you transplant them into the garden, not when you plant seeds. You should see such information offered in the catalog or tag description. Early varieties ripen in 55-70 days, medium varieties 70-90 days and late varieties more than 90 days.  

Now that you have a better idea of what certain terms in tomato descriptions mean, you should be able to choose a variety with confidence.

 

"January is the quietest month in the garden.  ...  But just because it looks quiet doesn't mean that nothing is happening.  The soil, open to the sky, absorbs the pure rainfall while microorganisms convert tilled-under fodder into usable nutrients for the next crop of plants.  The feasting earthworms tunnel along, aerating the soil and preparing it to welcome the seeds and bare roots to come."


-  Rosalie Muller Wright, Editor of Sunset Magazine, 1/99

Kim Willis

All parts of this blog are copyrighted and may not be used without permission.

 

And So On….

 

Find Michigan garden events/classes here:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/118847598146598/

(This is the Lapeer County Gardeners facebook page)

 

Newsletter/blog information

 

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 blog 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

 

Vetiver

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

January 19, 2021 plant books and baths

 Hi Gardeners

peony
The holidays are over and winter doldrums are setting for many of us. Many of us have been home for way longer than we have ever been in our lives. To ease the boredom, pull out those garden catalogs or go online to see them, and start planning that next garden. Or you may want to pick up some gardening books, see the article below, to prepare yourself for a new year of gardening.

As I mentioned last week, it’s too early for most gardeners to start most types of seeds. If you must get some seeds planted, try something unusual that takes a lot of time to mature. But for things like tomatoes and marigolds, patience is your friend.

I miss getting outside away from everything (like my husband’s TV) for hours at a time. I do try to get outside for a little bit every day.  But my arthritic joints do not appreciate work outside in cold weather. I’m lucky enough to have lots of plants inside to putter around with. And at this time of year- deep winter- the inside plants can always use a little attention.

I have 3 different hibiscus in bloom today. The fuchsia in my office room is blooming like crazy and I have 2 others blooming in another room. I have begonias, geraniums, streptocarpus and holiday cacti in bloom. An impatiens plant came up from seed in one pot and is now blooming.

The pothos in the living room window has grown tremendously and is creating a dilemma. It sits on a shelf up high on the window and is growing downward. It’s rapidly covering all the space in front of the window and is cutting down the natural light for some other plants. Should I cut it back or let it continue its conquest of the space? It’s a living curtain. I’ll never get it outside in the spring.

The diascia I brought inside didn’t make it. It bloomed nicely for a while but then fizzled out and died. So that experiment is over. I am thinking about buying a bay tree-Laurus nobilis. It’s actually a shrub that is easily kept pruned. It’s the plant we get bay leaves for cooking from, but I am using bay leaf for another reason. Recent research has found that bay leaf helps regulate blood sugar and lower triglycerides.  

You don’t hear much about bay leaf as an herbal remedy, so I am experimenting on myself. I’m using high quality powdered bay leaf in gelatin capsules I fill myself. I do believe it’s helping with the blood sugar, I’ll have to wait until my next bloodwork to check on the triglycerides.

I’d like to grow my own bay tree, supposedly the Romans kept it as a houseplant 2,000 years ago. It’s supposed to do well in cool sunny conditions inside. But I’ll have to see how much bay I would have to grow to get the amount of powder I need to see if it’s feasible.

Why not try your own experiment this winter with plants?  Not necessarily bay leaf or even a medicinal herb. But something unusual to grow, something everyone doesn’t have. Winter is a good time to research ideas and start such an project.

Laurus nobilis

 Gardeners need reference books

Thirty years ago, when people wanted answers to gardening questions, they usually picked up a reference book and looked up the information. Today when people want an answer they go online and ask some social media group. Now if they are asking the right group, people with knowledge of the subject and using science-based facts and not folklore, they may get good answers. But so often that’s not the case.

In many of these posts the answers are as varied as the folks writing them.  Some folks know what they are writing about others are parroting junk information they picked up somewhere else. Folk remedy solutions to problems, often useless, sometimes harmful, abound. And there are whole websites built around attracting “hits” which are filled with bad information even though they may seem professionally done. These are often the sources quoted by people answering questions.

It’s not possible to get all the information you need on starting a vegetable garden for instance, by asking on a garden FB page “Can you tell me how to start a vegetable garden?”  This type of question requires a much longer answer than a FB post can give.  And if you are new to gardening how do you pick out answers that are accurate from those that are not?

Even asking for plant identification is hit and miss on social media. Any post like this will often have dozens of different answers. And don’t count on apps to identify plants either, especially if you don’t know how – or can’t take a good clear photo. Those apps are rarely more than 50% successful.  Identification of pests, diseases and other problems is probably even less accurate from most social media and apps.

So, if you are a gardener with a plant problem or want to know about how to grow a certain plant where do you go for information?  Well, you might want to head back to those reference books. Garden and plant reference books should be in every serious gardener’s home. If you choose books by reputable authors your chances of getting good advice and answers to problems are much higher than asking on a FB page.

Every gardener should have several plant reference books to look up answers and to help them identify plants.  Good gardeners know the names of the plants they own, maybe not the cultivar name, like “Blueberry Sundae” daylily, but the species and common name, like Echinacea, or coneflower. There are books that can help you identify common garden plants, houseplants and weeds. 

Before you buy a plant, you should know what planting zone it’s hardy in and what growing conditions it requires. But many plant purchases are impulse buys, and the gardener will need to find this information after they get the plant home. Plant tags are helpful, but often don’t provide enough information. Books that help you with site selection, culture, growing tips, pruning and problem solving are invaluable.

Personally, I rarely buy fiction books in paper formats anymore but when I buy a reference book, that’s what form I prefer. Ebooks are harder to find information in and sometimes not available when you need them. But even electronic book versions are better than random social websites.

I have a whole shelf full of plant reference books and I still use them, especially for identification of plant species I don’t commonly see. Even if you are an experienced gardener a good reference book will teach you something. I’m going to list some books I have or that I know are good reference books.

Most of the books below can be found on Amazon and at many other bookstores.  You may want to look for them at book sales or resale shops. You can get some of them at a library, although having your own copies is always nicer. There are other good books on gardening and plant identification out there and if you have one you like and it isn’t listed, you can list it in comments below.

Just as social media has made it easy for everyone to seek and give advice, self-publishing books has given lots of people the ability to write a book – and some of these aren’t worth the paper they are printed on. A pretty cover is easy to do now, so don’t rely on that when picking books.

When you are looking for plant reference books check to see if the book has been published by a well-known publisher. Commercial book publishers usually print information from people they have determined are knowledgeable. The books are also edited so you aren’t wading through misspelled words and terrible grammar. Rodale Press, Storey Books, Penguin Group, and Wiley Publishing are some publishers known for nonfiction books about gardening.

Also check book reviews to see what others think of the book. Older books have a lot of valuable information so don’t pass up good deals on them. (Do remember that over time, research can change what is considered the best cultural practices).  And some of the better seed catalogs also have a lot of good information on culture- especially for those interested in vegetables.

Other sources for learning about plants are garden classes, like Master Gardener classes or classes sponsored by public gardens and arboretums. Sometimes these classes will even give you reference books with the class fee. Your local County Extension office may have a garden hotline or a horticulturist which can give advice.

I’m not saying you should never ask for advice on a garden webpage. There are many times when people like to hear other people’s suggestions, tips and opinions. But for basic care and identification of plants reference books can educate you so that you can determine what advice is probably sound and factual rather than myth and misunderstanding.

Reference books

The Houseplant Expert Dr. D.G. Hessayon


Practical Houseplant Book-  Zia Allaway and Fran Bailey

The Complete Houseplant Survival Manual: Essential Gardening Know-how for Keeping (Not Killing!) More Than 160 Indoor Plants-Barbara Pleasant

Gardening Under Lights: The Complete Guide for Indoor Growers Leslie F. Halleck

The Kew Gardener’s Guide to Growing House Plants: The art and science to grow your own house plants (Kew Experts)

The Vegetable Gardener’s Bible 2nd edition – Edward Smith

Vegetable Gardening For Dummies-Charlie Nardozzi and The Editors of the National Gardening Association

Homegrown Herbs: A Complete Guide to Growing, Using, and Enjoying More than 100 Herbs- Rosemary Gladstar and Tammi Hartung

Caring for Perennials: What to Do and When to Do it- Janet Macunovich

Designing Your Gardens and Landscapes: 12 Simple Steps for Successful Planning- Janet Macunovich

The Well-Tended Perennial Garden-  Tracy Disabato Aust

Manual of Annuals, Biennials and Half- Hardy Perennials – Alan Armitage

Flower Garden Problem Solver – Rodale Press

Garden Insect, Disease and Weed Identification Guide- Rodale Press

Dirr's Encyclopedia of Trees and Shrubs- Michael Dirr

Native Woody Landscape and Restoration Plants of the Eastern United States-Michael L. Dorn

 


Houseplant tips- cleaning your houseplants

Do you dust and bathe your plants? In the low light levels of winter dust on a plant’s leaves can impact it’s ability to absorb light and make food. Take the time to dust off plant leaves if they look dusty.

Many houseplants would love a shower occasionally if you can arrange it. If you can put them in a tub or sink and spray them off it is very beneficial to the plant. This can help a lot if you have trouble with spider mites, which like dry environments. It removes dust and dirt and acts like a good rainstorm outside does to perk up plants.

Use mildly warm water and no soap in that plant shower. If you worry about the potting medium getting too wet slip a trash bag over the top and tie it around the plant base. If your pot has good drainage it won’t be a problem if the potting medium gets wet.

Do not use leaf shine products, milk, oils or anything else on your plants leaves. These products can clog stomata – the pores in the leaf that regulate the passage of water vapor and other gasses. This can be harmful to your plants.

Should you trim off yellow or browned leaves? If the plant has a lot of leaves and a few are yellow or brown just trim them off. It’s not unusual for healthy plants to have a few yellow leaves. All leaves eventually die and are replaced. Dead crunchy leaves and stems should be removed. They aren’t coming back and don’t help the plant. It’s also ok to trim off any brown tips on leaves, which are common in houseplants in low humidity environments.

There are some people that feel if a plant has few leaves and is struggling to survive, that any leaf that still has some green left in it should be left.  They believe that the plant needs those remaining green areas to produce food. It’s a judgement call I think, because removing dying leaves also stimulates the plant to produce new ones. And in some cases removing dying leaves also removes insect pests.

If you have corrected the problem that caused the yellow or browning leaves, then removing the yellow and brown leaves will stimulate the plant to produce new, healthy leaves. If you aren’t sure what caused the problem, and the plant has few leaves left, leave any that still have some green until new leaves appear. Once new leaves appear remove the dying leaves.

It’s also important to remember that in some plants leaves remain green for a while after they die. Norfolk pines are an example of this. If the leaf or branch snaps easily or your touch makes it fall off the plant, it’s dead. Usually, close inspection will reveal the dried, dull looking state. Those leaves may have some dull green left, but they aren’t producing any food, and should be removed.

 Let’s talk about winter seed sowing.

The modern trend of winter sowing generally has a gardener sowing seeds in something like a milk jug. Then the containers are set outside.  In earlier times the seeds were simply sown in the ground in the fall or in a cold frame. Almost any plant that will self-seed in the garden can be sown in the fall right in the ground.

I suggest gardeners use a cold frame, rather than milk jugs or other small containers if you want to try “winter “ sowing. Those small containers can work if you are lucky, but they are much more prone to wide temperature fluctuations and they don’t give plants much room to grow.

In the spring as the sun grows stronger, they heat up rapidly, the seeds sprout and begin growing. Then we have a cold snap, with cloudy weather or the nights fall to very low temperatures and the plants die. Plants can also be cooked in those plastic containers during warm spells.  And the sun and heat rapidly dry out the soil in the containers, which may kill the plants. If they are left open they may get too much water.


A cold frame is simply a box on the ground with a clear lid, and sometimes a clear south side. You can also use hoops or tunnels to promote early seed starting. A gardener can simply construct a wooden box with a Plexiglass or glass lid or make a lid covered with heavy clear plastic film. Old windows can make good cold frame tops.

The box should be at least eighteen inches deep to allow plants to grow. The walls should be thick or well insulated. You can add a floor or simply have them sit on the ground. Cold frames should receive full sun all day.

Some people add soil and plant directly in the box, but plants transplant better if started in pots. Square pots use less space. Don’t start seeds or plants in a cold frame too early in the spring. The weather should be ready for them to be planted in the garden when they outgrow the frame. Planting in a cold frame can usually begin six to ten weeks before your last expected frost. Or you could sow the seeds in fall inside the frame, and leave it open until near spring.

The most important thing to remember about cold frames is that even though it is in the upper thirties outside on a sunny day, it will be much warmer inside the box with the lid closed. If temperatures get too hot the plants will die just as quickly as if they got too cold. On sunny days the lid must be raised at least a little. That’s where those devices that will raise the lid when the temperature gets to a certain point inside and lower it when it drops are handy. They can be purchased in garden supply stores.

If you do not use a thermostatically controlled opener you must be diligent in raising and lowering the lid depending on weather conditions. If extremely cold weather threatens after seeds sprout the whole cold frame can be covered with a blanket.

Winter seed sowing is not a bad idea. It mimics natural conditions for many seeds. Some seeds need cold, moist conditions for several weeks before they will germinate. But sowing the seeds in small, enclosed containers like milk jugs is not a good way to go about it. Even in a cold frame care must be taken so seedlings don’t get too hot or cold.

Just sowing the seeds in the place you want them to grow in the fall, and marking the spot, is probably the best solution. You may need to cover the area with row cover or fencing to protect the seeds from critters. The seedlings may come up a little later than those in cold frames, but they generally catch up quickly.

 

The color of springtime is in the flowers; the color of winter is in the imagination.

Terri Guillemets

 

Kim Willis

All parts of this blog are copyrighted and may not be used without permission.

 

And So On….

 

Find Michigan garden events/classes here:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/118847598146598/

(This is the Lapeer County Gardeners facebook page)

 

Newsletter/blog information

 

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 blog 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

 

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

January 12, 2021 Too Cold for Hippos

 Hi Gardeners

No hippos only warthogs
We finally had a few days where the sun shone for a few hours.  We haven’t had a lot of snow, but the gloom lets you know it’s winter. I’ve been looking for seeds and plants I want to buy in catalogs and online, so it helps keep the spirits up.  And boy- there are a lot of things out of stock already and the season has just begun.

Another thing that keeps the spirits up is plants blooming inside. Green is good but flowers are better. I love tropical hibiscus as blooming houseplants, even though they are large plants. I have a beautiful big pink double flowered one blooming today.

Also good for inside blooms are fuchsia, I have 5 different ones and 4 are in bloom right now. Streptocarpus and geraniums are good blooming indoor plants as are the fibrous begonias and gerbera daisies. And of course, the various holiday cacti, I have “Christmas” cacti in bloom much of the winter.

Many of you may have received amaryllis for Christmas and you’ll have blooms from them soon. If you treat them right, they’ll bloom many times for you- but they need rest periods before each bloom period. If you want more information on them here’s a link.

https://gardeninggrannysgardenpages.blogspot.com/p/houseplants-amaryliss4-amaryllis-did.html

The birds are flocking to the feeders now as they deplete the wild seeds available. Many people are talking about robins and bluebirds that haven’t gone south. When there isn’t much snow these birds tend to linger. If we get a big snowstorm some more of them may leave. They don’t normally eat seeds, but bluebirds may eat suet. You can help them out with berries and fruit or expensive dried mealworms if you like.

Deer are wreaking havoc on many evergreen shrubs now. They may also prune your roses and some other plants. Don’t feel sorry for them and feed them. This makes your problem worse and things like corn aren’t good for deer digestive systems. Don’t get them used to being up close around your home and then cry about your flowers in the spring. You may need to bring bird feeders inside at night because they will empty them if they can reach them.

I guess deer pests are better than hippos. I was reading a news story about how hippos have become a problem in Columbia, after a drug dealers private zoo was emptied. They have multiplied and are destroying crops, rare native plants and threatening people. In Africa where they are native, hippos are considered to be the most dangerous large animal and they kill many people each year. I’m glad it’s too cold for hippos here, one advantage of winter.

 

Two resolutions for every gardener

There are two pieces of information every gardener should know and if you don’t know these things, make a resolution today to learn them. Those things are your growing zone and your average first and last frost dates, which gives you the length of your growing season. This information is critical for gardening.

You can find your growing zone by looking at the map below.

  


Knowing your growing zone will let you buy perennials, shrubs and trees that are hardy in your area. Almost all catalogs and plant tags list this growing zone information.

Knowing the length of your growing season- first and last frost dates- helps you chose varieties that will mature before frost in your area. It also helps you know when to plant frost tender plants in the spring. When you are starting seeds inside the package will tell you how many weeks to plant them before the last spring frost. These dates can only be averaged, because weather conditions at the time will pay a big role in whether you get a frost or freeze.

Finding the first and last frost dates is a little more complicated. I suggest contacting your nearest Extension office, almost all counties have an Extension office which is affiliated with a land grant college. An older experienced gardener may be able to tell you.  There’s a link to the average last spring frost below. It will get you started.

https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/news/when-expect-your-last-spring-freeze

Another way to find the information is to search online using “when is my first and last frost date” plus your zip code. Keeping a close eye on the weather forecast near the average dates is recommended.

Gardening you can do in January

Check your outside trees and shrubs and protect them from deer, vole and rabbit damage if you haven’t already done so.  A barrier around the plant of small wire mesh, 3 feet high is recommended for the trunk.  If deer eat the tops of evergreens surround them with a barrier of deer netting.  If you can’t get poles in the ground you can drape it over plants.

Fruit trees and grapes can be pruned this month, if you are good working outside in cold weather.

Cut up live, discarded, Christmas trees.  Use the branches to cover perennials or chop them into smaller pieces and compost. If you have a large pond with fish throw the trees in or on the ice. They make good spawning spots for fish.

Keep the bird feeders full.

Build new planters, birdhouses and other garden crafts. Paint old garden accessories new colors.

Check the houseplants for signs of insects or disease. Trim off dead leaves and dust leaves if needed.  Rotate plants next to windows to keep them growing straight. Start cuttings or root leaves from houseplants like jades, aloes, Christmas cacti, African violets, Rex begonias, spider plant, pothos and other vining plants.

Start tuberous begonia bulbs inside in a warm place. They need plenty of time to mature and start blooming before the last frost in spring.

Check summer bulbs and tubers in storage. If any are soft and molded, discard them. If they look shriveled add a little moisture to the material you are storing them in.

Seed starting can be done for some types of plants in some growing zones. More on that below.

 

When to start seeds


There has been an unusually early number of questions relating to what seeds can be started now. Everybody needs to relax and slow down a bit. Planting seeds too early is a waste of time and money.  And in most of the country it’s too early to start all but a few types of seeds.

If you do start seeds now you need a grow light. In the northern areas even a heated greenhouse will need supplemental lighting to start seeds now. Northern days are just too short and the sun too weak to grow seedlings well.  Windowsills definitely will not work.

Seeds to be started in January and February in zones 5 -7 include begonias of all types that can be grown from seed, impatiens, coleus, geraniums, petunias, and lisianthus. Start pansy and viola seeds early because they can be planted outside quite early, before the last frost. Some perennial plants might be started early if the seeds have had the proper chilling requirements met. But even with perennials it’s better to wait a bit longer. If you are in zone 4 and lower, late February is probably best to start the above species.

If you have seeds from indoor type plants they can be started.  Also, tuberous begonia bulbs, calla lily, banana and elephant ear bulbs can be started in pots early.

Most other species of plants should not be started in zones 5-7 until March or later. The seedlings will get lanky and require a lot of room to grow well if started too early. There is a great opportunity for diseases, insect pests and poor conditions to destroy the plants before it’s time to plant outside.

If you are in zones 8 and 9 some vegetable plants might be started inside now, and some annual flowers. Check catalog descriptions or seed packet instructions to find out how many weeks before your average last frost you should start seeds.

Growing weed

One plant you can start from seed now- if it’s legal in your state- is marijuana. If you are itching to grow something from seed start some pot. If you don’t enjoy smoking it the plants are very attractive to pollinators and a nicely grown plant is an interesting ornamental.

It can be tricky to find the seeds and I am not going to list any sources because in some states this is illegal. But if you search for the seeds online, you’ll find an abundance of places selling them. The seed is expensive, maybe a friend who grows has some seed they can share.

You don’t have to get an elaborate grow system and use all kinds of chemical concoctions to grow marihuana, although it can become an elaborate and expensive hobby. I grew it in regular potting soil using rose fertilizer and I ended up with huge, nice plants. I just used growlights that I raised as the plants grew- and believe me, they grow fast. It’s not called weed for nothing.  My plants went outside after the last frost.

 

Young pot plant under grow light

Buying seeds- don’t worry about GMO

Every year as people start ordering seeds for spring someone asks- “where can I find non-GMO seeds for my garden?”  The good news is that you can find non-GMO seeds everywhere. Home gardeners rarely have to worry about genetically modified seeds (GMO), because almost every seed offered to gardeners is not genetically modified.  GMO varieties of seed are almost always crop seeds: seeds of field corn, soybeans and so on. There are just two types of common garden crops that have GMO varieties, sweet corn and squash, but you will rarely, if ever, find them in the retail market. And if you did find them, they would be labeled as GMO.

Seed companies that advertise in bold letters- NON GMO SEEDS!- are just playing on public fears and ignorance.  And it’s ridiculous that almost all companies are now doing this because their competitor’s seeds are not GMO either. Seeing “non-GMO seeds” in a garden catalog means absolutely nothing. One catalog that shall remain nameless boasts “ non GMO seeds since 1876” .  What a crock.  Don’t choose a catalog to buy from because it say’s non – GMO.

If you want organically grown seeds, that’s a different matter. Organic seeds are seeds harvested from plants that were not treated with pesticides.  There are many places that carry some organic varieties of seeds. The only reason to buy organic seeds is to support people who grow organically. Your own health will not be affected in any way regardless if you buy organic or non-organic seed.

Neonicotinoid treated seeds

The only problem with “non-organic seeds” is if the seeds themselves were treated with one of the neonicotinoid pesticides.  Many types of seeds are treated with these products to prevent insect damage in storage. Since the seeds take up these pesticides the neonicotinoids also protect the seedlings as they begin to grow. 

As the plants get older, if no neonicotinoid pesticides have been applied since the seed treatment, the amount of the pesticide in plant tissues continues to decline. However, studies have shown that a small amount of pesticides can remain in plant parts, including pollen and nectar for at least a year.

Neonicotinoid pesticides are very safe for humans, other mammals and birds and that is why their use is so popular. The problem is that along with harmful insects, neonicotinoids can kill or weaken pollinators and other helpful insects.  There is ongoing research on this subject, but it seems that seed treatments or treating seedlings with neonicotinoids can affect pollinators when those plants bloom, weeks or months later.

Plants grown from seed treated with neonicotinoids will not harm you, only pollinators and other insects. If you are going to plant things that you consume before they bloom, such as lettuce, carrots, beets, broccoli and so on, then the infinitesimal amount of pesticide left from a seed treatment should not be any problem. If you used organic growing practices your food is very, very close to organic, although legally you may not be able to label it as such.

Plants like trees or shrubs that will take several years to bloom from seed will not have any pesticide residue left to harm bees. Whether you choose to grow neonicotinoid treated seeds for plants like beans, sunflowers, squash and flowering plants attractive to bees that bloom the first year, is a personal choice. At this time research suggests there may be some damage to pollinators with some species of plants whose seeds were treated.

If you follow organic garden methods your garden produce will be virtually indistinguishable from those who used organic seeds even if you start with seeds that weren’t grown organically. If organic seed is more expensive than non-organic, I don’t buy it.

Other seed terms


Open pollinated seeds (OP)-are seeds that are not hybrid and are offered by many seed companies.  Open pollinated seeds are generally older varieties or heirlooms. The only real advantage to open pollinated seeds is that if you isolated that variety from other varieties of the same species, you can save seeds to grow for next year. And with those seeds you will get a new crop very similar to the parent plants. 

If you don’t isolate your plants such as tomatoes and peppers by variety, the seeds you save from this year’s crop are likely to be hybrids- insects and the wind distribute pollen between varieties. The resulting plants grown from those seeds will be all over the scale as far as vigor and taste.

Seeds that are hybrids are not genetically modified in the accepted definition of the word; it’s just means that two different varieties of a plant were crossed through sexual reproduction, (getting pollen from one plant to the stigma (female part) of another plant).  The varieties that are crossed to produce the hybrid are known to reliably produce seeds that will grow into a certain type of plant.  But if you save seed from hybrid plants and grow them the offspring will have all sorts of variations, some good, some bad. 

Hybrid seed that is deliberately produced is usually more vigorous and disease resistant than open pollinated seed. You’ll usually see such seed marked as F1 or with the word hybrid in the name. Hybrid seed can produce vegetables and flowers every bit as healthy, tasty, and safe as non-hybrid seed.  And seed can be both organically grown and hybrid.

Most seed comes from the same place

It may surprise gardeners buying seeds to learn that many seed companies offering seed in small packets are all buying from the same seed growers or wholesalers. A few companies do grow some or all of the seeds they offer, but a great many companies just buy bulk seed and simply repackage it.  The seed grower sells seed to wholesale seed companies, they in turn sell seeds to smaller wholesalers or retailers, who package the seeds in paper or foil packets for the home gardener.

If you read a seed catalog carefully and pay attention to the small print you may be told what seed growers the company contracts with, or what wholesaler they buy from and who they are affiliated with or are owned by.  If you ever thought certain catalogs looked a lot alike and offered similar things check their mailing addresses. Some come from the same company under different names. These different catalogs from the same company may have different prices for the same item too.

Shop around. When buying garden seeds make sure to compare the size of the packet and the cost of shipping to see where you get the best deal. The same seed variety can vary widely in price from one company to another.

 

For lots of information about seeds and starting seeds click on the page below.

https://gardeninggrannysgardenpages.blogspot.com/p/have-youreceived-any-garden-catalogs-in.html

 

 

A surprising way plants can obtain new genetic material

An interesting research paper was just released that might explain how new species of plants form and how plants can adapt to changing conditions.  Researchers have found that genetic material in the nucleus of a plant can be passed from cell to cell.  And if two plants have a graft union that genetic information can then pass from plant.

In nature plants sometimes graft together at their root systems and parasitic plants such as mistletoe also tap into the host plants at a cellular level. Scientists have shown that genetic material can pass from plant to plant at these natural grafts and also at human made grafts. It’s theoretically possible that genes from one plant that can survive drought for instance, can be passed to another plant by a parasitic plant like mistletoe, or by roots grafting together.

This raises some interesting questions.  Not all grafts between plants will survive, the closer genetically the plants are the better the chances for a graft to “take”.  Species within the same genus can often be grafted together but plants in different genus or families are unlikely to form a graft.

But if you can find a related species of a plant that has some desirable quality you would like another species to have, such as disease resistance or flower color, it’s possible that a graft of the two might let the plants exchange the genes to pass the desired quality along.

It’s going to take some more research, but we may have discovered a new natural way to genetically modify plants.   

Here’s a link for more reading:

www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/01/210111112227.htm

 


“If we had no winter, the spring would not be so pleasant: if we did not sometimes taste of adversity, prosperity would not be so welcome.” 

– Anne Bradstreet

 

Kim Willis

All parts of this blog are copyrighted and may not be used without permission.

 

And So On….

 

Find Michigan garden events/classes here:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/118847598146598/

(This is the Lapeer County Gardeners facebook page)

 

Newsletter/blog information

 

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 blog 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