Wednesday, June 11, 2014

New Home (and Growing Season)!

Many of you already know, but I have recently relocated to beautiful Birmingham, Alabama!  While NJ and the mid-Atlantic region will always hold a special place in my heart, it's great to be back home with one of the longest growing seasons in the US (even as we head into the sweltering heat and humidity that is an Alabama summer).  Along with exciting new growing opportunities, horticulture in the southeast region also presents an array of new gardening challenges.  From spiking temperatures to severe thunderstorms, from extended drought to packed clay soils, I know some lessons will be hard-learned.  I'm here to share with you my experiences both good and bad in the garden, so be sure to check back frequently!


To kick off my adventure, let's start with a great question I've heard frequently of late: what should I plant and when?  Of course, like snow flakes (which this region saw an unusually high amount of this past winter) no two growing seasons are the same.  However, the Alabama Cooperative Extension Service (ACES) has a detailed chart (found here) that will serve as a great general guide in planning your garden. Has the spring planting date for your favorite veggie already passed?  Don't despair!  Most will have a suggestion for fall planting dates as well.  Wondering when you'll be able to eat the tasty treats you grow?  Just count forward from your planting date by the given days to maturity to find your approximate harvest date!  As always, be sure to have a current soil evaluation before fertilizing or planting!  In Alabama, ACES soil testing kits are extremely affordable and available from a variety of locations.  Contact your local Alabama Master Gardener Helpline to find a location convenient to you.

Happy gardening y'all!

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Winter Planning for a Successful Season

The weather outside may be frightful, but there’s still plenty of gardening related tasks to be accomplished during the winter season. Here are some things that can be done over the next few months in order to prepare for a successful gardening season to come.

  • Help prevent damage to outside plants by gently brushing snow off of heavily laden shrubs and trees to prevent breakage and avoid burying shrubs and perennials when shoveling or blowing snow.
  • Prune dead, diseased, or damaged wood on trees, shrubs & vines as soon as it is observed. A few minutes of tidying up now can save time later and give you some winter exercise.
  • Add organic material to the compost pile or bin.
  • Avoid walking on frozen lawns as it can break grass blades and damage crowns of the plants. Stick to driveways, sidewalks, and walking paths.
  • Bare soil invites winter weeds into the garden. Cover bare areas with mulch and pull any weeds that appear to prevent them from going to seed in the spring.
  • Monitor evergreens for bagworms sacks and remove them if found. Clip them off and bag them up to be disposed of with your household trash. Do not compost them. Bagworms can be highly destructive to trees such as arborvitae, spruce and cypress so clip the 1-2” sacks now to prevent the hundreds of eggs from hatching in the spring.
  • Provide food and habitat for winter wildlife by keeping bird feeders and birdbaths filled throughout the season. You may even consider a birdbath heater which will keep the water just above freezing and available to wildlife that will desperately need it. Wait to cut back shrubs and perennials until the spring so that wildlife will have some winter cover. This will also increase the visual interest in your garden throughout the season.
  • Read gardening books and magazines and plan for next year’s garden designs.
  • Plant bulbs until the ground freezes or during a thaw or store in the refrigerator.
  • Cut evergreens for fresh, indoor decorations.
  • Keep firewood outside until 1-2 days before burning to prevent critters from waking up inside your home.
  • Order seeds for next season.
  • Clean & disinfect pots & containers.
  • Have your soil tested before purchasing or applying any fertilizers or soil amendments.
Also, don't neglect your trusty tools!  Here are some tips on caring for your tools this winter so they'll be at their best when you need them next season.

  • Check hoses and sprinklers for leaks. Small leaks can result in large quantities of wasted water and higher utility bills. Drain, coil & store hoses in a dry, protected area where they will not freeze.
  • Remove any soil, vegetation, or rust from all tools using a strong stream of water, a wire brush, or scraper. Grill cleaning brushes work great for this task.
  • Lubricate all tool pivot points and springs.
  • Sharpen hoes, spades, loppers, pruners, and saws.
  • Check all tools thoroughly for loose screws or nuts and tighten them accordingly. Replace or repair broken handles and other bent or broken parts.
  • Spray all bare metal parts and cutting edges with a penetrating oil to prevent rust.
  • Sand wooden handles smooth and wipe with boiled linseed oil to help prevent wood from cracking and drying or paint handles a bright color for quick and easy location in the garden.
  • Repair or replace any tools with bent blades or teeth.
  • All sprayer parts should be thoroughly washed and rinsed before storing. Most pesticide labels recommend a triple rinsing of sprayers. Oil any moving parts as instructed in the owner’s manual. Store sprayer upside down to allow it to drain and dry thoroughly.
  • Store any chemicals out of the weather where they will not freeze. Check chemical labels for expiration dates. If expired, dispose of them as hazardous waste.
  • Clean wheelbarrows, carts, and wagons thoroughly and remove and rust before touching up paint chips with spray paint to prevent rust in the future. Check tire pressure, inflate if needed, and grease wheels to keep them rolling smoothly and prevent squeaking. Store in a dry area.
  • Clean and service lawn mowers and other power equipment such as tillers, chippers, trimmers, or weed eaters according to the instructions in the owner’s manual and store in a dry area.
  • Avoid storing gasoline over the winter as old gasoline does not ignite easily, making the machines using it work harder, and often leading to frustration getting them to start. If you do store fuel, be sure it is in a will ventilated area away from your dwelling space.

Monday, July 15, 2013

Beat the Heat!

For those of you working in the garden or field this week, you're probably already aware that our area is under an excessive heat warning until at least mid-week, with temperatures in the high 90's and heat index values reaching into the 100's.  Please don't take this lightly.  Heat can kill!  If you're spending time outdoors, be sure you know the signs of heat related illness and take the proper measures to avoid it all together.  The National Weather Service has a great article on the subject so check it out and learn how to be prepared here: NWS Heat: A Major Killer.


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Late Blight Rears Its Ugly Head Again

I hate to be the bearer of bad news but late blight, the disease caused by the fungal-like pathogen Phytopthera infestans, has been confirmed on a farm in Mercer County, NJ.  This is the first confirmed case of the disease in NJ for 2013.  This devastating disease of tomatoes, potatoes and other solanaceaous plants is notorious for it's ability to quickly wipe out entire crops, from a few plants in a home garden to entire commercially cultivated fields, putting farmers at serious financial risk.  Remember the Irish Potato Famine back in the mid 19th century?  Yup, that was late blight.  So if you're growing tomatoes in any capacity this year, I can't encourage you enough familiarize yourself with the symptoms of this disease, to check your plants at least twice a week (more frequently when the weather is as wet as it has been lately), and destroy diseased plants immediately.  If you're growing tomatoes and visit any other gardens or farms also growing tomatoes, especially any "you pick" fields, be sure to clean your hands, clothing, gloves, shoes and any tools used with hot, soapy water between locations to help prevent the spread as well.  For more information from Cornell University on late blight, including how to identify infected plants, go to http://nysipm.cornell.edu/publications/blight/.  Not sure if you have late blight or not?  Reach out to your county's Rutgers Master Gardener Helpline.  For Burlington County, contact the RMG Helpline at (609) 265-5050 or mgburlingtoncounty@gmail.com.  For other counties in NJ, check here: http://njaes.rutgers.edu/mastergardeners/helplines.asp.  For other states, check with your state land grant university cooperative extension program.

Late blight on mature green tomato fruit.
Rutgers Cooperative Research & Extension, (NJAES,)
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.
Late blight on mature green tomato fruit.
Rutgers Cooperative Research & Extension, (NJAES,)
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Rutgers Master Gardeners of Burl. Co. Spring into Action!

Well, it seemed as if it may never come, but spring finally made an appearance in Burlington County and now, following a frost two weeks ago, this week it's feeling more like summer!  The Rutgers Master Gardeners of Burlington County (RMGBC) and I have been hard at work, wrapping up our 2013 Initial Training Program, opening the growing season with the 2nd Annual Burlington County Garden Expo, and getting our eager hands into the soil at our many projects throughout the county.

Our training wrapped up with our annual tour of the Rutgers EcoComplex where Pat Evans told us all about how their bio-reactor landfill system works, and Russel Wright lead our group through the state-of-the-art research and demonstration greenhouse.  During these tours we learned how the energy demands of the greenhouse are met through the capture and utilization of gases from the landfill, as well as about the incubator businesses operating in the greenhouse and how the aquaculture system provides nutrients to their growing plants through the recirculating hydroponic irrigation system.

Bio-reactive landfill tour with Pat Evans
Greenhouse tour with Russel Wright


Even though most of New Jersey saw heavy rains and thunderstorms during the day, we managed to stay dry out at the Burlington County Community Agricultural Center (BCCAC) for the Garden Expo on Saturday, May 11.  In addition to the "Ask a Rutgers Master Gardener" table, the RMGBC had a Ramapo tomato plant sale, led educational programs on subjects such as The Climate-Friendly Gardener, Flower Arranging: Thinking Outside the Vase, and Gardening to Protect Water Quality, as well as ran the Children's Make-and-Take activities for the day.  Our Make-and-Take activities included potting up a few herbs and/or flowers as a Mother's Day gift for mom while learning about the importance of soils and making a radish seed necklace while learning the basics of how seeds germinate.  We all had a lot of fun and enjoyed the mild weather.  Thank you to everyone who came out and helped to make this event a success!


'American Gothic' photo prop
RMGBC Children's Make-and-Take area










Flower arrangements by RMGBC Educator Joan Johnson

We've dug on in (ha!) to all of our community projects for the year as well, including our ongoing projects such as our Demonstration Plots and IPM Scouting Team at the BCCAC, Donation Garden at Medford Leas, our Kitchen and Blended Gardens at the Pinelands Preservation Alliance, and the Children's and Butterfly Gardens at the Rancocas Nature Center, as well as a new project working with the Eagle Scouts to help design a teaching garden at Evans Elementary School.  Stay tuned for more updates on these projects as the season progresses!


Cleaning up the BCCAC Rain Garden
Bill Bamka, RCE Agricultural Agent
demonstrating the use of a square for
measuring thresholds for the IPM scouts.



Installing a new cold frame at the Medford Leas Donation Garden.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Snow? Really?

Well, here it is folks!  The reason I always urge gardeners to wait until early April before seeding and early May before transplanting anything into the ground in Burlington County.  Think back to the second week of March when the sun was shining and it felt downright toasty topping 60 degrees outside.  It seems a rather distant memory now as the snow continues to fall but back during that warm, sunny week the Rutgers Master Gardener Helpline phone here at RCE Burlington County was nearly ringing off the hook with callers anxious to know if it was safe to start their spring planting.  As tempting as it was, even for myself, I towed the frost date line and cautioned everyone to wait.  Aren't you glad you did?

Friday, October 5, 2012

Winning Winter Squash

Yesterday we harvested our trial field for new winter squash varieties two hybrid stars really shone!  The first is a new, round, pie pumpkin called 'Trickster'.  It's very similar to the 'Prankster' variety, but we saw much more uniform orange color with the 'Trickster' as well as greater stem quality and a touch better disease resistance.  The second, and a bit unexpected, winner was the 'Quantum' butternut squash.  Wow, what a producer!  High yield, amazing uniformity of color, size and shape with really nice, thick necks and, to be in a field with a fairly significant amount of both downy and powdery mildews present, it was virtually disease free.  If you're considering new varieties of winter squash for your garden next year, it would be hard to go wrong with these!


'Trickster'
'Quantum'

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Save Seeds, Money, & Biodiversity!

With all of the variety that September garden harvests can offer, it's the perfect time to start saving seed for next year's garden, but you'll want to make sure to do it the right way in order to protect next season's bounty.  Seed saving can be a wonderful way to save costs in your garden as well as to preserve many of the lovely and tasty heirloom varieties, but there are several potential pitfalls you'll want to be careful to avoid.

First, keep in mind that every plant's seeds are not worth saving.  Hybrid plants, those created by cross breeding separate parent plants for specific features, often produce sterile seed or seed with such a high degree of genetic variability that the resulting progeny may not resemble your original plant at all, such as seen with the strawberry plant (Fragaria x ananassa).  Because of these genetic possibilities seed from hybridized plants are not recommended for saving.

Second, many garden plants are open pollinated.  That means that their flowers do not self pollinate but instead are pollinated via insects or wind, or a combination thereof, by nearby plants of the same family.  Open pollinated plants include many cucurbits (squash, cucumbers, melons), brassicas (cabbage, chard, broccoli, mustard greens, spinach cauliflower, kale, radish) and a variety of other plants such as beets, onions and basil.  These open pollinated plants will naturally cross with others plants of the same family growing in their vicinity, so in order for them to reproduce identical plants from seed they must be isolated from all other plants in their family that may pollinate them.  It is very difficult, if not impossible, for home gardeners to isolate plant varieties and avoid unwanted cross-pollination as these plants must be secluded by large distances to maintain the original variety.  Having plants with more variety from year to year may not sound like that big of a deal, but be aware that this cross-pollination will likely result in the gradual deterioration or "running out" of the seed to be harvested.

A third concern is that of seed transmitted diseases.  If a disease infects a plant at the end of the season it may not cause much visible damage at the time.  But, if seed is saved from the diseased plant, it may result in severe injury to or even death of young plants in the next season.

If after heeding these warnings you are still interested in trying your hand at seed saving, here are a few pointers on how to do so successfully.  To begin, always harvest from the best plants of each type.  Select disease-free individuals with the qualities of traits, such as flavor, color, size, shape, harvest time or flower you find desirable.  Remember that in order for seed to be viable, it must be mature.  This will likely mean that the fruit you take the seed from will be beyond the stage where it is desirable to eat.  So, you will have to decide which fruits to harvest to eat and which to let fully ripen to harvest for seed.  Seed set tends to discourage further fruit production as well as reduce the overall vigor of a plant, so you'll want to wait until the end of the season for each particular plant type to harvest seed.

Typically seeds are ripe when they have turned from white to somewhere between cream colored and dark brown, depending on the plant.  Flower seeds are mature when the flowers have faded and dried.  This will apply to many vegetable plants that you may not think of as flowers, such as lettuce, carrots, onions and most herbs.  Plants with pods, such as beans and peas, have mature seed when the pods have turned brown and dried.  Most seeds of fruiting plants, such as tomatoes and peppers, will be ready once they are past the peak of ripeness.  The catch to this is that if you wait for all of the seeds of a plant to ripen you may lose most if the seeds to birds or animals, so you'll want to try to harvest when most of the seeds are ripe.

Once seeds are harvested, they must be properly prepared in order to be viable.  Most seeds of pods and flowers should be prepared by the dry method.  This means that the seeds should be allowed to mature and dry on the plant as long as possible.  After harvest, complete the drying process by spreading them in a single layer on a screen in a well-ventilated area with low humidity.  You will know they are ready when the chaff (the dry, scaly protective casings of the seed) can be easily removed by blowing or gently rolling the seed in your hand.  For very small and lightweight seed, such as lettuce or carrot, you may want to put the seed in a paper bag to dry as the paper will help wick moisture away from the seed while also containing the seeds.

Seeds harvested from fleshy fruits should be prepared by the wet method.  This is done by scooping out the seed masses and soaking them in a little bit of warm water in some sort of container for three to four days, stirring daily.  This will allow the seed coatings to ferment, a process which kills some diseases and separates the good seeds, which will sink to the bottom, from the bad ones and the remaining fruit pulp, which will float at the top.  You can then pour off the pulp, water, bad seeds and any other undesirable material that may have floated up.  Remove the good seeds and spread them on a screen or paper towel and allow to dry completely, otherwise they may mold in storage.

Now your seeds are ready to be stored.  You can put them in envelopes, jars or plastic freezer safe containers, making sure to label containers with the seed type, variety and date harvested.  Toss them in the freezer for a day or two to kill off any pests that may have hitched a ride.  Finally, store the containers in a cool, dry location.  Keep in mind that seed viability will decrease with time.  Most seed should be used within three years of harvest but others, such as corn, onion and parsley, must be used within one year.

I wouldn't recommend planning your entire garden around saved seeds, as many things can go wrong, but it can be a great way to supplement catalog or store bought seeds and save yourself a few bucks in the process.  Start small and see how it works for you.  And remember, seed saving isn't only good for preserving unusual and heirloom varieties of vegetables, but also for many flowers and native plants as well!

 

Friday, August 10, 2012

What to do on a rainy day?

Do you think since it's raining out that you can't work on your garden?  Think again!  If you're not averse to getting a little damp and having muddy knees, a little summer rain makes the perfect conditions for weeding and transplanting.  Rain loosens up the soil around plant roots, helping those pesky weeds to slide right out when you give them a tug at the soil line and moist soil combined with cloudy or overcast skies help to reduce the shock plants receive when they are moved to a new home.  Just be careful not to trample beds too much or you may compact the soil, making it difficult for plant roots to penetrate as they grow.  Of course, if there is thunder or lightning, be sure to seek safety immediately!  Even if it's storming, you can always peruse catalogs and garden books to plan for changes or additions to your garden or research any recent pest or disease issues you've been experiencing.  Give the Master Gardeners at your local county extension office a call if you get stuck.  Now what are you waiting for?  Get to work!


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Thursday, August 2, 2012

Fern Propagation Workshop 8/7

I will be hosting a Fern Propagation Workshop next Tuesday, August 7, 2012 from 10:00 am until 12:00 pm in the Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Burlington County at 2 Academy Dr., Westampton, NJ 08060. Master Gardener Educator Joanne Szeliga will teach about the unique and interesting botany of ferns then she'll lead the class in propagating some Japanese painted ferns (Athyrium niponicum 'Pictum' ) of their very own from spores. All necessary supplies will be provided. A $5 fee will cover materials. Pre-registration is required as space and materials are limited. Please contact me to register at (609)265-5050 or bmcminn@co.burlington.nj.us.

Painted fern. PHOTO CREDIT: PERENNIAL PLANT ASSOCIATION

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Speaking of stink bugs...

Often it can be difficult to differentiate between beneficial insects and pests in the garden. One common case of mistaken identities is between stink bug pests and their beneficial relatives. While the spined soldier bug, Podisus maculiventris, is related to stink bugs, contrary to popular belief they are actually different critters entirely.  P. maculiventris looks very similar to Euschistus servus, the brown stink bug, but has more acute spines on the edge of the pronotum (think shoulders). There are at least 10 different species of stink bugs that may be found feeding on a variety of plants in a NJ garden but E. servus and Acrosternum hilare, the green stink bug, are the most common. In recent years the invasive species Halyomorpha halys, also known as the brown marmorated stink bug, has become a major agricultural pest and household nuisance and is making its way into many NJ gardens. To add to the confusion, there are some species of stink bugs (such as Perillus bioculatus, the two-spotted stink bug) that are predators of other pest insects. Still confounded by the subject? Take a look at the Rutgers Fact Sheets below for further clarification.

Rutgers Fact Sheet on Beneficial Insects of the Home Garden

Rutgers Fact Sheet on Stink Bugs

Rutgers Fact Sheet on the Brown Marmorated Stink Bug

Green stink bug

Brown stink bug

Brown marmorated stink bug

Spined soldier bug feeding on beetle larva

Two-spotted stink bug feeding on Colorado potato beetle larva

Friday, July 20, 2012

What's Eating You? 7.20.12

Adult Japanese Beetles (Popillia japonica Newman) seem to be hitting their peak right now.  Adults of these beetles feed on the foliage and flowers of over 300 species of plants.  I could write a lengthy article all about these beetles and how to manage them, but I'd be hard pressed to top Ohio State's Fact Sheet on the subject.  Check out their link below for all you ever wanted to know about Japanese Beetles in the home garden.

Popillia japonica Newman


Ohio State Japanese Beetle Fact Sheet

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Burlington County Farm Fair 7/18-7/21

The annual Burlington County Farm Fair kicks off this week at the Burlington County Fair Grounds at the intersection of Hwy 206 and Jacksonville-Jacobstown Rd. in Columbus starting Wednesday, July 18 at 2 p.m.  Be sure to stop by the Rutgers Cooperative Extension booth on the pond to ask discuss your garden questions with our Master Gardener volunteers and to pick up one of our Brown Marmorated Stink Bug (BMSB) temporary tattoos!  See the links below for more information on the Burlington County Farm Fair, the Rutgers Master Gardeners or the Brown Marmorated Stink Bug.

Burlington County Farm Fair

Rutgers Master Gardener Program

Rutgers Fact Sheet on the Brown Marmorated Stink Bug


BMSB temporary tattoo



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Friday, July 13, 2012

What's Eating You? 7.12.12

Are you noticing that something has been taking a bite out of some of your plants?  Colorado Potato Beetles (CPB) are very active right now.  You may see them in all live stages, eggs, larvae and adults.  CPB's feed on leaves, flowers, terminal growth, stems, and even the fruits of a large variety of vegetable plants.  Their preferred hosts are tomato, potato and eggplant but they will also feed on many other plants and weeds including ground-cherry, jimsonweed, horse nettle, petunia, henbane, thorn apple, thistle, and mullein.  Chances are, if you're a home gardener,  you have few enough plants (and beetles) that you can manage these heavy foliar feeders with a gardeners best tool, your hands.  Inspect your plants (including the undersides of leaves) once weekly and pick off and crush all eggs, larvae and adults you happen to see, or drop them in a bucket of soapy water.  This will greatly reduce their populations as each generation will reach maturity within only 10 days.  Keeping your garden and surrounding area free of weeds will help to reduce populations.  It is also helpful to rotate solenaceous (the family to which tomato, potato and eggplant belong) plants as far as possible from the previous year’s planting to reduce beetle infestations.  Cheesecloth or non-woven nylon crop covers may help protect the foliage of young tomato and eggplant transplants from beetle damage.  For the larger scale growers or extreme infestations, a biological insecticide, Bacillus thuringiensis var. tenebrionis (BT) (commercially available as Novodor), may be used. BT is a biological pesticide which uses a bacterium to kill small potato beetle larvae.  It is harmless to most other insects and mammals.  As a last resort beetles may be treated with chemical pesticides labeled for control of CPB.  If a pesticide is used, target newly hatched eggs and small larvae making sure to thoroughly cover leaves and stems for best results. With any pesticide always read and follow all label directions before application and observe the required number of days wait before harvest for each particular crop. 

CPB eggs
CPB larvae (1st and 2nd instars)


CPB Adult

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Wondering what those purple flowers are?

If you look around Burlington County right now, in highway medians, roadside ditches, maybe even in your own yard, you'll notice an abundance of blue to purple flowers on tall, slender, almost woody stalks.  These are chicory (Cichorium intybus) flowers.  Also known as blue sailors, coffeeweed, or succory, chicory, though considered by most to be a wildflower, has been named a noxious weed by the NJ legislature since its introduction to North America from its native home in Europe.  A perennial by virtue of a taproot, certain varieties of chicory are valued by many for an array of uses of its leaves and roots.  Wild chicory may be used for its bitter leaves in certain dishes but there are also several varieties that have been cultivated specifically for their leaves, such as Belgian endive (not to be confused with true endive, Cichorium endivia), radicchio, and sugarloaf.  Perhaps the best known use, especially of Cichorium intybus var. sativum, is of the root as a coffee additive or, particularly in times of economic hardship, as a coffee substitute.  The root is baked and then ground before use.  Other uses for chicory are of the roots as an additive to beer and as a medicinal treatment for intestinal parasites, or the entire plant may be used as forage for farm animals.


USDA PLANTS Profile for Cichorium intybus

Rutgers N.J. Weed Gallery - Cichorium intybus