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Cypress Basin Master Gardeners Association
Cypress Basin Master Gardeners AssociationCBMGA is an educational and volunteer program offered through the A&M AgriLife Extension of the Texas A&M University System.

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CBMGA Plant Ramblings January 2019

2019-01-28 by khihon

First of all DON’T FORGET THE ANNUAL PLANT SALE AND GARDEN SHOW IS JUST 53 DAYS AWAY!!
MARCH 23, 2019.

Mark your calendar!
PLANT SALE SPLASH

On our web page (cmbga.org) is a link that gives gardening reminders for each month of the year.
Here is the link for January
Garden Reminders for January
and for February
Garden Reminders for February

From Kridler’s Korner: Pointers and helpful hints on things to do for your garden
OK if you are going to put in vegetables then you want to till up the soil this week before we get rainfall next weekend!

IF you put in a winter cover crop over your whole vegetable garden last September of either mustards or Brassicas, or Elbon Rye (or you have green weeds now) then you can till under your green cover crop to add organic matter to the soils.
Research shows that it takes 57 days for a living green cover crop to break down/rot/compost the fresh green leaves and living roots of green plants and then be at the “maximum available nutrient” amount after you till it under in the spring time getting ready to plant the “summer” crops.

This week you should put in a block or raised bed of onions or garlic if you eat these! I like to raise up a section of the garden about 8” and use a 4 foot wide bed for onions, kale/cabbage, broccoli, turnips, mustards, bok choy, mizunas and other cold hardy winter type crops. These must all share a very well drained sandy soils locations.
You should already be eating Snow Peas or English peas, but it is not too late to plant them!

This first tilling of the vegetable garden you want to add in all of the soil fertilizers and minerals that your soil test says that you needed!
First of Jan. TAMU soil testing lab had a 9 day turn around from when they received a soil sample till they sent it back to the sender!

When in doubt, BEFORE you till for the first time this week (second and third tilling for some) you will go ahead and collect a soil sample from the entire garden and save this in a clean plastic bucket or container.
Then you will spread evenly 10# of Dolomite Lime for every 1,000 square feet of vegetable garden, this is 435# of dolomite lime for a full one acre vegetable garden.
IF you did not fertilize your garden after about June last summer, then you will evenly spread 5# of 17-17-17 for every 1,000 square feet.
This would be about 200# of 17-17-17 for a full acre.
Or you are adding 34# each of Nitrogen-Phosphorus-Potassium; the N-P-K portion of plant nutrients or you are adding approximately 34 Parts Per Million of each of these to your garden.

You will send off the pre-tilling soil sample and in two weeks or so you will know what other minerals/fertilizers you will need to add before you till your garden in late March for tomatoes, beans, peas, corn, etc!
Keep track of how many pounds of what you add to the garden all summer!

I don’t plant potatoes, but if you do, you want to go buy them at Kelly’s Produce, maybe Texas Country Farm supply will have the seed potatoes as you will want to plant them about Valentine’s day Feb. 14th to about the very latest Feb. 28th. There are only two major seed potato varieties that grow well in this area, one red and one white variety and you need deep sandy well drained soils.
Potatoes require different fertilizer amounts, than onions;
corn requires different from them and
peas and beans are different from all of these!

You should plant all of your different crops in blocks, so you would till in the correct fertilizers in these blocks about two weeks before you were going to plant them.

Along the north ends of bigger gardens you will begin planting long rows of black oil seed sunflowers (bird seed sunflowers). These will help to attract pollinators to your vegetables that require pollinators.
Plant the first row in early march, add another row every two weeks for six weeks. Then when the last row planted is knee high then add another half row so that you will have fresh sunflowers blooming all summer. North side of the garden because if you have good fertilizer, rich soils, the sunflower plants will bloom at 9 to 10 feet tall. If you have pitiful garden soils then they will bloom at about 30” to 36” tall.

IF you have good garden soils your onions will be 4” to 6” in diameter at harvest, Purple top turnips will be 3 to 5 inches in diameter but if you let these turnips go on to bloom, a mature Purple Top turnip will weigh in at about 12#. Blue ribbon winning turnips at county fairs will often weigh in from 20 to 30 pounds!
Keith Kridler

Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

10th Annual CBMGA Plant Sale & Garden Show

2019-01-13 by khihon

plant sale image

Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

2018 HalloGreen

2018-10-16 by khihon

HalloGreen 2018
Event started off with everyone hearing from the Cow Guy.
Inside, Linda Hilger told about light waves and how plants use the light.

Mt Pleasant Police Department Canine unit told everyone about how they use dogs to find drugs.
Regina Clark initiates the Butterfly session by telliing the kids about the life cycle of the butterfly
Here Virginia Reynolds, Sally Lewellen, and Keith Lebsack help the kids with their butterfly craft project

Linda Seifert, Vicky Kaiser and Keith Lebsack help with the butterfly craft project
Vicki Miller and Virginia Reynolds show the kids how to make a butterfly refridgerator magnet
Regina Clark brough milkweed with Monarch caterpillars feeding on it.

Outside in our greenhouse, Keith Kridler told the kids about birds, bugs and snakes.
The Texas Forestry spoke to the kids on fire prevention
Sharon Cowan demonstrated the priniciple behind string instruments with a “squawker cup” project the kids made, with Hiroko Somsag and Jo Anschutz helping the kids

Here Kay Smith, Rhonda Lesher, Hiroko Somsag and Janiece Pyle help the kids with their Squawker Cups
Virginia Reynolds, Kay Miller, Regina Clark, Vicki Miller, Debbie Dewolf, and Janice Butler cover last minute details of the soon to start HalloGreen.
Rosemary Morgeson, Janice Butler, Kay Smith, Kay Miller, Bob Christensen and Debbie DeWolf listen to the Police Dogs presentation

Linda Seifert, Vicki Miller, Gwen Burkett, Keith Lebsack and Linda Hilger discuss details of their jobs for the event.
Jenifer Ross, the nicest person in the known universe
Carol Farraugh(left) and Harry Farraugh(right) listen to the Woodland Trails presentation by Keith Kridler while Tommy Morgeson eyes me (Dave Miller) taking their picture.

Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

Area Home School Students Tour the CBMGA Master Gardens Special Edition, April, 2017

2017-04-03 by khihon

Area Home School Students Tour the

CBMGA Master Gardens

The CHEMPA organization brought around 20 area home schooled students for a field trip Friday March 31 to tour the Master Gardens at the Titus County Extension Offices. The group tries to incorporate a field trip every Friday to offer the students experiences they won’t get just from their studies at home. The students only had 45 minutes to spend at the Master Gardens but still learned about several of the specialized areas.

Area Home School Students Tour the CBMGA Master Gardens

The areas toured by the home school students were:

PERENNIALS where Master Gardener Margaret Lawson informed the students about the plants in that bed.

Master Gardener Sue Farr tells the students about Texas Superstars. Texas Superstars are plants that have been certified to thrive in Texas.

Master Gardener Kay Miller shows the differences between bulbs, corms, rhizomes and tubers. The bulb bed has over 500 separate plants consisting of around 60 different plants and one Rising Sun Redbud tree.

Master Gardener Dale Vanhoose gives an overview of our Earthkind® grapes. The Earthkind® program is a program started by Dr. George of Texas A&M that does research to determine plant varieties that perform the best with minimal water, no fertilizer, no pesticides and minimal maintenance.

One of the newest beds is the Butterfly/Pollinator bed. All of the plants in this bed provide a smorgasbord for nectar loving insects. Master Gardener Regina Clark shares her love of butterflies and the plants that support them.

Master Gardener Glenda Brogoitti shares information on the benefits of utilizing Native Plants in landscaping. They use less water and since they are native, they thrive in the Texas summers.

The plants in the beds in front of the extension offices consist primarily of perennials but have a few annuals sprinkled throughout to provide a little more color in between the blooming of the perennials. Master Gardener Deloris O’Conner tells the students about the different plant in the front office beds.

The students also heard about the Master Gardens Wildflower area, the Raspberry bed from the knowledgeable Master Gardeners for those areas. There were Master Gardeners knowledgeable and available for each of the specialization areas plus a few extra Master Gardeners for support. The CHEMPA organization plans on bringing a second group of home school students to tour the Master Gardens on Friday, April 7.

The Master Gardens are an ongoing project of the Cypress Basin Master Gardeners Association, CBMGA located at 1708 Industrial Blvd in Mt. Pleasant, Tx. The Master Gardens are open to the public to view at any time. Groups are welcome to tour the gardens on their own or can request a guided tour of part or all of the gardens by appointment.

The Master Gardens consists of around fifteen areas or specialized beds that includes perennials, Texas Superstars, Earthkind® Roses and Grapes, Bulbs-Corms-Rhizomes and Tubers, Vegetables, Herbs, Blackberry, Blueberry, Raspberry, Greenhouse and Demonstration beds,Butterfly and Pollinator Bed, Wildflower areas and a Nature Trail with a picnic area. A self guided tour of the Master Gardens can be done in 20 to 30 minutes if all you do is walk through the gardens stopping to look only occasionally at those plants that catch your eye. To do a full guided tour, one should allow between one and two hours. And if you can’t come in person, you can get a good idea of what the Master Gardens have to offer through their Master Gardens Virtual Tour or enter http://cbmga.org/cbmga-master-gardens-site-plan-ii/ into your browser.


Come Grow With Us
Cypress Basin Master Gardeners

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Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

CBMGA’s Plant Ramblings – Special Edition Issue, December, 2016

2016-12-25 by khihon

CBMGA 2016 – A Year of Accomplishments


Wow, what an outstanding year 2016 has been for Cypress Basin Master Gardeners
Association. And there is no question it would not have been nearly as
outstanding without great hardworking members. We have been fortunate in so many
ways including the outstanding leadership provided by our executive board. This
journey will give a glance back over 2016 showing where we have been and what we
have done. The chart below shows 50 projects, events, field trips and awards. Each Month and each item links to a short narrative and picture. And this journey begins with a letter from our President, Sharon
Cowan.


December, 2016

Dear
Master Gardeners:

This has been a fun, productive year. Check the list in this newsletter to remind us of all we have done in 2016. I appreciate every ounce of effort you have put into the organization. We can’t do what we are capable of doing without each of you contributing in an area where you are comfortable and having fun.

2017 will not look like 2016 but it too can be as good. I feel we are building on what past groups and officers have done as we continue to expand and improve. None of our accomplishments have happened because of one single person or a few different people. It happens when we are able to work together focusing on the
desired outcomes. Because we are people, there will be hiccups and times when we don’t all agree, but those times can be worked through as we remember our common purpose.


Kenny Rollins is retiring as County Agent and we are going to miss him A LOT. He has been wonderful to work with, supporting what Master Gardeners do and always complimentary of the results of our labors. When we look around at other counties and groups, I am sure we realize how fortunate we have been. As we go
forward until his successor is named, we will keep doing what we have been doing. Many among us have lots of knowledge and are willing to share that with the organization and new interns beginning January 3, 2017.


Membership requirements for 2017, which begin January 1, will be dues of $20, 6 CEU’s as before, and 25 volunteer hours. Attending the meetings will earn you the CEU’s and 2 hours per month will almost fulfill the volunteer hour requirement.


Remember, we are not a garden club. We are Master Gardeners with the mission of serving and educating. We will continue to fulfill that mission as we enter 2017.


Thank you for 2016 and looking forward to 2017,


Sharon Cowan, President

Acknowledgements:

We wish to acknowledge and offer our heartfelt thanks for the generosity shown to Cypress Basin Master Gardeners Association by:



The Titus County Commissioners

for donating the resurfacing of the parking lot at the extension office, numerous loads of dirt used in the construction of new beds, and for our new sign that clearly identifies the Extension office and the Master Gardens.



Home Depot

for donating numerous items that helped in our annual plant sale, the construction of the path around our Superstar® Beds, and the construction of our demonstration beds in our Greenhouse.


Kenny Rollins
for being one of if not the best County Extension Agent in Texas. His support in working with the Cypress Basin Master Gardener Association to improve our Master Gardens, improve and grow CBMGA and to help educate and serve our four county area.

 We can’t thank you enough for sponsoring our group allowing us to better serve the surrounding community. Kenny is retiring soon. We wish him the best in whatever the future has in store for him. We will miss him.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/AndreRoger-and-Kenny-wr.jpg



Kenny as Usual


2016 – In Review

 

Month Project/Activity Type Month Project/Activity Type
January Master Gardener Training Class of 2016 starts Class Event July Constructed New Texas Native Plants Bed Project
Finished Raised Beds in our Greenhouse Project   Added Timers to Front Office Beds Project
February New flowering Bulb Bed Established Project   Added Raised Sprinklers and Timers to Vegetable Bed Project
Propagation for 2017 Plant Sale Started Project   EarthDay at Campbell Edwards Elementary Event
Added Vent Fans to Greenhouse Project August Constructed Hügelkulture Areas Project
Gold Shovel Awards Award   Landscape Habitat for Humanity House Project
March Converted Bed to Blueberry Bed Project   Resurface the Parking Lot Commissioners
Added QR Codes and Signs to all Beds Project September Added Drip Irrigation to Greenhouse Project
Field Trip Dallas Arboretum Field Trip   Created Wildflower Areas Project
Completed Earthkind® Rose Trial Project   Pioneer Days-Pittsburg Event
April Hosted Pioneer Club Tour of MG Event   Titus County Fair- Mt. Pleasant Event
Wildscapes Award Award   Added New Earthkind® Grape Beds Project
Field Trip Nacodoches-Arboretum and Plant Sale Field Trip October Planned a New Butterfly Garden for 2017 Project
May Annual Plant Sale an Expo Event   Field Tript to Los Piños Winery Field Trip
Expanded our Vegetable Bed Project   Built a New Rose Bed Area Project
Field Trip to Private Estate Field Trip   Cleared South End of Project Project
Added Entrance Sign to Woodland Trail Project November Install New Sign at Extension Office Commissioners
June Finished Floor in The Greenhouse Project   Built New Walkway Behind Superstar® Beds Project
Field Trip Overton Field Trials Field Trip   Built Up New Raspberry Bed Area Project
Field Trip to Blueberry Farm Field Trip   Planted Jasmine on West Side of Greenhouse Project
Texas Master Gardener Reserach Award Award   Graduating Class of 2016 Class Event
Built a Sunflower Bed Project December General Maintenance to the Master Gardens Mtce

JULY
July 4th Party Project   Annual Christmas Party/Monthly Meeting Event
Extended Controlled Water to South End of Project Project      


JANUARY


Master Gardener Training

Nineteen new interns began the classes for Master Gardeners in January. A love of gardening and search for knowledge is central to why Master Gardeners join the program. In January through March, interns at Cypress Basin Master Gardeners met each Tuesday and Thursday evening from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM in order to earn their certification. Interns meet minimum of 50 hours for instruction covering topics such as growing fruits and vegetables, landscaping, annuals and perennials, environmental conservation, plant selection and propagation, plant pathology, soil science, entomology, and Earth Kind gardening. In addition to learning, interns were provided the opportunity to interact with certified Master Gardeners and enjoy the delicious food provided by members.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/01Kenny-Training-Class-wr.jpg

 


 

 

 

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Finished Raised Beds in Greenhouse:

The 2016 Bed heads Jill Klepzig and Ladd Winkleblack along with a lot of help from many Master Gardeners created a variety of beds that not only demonstrate that raising your own vegetables does not take a lot of space but that the beds can be constructed of a variety of
materials in assorted shapes and sizes to fit almost any homeowner’s available space. Six different raised beds were built in the greenhouse to show that growing vegetables in the garden does not necessarily take a lot of space or equipment. The raised beds are: treated lumber and polycarbonate raised bed;
concrete retaining garden wall cap raised bed; round cafe-rumblestone blocks raised bed; treated lumber raised bed; rectangular rumblestone block raised bed and keyhole garden raised bed. The beds that were finished this year were the Keyhole bed and a round stone bed. The beds have produced a variety of greens to use in fresh salads with over 200 pounds donated to SAFE-T.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/KeyHoleGarden-wr.jpg

Our
Keyhole Garden Raised Bed

 

 

 


FEBRUARY

We built a new Flowering Bulb Bed:

Under the direction of the bed head for the new bulb bed, Kay Miller, we built a bed just for bulbs, corms, rhizomes and tubers that all bloom. The goal was an attempt to have at least one variety in bloom every month. It turns out that is more difficult than it
sounds. The bed is a raised bed approximately seven feet by sixteen feet built on a slope. The front of the bed is about 12” above the ground and the back corner is almost three feet above the ground. The bed contains almost 60 different varieties of bulbs, corms, rhizomes and tubers consisting of over 500 individual plants. For interest and a little shade over some of the plants the bed includes a Rising Sun Red Bud tree. The bed was completed in the early part of February and the bulbs couldn’t wait to get started.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/01BulbBed-001-wr.jpg

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/01BulbBed-003-wr.jpg

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/BulbBed160206-001-wr-1.jpg

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/BulbBed160528-001-wr.jpg

 

 

Started Plant Propagation for the Plant Sale:

CBMGA has a plant sale every May to raise money for the group and to provide the community with plants that are known to do well in our area. Members propagate plants all year but in late winter, very early spring our members take cuttings from various plants and start the process of propagation. Propagating plants for the plant sale is a key opportunity for interns to gain hands-on experience in propagating and to interact with more expert master gardeners.  Brugmansia (Angel Trumpet) cuttings planted in the fall were separated and transplanted to large pots. Other perennials were separated and planted in 4 or 6 inch pots in preparation for the plant sale.
Then when our plant sale arrives we have thriving plants started from established plants that grow in our area work on starting new plants. And all through the year- more propagation 

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/03JaniceHirokoMarthaKay-Sharon-Carol-and-Glenda-wr.jpg

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/BarbaraHMargaretBarbaracCarol-sprngPropagation160217.jpg

 


Added Vent Fans to Greenhouse:

Greenhouses have a tendency to get too warm too early in the spring without proper venting. Our group is fortunate to have some individuals with experience in electrical wiring. Mike Deming and Harry Farraugh volunteered to install and wire the two vent fans in our greenhouse. They can be thermostatically controlled or just turned on.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/Mike-Deming-and-Harry-Farragh-vent-fans160217-wr.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


CBMGA Gives Gold Shovel Award to Outstanding Members:

CBMGA started a new tradition in 2016. Members were required to give at least 12 hours of volunteer time to maintain their accreditation as a Texas Master Gardener. To recognize those members that went above and beyond, CBMGA gave a Gold Shovel Award to all members who volunteered 100 hours or more. Here members from left to right and top to bottom are John O’Connor, Keith Kridler, Tommy Morgeson, Andre’ Brogoitti, Judy Johnson Russell, Jim Falk, Deloris O’Connor, Sharon Cowan (President), Margaret Lawson, Kay Miller (Vice-President), Debbie Dewolfe, Helen Brunsen, Glenda Brogoitti and not shown Ladd Winkleblack all earned their Golden Shovel Award for service in 2015.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/CBMG-Awards-photosWeb-160210.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



MARCH

 

Added our New Blueberry Bed:

Under the direction of bed head Roger Farr, a blueberry bed was planted in March. The bed was constructed as a raised bed over an old asphalt parking area. Six different varieties of rabbiteye blueberries were planted: Alapaha, Austin, Brightwell, Climax, Powderblue and Tifblue. Members and interns planted and maintained the blueberries and are looking forward to fruit in the spring.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/Climax-Blueberry-160326-wr.jpg

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/climax-blueberry-160824-wr.jpg

 

 


                                     

 

Added QR Codes to all of the Beds:

An addition to our website was started in 2015 that lets visitors to our site view some of the amazing work our members have done at our CBMGA Master Gardens. Each bed is represented on the web where a visitor can click to go to any bed or area and then click to get detailed information on any plant in our beds. This year we added QR Codes to each of the beds so that any visitor that physically tours the grounds will find a QR code in each bed or area. They can then point their smartphone at the QR code and it will take them to the web page for that bed where they can then check out every plant in that bed. Below are a couple of QR codes that will take you to the labeled bed or area.

 

Bulb Bed

Virtual Tour
Start


Field Trip to Dallas Arboretum for Dallas Blooms Tour:

This year, CBMGA took several outstanding group field trips. The first one of the year was to the Dallas Arboretum for their Dallas Blooms show. And the blooms were nothing short of stunning. The weather was perfect and what a wonderful place to for a group that loves gardening to spend a super day enjoying the flowers, plants, and great camaraderie and friends.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/03CBMGA-Dallas-Arboretum-160315-wr.jpg



CBMGA at Dallas Blooms 2016
,

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/03CBMGA-at-lunch-wr.jpg

 CBMGA Lunch at Dallas Blooms,

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/03CherryContrast160317-wr.jpg

Cherry Blossoms Galore

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/03AzaleaDallasArboretum160317-wr.jpg


And the Azaleas-wow
,  

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/03wornOut-at-the-Arboretum-160315-wr.jpg

 Worn out at the end of great day

 

         


Completed Earthkind® Rose Trials:


CBMGA participated in an Earthkind® Rose Trial run by Dr. George of Texas A&M. The trial was established as research to find the best varieties of roses to grow in Texas. The trial lasted three years and was completed in March of 2016. The trial required coordination by bedhead Rosemary Morgeson to ensure the blooms on each plant were counted, the fragrance evaluated, the overall aesthetics of the plant evaluated among other criteria periodically on a schedule throughout the trial. The plants could not be dead headed, sprayed with any fertilizer or insecticide and could only be given water during extreme
drought. Rosemary kept meticulous records throughout the trial consolidating all documentation and turned that over to Dr. George in March. The trial rose beds will now be re-allocated to other purposes and CBMGA will develop a rose area on the south end of the extension property.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/Rosemary-Morgeson-shows-off-BriteEyes-wr.jpg



Rosemary Pointing out our Brite Eyes Variety

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/Rosemary-Moregeson-on-EarthKind-roses-wr.jpg

Rosemary Discusses Earthkind® Trial Roses

 

                 

 


APRIL

 

Hosted Pioneer Club Tour of our Master Gardens:

CBMGA was contacted by the Pioneer Club of Pittsburg to conduct a tour of our Master Gardens. Of course we were thrilled to show off our gardens and all of the work our bedheads have done. We served the group coffee and breakfast snacks as their group all arrived at the Titus County Extension Office. Once all were assembled, each bedhead or bed representative gave a brief presentation on each of the beds or areas.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/04Deloris-OConner-shows-off-the-FOB-160413-wr.jpg


Deloris-Front Beds

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/04Mary-Christensen-Covers-the-Vegetable-Bed002-160413-wr.jpg


 


Mary on Veggie Bed

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/04Kay-Miller-on-her-Bulb-Bed-160413-wr.jpg


 
Kay on Bulb Bed


 

CBMGA Receives Wildscapes Award:

Texas Wildscapes is a habitat restoration and conservation plan for rural and urban areas. It enables Texans to contribute to wildlife conservation by developing wildlife habitats where they live, work and play. Through Wildscapes, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department encourages landowners to restore habitat, for birds, insects, reptiles and even small mammals, on their properties. Rosemary Morgeson, one of our long time Master Gardeners and past president sought this information out and through numerous conversations and a stack of paperwork applied for CBMGA’sWoodland Trail to be designated as a Wildscapes Wildlife Demonstration Site and in April she and Tommy Morgeson presented the awarded recognition to CBMGA.

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Group with Wildscapes Award

 

 

Field Trip to Nacodoches Arboretum and SFA Plant Sale:

Another great field trip organized by our VP Kay Miller was the one to SFA’s Spring Plant Sale and their Arboretum. Most everyone brought home a car full of plants from the sale and then enjoyed touring the local arboretum. Organized into various plant types each area offered its own special views but one area stood out to this photographer. There was a woodland area of sorts that held what was labeled as a native azalea which was gorgeous in the middle of a wooded area.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/04Aboretum-Nacodogches-wr.jpg


Tree Color in the Woods

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/04TheGangAtSFASU-Arboretum160402-wr.jpg


The Group in front of
the Azalea

 

 


MAY

CBMGA Annual Plant Sale and Expo:

Every year on the first weekend in May, CBMGA holds its Annual Plant Sale and Exp. Our plant sale is unique in that a significant percentage if not majority of the plants we sell are propagated by our Master Gardeners from their own plants or the plants we grow in the Master Gardens. This guarantees the plants are grown right here in this area. Planning and propagating starts almost immediately after one plant sale ends and continues until the following plant sale. We almost always have a large turnout from the community as people start calling and stopping by the extension office weeks before the sale asking when it is going to be.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/05PlantSale001-wr.jpg


Plant Sale Ad

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Finishing Setup
,


 

 

We Expanded our Veggie Bed:

Just like most avid gardeners, when we get started we have a hard time stopping as long as there is more ground that we can plant in. The Vegetable Bed covered just a part of the available dirt at the end of our raised beds of Blueberries, Herbs, Blackberries and Roses so what else could we do but make the vegetable bigger. Mary Christensen is bedhead for the vegetable bed and saw an opportunity to increase the size of the veggie bed, enlisted some of the other Master Gardeners and presto changeo we have a vegetable bed almost twice the size it was in 2015.

http://cbmga.org/files/2016/12/VeggieBed001.jpg



Old bed stopped where the green
stops

 

 

Field Trip to Private Estate:

This year our group obtained a once in a lifetime field trip to an exclusive private estate that most members had only been able to admire just a small part of from a distance. We are extremely grateful to the owners for allowing us to share the outstanding landscaping that their property encompasses. Wow, what an experience.

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 The group at the start

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Just one of the stunning views

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Some of us REALLY enjoyed the day

   

 

Added Entrance Enhancement and Sign to Woodland Trail:

CBMGA added a Woodland Trail to the Master Gardens over the past few years bringing it to fruition in 2015. Then in 2016 Mike and Martha Deming and Harry Farraugh added the a wonderful entrance to our Woodland Trail and adding a beautiful sign finishing the entrance so visitors know exactly where the trail begins.

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Entrance to our Woodland Trail

 

 


JUNE


Finished floor In Greenhouse:

The Greenhouse and Demonstration Gardens has been an ongoing project for a couple of years now. It really took hold in 2015 when raised beds were constructed in the greenhouse to demonstrate some options for building raised beds in which to grow vegetables. But the floor of the greenhouse was just never finished until this year. We wanted something that would hold up, and yet be something that another group of Master Gardeners could change if they wanted. We settled on crushed rock as a floor base that was put down. It allows water to run through so there is never any standing water. It is on top of a heavy duty nursery type ground cloth to keep gophers and weeds from coming up from the ground. And it will virtually never wear out.

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Finished Floor in Greenhouse

 


Field Trip to Overton:

Members and interns attended the East Texas Field Day in Overton. The field trials featured more than 500 varieties of ornamental plants and vegetables for public viewing, along with discussions by experts at the Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension Center in Overton. This event allows gardeners, professional landscape managers and seed company representatives to learn which landscape plants do well under East Texas conditions. Members and interns enjoyed a delicious barbecue lunch provided courtesy of seed companies and other field day sponsors. They were also able to attend programs in the afternoon. Although it was a hot summer day, the Overton Field Day was an outstanding and informative field trip for all who attended.

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The Group at Overton

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Roger,Glenda,Sue

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Members viewing the Overton flowers

 

 


Field Trip to Blueberry Farm:

What go be better, folks who love plants visiting a blueberry farm learning about growing blueberries and then picking as many of the fat, luscious, sweet, bright blue berries to take home and enjoy. The group received a CEU for the information on how to grow blueberry plants and what kind grow best in our area.

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Gary the owner
speaks to our group on growing blueberries

 

     

 


Award for Research Presented:

Every year at the Texas Master Gardener Conference, a number of awards are given out to individual Master Gardener groups. The award categories are youth, project, education program, written education, research, Marva E. Beck JMG Leader of the Year, Outstanding Individual Master Gardener, and Outstanding Master Gardener Association. This year we had two of our Master Gardeners put together the required documents and submitted them to the Texas Master Gardeners for consideration. The documents were covering the Earthkind® Rose Trials that CBMGA participated in for three years. Not only did CBMGA receive an award for the research but the work done by Martha Deming and Phylixcia Moore garnered First Place for CBMGA. The work was submitted for review for 2015 but the awards are not given out until the 2016 Conference.

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1st Place for Research

 

 

 


Our Sunflower Patch Shows Off:

Keith Kridler with one of his amazing talents demonstrated to the group what could be done with different areas of the property. There was an area that was pretty much just grass that he planted sunflowers in and then over the summer anyone who visited the gardens witnessed a beautiful display of giant yellow blooms.

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Sunflower 001

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Sunflower Patch


 


JULY

July 4th party:

Mark and Rhonda Lesher graciously offered to host a July 4th party at their beautiful property. Everyone who knows Rhonda knows she does it up right. Everyone brought goodies to eat and lots of choices for a cold beverage in July. Great group of folks celebrating the birth of the greatest country on the planet.

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Our Wonderful Hosts

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Helen and her Husband Everett Showing off for the camera

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Hippies in the Bushes

,         
 
,                   
 


Extended controlled water to south end of property:

You know how one thing leads to another and another, well Dale Vanhoose and Rhonda Lesher (already in the A&M Earthkind® Grape Trials) got to thinking, we need an Earthkind® grape bed in the Master Gardens. So before that can go in, access to water needed to be installed and since it was being extended for the future grape beds, why not go ahead and extend it over to a point closer to the south end of the property where more beds are located and more beds are planned. One thing and then another and another 😉

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Extended
Controlled Water to South End

 


Relocated native plant bed:

At one time we shared a small area of the property with the Native Plant Society where they planted several of the native species around East Texas. Our group decided to take over the bed, relocated it and expand it. Glenda Brogoitti stepped up to become the bedhead for the
relocated Texas Native Plants Bed and this is some of its journey.

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New Location

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Soil and Interest Added

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Plants have matured
somewhat

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Results of Planting the right plants

 

Added timers to front office beds:

One of the more time consuming jobs every year at CBMGA is watering all of the plants in the beds. Some of the beds have been put on timers and are watered automatically. But some of our beds were not and that meant someone had to show up and water those beds by hand. Our Front Office Beds were some of those beds. This year Tommy Morgeson connected all of the front office beds together and installed a manual timer/valve that allows someone to stop by, set the time/valve to the allotted time and forget it. The timer waters for the set time and then turns off. Everyone who has been on watering has really appreciated the new addition.

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Added Watering Time to Front Office Beds

 

 

Added sprinklers/timer to veggie bed:

And as much time as some of the other beds took to water, our veggie bed seemed to take forever, and it did take a long time especially since we expanded the vegetable bed by at least 50% this year. That meant even more time would be spent watering to make sure our vegetables didn’t suffer from that good old Texas summer heat. This year however, Tommy Morgeson and Andre Brogoitti installed tall sprinkler heads to water the entire vegetable garden and put them on a manual count down timer/valve. Now all any of the members of CBMGA has to do is to stop by the extension office on a watering day, turn the timer/valve on and it will automatically water and shut off. With the expanded veggie bed this has been a huge time saver. Great job guys!

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Raised Sprinkler Heads

 

 

EarthDay @ Campbell Edwards:

Part of CBMGA’s mission is to serve and educate the public in horticultural topics. As part of that mission an event was scheduled at Campbell Edwards Elementary School in Mt. Pleasant, Tx. to celebrate Earth Day. Keith Kridler and Kay Green attended the event and spoke with the students about Earth Day and presented them with some trees to plant.

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Kay Green speaking with
the Students at Campbell Edwards

 

 




AUGUST

Started Hügelkultures:

Hügelkultur is a composting process employing raised beds constructed from decaying wood debris and other compostablebiomass plant materials. The process helps to improve soil fertility, water retention, and soil warming, thus benefiting plants grown on or near such mounds. Michael Clark, a member of the last graduating class, stepped up to take control of our hügelkulture areas. Two hügelkultur areas were started this year around stumps from fallen trees. The largest bed is behind the greenhouse and will provide a large raised area to plant more vegetables. The beds are still being filled with brush, fallen branches, compost, and mulch. Eventually, the beds will be covered with at least six inches of topsoil. The next few years should bring interesting results as the materials begin to decompose and add rich nutrients to the soil.

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Hugelkultur garden behind greenhouse

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Further development of hugel bed

   



Planting at Habitat houses :

Part of CBMGA’s Mission is to serve the public through education. Habitat for Humanity has helped a couple of people in their quest to acquire a home, a house that they can call their own. Habitat does not just build a house and give it to someone. Individuals are vetted and
must contribute their own man hours to the construction. Habitat homeowners help build their own homes alongside volunteers and pay an affordable mortgage. Many people think they are just given a house and that is not the case. Where does CBMGA come in? A house without some kind of landscaping is not much more than a box that can hold people. Putting landscaping, even a meager amount around that box makes it a real home. CBMGA helps the new homeowner by teaching them what plants will work in their environment. Plants that they can afford. And plants that they can manage. Some plants need a lot of attention and others can get by almost on their own. So CBMGA helps the new homeowner understand what they can use and manage and will be there for years to come.

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One of the Habitat houses CBMGA has partnered on

 

 


Resurface parking lot:

The north parking lot had gotten fairly rough as it not been resurfaced in a number of years. Several of the members brought this to the attention of Kenny Rollins, our sponsor and extension agent, asking him to take the matter to the County Commissioners. Kenny did and the County Commissioners came through. They had the crews bring several loads of asphalt to the extension office, brought in graders and rollers to smooth the new asphalt and the parking lot now looks great. CBMGA would like to thank the County Commissioners for bringing the parking lot back up to grade.

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Parking Lot After Resurfacin
g

 




SEPTEMBER

Added Greenhouse drip:

Ladd Winkleblack was the bedhead over the Greenhouse and Demonstration Gardens during construction of the raised beds and for most of 2016. The Greenhouse houses our irrigation controller and some of the ports were dedicated to providing timed watering to the raised beds in the Greenhouse. Ladd and Tommy Morgeson added drip irrigation in stages to each of the raised beds over this past year.

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Ladd adding some
irrigation tubing

 



Created Wildflower areas:

Master Gardeners are almost always trying to find a way to incorporate more flowers, more plants, just more into their landscaping. It must be some kind of addiction. I know it is at my house and it must be generally addictive. The grounds had a spot that needed just a little cleaning up and we could add yet another feature to the Master Gardens. Sue and
Roger Farr (you’ve seen their names before and will again) thought a wildflower area would add interest to our Master Gardens so Sue stepped up as the bedhead of the newly created wildflower areas. They were so enthused, we added two instead of just one.

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Sue Instructing the recruits on sowing

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The recruits Sowing



Results

We can’t wait until spring 2017. They
should be just magnificent.

 

Pioneer days:

Although CBMG traditionally sets up a booth to provide information to the community, this year, we expanded participation by participating in the Pioneer Day Parade. Under the direction of Noelle Hood, the very first annual CBMG Kazoo Band performed an assortment of high octane tunes. Marching in the parade with the band was our very own giant Mr. Potato (AKA auxiliary member Dave Miller) – in honor of our gardening heritage. The participation in the parade garnered laughs and smiles from the audience and proved that not only do we know about gardening, but we also know how to have fun! To finish off the activities, at the end of the day, a giant flash rain storm hit the area and members had to rush to take down the booth. This was a memorable summer event for CBMG.

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The Marching Master Gardeners

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Mr. Potato Head

 



TitusCountyFair:

Another opportunity for CBMGA to provide a presence for the community to answer questions about gardening and other horticultural topics is the Titus County Fair. For as long as I know of, CBMGA has had a booth at the fair to share information with the public and use the time as a small fund raiser by selling bulbs, a significant portion of which are donated from the Master Gardeners own gardens. Debbie Dewolfe coordinates a number of our events and does a super job.

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Debbie Directing Set Up
,

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Finished/Ready to Go

    

Added Earthkind® Grape Bed:

Remember back in July we extended our controlled water to the south end of the property because we were adding an Earthkind® grape bed? Well we got our grape bed in. Lots of folks, lots of muscle but the results look amazing. Keith Kridler headed up the construction of the bed with Dale Vanhoose stepping up to be the bedhead of the new Earthkind® Grape Beds.

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Keith, Dale and Rhonda starting the construction

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Construction almost finished

 

 


OCTOBER

Planned Butterfly garden:

Not a lot to show here since this bed will not actually be done until 2017 but as a result of so many butterflies showing up in the Master Gardens this year, one of our most recent graduates, Regina Clark volunteered to head up a Butterfly Garden and has planned what it will consist of. Here is why Regina jumped at creating a butterfly garden.

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Monarch on Cigar Plant

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Black Swallowtail just out of chrysalis

Oh, did I mention Regina is just crazy
about butterflies? 😉 We are looking forward to the finished garden.

 

Los Piños Field Trip:

And Kay Miller stacks up another successful field trip with the help of Debbie Dewolfe of the Los Piños Winery Tour. The folks at Los Piños could not have been nicer and provided a great tour of not only their orchards but of the winery itself. Tremendous information on grapes and the process of making wine. So many Master Gardeners signed up for this field trip, it took two tours. We had one group in the morning and another in the afternoon with an overlap where both groups met for lunch in the Los Piños restaurant. The tour was informative, the food was good and the friendship
shared was over the top.

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CBMGA at Lunch
at Los Piños


 
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Afternoon Group Gathers for Winery Tour

    

Constructed New Rose Bed:

CBMGA participated in the A&M research project on Earthkind® Roses. it was a three year research project that recorded a number of criteria on the roses in the trial from number of blooms, to fragrance and drought tolerance. The research ended the first quarter of 2016.
Now CBMGA is going to move forward with certified Earthkind® roses in a new rose bed/area. Dale Vanhoose used his tractor to grade, incorporate mulch and level the area the new Earthkind® roses will occupy.

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The New Rose Bed/Area is Mulched and Prepared for Planting

 

 

Cleared south end of property:

Do you remember the name Keith Kridler? We at CBMGA have determined that Keith’s brain never shuts off and as a result, he seems to crank out all these different projects that will ultimately make our Master Gardens into a mini arboretum. This is one of them. We have started clearing the south end of the property in preparation of more new beds and so vehicle traffic down the side street will be able to look toward the north and see the Master Gardens. When the gardens are in full bloom they are truly outstanding and so we hope any passer bys will enjoy what we are creating.

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Andre Brogoitti using his tractor to clear and mow part of the area

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View of the Master Gardens (late fall) from Business Parkway

 

 

 



NOVEMBER

Added New Sign-Donated by County Commissioners:

For a number of years now, several people would bring up the fact that the sign out front of the Extension Office was basically useless. It had become so faded it was unreadable. Well 2016 was the year it met its match. Our own Rhonda Lesher wrote to the Commissioners to get our request on the agenda. Our President Sharon Cowan and Vice President Kay Miller attended a County Commissioners Court meeting to request they fund the purchase of a new sign and were successful in that endeavor. We sincerely thank the Commissioners for their generosity in funding the purchase of our new sign . Tommy Morgeson, one of our long time, highly active members (also current business manager) drew up the design that was presented to the Commissioners for approval. The sign was purchased, the sign pole was repainted white to show up more at night and the new sign was installed by Keith Kridler, Andre Brogoitti and Dave Miller… and it looks great!


Keith, Andre and Dave Installing the new sign

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Our New Sign

           

 

Finished walkway around Superstar® Bed:

The Texas Superstar® Beds have had a walkway that only went around the front of the beds with the project to complete a walkway around the back side being rescheduled over and over for a good while. Well once again, 2016 struck and the walkway was finally completed. It took a couple of months between framing, filling, leveling, laying the blocks and finishing the irregular areas. Key players on this project were Tommy Morgeson, Andre Brogoitti, Harry Farraugh and Dave Miller with a number of other members pitching in as they could. The walkway was finished the end of November and it
looks great. Nice work everyone. We would also like to recognize and thank Home Depot for donating surplus pavers over the past few years that were used in the construction.

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Framing

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Finishing Irregular Areas


Old and New Paver Meet/Finished

 

 

Added a Raspberry Bed:

Boy it seems when Master Gardeners get cranked up, they just don’t know when to stop. Dale Vanhoose who volunteered to help build and be the bedhead of our Earthkind® Grape Bed had his momentum up and decided he thought we needed a Raspberry bed. And it seemed the perfect spot for it was behind the Superstar® bed. He had to wait until the new walkway was complete before he could start, but he started it in short order once the walkway was done. The bed was prepared with lots of mulch being worked into the soil in a built up area just south of the new walkway. I know he is chomping at the bit to get his new raspberry plants in the new bed.

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New bed is prepared waiting on plants

 

 


Planted
Jasmine Along West Side of Greenhouse:

The bed along the west side of the greenhouse has been a leftover bed for the past few years. Also the greenhouse can get extremely hot in the summer. As a way to reduce sun’s heat coming from the west, eight jasmine plants have been planted along the west side. A later project will be to provide framing for the jasmine to climb on so that it will almost cover the west side of the greenhouse, providing shade and hopefully reducing the heat from the west sun. Rhonda Lesher provided the jasmine plants. They may not look like much now but jasmine is a very aggressive grower. By the end of summer, the west side of the greenhouse should be covered.

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One of our new jasmine plants

 

 

 

 

Our Graduating Master Gardeners of 2016:

After 50+ hours of learning and at least 50 volunteer hours, 13 interns were excited about being part of the 2016 graduating class of Cypress Basin Master Gardeners. Receiving a beautiful certificate, an official name tag and a green thumb, each intern was inducted into the organization at the November meeting. Graduation ceremonies were exciting for the interns who found that all the hard work and dedication paid off. Martha Wilson, 92 years young, was the senior-most member to graduate. If she can do it – so can you!!!

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Graduating class of 2016

 


 



 


DECEMBER


Always
General Maintenance to Beds:

We put our general bed maintenance at the end of the year because gardeners know, this project is ongoing. Some months require more activity than others, but there is almost always something to do in your garden every month of the year. So here we wish to thank all of the Bedheads of each area or bed and all of the other Master Gardeners who stepped up to support not only the Bedheads but CBMGA.

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Sue Farr and Betty Falk Cleaning up the Superstar® Bed

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Deloris O’Conner working on front Office Beds

 

 


Annual
Xmas Party
(and
Monthly Meeting)
:

December is one of those months after finishing and before starting any outside gardening for the next season. (of course you have already started any seeds for next season). So it is a time for fellowship and relaxing into the holiday season.
Every year CBMGA celebrates the end of another great year, the Christmas holiday at the last monthly meeting of the year. Our group has grown so well that we are ending the year with almost 80 full time members. So from CBMGA to everyone out there, we hope everyone had a most Merry Christmas, Hannakuh, Kwanza or however you celebrate the holiday and that each and everyone enjoys a Safe, Happy and Healthy New Year. And don’t forget to come back next year or maybe come join the fun for the first time.

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Arriving for the Meeting

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From CBMGA to You

 

 

 


We can’t wait to see what we can do in
2017!


So stop by and visit sometime.


Cypress Basin Master Gardeners Association

 

 

 

Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

CBMGA’s Plant Ramblings (Kridler’s Korner to return later) Issue 4, December 2016

2016-12-09 by khihon

CBMGA held its annual Christmas Party(December Business Meeting)December 8 and the whole gang had something they wanted to say…

2016 Christmas Grettings

As expected, it was an extraordinary evening mingling and visiting with good friends.  And of course there were lots of goodies to eat.
food table 1
and
food table 2

and what is a Christmas Party(December Business Meeting) without your traditional Christmas Elves! The first official (and everyone knows an elf is officially not official if they are not wearing at least some official elf wear) elf to arrive was our own Jack Rose. As evidenced by the color of Jack’s beard, it appears Jack may be shooting for the big guy’s job 😉

Jack the elf

And our second(official) elf to arrive was Elf Phylicxia Moore.
Phylicxia the elf
Phlycxia’s official Elf Wear indicates Phylicxia is head of operations and chief elf in charge of transportation

(get it, reindeer antlers? Transportation? Come on!)

Way to go Jack and Phylicxia, your Christmas spirit was enough to light up the room even for any that were considering putting their Grinch hat on. Thanks.

Our Christmas Tree looked almost perfect with the CBMG ornament prominently displayed.

CBMG tree

We should never forget all whose lives have not shared in the good fortune we certainly share as members of CBMGA, anytime, but especially around Christmas. Thank you everyone who remembered this and donated the bags and bags of items so needed by our friends at Safety House. We wish them as good a Christmas season as they can possibly have at Safety House.

The Christmas Party(December Business Meeting)) began with the invocation given by John O’Conner. Then with lots of goodies to eat, everyone sat down at the tables to eat. Oh, and what tables they were! Beautifully set up by Sharon Cowan, Janice Butler, Martha Wilson, Virginia Reynolds and Kay Miller.
tables001
with decorations made by Kay Miller and Virginia Reynolds

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And Kay Miller brought everyone a handmade Christmas ornament for every person in attendance.
Santa nut

After enjoying a wonderful repast with great friends, a gift exchange! The evening just got better and better. This year because our group has been so successful and expanded (and that is good thing) our gift exchange changed from a traditional White Elephant gift exchange. Everyone who brought a gift got a number when they arrived. Some probably thought, “I got a low number. That means I will get to pick early and get my choice.” Not so fast little Ricky…we threw in a hook shot at the last minute. The numbers for the order of who’s turn it was to pick a gift were randomly chosen by our own wonderful Mistress of Ceremonies Rhonda Lesher (who also provided the evening’s Christmas music.) Thanks Rhonda for keeping this rowdy bunch somewhat in line and for the great Christmas sounds.
Mistress of Ceremonies

The evening was wonderfully festive sharing with good friends. We are one great group even if I say so myself! The new year is fast approaching and a whole new class of interns are about to embark on their journey to become Master Gardeners in their own right and then hopefully become part of a great group of folks…us! Let’s be sure and make them feel as welcome as I have to be part of a super group.

Keith Kridler had pressing personal business this month and so hopefully Kridler’s Korner will return next month sharing a little of his knowledge .

We look forward to your return Keith.

Some additional pics from the evening

crowd002wr crowd001wr crowd003wr
tommyno1wr Merry Christmas

Everyone!

See you next month.

Ladd's Birdhouse


 

 

Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings, Current Events, Kridler's Korner

CBMGA Plant Ramblings and Kridler’s Korner Issue 3, November, 2016

2016-11-11 by khihon

CBMGA honored Jim and Betty Falk for their years of service and presented them with a plaque honoring them by renaming our Superstar Bed, as the "Jim and Betty Falk Superstar Bed". Thanks Jim and Betty for all you have done over the years. You are an inspiration to us all.


​

The evening also included our annual graduation ceremony to present all of the interns with their certificate awarding them the official title of "Texas Master Gardener". Each of them completed 50 hours of classroom training and at least 50 hours of volunteer time contributing to the education of the public and assisting our extension agent. Many completed even more volunteer hours. Thank you Kenny Rollins, Titus County Extension Agent, for sponsoring CBMGA to allow us to continue our service to the community.
And a big Congratulations to all our new "Texas Master Gardeners"

The Class of 2016

From left to right: Debbie Collins, Cheri Jensen, Kay Green, Hiroko Somsag, Kenny Rollins(back), Barbara Harris, Janice Butler, Martha Wilson (oldest graduating Master Gardener ??? at 92 years young), Evelyn Winkleblack, Staci Carney, Matt Fisk, Michael Clark, Regina Clark.

Congratulations everyone! Now go forth with your newly sanctioned green thumbs and propagate…all those plants!
[slideshow]






​

The officers for 2017 were approved and elected by the membership with Sharon Cowan continuing as President, Kay Miller as Vice-President, Rhonda Lesher as Treasurer, and newly elected Janice Butler(one of our 2016 Graduates) stepping up to take on the role of Secretary. Congratulations to our new board. We are all looking for 2017 to be every bit as much fun and productive as 2016 has been. Great job you guys.

Roger Farr, one of our very own Master Gardeners gave an outstanding presentation on propagating blueberry and other plants using a misting system. I owe Roger a huge apology, but it was totally his fault. His presentation was so well done, I got completely lost in listening that I forgot to get a picture of him in his presentation. Great presentation Roger. Speaking with several members after the meeting, it was quite the topic of conversation.

November Gardening

Gardeners To Do List For November

Average Date of First Freeze in Titus County: November 15

Planting

  • Continue to plant shade trees, ornamental trees, and shrubs.
  • Relocate established trees and shrubs after they enter dormancy (late November to January). Plant ‘balled and burlap’ trees and large shrubs.
  • Continue refrigerator chilling of tulips and Dutch hyacinths in preparation for late December/early January planting.
  • Plant pansies, flowering kale and cabbage, dianthus, cyclamen, violas, and other cool season annuals. Plant daffodil and grape hyacinth immediately after purchase.
  • Divide and replant perennials such as Iris and daylily.

    Pruning

  • Prune evergreen trees (as needed) such as magnolias, live oaks, and wax myrtles to minimize possible ice damage.
  • Cut back dormant perennials such as lantana and salvia after the first freeze.
  • Trim back tropical plants such as cannas, banana and elephant ears after their foliage freezes down.
  • Do major re-shaping of shade trees as needed after the first freeze when plants go dormant. This is a good time to remove mistletoe that stands out on bare limbs.

    Plant Care

  • Mulch leaves on your lawn. Shred excess leaves and add to planting beds or compost pile.
  • Replenish finished compost and mulch in planting beds, preferably before the first freeze.
  • Harvest pecans after mid November.
  • Continue to mow warm season turf up to first freeze.
  • Fertilize new fescue and ryegrass lawns at one half the rate recommended.
  • Apply your favorite fertilizer to pansies and other winter color plants to promote strong growth if needed.
  • Inspect houseplants that are coming indoors to be sure they have no insect pests.
  • Harvest fall vegetables before the first freeze.
  • Remove and drain garden hoses from outlets and cover faucets to prevent freeze damage
  • (originally published by Dallas County Master Gardeners)

Some recent sights around our gardens:

(I am trying something new here by including a second slideshow, Hope it all works)

[slideshow]

Monarch on cigar flower


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Next month will be our annual CBMGA Christmas Party. Look for more from Kridler’s Korner next month.

We have classes beginning January 3, 2017 to become a "Texas Master Gardener". Information on becoming a Master Gardener can be found at

"How Can I Become a Master Gardener?" If you ever thought digging in the dirt with good friends might be fun…IT REALLY IS! You should join us!

Come Learn and Grow with Us.

If you haven’t visited the CBMGA web site we are at CBMGA.org.

To see some of the gardens CBMGA has done, drop by Our Master Gardens Virtual Tour

Hope to see ya’ next month and that you and yours have a most Happy Thanksgiving.


Come Grow With Us
Cypress Basin Master Gardeners

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Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

CBMGA Plant Ramblings and Kridler's Korner Issue 2, October, 2016

2016-10-14 by khihon

CBMGA PLANT RAMBLINGS

and Kridler’s Korner

Issue 2 – October 2016


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Featured Speaker Rosemary Morgeson spoke of Roses – Planting, Pruning, Propagating

We had another great social time before the meeting featuring some wonderful German food in honor of Oktoberfest. I should have written some of the names down but some of them were long enough they might have taken up most of the newsletter space. All of it was outstanding but Ladd and Evelyn Winkleblack made a special trip to Munster (an old traditional German community) to pick up original German sausage, strudels and then made even more. Great job everyone. Many more evenings like this one and we may need to get an affiliate membership to Weight Watchers.

And we got great news from the County Commissioners!!! The following article appeared in the Mt. Pleasant Tribune.

Commissioner’s approve sign for Extension Office


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Master Gardeners

Flowers decorate the surrounding grounds of the County Extension Office on Industrial Blvd. The grounds are filled with horticultural projects implemented by the Cypress Basin Master Gardeners.

Posted: Friday, October 14, 2016 12:00 am

mbachmandailytribune.net | 0 comments

The Titus County Commissioner’s Court approved a request for funds to purchase a sign for the Titus County Extension Office at their meeting last Tuesday. The sign will cost the county $432. Court commissioner Mike Fields said the sign should have been put up two years ago as it would let people know where the office is at.

“It was kind of embarrassing to not know what building you’re going to,” Fields said.

In a letter to the commissioners, Rhonda Lesher, treasurer of the Cypress Basin Master Gardeners, said that the organization had a lot of pride in their county and their extension office.

“We have landscaped a lot of the property surrounding the office,” Lesher wrote to the court. If you have not been by to enjoy our beautiful gardens, test plots and nature trail, I hope that you do.”

A non-profit volunteer organization, the mission of the Cypress Basin Master Gardeners is to volunteer in association with the County Extension Agent to increase the availability of horticultural information, perform horticultural projects that extend the knowledge of horticulture throughout the community and educate the community on the best horticultural methods.

The Master Gardener program is an educational and volunteer program offered by the AgriLife Extension of the Texas A&M University System.

Lesher wrote that Texas A&M had selected the organization to do research for Earth Kind varieties of landscaping plants, roses and grape and muscadine varieties. She said that the organization took pride in the fact that the gardens were promoted as a Mt. Pleasant tourist attraction in the Texas State Travel Guide. “Our Gardens also provide horticultural education for folks in the community, demonstrating plants for Texas landscapes, methods of composting and raised bed construction, to name a few items,” she wrote. She then praised extension agents Kenny and Lou Ann Rollins, who she described as helpful and, her gratitude for the facility. “We don’t take it for granted as we are aware that few counties have great Extension agents and a great building in which to hold their meetings,” she wrote. Sharon Cowan of the Master Gardeners, said that the organization currently has 27 projects going on. “We work very hard and we work many, many hours during the course of the year for aesthetics if nothing else,” Cowan told the court. “We appreciate any help.”

For more information about the organization, go to http://cbmga.org/

We want to thank the commissioners for their generosity in not only paying for a new sign to let the public know where the County Extension Office is located but for their generosity in helping the Master Gardeners improve the area and help the public.

There has been a lot going on since the last meeting.

1. We have completed the construction of and the planting of the new grape beds behind the extension office,

2. Established two new wildflower areas (thanks Roger and Sue Farr (and everyone that helped)


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3. Designated a new bed head for an upcoming bed – Our Butterfly Garden headed up by Regina Clark,

4. Approved plans to add a Raspberry bed just south of the Superstar beds (to be headed up by Dale Vanhoose),

5. Started back on completing the path from the front of the Superstar beds around to the back of the Superstar beds (thanks to Tommy Morgeson for bringing his tractor),


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6. Cleared a large portion of the property south to the business parkway south of us with plans to move our roses to the cleared area and up to the fence, and move the Vitex tree to this general area (huge thanks to Keith Kridler and Andre Brogoitti for their work on sawing, using their tractors and brush hogs, and mowing this area to get it ready)


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7. Added to the Hugelkultur areas to improve the decomposition of the materials (thanks Michael Clark for taking this on)

8. Cleaned up the gourd bed area (and added the material to the Hugelkultur areas)

9. As mentioned above got a new sign approved (Thanks Tommy Morgeson for drawing it up and getting the bids for the sign), which includes cleaning up the sign mounting post and frame and repainting it.

10. At the meeting we approved a change in the number of required hours to maintain Master Gardener certification from 12 volunteer hours a year to 25 volunteer hours a year. While still less than most other Master Gardener organizations, this will help the group to be able to maintain the current projects around the extension office.

11. The last field trip of the year was announced to visit Los Piños Winery. The tour of the winery will include a tour of the orchards and winery with an optional lunch (members pay) after the tour. The winery specified they could only accommodate 30 people on a tour so slots filled up quickly. Should be great weather to view the grounds and the winery finishing up with a great meal with some great folks. Thanks to Debbie DeWolf and Kay Miller for setting this up.

12. CBMGA had a booth and a group marched in the parade at the Pittsburg Pioneer Days. We were well represented by the Marching Master Gardeners playing kazoos and entertaining the crowds being led a one famous celebrity, the one and only Mr. Potato Head.


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13. CBMGA also had a booth at the Titus County Fair where we met the public, shared some knowledge, gave out some free seeds and hopefully found some future members of CBMGA.


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And from Kridler’s Korner

October To Do List:

Leaves are dropping, talk with lawn service crews, ask them for tree leaves/lawn clippings. Some are now putting big vacuum attachments on their Zero turn mowers. In the Mt. P. area, ask them to dump the clippings at the Extension office. Many MG groups will write an article for the newspaper telling people to drop off bulk leaves at community composting areas and or write an article telling them what to do with organic materials.

Time for a soil test if it has been three years since your last test.

Time to set pocket gopher, mole, rat and mouse traps around your property. See how many rodents might want to move into and under your property.

Wait till the end of Oct. to trim back over grown landscape shrubs, so that they will not simply re-sprout new growth before first killing frost.

Time to pull out the last of summer annuals, replant with winter hardy annuals like pansy’s, mums Etc. Wait till after a killing freeze to trim back perennials that are still in bloom.

Still time to plant wildflower seeds, clover and rye grass cover crops. Winter Wheat and Oats can still be planted. Winter greens can be planted.

Stir up your organic mulch covers in all of your flower beds. These wood chips and bark nuggets get glued together with fungi, forming a water proof barrier. Check to be sure you have three inches of fresh organic mulches over flower/shrub beds before Thanksgiving.

Old garden vines/larger garden plants need to be stacked up to dry, then chopped up with lawn mowers or bush hog mowers. Do NOT reuse or compost these garden plants back into the garden. Use garden plants and old fruits around trees and shrubs. Use hardwood leaves back into the vegetable garden area. Pull up tomato, pepper, egg plants then look for nematodes in the root balls of these plants.

If the soils in flower beds and or garden soils are heavy, hard packed then mix in Gypsum and more organic matter. Gypsum helps break up packed soils, much better to till this in to mix it into the top 7 inches of the soils.

Chicken litter can be tilled into garden soils with the next fall tilling. Wait two weeks then till the soil again. Depends on the litter but one ton per acre of garden area works pretty well.

Last gasp to spray Round-up for Bermuda, Bahia and the Nut Grass Sedges.

Time to gather pecans, black wall nuts, begin to taste test persimmons for ripe fruit. There is a “huge” difference in the sugar content from tree to tree with persimmon fruit. More full sun on the trees means more sugar in the fruit. The Orient Pears are still ripe on some trees. Maybe a few Kieffer pears still on trees. Watch for a couple of species of Hickory Trees locally. We have several different species, the smallest nuts come off of the “Pig Nut” hickory. Hickory trees are closely related to Pecans. There maybe a few of the Carpathian Walnut trees still in this region. Or the Paper Shell walnut trees.

Watch for the Florida Dogwoods that might be loaded with red berries. They can be harvested in another month. We also have the Rough Leafed Dogwood or Drummond Dogwood native to this area. It will have clusters of white berries and this takes more full sun, is more disease resistant than the Florida Dogwood trees. The Drummond Dog wood is more common between White Oak Creek and the Sulfur River.

Gather any of the Burr oak or the other species of White Oak Acorns to spread in local woods. Acorns are falling now from all oak species.

Other Items:

Link below is the best link I can find about Fall Web Worms. It has excellent hot links to good photos of the various life cycles. I am seeing these on my Bald Cypress trees, normally people don’t notice a pest problem until it has almost completely wiped out their shade trees in the yard.

http://enpp.auburn.edu/outreach/web-publications/fall-webworm/

Keith Kridler

Hopefully in the future we will be adding a couple of new items of interest to CBMGA Plant Ramblings, Plant of the Month and Featured Members Plant. We are still playing with the format, so if you have a thought and wish to share it, please use the Contact Us form on the web site. We also hope to add a regular Gardening Calendar.

In closing for this month CBMGA thanks everyone for all of the planning, hard work and all of the efforts that is making CBMGA shine like it does. Good job everyone.

And if you are not part of our organization, maybe you should be.


Come Grow With Us
Cypress Basin Master Gardeners

uc?export=download&id=0B5w5TobZx6ivdkVmT05yRkExMUU&revid=0B5w5TobZx6ivME5xY0tZa2Zvdk1nVXdVd09wNlQ4QlkxY0hjPQ

Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

October Gardening To Do List

2016-10-07 by khihon

Here is a list of things that can/should be done in your gardens during October and just a reminder to enjoy the upcoming holiday.

Time for a soil test if it has been three years since your last test.

Time to set pocket gopher, mole, rat and mouse traps around your property. See how many rodents might want to move into and under your property.

Wait till the end of Oct. to trim back over grown landscape shrubs, so that they will not simply re-sprout new growth before first killing frost.

Time to pull out the last of summer annuals, replant with winter hardy annuals like pansy’s, mums Etc. Wait till after a killing freeze to trim back perennials that are still in bloom.

Still time to plant wildflower seeds, clover and rye grass cover crops. Winter Wheat and Oats can still be planted. Winter greens can be planted.

Stir up your organic mulch covers in all of your flower beds. These wood chips and bark nuggets get glued together with fungi, forming a water proof barrier. Check to be sure you have three inches of fresh organic mulches over flower/shrub beds before Thanksgiving.

Old garden vines/larger garden plants need to be stacked up to dry, then chopped up with lawn mowers or bush hog mowers. Do NOT reuse or compost these garden plants back into the garden. Use garden plants and old fruits around trees and shrubs. Use hardwood leaves back into the vegetable garden area. Pull up tomato, pepper, egg plants then look for nematodes in the root balls of these plants.

If the soils in flower beds and or garden soils are heavy, hard packed then mix in Gypsum and more organic matter. Gypsum helps break up packed soils, much better to till this in to mix it into the top 7 inches of the soils.

Chicken litter can be tilled into garden soils with the next fall tilling. Wait two weeks then till the soils again. Depends on the litter but one ton per acre of garden area works pretty well.

Last gasp to spray Round-up for Bermuda, Bahia and the Nut Grass Sedges.

Time to gather pecans, black wall nuts, begin to taste test persimmons for ripe fruit. There is a “huge” difference in the sugar content from tree to tree with persimmon fruit. More full sun on the trees means more sugar in the fruit. The Orient Pears are still ripe on some trees. Maybe a few Kieffer pears still on trees. Watch for a couple of species of Hickory Trees locally. We have several different species, the smallest nuts come off of the “Pig Nut” hickory. Hickory trees are closely related to Pecans. There maybe a few of the Carpathian Walnut trees still in this region. Or the Paper Shell walnut trees.

Watch for the Florida Dogwoods that might be loaded with red berries. They can be harvested in another month. We also have the Rough Leafed Dogwood or Drummundii dogwood native to this area. It will have clusters of white berries and this takes more full sun, is more disease resistant than the Florida Dogwood trees. The Drummond Dog wood is more common between White Oak Creek and the Sulfur River.

Gather any of the Burr oak or the other species of White Oak Acorns to spread in local woods. Acorns are falling now from all oak species.

Keith Kridler


Come Grow With Us
Cypress Basin Master Gardeners

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Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings, Kridler's Korner

CBMGA Plant Ramblings-Come by our Booth at the Titus County Fair

2016-09-26 by khihon

We will be at the Titus County Fair manning our booth with lots of bulbs for sale at way below commercial prices, crafts and gardening advice. You can come by and "Ask A Master Gardener" a question about your plants, or most anything horticultural. See if you know which bugs are Good and which bugs are Bad.
Here are few for you to practice on:
[slideshow]




Can you tell if a plant if over watered or under watered?

And what about the nutrients your plants need?

Is your dirt good dirt or bad dirt?


Come check out the Titus County Fair at the Mt. Pleasant Civic Center at 1800 N Jefferson Ave, Mt Pleasant, TX and while there, be sure and stop by our booth and say hello.


Come Grow With Us
Cypress Basin Master Gardeners

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Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

CBMGA Plant Ramblings Issue 1, September, 2016

2016-09-13 by khihon

CBMGA Plant Ramblings

Issue 1, September 2016

Welcome to our first official digital newsletter/blog (at least in a long time). We hope you find it interesting, informative and entertaining and if you have any thoughts concerning the newsletter/blog, you can comment at the bottom. There are several places, include at the bottom of the newsletter/blog you can subscribe. We hope you do and that you share us with your friends.

CBMGA held its monthly meeting Thursday evening September 8, 2016. Lisa Egner, owner of Texas Heritage Gardens Egner Farms was our guest speaker. The topic was Southern Bulbs and was very informative. Lisa also brought some of the items she has for sale at Texas Heritage Gardens and many members were able to purchase several unusual bulbs, plants and seeds that Lisa stocks.

We want to thank Lisa for being a great speaker and presenting a lot of information about bulbs, their history and uses in such a way that even with all of the information provided, it was entertaining, informative and yet not overwhelming. Great job.

After the speaker’s presentation, President Sharon Cowan conducted the business meeting. The agenda included numerous items with the number one topic of “The Pittsburg Pioneer Days” where CBMGA will have a booth to talk to people about gardening, hoping to encourage more folks to join the group. Part of the “Pioneer Days” celebration will be a parade through downtown Pittsburg. Noelle Hood, secretary, has secured a spot in the parade for some CBMGA members to participate in the parade as the Marching Master Gardeners Kazoo Band (we understand there may be a celebrity that we cannot name at this time marching with us). We encourage everyone to come out to the Pittsburg Pioneer Days, see the parade, enjoy the day and visit our booth on Saturday, September 17, 2016.

We have one work day a week where members arrive at the Titus County Extension Office to work on and care for the Master Gardens we have there. If you have never been, we want everyone to drop by sometime and see some the work CBMGA members have done. If you can’t drop by in person, you can drop by our website and take the Master Gardens Virtual Tour. We have the Front Office Beds with numerous perennials and a few annual plants, our Perennial Bed many unusual varieties of perennials, our Texas Superstar beds featuring plants from the Texas Superstar collection, our Flowering Bulb Bed with over 500 bulbs, corms, rhizones and tubers, our Native Plants Bed featuring many native plants from our area, our http://cbmga.org/care-free-beauty-earth-kind-rose/, our Veggie Bed, Herb Bed, Blueberry Bed, our Blackberry Bed, Our Greenhouse and Demonstration Beds, and currently under construction, soon to be finished Grape Bed(web pages to follow) and Wildflower Areas(also web pages to follow). There is also a Woodland Trail with a picnic and where several of the species of trees are marked with QR codes that you can pull up information on each species on your smart phone.

And speaking of our workday, we had a wonderfully productive one this past Saturday. At least twenty seven people showed up to work and a LOT was accomplished. From our President Sharon Cowan:

It was a lot of fun and a lot was accomplished. The grape beds are nearing completion. Some have already been planted and Dale will complete that part.

Wild flower areas were prepared and attractively marked so the area won’t be mowed. Many seeds were packaged for the give-away at Pioneer Day and the Titus County Fair. Bulbs were bagged to be sold at the two events already stated. Maintenance was done on the rain water system at the perennial bed, and perennial bed was trimmed/maintained.

GREAT DAY-GREAT PEOPLE! Thanks.

Sharon

Here are some photos of the work that was done:

[slideshow]





The people shown were not all of the people nor all of the work. We had a really great work day from a great group of folks that accomplished a lot.

And as though having a great meeting, and a great workday with such a great turnout where so much got accomplished was not enough, even more was done. Our very own Keith Kridler not only finds time to put our retaining wall plans (designed and drawn up by Tommy Morgeson) into effect, he wrote up some great information to share about some of what is currently going on in our Master Gardens. Thanks Keith.

Kridler’s Korner

There were just over 150 open blooms on the Yellow Brugmansia outside Jenifer Ross’s window in the south perennial flower bed on Sunday morning. Common name for this plant is “Angel Trumpet” as the blooms hang down facing “Earth”. The similar blooming plants in the Datura Family are far more poisonous/more hallucinogenic compounds in Datura’s. These are commonly called “Devil’s Trumpets” for all of the single blooms on Datura plants “Look Upwards” from “Hades”. Both families of plants show off massive trumpet flowers, both now are available in multiple colors. September is a good month to make hardwood limb cuttings of the Brugmansia’s. This month is also the time to collect and dry the seeds from the Datura plant family. On the common white blooming Devil’s Trumpet the open seed pods will split open with four petals, revealing hundreds of seeds. The pod is about the size of a spinney golf ball. The seeds are arranged in such a way as to resemble the human brain. Maybe Mother Nature warning early humans that if you eat these seeds it will severely affect your brain? Each bloom on these plants will only be open for about 12 hours, scent from the blooms is more intense within the first few hours of opening.

Our Angel Trumpet

Also in the south bed on the Fennel plant there were 17 large caterpillars, Giant Swallow Tail larva munching away on the last of the leaves. They are within days of forming a chrysalis. It appears that they will eat every leaf on the fennel/dill only leaving behind the stems and seeds that are almost ripe for harvest. Monarch Butterflies were drifting south over the weekend, riding the north winds on south to Mexico after the front passed through. There were dozens of the Gulf Fritillary female butterflies busy laying eggs on the passion vines. Only about 1 out of 100 butterfly eggs will mature in the wild to create an adult butterfly.


Early morning, just before dawn is the best time to “hear” nature. The early bird species, American Robins were busy in the new wildflower pocket prairies running down crickets and the wolf spiders that were chasing the crickets. The Northern Cardinals were busy hopping around eating the just planted wildflower seeds! There were a couple of American Goldfinches, still in their bright yellow breeding plumage. Grey Squirrels were being busy dashing hither and thither just because they can. There was a kaleidoscope of color from leaves that were drifting down to earth. As the leaves spin, twist and sail on the breeze, sunlight reflects off leaf surfaces, changing the hue and color in bursts maybe a poor man’s fireworks. Dawn is breaking now, we have another day, enjoy every moment. Keith Kridler

The Cypress Basin Master Gardeners

Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

facebook response test 160908

2016-09-08 by khihon

Here are some shots from the end of August

[slideshow]



Come Grow With Us
Cypress Basin Master Gardeners

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Filed Under: CBMGA Plant Ramblings

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