Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community or School Garden

Have you thought about the best way to use signs in your Georgia community or school garden?  Gardeners often use small signs as plant labels but larger signs can be just as useful.  They can be an important way to tie your garden together.

A creative, welcoming sign at the entrance can tell who you are:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
SCAD in Savannah

Since gardeners don’t always work at the same time, signs can be a great way to communicate between gardeners:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
From Cherokee County Senior Community Garden

More permanent signs can hold announcements, maps and other documents.

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
Green Meadows Community Garden

They can be a great way to tell the story of your garden:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
From Blue Heron Community Garden

And, they can be instructional for beginning gardeners:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
From Food Well’s Healthy Soil, Healthy Life Initiative

Signs can also be a way to make sure all gardeners know the rules:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
From Tobie Grant Manor Community Garden

You can brag on your certifications.  Many certification programs have an option to purchase a weatherproof sign:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden

For school gardens, signs can encourage teachers to use the garden by giving them basic lesson facts:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
Due West Elementary School’s Math Garden Sign

Or they can be inspirational:

Using Signs in Your Georgia Community and School Garden
Ford Elementary School

Signs for the garden should be weatherproof, easily readable, and securely attached to a post or a building.  The next time you are at a large botanical garden like the Atlanta Botanical Garden or the State Botanical Garden of Georgia notice their signs and labels.  You will be inspired.

How do you creatively use signs in your garden?

Happy Gardening!

The Window to Plant Spring-Flowering Bulbs is Closing

Narcissus

Daffodil (Narcissus sp.) bulbs and other spring-flowering bulb-like plants (corms, tubers, tuberous roots, and rhizomes) make excellent additions to the landscape.  These plants add color and interest to the late winter/early spring garden while other plants are still dormant.  They can be placed most anywhere in the garden and make great additions to beds, borders, and containers.

The ideal planting time for spring-flowering bulbs is fall to mid-winter to allow enough chilling time (below 40-50 degrees) to induce flowering.  For landscape companies looking to generate some wintertime business, perhaps a bulb planting service in order.  Established daffodils have already started to emerge and the window for planting is closing fast, so grab your planting tools and get to work!

Plant Narcissus bulbs 3-6” deep, root side down of course, and backfill with a clean topsoil.  Fertilize during planting and just after flowering to provide plants with adequate nutrients for next year’s flowers.  For more information on selecting, planting, and installing bulbs, refer to UGA Extension Bulletin (B 918), “Flowering Bulbs for Georgia Gardens.”

References:

Thomas, P.A., Wade, G.L., Pennisi, B. PhD, (October 2012). Flowering Bulbs for Georgia Gardens. Retrieved from http://extension.uga.edu/publications/files/pdf/B 918_3.PDF

The Rains and Unusual Weather of December 2015

Winter Arrives after Unusual December

The conclusion of 2015 marked one of the soggiest Decembers on record with many areas of the state receiving in excess of 13 inches for the month (roughly 20% of the annual rainfall.) In addition, high temperatures hovered in the mid 70’s for much of December leaving Bermuda lawns green and irises, roses, magnolias, and azaleas blooming.  Perpetual rainfall kept soils waterlogged for an extended period of time and many folks ended the season wondering how the unusual weather might affect their gardens.

Total Precipitation – December 2015 2014
Blairsville 13.35” 3.06”
Griffin 13.94” 5.41”
Tifton 8.41” 6.48”

University of Georgia Automated Environmental Monitoring Network

Average Daily Temperatures – December 2015 2014
Avg. Max. Temp. (°F) Avg. Min. Temp. (°F) Avg. Max. Temp. (°F) Avg. Min. Temp. (°F)
Blairsville 62.01 41.21 54.68 33.82
Griffin 66.29 48.22 58.19 39.16
Tifton 70.65 52.47 63.94 44.59

University of Georgia Automated Environmental Monitoring Network

Will the azaleas bloom again this spring? Read more at www.archive.gaurbanag.org/Landscape Alerts.

 

Announcing Our New Training Coordinator, Welcome Greg Huber!

Greg Huber Training Coordinator

The Georgia Center for Urban Agriculture is excited to announce that Mr. Greg Huber will be our new Training Coordinator effective January 1, 2016.

Over the past decade, Greg has trained Georgia’s Green Industry workforce as the Program Coordinator, Lead Instructor, and Advisor for the Southern Crescent Technical College Horticulture Program. Greg’s diverse background in the industry includes Christmas Tree Farming, Carpentry and Construction, Landscape Management, Retail Nursery Sales, Landscape Installation, Site Planning, and Landscape Architecture. In 2014 he received the Georgia Green Industry Association’s Educator of the Year award and is also a past recipient of the Southern Crescent Technical College Rick Perkins Award for Excellence in Technical Instruction.

Mr. Huber holds a Bachelor of Landscape Architecture degree from the University of Georgia and is a Georgia Registered Professional Landscape Architect. Greg is active in professional, educational and community clubs and activities. He brings enthusiasm, passion and expertise to his position and to the unit. Our unit is eager to begin the New Year with Greg leading the direction of the Georgia Certified Landscape Professional and Georgia Certified Plant Professional programs.

Join us as we welcome Mr. Greg Huber to our team in the Georgia Center for Urban Agriculture and the UGA Griffin Campus.

Rodents and Your Community or School Garden

Rodents and Your Community or School Garden

One of the beautiful things about all types of gardens is the opportunity to see wildlife – birds, butterflies, bats, beetles, lizards – all types of wildlife.  A garden is truly an outdoor classroom.  Many school and community gardeners work towards having their gardens become certified wildlife habitats.

Budleia with Swallowtail, Rodents and Your Community or School Garden

Sadly, sometimes school or community vegetable gardens get blamed for harboring undesirable wildlife, like rodents.  This can be a real problem for the gardeners.

Is the vegetable garden really the problem?

Wildlife need food, water, and shelter.  Those things can be found in a garden, near a dumpster, or in buildings.  A large population of rodents need a large amount of food and a few seeds from end-of-the-season garden sunflowers will simply not sustain a large population of rodents.

If your garden is being blamed for a rodent problem, determine where the rodents coming from and what is attracting them.   Could it be leftover food from a playground or picnic area?  Are dumpsters being improperly used?  Has something recently changed, like nearby land being cleared that would displace wildlife and send them into your area?  Are bird feeders spilling an excessive amount of feed?  Chances are, a vegetable garden may not be the problem at all.

Setting out traps may help you all get a handle on the problem.   You should be able to see just how many, and what type, of rodents you are dealing with.  For example, voles eat the roots of any type of plants not just the roots of vegetables.  If it is just a few rodents you can just trap and relocate them.

Educate community leaders about your garden

If a community leader or school official is concerned about your garden and rodents there are several steps you can take:

  • First, demonstrate that you are using proper sanitation in your garden.  You  areRodents and Your Community or School Garden not leaving weed piles and overgrown plots for mice to hide in.  You are harvesting the vegetables just as they become ripe and not letting overripe vegetable stay in the garden.
  • If you have a compost pile show that you are not adding things that attract rodents like whole eggs, meats, or dairy products.   You are actively maintaining the compost bins/piles.
  • Educate the people around you that the soil and watering issues are no different in a vegetable garden than what is found around the traditional landscape plants located elsewhere on the property.
  • Maintain good relationships with your community leaders or school administrators.  When they see what a positive impact your garden is having eliminating it would be unthinkable.

As a bonus, to assist with a property-wide rodent problem consider adding owl nesting boxes to attract these rodent predators.  This would also add another wildlife dimension to your property!

An overall rodent problem is not a reason to eliminate a well maintained school or community garden.  For more information see the UGA publication Resolving Human-Nuisance Wildlife Conflicts.  Or, contact your local UGA Extension agent.  Thanks to the many UGA Extension agents who assisted in this blog post!

Happy Gardening!

Help us nominate one of our own to eXtension’s i-Three Corps

Nominate Becky Griffin for eXtension's i-Three Corps

eXtension is seeking 200 individuals to co-invent the future. They’re calling this group the i-Three Issue Corps!

eXtension is looking for individuals who have plans of work involving either climate or food systems.

UGA Extension and Center professional Becky Griffin is being nominated with her Pollinator Spaces Project.

The Pollinator Spaces Project assists pollinators by increasing needed habitat through a multi-faceted initiative. Throughout the state of Georgia, community and school gardeners are encouraged to add pollinator habitats to their gardens. Online resources and in-person trainings are offered to teach gardeners about pollinators, plant selection, garden design, and habitat enhancements. University of Georgia Extension agents, specialists and collaborative partners provide the resources and trainings.

Help us nominate Becky Griffin to eXtension’s i-Three Corps by voting online!

Read more

The Tamper – A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

The Garden Tamper

It is gift-giving season and we want to share a useful gift that is easy to construct with scrap wood.

We have mentioned using a tamper in several other blog posts.  It is a very useful tool to ensure good seed-to-soil contact when working with small seeds like spinach, lettuce, carrots, and collards.  The weight of the tamper is all that is needed to compress the soil slightly.

I was first introduced to this tool by Jim Hall, a Cherokee County Master Gardener.  He guaranteed a higher germination rate of small seeds by just using the tamper!

Building Instructions

The tamper is easy to construct and makes a great gift for a gardening friend or for yourself!  You will need a 2X4 wood piece, a 1X2  (or 2X2) wood piece, and a wood screw.

Step One:  Measure and cut 1 foot off of a 2X4.  This will be the base.

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

Step Two:  Measure and cut 4 feet off of a 1X2 (or a 2X2).  This is the handle.

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

Step Three:  Choose a wood screw that is at least three inches long so it will go through the 2X4 piece and into your 1X2.

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

Step Four:  Drill a pilot hole in the middle of the 2X4.

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

And into the end of the 1X2.

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

Step Five:  Using your wood screw attach the pieces:

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

Your final product:

The Tamper - A Great Gift for the Georgia Gardener

The tamper can be creatively painted or left bare.  Using the tool is easy.  Place small seeds on top of garden soil.  Sprinkle about 1/4th inch of soil on top of the seeds.  Gently tamp the soil with tool.  The weight of the tamper is enough pressure to ensure seed-to-soil contact.  No need to press down.

Happy Gardening!