'Elvis Lives'
by SherryBlanton
 gardening goings on
Apr 18, 2012 | 2419 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

 

‘One Man’s Treasure’, ‘Afternoon Delight’, ‘Elvis Lives’, ‘Guacamole’, ‘Squash Casserole’!! Hosta!!! Just like potato chips – you can’t just have one. I, thus, have dozens – often choosing them purely by the whimsy in their names. For those who have not added hosta to the landscape, it is time to do just that. The garden shops are chock-full of these marvelous hardy herbaceous perennials grown for their wonderful and colorful foliage. The leaves come in a variety of shapes, colors, sizes, and textures -- and can be solid or variegated in combinations of blue, green, yellow and my favorite, chartreuse. Just last week I bought one called ‘Orange Marmalade’ which has an orange tint to the leaves. As for texture, I love the ones with the thick, highly corrugated leaves – often making them impervious to slugs (more about that later). Hosta are low maintenance and widely available. They are featured in catalogs, such as the one from Plant Delights Nursery which lists dozens of interesting cultivars. There are tiny ones like ‘Stiletto’ which grow only a few inches across or huge ones like ‘Sum and Substance’ which get several feet across. Some can get just inches high and others can reach two feet.

Although hosta are primarily grown for their foliage, they do produce flowers from early summer to fall. Flowers grow on long spikes and range from white to lavender or purple and may be fragrant. Some folks do not like the flowers and promptly remove them. Butterflies and hummingbirds like the flowers, so I have begun to enjoy them more.

Hosta are shade-tolerant plants but they, like many other shade lovers, do not like deep shade. They prefer dappled morning sun and afternoon shade. Some will tolerate a little afternoon sun, but their leaves may get sunburned. The blue-leafed hosta require more shade and the gold, yellow and white-leafed hosta can tolerate more sun. Hosta with fragrant flowers do like some half a day of sun. ‘Fragrant Bouquet’, ‘Guacamole’, ‘Fried Green Tomatoes’ and ‘Sum and Substance’ all will tolerate some sun. (Don’t you just love the names!) Please remember that the more sun a hosta gets, the more water it will need to thrive. For those of you looking for long- lived plants for your garden, hosta are just the plant for you. A little slow release fertilizer is appreciated in early spring. Unless attacked by voles or wandering deer, they will remain in your garden for years. Deers love hosta and the pricier the plant the better the plant tastes. (This is not scientific fact just personal observation.) I use a product made of putrefied eggs to spray all my hosta with after the deer consumed most of mine one year. Voles, small mouse-like creatures that tunnel under the mulch and devour the entire root system, can also do lots of damage; I have lost many beloved hosta to these small creatures. (Since voles like to crawl under mulch, pulling back your mulch from the base of your plants might prove helpful; removing it entirely from a bed may help convince the voles not to remain in your garden. The only drawback here is that the mulch is really good for the garden; I compromise and keep it away from the base of the plant.) To do battle with the voles I went to two methods, planting the hosta in containers and planting those in the ground with moats of Permatill surrounding the root ball. Permatill, actually a soil amendment is a product (a soil aggregate) made of small rocks and is advertised as a volebloc, as supposedly the voles don’t like to crawl through the rocks to get to the root. The Permatill did help deter much of the damage once I started using it. Years ago I put out mouse traps laden with peanut butter and oatmeal; the only thing I caught were my own fingers. Years ago we had a terrible problem with rats getting under our house, so we had to hire a service which dispatched them; when we dispatched the rats our vole problems disappeared. Enough said on that topic.

Another garden enemy to hosta are slugs who will munch and munch and munch. Some gardeners may put out small containers of beer (a drink irresistible to slugs and snails) which the slugs drown in; there are also slug baits but caution is needed as those products can poison pets. I have used diatomaceous earth and a product called Sluggo which is supposed to be safe to use in the garden for pets and the environment. A friend puts out boards which the slugs crawl under and then she cleans off daily. I have heard of others pouring salt around their hosta but I would not recommend that method as it is bad for your soil and anything else there.

Hosta, like all other things in our gardens, prefer well-drained soil with lots of organic matter. They need ample moisture during their growing season – at least an inch per week. You can plant, transplant, and divide hosta in the early fall or in the spring before the leaves unfold. It is much harder on the plant if you do those chores during summer’s heat. Just a few weeks ago I spent days bumping my hosta to bigger pots. By the way hosta do great in containers. Not only are they not bothered by voles, but you can also move them out of range of the local deer herd; the extra chill in the air from being in a container is actually enjoyed by the hosta root system.

With more than 2,000 registered cultivars of hosta in existence, there is one for every personality and every garden. Choose some of each color, size, and leaf shape and prepare to quickly become a collector. Sit back and enjoy the spring show as their marvelous leaves unfold. You and your garden will be the better for it! (Now, where did I put my Plant Delights catalog?)

By the way the MGs will sell ‘Sun Power’ hosta at our first plant sale of the season, April 21, from 8 until 11 at Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan. ‘Sun Power’ is more sun tolerant than many other hosta culitvars.

 

Correction to Date in Garden Events
by SherryBlanton
 gardening goings on
Mar 30, 2012 | 2275 views |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Jacksonville Garden Club plant sale is going to be Saturday, April 28 from 8-11 a.m. in the parking lot of Dr. Terry Bonds office at 601 Pelham Road S.
 (In case of rain, they will try again on the next Saturday).
Garden Events
by SherryBlanton
 gardening goings on
Mar 24, 2012 | 1952 views |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Rain Barrel and Cisterns Workshop

By Hayes Jackson, Urban Regional Agent

March 29, 2012 10:00—12:00 pm

Anniston Museum of Natural History

800 Museum Drive, Anniston To Register Contact 256 237-6766

FREE CLASS! *First 30 registrants can purchase a Rain Barrel for $40.00*

"Funded by Legacy, Inc. Partners in Environment Education."

Sponsored by Anniston Museum of Natural History www.annistonmuseum.org

Berman Museum of World History www.bermanmuseum.org

Longleaf Botanical Garden www.longleafbotanicalgardens.org

 

PLANT SALES

Saturday, April 21rst, 4-H Tree Amigos Master Gardeners , 8 - 11, Cane Creek Community Gardens

Saturday, May 5, 4-H Tree Amigos Master Gardeners and Anniston Museum Volunteers, 8 AM - until all plants are sold, Longleaf Botanical Gardens at the Anniston Museum

Saturday, May 5, Jacksonville Garden Club, 8 until, Dr. Bonds parking lot in Jacksonville

 

 

LUNCH & LEARN - A series of free gardening programs sponsored by Calhoun County Master Gardeners & Calhoun County Commission. Held the 4 th Wednesday of each month at the Cane Creek Community Garden at McClellan. Noon-1pm ~ bring your own lunch!

April 25 th

,

"Stone Structure Sites on Choccolocco Mountain"

Harry Holstein, JSU Archeology Dept.

May 23 rd

"Land Conservation in Alabama"

Josh Holmes, Alabama Land Trust

June 27 th

"Succulents"

Hayes Jackson, ACES

July 25 th

Cleaning up Choccolocco Creek"

Michael Buntin, AL Aquatic Biodiversity Center

Aug 22 nd

"Getting to Know the Talladega National Forest"

Karen McKenzie, District Ranger

Sept 26 th

"Native Plants"

Hayes Jackson, ACES

Dates/speakers subject to change. Calhoun Co. Extension Office 256-237-1621.




"Every Home Deserves a Garden" with Vince Dooley, Botanical Gardens Benefit Luncheon, Friday, April 27, Call the Museum to get a ticket. 

 

 

Has Spring Sprung?
by SherryBlanton
 gardening goings on
Mar 23, 2012 | 2050 views |  0 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Just wanted to share a photo of my ‘Coral Bells’ azalea. Nothing says like spring in Alabama like the blooms of this beautiful azalea (except perhaps for the glorious stretch of white dogwoods lining the street in my neighborhood). These warm days have led all of us to believe that spring is really here and winter is over. But the last official frost date for our area is April 15th. I can remember a snow on April 6th. So words of wisdom. It is too early to plant tender annuals. It is too early to put out a summer vegetable garden. Even if we do not have  a frost, the ground has not warmed up enough to put annuals and summer vegetables in the ground. At a recent vegetable growing class I attended it was suggested that the ground be around 65 degrees for our summer vegetables to begin to grow. If plants are very tender the first week of May is even better for them. Most annuals are considered tropicals and we are way too chilly now for them. I have to admit I was tempted as I strolled the aisles of the big box stores and eyed the begonias, the impatiens, the zinnias, and others. But common sense took over. Those same plants will be waiting for me when it is safer to plant them. So spend this lovely weekend getting ready to plant. Add some compost to your flower bed. Wash the pollen off your car and enjoy spring in Alabama.

Enjoying a mahonia!
by SherryBlanton
 gardening goings on
Mar 12, 2012 | 2085 views |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Most of the time this evergreen shrub adopts an unassuming role in the garden. A stiff upright- growing plant with prickly leaves that resembles a holly, it doesn’t command our attention like a camellia or a Japanese maple. That is, until January when magnificent sprays of bright yellow flowers bloom in spike-like clusters. The faded blooms are replaced by blue-black berries which the birds relish. This is one of those plants that must be planted in the right place, as the leaves are sharp and a little mean. It should not be planted close to walkways or where people sit or little children play. Mahonias do not seem to be bothered by either pests or diseases but they can get leggy. Use judicious pruning when needed to remove the leggiest canes to the ground.

 

I have many different mahonias in my yard but ‘Arthur Menzies’ (ordered from Heronswood Gardens, now out of business) may be a favorite. Friend and gardener Hayes Jackson told me this was a plant I should own. He was right; the beautiful glossy green leaves and the wonderful sprays of bright yellow blooms have earned a place in my garden’s heart. The sprays, resembling mini fireworks exploding in the landscape, are a special gift in January when the days tend to be gray and dreary. Although ‘Arthur Menzies’ will grow in full sun to part shade, mine is in filtered shade and doing well. This mahonia can reach 15 feet tall but not nearly that wide; in the ten or so years in my grden it has not reached that size. It is not a suitable choice for a foundation planting. It might make a nice screen as long as you plant it where no one can get stuck.

When I began to garden decades ago I went for all the splash and substance for spring and summer, an error commonly made by many gardeners, especially first timers. But gardening and the precious gifts that a garden can bring can occur twelve months of the year. A mahonia is only one of many wonderful plants that brightens the landscape at unexpected times throughout the year. So garden for the whole year. It takes a little practice and a lot of thought, but it is a worthwhile effort.

Today's Events
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Wednesday, 19, 2013
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Pond Spring- The Gener... 3:50 PM
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Hip Hop Hope Vacation ... 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
$0 The Living by Faith Ministry will host Vac...
Heflin PD applies for free stuff
by Laura Camper
lcamper@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 3 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The city of Heflin Police Department has applied to receive tens of thousands of dollars of free equipment through a military surplus program. Captain AJ Benefield, interim police chief in Heflin, said the department is trying for a boat, two golf carts, three all-terrain vehicles and a 36-passenger bus through the 1033 Military Surplus program. It has been approved at the state level but is waiting for final approval, Benefield said. If the department gets all the requested items, it could total about $150,000 worth of equipment, he said. “And all of this is no cost,” Benefield said. The department does have to pick up the equipment and pay any fees or permits to transport it back to the community, he said. The department has gotten other equipment through the program including M16 guns and a bulldozer, Benefield said. “You have to do justification for your department to use these items,” Benefield said. The city could use the golf carts and ATVs to help patrol special events like the concert a few weeks ago or the upcoming Fourth of July parade, Benefield said. The boat could be used for a water rescue on Lake Heflin or at the watershed, he said. And if the city finds that it doesn’t use the equipment, with the exception of demilitarized weapons and such, after a year the department can auction it off to recoup their investment, Benefield said. Sgt. Kenneth Perryman, program coordinator for the state of Alabama, said by 2012, Alabama law enforcement agencies had received more than $16 million worth of equipment through the program. The program is open to all federal and state law enforcement agencies with arrest authority, Perryman said. The program was created by federal act in 1995 with a focus on counter-drug and terrorism efforts. Not all police departments have to deal with terrorism, but they do deal with drug arrests, he said. The program gives them access to high end equipment that they may not otherwise be able to afford, he added. “Whenever (the military) turns things back in, it’s available for law enforcement agencies,” Perryman said. The equipment can run the gamut from buildings, to aircraft, to weapons, to night vision goggles to protective clothing, he said. It’s all given away on a first-come, first-served basis, Benefield said. He gets emails when new equipment becomes available and lets the state know when he is interested in an item. It can take anywhere from two hours to two days to hear back from the state if the department’s request is approved, but it takes longer to go through the rest of the process, Benefield said. Approval for the equipment has to go through three departments, the state, the Department of Defense and the Defense Logistics Agency, which oversees the program, Perryman said. It can take a few weeks before the department will know for sure that it got the equipment, Benefield said. But it’s worth the wait. It’s equipment the department doesn’t have the money to go out and purchase otherwise, he added. “It’s a very beneficial program if used right,” Benefield said.
The Cleburne News - 06/20/13
Jun 19, 2013 | 6 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Heflin Highlights
by Suzanne Payne
Jun 19, 2013 | 9 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Lovely Lady Even though this is way after the fact, I want to recognize a dear lady and good friend of mine who celebrated a birthday milestone last month. Sarah Johnson turned 75 on May 25th. Sarah is special to many of her friends and family and I count myself among them. Speaking of special…here are some people who fit that category! Happy Birthday to them all! June 19-Mattie Norman. June 20-Kadie Benefield, Mark Bell, Blake Bowman, Chasity Davis and Troy Brandenstien. June 21-Linda Charles, Stephen Chupp, Audrey Vise, Ronnie Mayfield, Stacy Hartley and Ethan Summerille. June 22-Ann Howle, Taylor Draper, Kim McMichael, Jane Sanders and Sam Parker. June 23-David Johnson, Chris Davis, Charlotte White and Betty Jo Rich. June 24-Beverly Johnson, Mark Truett and Brittany Turner. June 25-Malene Bowen, Chris Turner, Scott Dennis, Serena Owen, Kaley Oliver, Nicole Estes and Ty McLean. June 26-Ashley Wilkerson, Kim Williamson, Rachel Perry, Clay Owens, Ashley Robinson, Mary Merrill and April Benefield. Still Sweethearts A very happy anniversary to these couples. Being in love makes you complete. June 20-Shawn and Ellie Hudgins…Ronnie and Laura Mayfield. June 21-Billy Wayne and Dana Morgan. June 22-Tim and Delores Allen. June 24-Robert and Carolyn Jarrell…Tony and Shelia Waddell…Mr. and Mrs. Benny Brown. June 25-Jeromy and Misty Owen…Keith and Kay Yancy. June 26-Jackie and Jane McDaniel…Gearld and Barbara Perkins. Sunshine List Jimmie Nell Vise, Sherry Riddle Brown, Glenn Shortt, Mildred Hollis, Kerry Smith, Malene Bowen, Doug Taylor, Charles Laminack, Terry Benefield, Kathy Jacks, Glenn Berry, Sara Noland, Ken Sanders, Martha Holley, Rider Bearden, Gearld Brown, Jackie Stovall and Merrill Hayes. Just a Reminder 1. Big plans are going on with the Cleburne County High School class of 1998…reunion type plans! If you are interested in finding out more, send your contact information to cleburnecountyclassof1998@gmail.com 2. The Ranburne First Baptist Church is doing what churches do best. They are helping out a fellow human being. On June 22, this caring group of people are having a fundraising event for Kerry Smith. Kerry and his family have been members of this church for a very long time. At the present time, he is in Northside hospital awaiting a bone marrow transplant and receiving chemo treatments for leukemia. For $8.00, you can enjoy a scrumptious barbeque meal, participate in a silent auction and enjoy a Christian concert featuring Christy Sutherland (Barbara Mandrell’s daughter-in-law), Kelli Dodd, Phillip Frost and Tonya Parrish. See church members for tickets or call Jackie Howle at 256-453-2823. Bye! Until next week…remember…If winning isn’t everything, why keep score?
Lucile Morgan Library summer reading
Jun 19, 2013 | 8 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Registration for the summer reading program is not underway at Lucile Morgan Public Library. All Cleburne County boys and girls who will be entering grades 1-6 in the fall are invited to participate. The program will run from June 1 to July 13. Those enrolled in the reading program will earn great prizes for the books they read. Special prizes will be awarded to those who meet their reading goals and to those who read the most books. During June and July the library will be open for three extra hours each weekday from 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Saturday hours will remain from 10 a.m.- 1 p.m. The summer reading program and all services for the library, including large print brooks, audio books on CD, videos, DVD’s, Skype, and Internet access are available to all residents of Cleburne County without charge.
New Hope Ministries
by Veneta McKinney
Jun 19, 2013 | 10 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Greetings from New Hope Ministries. We will be having a Ladies Night at New Hope Ministries this Thursday night June 20 at 6:30 pm. There will be refreshments served. Please make sure to come and be a part of this special fellowship time. The men will be having a special Men’s Breakfast at Golden Corral in Oxford on Sunday morning June 23 at 8:00 a.m. There will be a couple’s night on June 28 at 6:30. More details to follow On Sunday June 23 for the Sunday morning, Sunday evening and Monday night service we will be having special guest speaker Max Navaro. Come and be blessed. Be sure to watch New Hope Arising – the new TV program that is airing now. Monday evenings at 5:30 pm, Wed 9 am, and Fri 2 p.m. It’s a place of New Hope and Encouragement. We had a special Father’s Day presentation last Sunday – honoring the dads of the church. We are very proud of our dads and each one received a special gift from the church. This past Sunday morning, we were blessed by Bro. Newman Voss ministering to us again. He spoke on bringing the Kingdom of the Lord down to earth. We are to rule and reign in Christ. Jesus modeled what we are to be on the earth. We are to walk in total victory and submit to His Lordship. Our assignment is to “Go” but our destiny is to bring the Kingdom of Heaven to earth.
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