Sunday, June 24, 2018

ELDERBERRIES

During last month's meeting/tour, several members asked about the growing/cultivation/harvesting, and health benefits from elderberries.  I lightly researched the topic and found this:  elderberries are members of the honeysuckle family, and are commonly used to make wine, juices, jelly, jams, and home treatments for coughs, colds, sore throats, and the flu.  Sambucus Nigra (black, blue, or Mexican) is high in vitamin C, and considered to be an antioxidant, and an anti-inflammatory home treatment.  Elderberries grow in the wild here in Northeast Washington, and are best harvested away from the toxin-covered roadways, and always after a frost or two (which only slightly improves the flavor!).

Here is a link to a helpful Washington State University Extension Service Bulletin on the subject of "Growing Small Fruits."

jim

Elk Pioneer Days booth



Our garden club operated a booth during this year's community celebration, Elk Pioneer Days, on the 16th of June.  The weather did not initially cooperate, with rain sprinkles and wind in the morning, but the temperatures, and the crowds soared for the remainder of the day.  Our sister organization, the Backyard Beekeepers operated the booth next door, and we were able to offer information to the public on gardening, composting (handouts and posters, courtesy of Master Composter/club member Laurie Woicik), and pollination.  A big "thank you" to the club members who helped in the booth:  Diane, Jane, Laurie W., Pat, and yours truly.  Another big "thank you" to the folks who donated plants for the booth:  Carolyn, Su, Lauri C., Barbara, Marylee, and Pat.  All in all, a pretty nice day. 

Also, watch for the official tan-colored Elk Pioneer Days t-shirt, being worn by all our style-conscious neighbors:  our garden club helped sponsor the shirts, and our name proudly appears on the lower back - about where the pain appears from a day of weeding in the garden.

jim

GARDEN CLUB TOUR JUNE 2018



Thirty or so avid gardeners descended on the community garden of our local North County Food Pantry for an in depth tour on the 12th of June. Our effervescent guide was garden coordinator Chris Stevens who answered, oh, about a million questions on drip irrigation setups, raised bed construction, foot-path mulching, and many other topics.

Chris was presented with the coveted Club Garden Gnome (his second such gnome!) for allowing us to infest his garden and his mind. Chris did identify the dark green, lushly-growing plant alongside the garden greenhouse wash tub as a "Mexican Sunflower," for whoever asked me the name of that plant (it's good to have knowledgeable help!).

Friday, June 15, 2018

Supervisors, campers sought for day camp



Hi Everyone,
We could use some adult help with a day camp we are offering next week, one on Tuesday, June 19, in Newport, and another (same camp) offered again on June 20, in Elk. We will be supervising teens who will be teaching gardening, nutrition and physical fitness to younger kids. I have attached the flier with more information.  This camp will be a lot of fun and provide you with lunch and supper. If you are interested, please let me know.
Also, if you know of kids 7-12 years old who may wish to participate as campers, please encourage them to register. All the info they will need is in the flier, and at this website.
Thanks!
Dixie Chichester


4-H and Master Gardener Coordinator
Washington State University/ Pend Oreille County Extension
509 447-6453

Monday, June 11, 2018

June tour, news and FROST ALERT

Good evening all 

A couple of things I need to share with y'all.

1.  The June Tour will be to the Community Garden at the North County Food Bank.  Chris, our speaker from May, will be updating us on all the changes and improvements done in the garden this spring.  We will also be able to better see the irrigation system and weed-control methods used to keep down the huge amount of time (not to mention help needed) in a garden of that size.  Even if you saw it late last summer, I am sure you will see something new this trip.

2. All 2018 paid members will receive a 2.2 pound bag of Mykos (pure mycorrhizal inoculant).  Mycorrhizal inoculants have been around awhile and you can read more about the benefits on the Internet.  Suffice it to say that if you garden you will want some of this.  It retails on Amazon for $22 so bring your card or your dues so you can get a bag. (Jane, I left a voice message for you to check concerning memberships).

3. This Saturday, June 16, the Elk Camden GardenKeepers will have a booth at Elk Pioneer Days as voted for at the April meeting.  Now we need you to put some time and/or  plants in also.  There are still openings (two-hour slots) that need to be filled so I don't burn out the regulars.  We are going to have the opportunity to share about gardening, plants,and our great club and I can't imagine you would want to miss out (unless, of course, you are waiting for the Prize Patrol to show up at your door; but that isn't until the end of June according to my spouse). We need one person at 9-11 and 11-1; two persons 1-3, 3-5, 5-6.  Laurie will have the signup sheet at the tour but if you can't make it you can respond to this email.

4.  In case you haven't heard, the National Weather Service in Spokane has issued a "Freeze Alert" from 1 am to 7 am Tuesday morning for Elk and all areas North.  Better cover up those tomatoes and other tender plants if you don't want to start the garden anew.  Thirty degrees is possible and that will surely put an end to a lot of hard work.

I think I have covered it all.  Look forward to seeing many, if not all, of you Tuesday in the Camden Grange parking lot where we will depart at 7 p.m. for the North County Community Garden Tour Version 2.

Jim and Pat

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Elk Pioneer Days garden club booth

For those of you who did not attend the last two meetings or haven't yet read my column in the Elk Sentinel, the Elk/Camden Garden Keepers will (after a loooong hiatus) have a booth at the Elk Pioneer Days celebration to be held Saturday, June 16.  

We are in need of club members to spend an hour or two at the booth talking gardening, answering gardening questions, and telling people about this great, local gardening club you belong to.  

We are also looking for donations of plants, especially of the flowering variety (but will accept other types as well), to sell at the booth as a club fundraiser (remember those great speakers ($25 honorarium) and free club T-shirts for members?).  

Since we will have a meeting (tour actually) the Tuesday before Elk Days (that would be June 12) we would be happy to accept volunteer time signups and plants that evening.  If your plants aren't ready then bring them on down on Saturday morning and we'll set them out with what we already have received.  If you can't make the tour you can respond to this email to let us know you would be willing to share your love of gardening for a couple of hours at the booth.

Looking forward to seeing everyone at the tour. Details will be sent closer to the date. 

Jim (and Pat)

Friday, June 1, 2018

Weeding between the lines

By Jim McGinty

Hot, summer days already – we recorded 88 degrees Fahrenheit here at Rancho McGinty in late May, and the temperatures have not moderated much at all – a little rain would be nice.

Out in the garden, the corn stalks are about 2 feet high, and dark, dark green: I’m trying the Juneau, Alaska’s Extension Service’s method of growing sweet corn under challenging (short season) conditions. So I really loaded up the soil with over-wintered chicken manure, laid down drip irrigation, covered the whole mess with black polyfilm, and planted five week-old home-grown corn plugs (a 68-day variety from Gurney’s called “Quickie”) through the film. In about two weeks, I’ll add some fresh horse poo tea to the plants through a drip irrigation “fertigator” (a liquid fertilizer applicator that adds the filtered good stuff through the weep hose), and wait impatiently for fresh corn-on-the-cob.

Our garlic stalks are about 3 feet high, and starting to twist, so garlic seed pods, called “scapes,” are due any time – I like to clip the scapes off, so all the plant’s energy will develop bigger, better garlic bulbs – the scapes are excellent as pesto makings, or batter dipped and deep fried, or cut into salads.

Out in the garden, now is the time to plant seeds or transplant all those warm weather crops:  corn, beans, peppers, tomatoes, eggplant and squash (why?!), and pumpkins. Soon you will be thinning your rows of veggies, and those thinnings can be replanted, or used as tasty temptations for your livestock – be sure to water the plants left in the ground, as they will be feeling traumatized.

You will want to watch those rows of potato plants for exposed tubers – you can mound up dirt or heavy mulch (barnyard litter, leaves, etc.) around the plants to keep the sun from greening those precious potato skins.

If you have not already stopped cutting those delicious asparagus spears, now is the time to leave the plants alone until next spring – leave the remaining stalks to grow tall and produce fern-like leaves – it would be good to add some rotted manure or some compost around the asparagus crowns.  

Out in the orchard, now is the time to monitor those clusters of baby fruit, as we don’t want too many apple or pears banging into each other in the wind – you can thin the marble-sized fruit to about 6 inches apart. Bruised fruit equals rotted fruit.

Now is also a good time to prune out all those water sprouts from the centers of the trees – those shiny-barked new suckers will do nothing important for the your tree, and will only pull energy away from the process of growing food for you!

Speaking of food FROM you, remember to drain all the containers of standing water to discourage those pesky mosquitos – this is a good summer for the blood suckers, so let’s all fight back!

GARDENING CALENDAR

Last month, our local garden club was treated to guest speaker Chris Stevens, the garden coordinator from the North County Food Pantry.  Chris’ discussion of what is going on in their garden was so fun and informative that many club members asked if we can go back this spring to see the many changes and improvements.  So we are: on June 12, at 7 p.m., we will depart Camden Grange for a short drive to the Food Pantry (40015 N. Collins Road, Elk) for a tour of their updated drip irrigation system, new compost facility, changes in what goes where and when, and much more. Be sure to take pictures and/or notes of the many good ideas and methods employed by the Food Pantry garden crew – they grow a LOT of high quality food, using reduced water and electricity – and our garden budget can stand a little reduction. 

You can always find out what’s going on with our garden club by accessing (that sounds so official!) our club’s blog site right here.

On June 16, our garden club will have a booth in Elk Park during our community’s annual Elk Pioneer Days celebration, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. At our booth, you and the general public may purchase high-quality plants at more-than-fair prices, ask gardening questions, and closely interrogate club member volunteers on the REAL origins of our 20-year-old club. Our booth will be right alongside the booth sponsored by our sister club, the Backyard Beekeeper’s Association, which will offer cool information on the subject of bees, plant pollination, and unconfirmed theories on what is happening to our buzzing benevolent buddies.



That’s it for this month – time to pull weeds out of the ground (and feed them to the goats and sheep!), smother weeds with deep mulch, and then mutter anti-weed imprecations – the curses won’t help, but I’ll feel better, and that’s what it’s all about!