July 7 Meeting

This meeting was held in the evening at 6:30 pm.  The featured speaker was Jeffrey S. Ward, CT Agricultural Experiment Station.  The topic was:  “Strategies for Reducing Deer Browse Damage”.  His program reviewed a  five step program for preventing and reducing deer damage to landscape plants.  Dr. Ward’s personal garden problems were illustrative of the problems deer cause in the garden.

The native of the month reported on was the Butterfly Weed.  Butterfly Weed is marvelous for attracting butterflies.  The handsome, dark green foliage is topped with bright orange flowers in July & August.  Butterfly_Weed_Asclepias_tuberosa_UmbelIt has a long tap root that makes the plant highly drought-resistant, but also makes mature plants tricky to transplant.

The artistic arrangement were brightly colored flowers or “Hot” arrangements.  Horticulture displays were for Roses, Lilies and Irises.

May Meeting

The May 5th meeting  featureed a presentation on Low Maintenance Gardening by Lorraine Ballato.

Life is too short to spend it deadheading, weeding, staking, and doing so many other things in the garden that come under the heading of “drudgery.”  Until someone invents the gardening equivalent of a self cleaning oven, we need to garden smarter.  This talk will give you some ideas about how to change your garden and gardening techniques so that you will have less maintenance and more time for all those other things in your life.

The native vine of the month was Trumpet honeysuckle (Lonicera sDSC05610empervirens)

This is a showy vine with scarlet flowers in summer and autumn. Trumpet honeysuckle is a favorite with hummingbirds. The leaves are dark green on top, and pale blue-green beneath. The vine climbs by twining stems, so it needs a trellis, fence, or large shrub to climb on.

 

 

 

Artistic:  Mother’s Day tea cup arrangement
Class I:   Lily of the valley
Class II : Lilacs or violets
Class III: Branching out – any branch flowering or not

April Meeting

The April meeting  featured a presentation  Beyond Flower Pots with speaker Lorraine Calegari.

Learn interesting ways to alter re-purpose and display old flower pots, watering cans, hoses and other garden paraphernalia. Also discover easy ways to preserve and display souvenirs and collectables. Demonstration includes actual samples of altered items and larger images with a demonstration on how to make the transformation & give new life to just about anything.

The native perennial of the month was presented by Linda Hooper.  It was foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia)

 

March Meeting – Rescheduled to March 10

The March 3 meeting was rescheduled to March 10 because of snow (that didn’t happen but we don’t mind that at all).   To ensure members and guests could enjoy our guest speaker, Lorraine Ballato, we moved her presentation to the May 5th meeting.

The revised meeting covered the other events scheduled  – club business and horticulture.  Renee Marsh, a member of the club, gave a presentation “Spring – A Time to Plant, Prune and Whack”  discussing issues around overgrown shrubs, pruning techniques and timing, and tools she recommends.

A pizza luncheon was then shared by all.

March Meeting – RESCHEDULED

The March 3rd meeting will feature a presentation on Low Maintenance Gardening by Lorraine Ballato.

Life is too short to spend it deadheading, weeding, staking, and doing so many other things in the garden that come under the heading of “drudgery.”  Until someone invents the gardening equivalent of a self cleaning oven, we need to garden smarter.  This talk will give you some ideas about how to change your garden and gardening techniques so that you will have less maintenance and more time for all those other things in your life.

The native plant of the month are ferns.   Here is an example of a fern that can see even in these winter months, the Christmas fern (polystichum acrostichoides).   It typically grows in a fountain-like clump to 2′ tall and features leathery, lance-shaped, evergreen fronds.

December Meeting

The December 2nd meeting was our annual Wreath-making Workshop.DSC04005_edited-1

Wreaths for the civic buildings and other city decorations were made.

In addition to making wreaths for the city,  members made holiday wreath for their own use.   After the decorating, a Christmas luncheon was served.

November Meeting

The November 5th meeting was our annual Artistic Fall Decoration Workshop where club members try their hands at making artistic floral arrangements.  Claire Norris gave a hands-on demonstration on important concepts for flower arrangements before everyone got started.

The native shrub of the month,  American highbush cranberry (Viburnum trilobum), was presented by Arlene Grey.

September Meeting and Kickoff

The September meeting kicked off our new year.   In line with the Federated Garden Clubs of CT we will focus on the theme
               Bee Kind to Pollinators.   Plant Natives.  Create Backyard Habitats.

We are also changing our meeting schedule.  The club will now meet March through December and we will schedule some evening programs.  We hope this allows more people from the community to participate.

September Meeting

  • Plant Identification Contest   – Club members tested their skills by identifying fruits and nuts, flowers and foliage plants and ornamental plants.   Many members teamed up to face the challenge.   The hardest identification was a leaf from a castor plant which is grown as an annual in Connecticut.

    DSC05932

    Photo courtesy of Renee Marsh

  • Plant Mystery – There are times when gardeners – even seasoned ones – need help identifying a plant.  Members brought in a number of challenges.   These included Helianthus annuus ( common sunflower) and giant ragweed.
  • The perennial of the year, Variegated Solomon’s Seal (Polygonatumodoratum ‘Variegatum’‘), was covered by the new chair of horticulture, Linda Hooper.  Each year a the plant is awarded to the member of the club who has contributed the most artistic and horticulture arrangements.   This year we recognized Linda Hooper and awarded her the plant.

 

May Meeting

The May meeting was Color, Texture, Structure & More:  Garden Design for Four-Season Interest  by Donna Katsuranis, Advanced Master Gardener.

 Old-fashioned Bleeding HeartDicentra spectabilisCourtesy of Renee Marsh

Old-Fashioned Bleeding Heart
(Dicentra spectabilis)
Courtesy of Renee Marsh

How can we make our gardens more appealing year-round and not just forget about it in the winter? Donna helped us explore the garden through new eyes – how to focus on the “bones” and the many tricks  to keep a landscape healthy, happy and beautiful throughout the year.

 

 

Sandy Nesteriak covered  the invasive plant of the month:  Garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata)

 

 

April Meeting

The  April 1st meeting was a presentation Fungi in Forests and Landscapes:  Friends or Foes?  by Robert (Bob) Marra who is a plant pathologist at the CT Agricultural Experiment Station.

Bob’s talk introduced us to the fascinating world of that poorly understood Kingdom Fungi.  He covered fungi as recyclers, pathogens, parasites and plant partners (symbionts).  Many plants, including the trees in our forests, could not survive without the important associations their roots establish with fungi.   The presentation looked at fungus we see above ground like trunk and limb rots, cankers and canker rots, as well as things that go on below ground like root and butt rots.

Courtesy of Renee Marsh

Laetiporus sulphureus
Common name is sulphur shelf and chicken of the woods
Courtesy of Renee Marsh

Linda Tura covered the invasive plant of the month:  Autumn Olive (Elaeagnus umbellata)

Autumn Olive with berries

March Meeting

The  March meeting was on Butterfly Gardens.  The speaker was Rose Hiskes of the CT Agricultural Experiment Station.

This talk introduced the Bird & Butterfly Garden at the Station’s Lockwood Farm in Hamden, gave definitions to some basic terms and then looked at the more common butterflies found in Connecticut.  Images of caterpillars are shown.  Nectar plants for adult feeding and larval food sources for egg laying was presented.  A resource list was handed out along with other pertinent fact sheets.

Black Swallowtail

Black Swallowtail (courtesy of Renee Marsh)

We also covered the Invasive plant of the month:  Norway Maple (Acer platanoides)

For the full meeting schedule and times, see the Meetings page.

February Meeting

The February meeting was a presentation on Organic Gardening by Guy and Janelle Beardsley of Eco-Gardens in the White Hills of Shelton.

This program covered the hows and whys of organic gardening including soil amendments, equipment, and the sequence of planting and harvesting.   Guy discussed the basic organic philosophy, the importance of an honest and nutritious food supply and the threat to food quality posed by corporate agribusiness.

We also covered the invasive Common Reed (Phragmites australis).

Common reed

Common Reed – Phragmites