The Ann Arbor Chronicle » Matthaei Botanical Gardens http://annarborchronicle.com it's like being there Wed, 26 Nov 2014 18:59:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.2 Column: Seeds & Stems http://annarborchronicle.com/2010/03/13/column-seeds-stems-5/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=column-seeds-stems-5 http://annarborchronicle.com/2010/03/13/column-seeds-stems-5/#comments Sat, 13 Mar 2010 14:24:26 +0000 Marianne Rzepka http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=39329 Marianne Rzepka

Marianne Rzepka

Friends don’t ask me how I feel about February. They’ve already heard me say that there’s a reason why the worst month in the year – cold, icy, gray – is the shortest month. And when it’s over, it’s still winter.

So when the first of March rolled around this year – coming in like a lamb, instead of a lion – I was left blinking in the sun and looking like I just crawled out of hibernation. There was sun and steadily rising temperatures, so sue me if I think spring is already here.

But though the temperatures are already in the 50s, these weeks can be the winter of a gardener’s discontent.

We want to get out there, we want to start digging, but we know it’s just too darn early. It’s even too early to set up the grow lights to start my tomato plants from seed. Some stoics will tell you it’s even too early to walk on your lawn!

I know there are things I could be doing to get ready for the growing season. I could be planning my vegetable garden, getting serious about the seed catalogs that are piled up around my reading chair, or sharpening my garden spade.

But these are things I could have done anytime over the past winter months – and I didn’t. Spring fever may get me going on these tasks, but this is the time of year when an array of classes, talks and projects are more apt to get my attention.

If you’d like to ease into the growing season, you can start simply by calling up Dial-A-Garden at 734-971-1129. There are a number of recordings that change monthly, and you can see a list of the topics at online. This month, there are recordings on crabgrass control, testing leftover seeds, starting vegetable seeds and spraying fruit trees.

You also can learn about forcing spring-blooming branches. Some branches – like forsythia and quince – will bloom more easily than others, says Madolyn Kaminski, who oversees the Dial-A-Garden programs. You simply cut some long whips from those bushes and put them in vases in your house. Every day, change the water and snip a little bit off the bottom. In about two weeks, you’ll get some early spring blooms. The closer it is to the time the bush would naturally bloom, the faster you’ll get blooms on your cuttings.

If that’s too much fun for you, it’s also time to spray your rose bushes with sulfur lime, says Kaminski. She swears that you’ll be surprised at how it will reduce the amount of black spot.

Kaminski also is in charge of the Herb Study Group that meets once a month at the University of Michigan’s Matthaei Botanical Gardens, 1800 N. Dixboro Road. Members next meet on April 7 to discuss starting herbs from seed. The meeting will start at 7 p.m. in Room 125. If you’re interested, just show up.

“Four to six weeks before they go in the ground is the best time to start your herbs,” says Kaminski, who is successfully raising a 6-foot-tall bay leaf tree at home.

If you’d like to get out of the house, this time of year is good for pruning – just ask the crews in my neighborhood hacking at the trees crossing the power lines. You can prune your own shrubs and trees, and now that there are no leaves to get in the way, you’ll have a clear view to clip out any crossing branches or trim lopsided edges.

Normally, I would recommend stopping by any of the volunteer work days usually held on the second Saturday of the month at UM’s Nichols Arboretum and the third Saturday of the month at Matthaei.

But not this month. This month, there’s too much mud, so volunteer days for both places have been canceled for March, says volunteer coordinator Tara Griffith. If you still have time in April, you can make sure the volunteer days are a go by calling her at 734-647-8528. It’s just for the morning, and you can learn a lot by lopping out invasive buckthorn and honeysuckle with professionals.

Book cover for Easy Edibles

Book cover for "Easy Edibles" by Sheri Repucci.

If that’s too much action for you, settle down with a copy of “Easy Edibles: A Beginner’s Guide to Growing Organic Food in the Lower Great Lakes Region” by Sheri Repucci, who used to be in charge of garden activities and coordination at Project Grow.

The book is aimed at beginners because they are often “overwhelmed” by details when they talk to seasoned gardeners, says Repucci. But the book’s also good for those seasoned gardeners who appreciate a compendium of common sense basics. Besides chapters on setting up a vegetable garden and choosing plants, there are profiles of a number of easily grown vegetables with typical height, sun and soil needs, planting depths and harvest times.

The book – issued by Ann Arbor publishing house Alice Greene & Co. – can be found at Border’s, Downtown Home and Garden, Crazy Wisdom Bookstore and Tea Room and Hollander’s, as well as at Matthaei and Zingerman’s Roadhouse. Or check the publisher’s website.

I enjoyed the “Challenging Vegetables” section, which included some of the crops – corn, potatoes, eggplant – I grew last summer without much thought. That conforms to my planting philosophy of “just stick it in the ground and see what comes up.”

Repucci, who now lives in Toronto where she’s studying the effects of healing gardens at York University, has more reasoned advice, warning any gardening wanna-be not to mistakenly jumpstart the growing season. “The spring can fool you,” she told me in a recent phone call. “Even experts can be surprised at how fast the weather can turn.”

Too early and an unexpected freeze will turn those tomatoes into limp sticks. Even if the weather isn’t too cold, planting in soil that isn’t warm enough will set your tender plants back, Repucci says.

Just what I don’t need to hear – although it’s something that I know. So instead of going out and urging my daffodils and tulips to hurry up and bloom, I’ll take another piece of Repucci’s advice.

She says her research into the therapeutic qualities of gardens tells her that you don’t have to dig or prune or plant things in the ground to get the benefits.

“You just have to look at it,” Repucci says. “What makes a garden therapeutic is looking at it.”

Guess I’ll just pull a chair up to my kitchen window and watch the rest of the snow melt while I plan a new raised bed.

About the writer: Marianne Rzepka, former reporter for the Ann Arbor News and Detroit Free Press, is a Master Gardener who lives in Ann Arbor and thinks it’s fun to turn the compost pile.

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Project Grow Board Expands http://annarborchronicle.com/2008/10/10/project-grow-board-expands/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=project-grow-board-expands http://annarborchronicle.com/2008/10/10/project-grow-board-expands/#comments Fri, 10 Oct 2008 12:36:12 +0000 Dave Askins http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=5496 At the Project Grow annual meeting of membership, held Thursday evening at the Nature House at Leslie Science Center, news of a possible organizational arrangement with Matthaei Botanical Gardens led to an impromptu expansion of the board of directors to include two additional members. In addition to Catherine Riseng and Dustin Underwood, who were already on the slate for election, Royer Held and Kirk Jones were elected to the board. Project Grow’s mission is to make organic gardening accessible through the community and it does so most visibly through garden plots available at 14 different sites located throughout the city.

At the meeting, Project Grow board president, Devon Akmon, announced that Karen Sikkenga, associate director of Matthaei Botanical Gardens, had approached Project Grow with a proposal that the two organizations form a more robust relationship. The exact nature of such a relationship, said Akmon, was being evaluated by an exploratory committee of six people, which included Held and Jones. The evaluation, stressed Akmon, would involve a close assessment of Project Grow as an organization, which would ultimately make it stronger, whether the outcome resulted in a merger, a partnership, or no new relationship with Matthaei, which is part of the University of Michigan.

Reaction among the roughly 20 assembled members to the word “merger” was uniformly negative, with one member saying, “That would make us a part of U of M. So, no, no, no.” Some kind of partnership, however, was something people in the room seemed more prepared to contemplate. And they were keen to see Held and Jones take a role as board members in that contemplation, not just as members of the exploratory committee. With the agreement of Akmon, as well as verbal support from board members Damaris Suffalko and Terre Fisher, a decision was made to expand the number of board members from eight to 10, which reversed a board decision made prior to the annual meeting to fix the number of board slots at eight.

A more robust arrangement between Project Grow and Matthaei would build on collaboration already in place. That collaboration includes Matthaei as a gardening site for Project Grow gardens as well as a combined plant sale in the spring. Matthaei runs the cash register for the combined sale, but separates out proceeds from plants tagged as Project Grow plants, issuing a check to Project Grow.

Asked what motivated Matthaei to seek a more robust relationship with Project Grow, executive director of Project Grow, Melissa Kesterson, attributed it in part to the existing collaboration between the two organizations, noting that Bob Grese, who is director of Matthaei, was a longtime gardener at the Zion Lutheran Church Project Grow site, before construction plans by the church led to its elimination.

Further, said Kesterson, Matthaei saw their overture as a way to offer Project Grow a financial safety net – the city of Ann Arbor restored $7,000 of funding to Project Grow this spring after previously having eliminated it. The city’s contribution represents about 13% of Project Grow’s overall budget of $55,000. And finally, Kesterson said that public gardens represented a part of Matthaei’s vision for its own community outreach, and that  Matthaei did not want to duplicate what Project Grow was already doing.

Mention of the financial safety net prompted a question from one member about whether the financial clout of Matthaei was something that Project Grow needed in order to survive. Kesterson replied, “We’re very healthy. We’re doing great.” Acknowledging that the organization was currently solid, Akmon stressed that the organization’s budget needed to grow.

Akmon said that a time frame for the assessment of the overture from Matthaei will be a matter of a few months.

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