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A New Sign is Added to the Garland Community Garden.  The smaller sign at the right was added yesterday.  It identifies the garden and surrounding area as a National Wildlife Federation Certified Wildlife Habitat.  We obtained our certification about two months ago.

 Charlie and I posted the sign last night with the assistance of two small helpers, Erin and Jack.  Again kids love gardens.  If you don't have a garden to share with the kids in your life, bring them down to the Garland Community Garden and let them run amok.  No one enjoys the freedom and mysteries of the garden quite as well as children.  We have lots of shade trees too.

 

Speaking of kids and gardens--at the Garland Community Garden you can never know who will drop in while you are there.  For example, Robert Opel, one of the members of Loving Garland Green happened to stop by when we were down there last night.  He had three ears of corn with him and pointed out to the children that you don't have to cook corn.  You can just shuck it and eat it.  Erin was not only game to try it, she shucked an ear and ate the entire thing.

 

Speaking of Robert . . .

Robert and Anita with tin butterflies cut from license plates.  

On Tuesday Robert and Anita were down at the garden to water and pull a few weeds.  They brought with them two butterflies and a flower made by a local artist to donate to our butterfly garden in front.   

Anita Opel watering at the Garland Community Garden - June 21, 2016

And speaking of members of Loving Garland Green . . .


It's our members who work so hard to make sure the garden is a fun and interesting place to visit.  For example, on Sunday Chris watered the garden, on Monday of this week Burgi and Marie watered the plants, on Tuesday it was Robert and Anita, on Wednesday it was Jane.  Also on Wednesday Gene Rodgers mowed.  Cheryl was down pulling grass this week too.

If you want to join the fun, join us all on Saturday when we have a community work morning from 8AM to Noon--doing all kinds of things to get the garden in shape.  If you can't make this Saturday, attend our monthly speakers meeting.  For June, it's at the Garland downtown public library on Austin Street, Monday June 25 from 6:30 to 7:30.  The topic is "Can I eat that?"  It will be presented by a member of the Dallas County Master Gardeners.

 

MORE GARLAND GARDEN NEWS!  Charlie is Growing Large Tomatoes this year!

Below is a one-pound tomato he picked this morning.  Just this morning Charlie picked 14 1/2 pounds of tomatoes.  To date for this season he has picked 54 pounds of tomatoes!

Altogether this growing season Charlie's garden has produced 78 pounds of produce.

 

 

 What do you do when you find a tomato that looks like this?

 

YOU HAVE SOME FUN WITH IT!

MEET MS. TOMATO LIPS!

 

FOR LOT'S OF FUN, VISIT THE GARLAND COMMUNITY GARDEN--4055 NAAMAN SCHOOL ROAD GARLAND 75040

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Mike, Gail and Vicki, Garland Good Samaritans volunteers pose in front of the container garden.

Deliveries to the Good Samaritans

Only a few days away until summer begins—even though it feels like it started about five days ago with the heat.  I don’t know about you but all I’ve wanted to do the past few days is lie around and read murder mysteries.  However, with assistance from Charlie I did muster up enough energy to plant another laundry basket of sweet potatoes, and harvest some vegetables from the Garland Community Garden to make our weekly delivery to the Good Samaritans here in Garland.  I also bought an eggplant and pepper plant to replace some spent kale in our container garden at the Good Samaritans home.

Thus far this year Loving Garland Green has delivered approximately fifty pounds of fresh produce to local folks.  Eight pounds of this delivery are blackberries.  We still have about three weeks of production so I’m expecting another ten pounds.  Again, if you have room, I can’t say enough for the productivity of blackberries in Garland—in addition to the general lack of care they require.

 

Sweet Potatoes in a Laundry Basket at the Good Samaritans of Garland--Six to eight sweet potatoes will be ready to harvest between Halloween and Thanksgiving.  In the meantime a prolific vine will grow over the wire trellis  in this basket--a pretty and edible sight.  The sweet potato leaves can be harvested for the next four months to provide a delicious addition to salads and stir fries.

This week we had about a pound of tomatoes to deliver and two pounds of green beans.  Next week the tomatoes will really start producing down in the garden.  I’m hoping to have a lot more tomatoes to deliver next week.  By the end of July the various melons (watermelons, cantaloupe and Asian melons) we have growing will start producing. 

Loving Garland Green's Quarterly Yard Sale – Saturday June 18th 

9 AM to 4PM – 269 Bellwood Drive  (second house on the right in from Naaman School Road two blocks east of Brand)

Do I have a lot of stuff to haul down to Charlie’s today!—not only my stuff, but stuff that Burgi, a Loving Garland Green board member, has delivered to my house.  This sale promises to be a great opportunity to get a lot of good stuff.  Already his living room and one of his bedrooms is filled with things.

One of our fabulous offerings at this sale will be a complete set of vintage Villeroy & Boch Fasan Green Willoware from Germany.  This service for eight includes the serving dishes as well.  If you will consider that EBay offers four cups and saucers from this set for $98.95, you will understand that at $200 for the entire set the buyer will be getting dishes valued at more than three times that amount.  If we are not able to sell the set for $200, we will sell them on EBay.  In addition to the dishes we have hundreds of other unusual items. Please come and help support a deserving non-profit organization in the DFW area.

 

Monthly Speakers Meeting on Garden Topics

Monday, June 27 6:30 to 7:30 PM at the downtown Garland Library on Austin Street

CAN I EAT THAT?

Loving Garland Green is hosting another great presentation from the Dallas County Master Gardeners. 

 

End of Month Garland Community Garden Weed-Pulling Party

Saturday 8AM to Noon

June 25

We invite you to come support the Garland Community Garden.  We need help pulling the grass from our beds.  In addition to plenty of cold water, we also are offering a tour of the garden from 9 to 9:30 AM.  Come learn about your community garden and how you can participate.  There should be a few blackberries left for the children to pick.

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Jeannie Le, Garland Third Grader, watering the Children's area of the Garland Community Garden - June 11, 2016

Even though the photograph above was taken only a few hours before this article was written, it is nonetheless, a timeless snapshot that could have been taken in any garden over the last hundred years.  Gardens, teeming with the mysteries of life and containing countless universes of microorganisms, continue to be an irresistible attraction for children and many adults.  Endless stories are played out in the garden 24/7 and most of them go unobserved—even by the most attentive of gardeners.

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Yesterday Huong Le called to ask if she and her two daughters could join me to work in the garden today.  Of course I said “yes”.  First of all I already know Huong Le and her daughter Jeannie.  Jeannie was in a botany elective class I taught at Beaver Tech here in Garland last year. Secondly, I never turn down any offers to lend a hand in our community garden.

The girls and their mother are not only brilliant and beautiful, it turns out they are natural gardeners as well.  My first thought when Huong Le called yesterday was “Great, I’ll put them to work pulling weeds.”  However, later in the day I had second thoughts.  After all I wanted the girl’s first experience in the Garland Community Garden to be one that would yield happy memories upon later reflection.

 

 

CONTAINER GARDENING SO EASY A CHILD CAN DO IT.

I decided I would show them how easy it is to create a container garden:

1. Buy a Plastic Laundry Basket ($5.92)

2. Drill ¾ inch holes in the bottom of the basket.

3.  Cut a 30-inch long piece of fencing (3’ high)

4.  Put a mixture of potting soil, organic garden soil and vermiculite in about 1/3 of the pot.

5. Stick the wire fencing on top of the soil (curving the fencing against the sides of the tub.

6. Pour the rest of the soil into the pot.

7. Plant four or five potato slips (free from a friend)

8. Water

9. Cover with straw mulch.

A lot of people don't know that sweet potatoes leaves are delicious.  They can be eaten raw (high in vitamin B6) or they can be tossed in last minute to a stir-fry dish. They also are decorative and their lovely dark green leaves on a trellis are pretty to view.  Sweet potatoes are usually planted around the end of May and then harvested between Halloween and Thanksgiving.  This means you can be harvesting sweet potato leaves for five months. (NOTE OF CAUTION:  Do not eat the leaves of white potatoes as they are members of the nightshade family. Only sweet potatoes.)

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CONTAINER GARDENING SO EASY YOU MAY WANT TO PUT YOUR DOG TO WORK

If  you are really lacking for space and have no room even for a laundry basket, and you still have aspirations to be an urban gardener, you can stretch the concept of container gardening to its limits.

1. Buy a certified organic sweet potato at your local grocery store or farmer's market.

2. Stick four toothpicks in it 2/3's of the way up from its pointed end. (Yes sweet potatoes have a round end and a pointed end.)

3. Pour water in a glass or plastic container.

4. Stick the potato in the container.  (The water should cover about 2/3's of the potato.)

5. Place the potato in sunny spot in the house.

In about three weeks the potato will begin to sprout vines and leaves.  Once it has achieved substantial growth you can begin clipping the leaves for your salads and stir fry dishes.  The leaves taste somewhat like spinach only  nuttier.  Their best flavor is when the leaf is small to medium.  Like all living things, the leaves get tougher with age.

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Jeannie Le with two buckets of blackberries from the Garland Community Garden - June 11, 2016

It was a delightful and productive morning in the garden.  In addition to building a container garden for sweet potatoes the girls also picked blackberries, watered, and planted two tomato plants, two basil plants, one lantana and numerous marigolds.

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Zoe Le with sunflowers - Garland Community Garden - June 11, 2016

It is difficult to say which garden task Zoe enjoyed the most--picking flowers or watering as she enthusiastically embraced both.  

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Malcom, Judy and Kevin at the Good Samaritans in Garland, Texas - June 7, 2016

Yesterday Kevin, Margie and I picked fresh produce from the Garland Community Garden and delivered to the Good Samaritans here in Garland.  We delivered 18 pounds of Okra, blackberries, stringless green beans, kale, and variety of fresh herbs.  

Our gardens are overflowing here in Garland.  Charlie's cherry tomato bushes are loaded and they are over 7 feet tall.  My blackberry bushes have already produce 20 pounds of berries.  I hope that folks will remember to not only pick their harvests on a regular basis, but to share the bounty in their local communities.

Speaking of bounty, it will continue to come down at the Garland Community Garden.  Our hops are blooming already with more than three times the amount produced last year.  We have three teepees of pole beans that are blooming. All our bush beans are already producing. The loofah are finally beginning to take off.  We have two large beds of Asian melons that will soon be producing.  Our two cantaloupe beds are thriving.  We have tomatoes all over that are filled with green tomatoes.  Our Malabar spinach is beginning to produce.  Our blackberry bushes are finally coming into their own.  We've already harvested 8 pounds from the garden.  Peanut bushes are thriving all over the garden.  This year we planted those nitrogen-fixing plants as ground cover amongst our tomatoes.

Sweet Potato Slips Monday Night at the Loving Garland Green Meeting

Jane Stroud, one of the members of Loving Garland Green's Board, brought sweet potato slips to share with members.  Jane, a microbiologist by profession, is also a diligent gardener and wildlife preservationist.  She is the one who introduced me to the value of native bees and showed me how to build houses for them.  Until I knew Jane, I didn't realize there were so many varieties of sweet potatoes.   Jane shared the following varieties with us:  Allgold, Arkansas Red Leaf, Becca's Purple, Cordner's Red, Ginseng Orange, Mahan/Bradshaw, Molokai Purple, Maryland Red, Texas Porto Rico AKA Red Velvet.

Sweet potatoes are a great vegetable to grow here in North Texas.  They are great for container gardens.  In fact, that's what Jane grows them in--large plastic storage containers.  I am making one for the folks at the Good Samaritans.  The great thing about sweet potatoes is that you can also eat the leaves.  Unlike other potatoes from the "white" varieties, sweet potatoes are not members of the nightshade family.  Thus you can eat their leaves while the potatoes are growing underground.  The sweet potato thus produces food from about the end of June until the first killing frost here in November.

We harvest our sweet potatoes here in North Texas after Halloween and before Thanksgiving (usually the first week in November).  Harvest two to three weeks prior to eating.  The tubers need to cure and develop sweetness.

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Hugelkultur Pot Garden at the Good Samaritans Survived the winter and is still producing.  This week we will bring a tomato plant and some summer spinach to freshen it up.  Last fall members of Loving Garland Green made some hugelkultur pots and planted kale and pansies (for a winter flower).  Hugelkultur pots are modeled after the larger garden plots:  rotten wood and organic matter are placed in the bottom of the pot.  Then garden soil is placed on top of that and the plants are installed.  This arrangement means that you don't have to water very often, if at all. The rotten wood holds the moisture from the rain and also slowly releases nutrients as the wood continues to rot.

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This morning I went down to the garden and picked six pounds of blackberries along with about 15 one-gallon bags of greens.  The total poundage was nine pounds. (Greens don't weigh much.)

When Charlie and I delivered them to the Good Samaritans, the response from the staff and Director Pam Swendig was as gracious as if we had delivered a truckload full of produce. Often, as I've said before, people withhold gifts from embarrassment that the gift might be too small or not good enough.  We shouldn't do this.  Yet I know that I do from time to time.  Even today I found myself thinking:  "Eight 8-ounce bags of blackberries and one two-pound bag for the volunteers to munch on, that's not much. Maybe I shouldn't bring them."  But then I started thinking in terms of the individual and came to a better conclusion. Thanks to our donation, eight people will each get a half pound of fresh blackberries.  Twelve people will get a bag of fresh kale and numerous others will have mint and lemon balm for making tea.  No, we are not feeding multitudes, but we are feeding some.  I'm thinking that if everyone shared just a little of what they have, no one would go hungry in their community.

While we were there I looked at the hugelkultur pots we made and donated last fall.  I'm happy to report the kale is still alive, although one pot has gone to seed which is to be expected as Kale tends to bolt in hot weather.  I told Pam that we would bring her a tomato plant later this week for their hugelkultur pot garden.  The pansies we brought last fall, also in hugelkultur pots, are like  most pansies all over the DFW area--still alive and well.  Some folks are getting downright impatient with their longevity this year.  Normally, by this time the pansies are dead and gone and have long been replaced my more heat tolerant annuals such as zinnias.

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Haskap, Blue Honeysuckle,  (Lonicera caerulea

The more I walk, work and live in the world of plants, the better able I am to see the value of scientific names.  It seems like just about every plant out there has at least two common names.  Sometimes folks can be talking about the same plant and not even realize it because they each have a different common name for it.  That's one of the benefits of Latin. It's a dead language so nothing's going anywhere and it's common ground regardless the mother language of the gardener or scientist.  So if I refer to a Lonicera caerulea, the person I'm communicating with will know exactly the plant I mean whether they are Italian or Chinese (providing, of course, they are familiar with the scientific nomenclature for the plant as there is only one scientific name for a plant). 

How did I learn about the existence of this plant?  Like much of my knowledge:  from a friend who is smarter than I am.  This morning I got an email from one of them, Susan Metz, who works with the folks here in the Garland Parks and Recreation Department and who has done extensive work over the years with Texas A&M. Susan and her husband have a farm outside of Garland.  While working at Texas A&M AgriLife Susan was involved in obtaining a SARE grant using pigeon pea as a biological chisel improving soil compaction.  It’s a very beautiful legume beneficial to bees as well .  Susan obtained the seed from Dr. Phatak who worked with the crop at U of Georgia and about a month ago she donated five healthy plants to the Garland Community Garden. I planted them in our multicultural plot as these legumes are a dependable food source in developing countries all over the world--particularly in desert areas where little water is available.

Susan wrote to me this morning that for her next adventure she is going to try growing a Lonicera caerulea  Honeyberry "Borealis" Antioxidant-rich berries.

Of course that juicy tidbit sent me to the Internet to learn more.  Following is a summary of my now expanded information on this plant:

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The Haskap plant produces a delicious fruit that can be hard to describe. Many people describe it as a mix between raspberry and blueberry, but in our opinion it is completely unique.

The haskap berry is quickly becoming recognized as the latest super food. Its antioxidant and other health benefits are well known in places like Japan, where the berry is considered a delicacy, and scientific study is confirming the benefits of haskap. A 2008 article in the Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, for example, highlights the role haskaps can play in preventing chronic conditions like cancer and diabetes.

Because they produce fruit early in the growing season and because of their exceptional winter hardiness, Haskaps make an excellent choice for orchard owners and small scale growers alike. Haskaps can survive winter temperatures as low as -45°C and their flowers can be exposed to -7°C temperatures with no damage to the fruit.

[From: http://www.ppsfruittrees.com/pages/haskaps - accessed May 29, 2016]

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I definitely plan to obtain some plants for my own woodland garden in my front yard as well as some for the Garland Community Garden.  I have tried to grow blueberries with little reward here in Garland.  I guess it can be done if one is willing to continuously be adjusting the pH of the soil as blueberries prefer much more acid on their soil menu.  Just a few miles east of here they grow well, but not here in our clay-ridden Blackland Prairie soil--which in my opinion needs to be amended with expanded shale regardless what you are planting.

There are many varieties to choose from as you can see from the link provided above.

I think I'll choose the Borealis, the Honey Bee and the Aurora varieties.  Next year I'll add  the Boreal Blizzard to the mix.  I will order and plant this fall.

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Jujube Tree Garland Community Garden - May 28, 2016

I just planted a Jujube (pronounced juh-ju-bee) in the Garland Community Garden this Memorial Day weekend in memory of all those who have gone before us.  With a little bit of luck, this tree will outlive all the visitors including children who visit the Garland Community Garden for at least the next 30 years.  Yes, the garden is being built to endure.  Why do you think we are planting so many perennials and self-seeding drought tolerant plants?

When/if we are gloating in the luxuriant, but false glow of our longevity as a species, we might bring ourselves down to earth by considering the world of plants.  It’s true that our expected lifespan triumphs over that of many animals such as dogs, cats, chickens, rats and the like.  However, in the world of plants, many examples of superiority can be pointed out.  Take the giant redwoods in California, for example.  These giants can live to be 2,000 years old and have graced the planet for more than 240 million years.  The jujube is another such example. There are jujubes in China that are said to be over 1000 years old.

The jujube which is said to have originated in northern Africa, has a long historic background in China as well as India.  It is mentioned in the earliest Sanskrit literature, and is intimately connected with the folklore of people of Punjab who consider jujube plants most sacred.  The fruit of the tree is associated with health and rejuvenation.

The jujube (also called “Chinese Date’) is a tough tree that needs little water and grows in just about any type of soil—from our thick clay to sandy soil.  Believe me, it grows in Dalhart, Texas and that proves my point.  You know what I mean if you’ve ever visited the panhandle of Texas.  (I grew up near there—keeping in mind that out in that part of Texas anything within 100 miles east, west, north or south is considered “near.”)  A jujube tree in Dalhart continued to produce fruit throughout the Dustbowl Days.

Introduction of the Jujube to the USA

 Frank N. Meyer, a plant explorer employed by the USDA, went to China in 1908 to catalog plants and trees that we did not have in this country. One group of trees was the improved varieties of jujubes. Although the wild, very small fruited, jujube had been imported to the United States from Europe in the 1800s, it was not very good and of little value. These improved varieties were much better, and the USDA thought they had a chance to become a great fruit for the Southwestern United States. Since they can grow with as little as 8 inches of rainfall a year, the thought was that they were ideal for many of the drier states, including Texas.

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The Largest Jujube Tree in Texas

As mentioned, the Jujube thrives in our climate, requires little care and lives a long time.  This deciduous tree typically grows 12 to 15 feet tall.  However, if you want to see the largest known jujube tree in Texas, if not the USA, visit the Fort Worth Botanical Gardens.  They have a Jujube tree that reaches 45 feet to the sky. I find it interesting that the Jujube appears to grow mostly on one side.  If you look at the Ft. Worth tree and then look at the jujube I planted today, you'll see what I mean.

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Notes from November 12, 2015:  Pile of Jujubes at Judy Li’s place.  We can grow jujube trees in our area and I hope to plant some this spring at the Garland Community Garden.  I ate several fresh ones while at Judy’s and she also served Charlie and me some delicious hot Jujube tea.  Jujubes are sometimes called red dates or Chinese dates.  They are great!

My First Close Encounter of the Jujube Kind

It was November 2015 [The Epic Saga of Judy Li] when I tasted my first jujube. 

As far as I’m concerned, to know a Jujube fruit is to love it.  I can see why it is so popular with the Chinese.  The fruit tastes wonderful—sweet, smoky, chewy, juicy.  Their taste and texture are similar to that of a date but while sweet, the jujube is not overpoweringly sugary as dates can be.  Tea made from the fruit is delicious to drink.  After drinking a cup of it, I had a wonderful sense of well-being that I still recall seven months later.  I do believe its claims to reduce anxiety.

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Flowers of the Jujube

The jujube produces small, somewhat fragrant white to greenish yellow flowers of 1/5-inch diameter in large numbers in the leaf axils. The flowering period extends over several months from late spring into summer. However, individual flowers are receptive to pollen for only one day or less. Pollination needs of the jujube are not clearly defined, but appear to be done by ants or other insects and possibly by the wind. When our Jujube blooms I’ll be sure to watch to see what pollinators visit the tree.  Most jujube cultivars produce fruit without cross-pollination. The jujube is well protected from late spring frosts by delayed budding until all chance of cold weather has passed—making it a perfect fruit tree for our area with its sometime late February/early March ice storms.

Fruit of the Jujube

The fruit is a drupe, varying from round to elongate and from cherry-size to plum-size depending on cultivar. It has a thin, edible skin surrounding whitish flesh of sweet, agreeable flavor. The single hard stone contains two seeds.

The immature fruit is green in color, but as it ripens it goes through a yellow-green stage with mahogany-colored spots appearing on the skin as the fruit ripens further. The fully mature fruit is entirely red. Shortly after becoming fully red, the fruit begins to soften and wrinkle. The fruit can be eaten after it becomes wrinkled (the only kind I’ve eaten and they taste wonderful—like dates but without the overly sugary taste of dates). Many people prefer them during the interval between the yellow-green stage and the full red stage. At this stage the flesh is crisp and sweet, reminiscent of an apple.

The fruit has been used medicinally for millennia by many cultures. One of its most popular uses is as a tea for sore throat

Harvesting the Fruit

The crop ripens non-simultaneously in July and August and fruit can be picked for several weeks from a single tree. If picked green, jujubes will not ripen. Ripe fruits may be stored at room temperature for about a week. The fruit may be eaten fresh, dried or candied. Fresh fruit is much prized by certain cultures and is easily sold in Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, and Indian markets. Tree dried fruit stores indefinitely and may have good marketing potential as it dries on the tree without the use of a sulfur preservative.

Propagation

 Most Chinese cultivars in the U.S. are grafted or budded onto a thorny rootstalk, which produces many suckers from the roots. There is evidence that jujube cultivars will root on hard or soft woodcuttings. However, successes have been limited to date with this process of plant reproduction. Jujubes also can be propagated from seed, although they do not come true. Most jujube cultivars produce fruit without cross-pollination, but seeds from such self-pollination are usually not viable (such as from the Li or Lang cultivars).  Our jujube in the Garland Community Garden is a Li cultivar.

Planting a Jujube 

Plant where it will have plenty of room and plenty of sun.  Take this advice from Texas Gardener:

Jujubes do not tolerate shade well. They prefer full sun but need little fertilizer. The only fertilizer that is needed occasionally is nitrogen, especially on poor or sandy soils. Compost worked into the soil is good for those who prefer organic methods.”  [ SOURCE:  Texas Gardener, Jujube, A Fruit Well Adapted to Texas,

http://www.texasgardener.com/pastissues/janfeb08/Jujube.html - accessed May 27,2016]

Root Sprouting Problem

The only downside to the jujube is root sprouting.   According to George Ray McEachern, an Extension Horticulturist from Texas A &M: 

Root sprouting is a problem under mature plantings and can lead to the formation of a thicket if control measures are not undertaken. As soon as sprouts form, they should be cut off at or under the ground.

 Plants produced from these sprouts will not produce the same type of fruit as the mother plant if the tops are grafted onto a rootstock. Young plants should not be used as a source of new plants unless they are grafted.”

Because of our frequent mowing at the garden, root sprouting is not anticipated to create any problems.

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Nutritional  and Medicinal Value of a Jujube

In accordance with the National Center for Biotechnology, juice through the jujube fruit is shown to have cytotoxic action on various tumor lines. A report demonstrated that the amount of viable cells have been reduced after treatment method. These types of advantages have been related to the jujube’s high content of bioactive compounds.

Studies carried out over more than a 20-year period have demonstrated bioactive compounds to play a crucial role within the protection against long-term illnesses.

 Jujube fruit is additionally an anti-oxidant along with re-energizing qualities.

The dried fruits of the jujube consist of saponin, alkaloids and also triterpenoids. These 3 substances are all valuable in cleaning the blood, and also as a guide to digestion of food.

In Japan, research has revealed the jujube can improve immunity.

Additionally, jujube fruit is used to enhance muscle strength, improve strength, and as a tonic to boost liver function. A very common usage is to make a tea from the fruit to deal with aching throats. Ingesting the fruit may help deal with long-term exhaustion, respiratory disease, and also anemia.

The powerful chemical obtained from jujubes, jujuboside A, affects the hippocampus within the brain and is also usually used like a natural sleep aid. Jujubes may be used to deal with both insomnia and also anxiety

The Journal of Ethno-pharmacology documented in April 2009 that jujubes have an optimistic impact on the liver. They discovered that the jujube provides safety from liver injury through serving as an anti-oxidant. 

 A low-calorie treat:  Every 2-ounce offering of raw jujube, about 4 fruits, just has 44 calories and virtually no fat yet provides you with 1/2 gram of protein. 

So why don’t we hear more about jujubes?

Well, you just did.  Now get out there and tell others about this great plant that easily grows in North Texas and throughout most of the southern and southwestern USA.

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GARDENS BRING NEIGHBORS TOGETHER!

Gardens offer communities infinite opportunities:  job creation, healthier living, a chance to get to know your neighbors better, good food, happy memories, a learning format for you and your children and much more.

Jaycie, my neighbor and blackberry picker partner.  Jaycie loves blackberries so she picks on the half for me.

 It's Blackberry Time in Garland, Texas!

May has been a busy month for me. I've been so busy with extra curricular activities in my life that my own yard fell into sore neglect.  Two days ago, with the assistance of two of my great neighbors, I got it whipped back into shape. While working in the front yard, I happened to notice blackberries on my front two bushes were ready for picking.  Jaycie and I picked and weighed four pounds of blackberries on Wednesday, May 25--the first of the season from my garden. I like to weigh and record each picking and then brag about the total poundage at the end of the season which usually comes the end of June/first week of July.  Gardens are filled with opportunities to teach our children. For example, Jaycie had the opportunity to weigh the blackberries on a food scale and then divide them into three equal portions: one for Jaycie and her mother; one for Margie and Gene; an one for me and Charlie.

Last night Margie, Jaycie's grandmother who lives across the street, invited me over in the evening for some blackberry cobbler in her backyard.  The cobbler was made from berries that came from my garden.  By the way, speaking of gardens, Margie's looks great.  The most remarkable plant in her back yard is an olive tree.  The tree is in a pot and is just under three feet tall--but it is filled with olives.  There are easily 100 olives on that small tree.  Oh yes, the cobbler was wonderful.  Get to know your neighbors!  That's the best advice I can give.  Then you might get some free blackberry cobbler in May or June.

SPEAKING OF NEIGHBOR'S GARDENS . . .

GET A LOOK AT CHARLIE'S CHERRY TOMATO PLANTS

Charlie's Cherry Tomatoes -- The fence behind them is 8 feet tall. These plants have pounds and pounds of green tomatoes.  Already we've eaten a few of them.  (Photo taken May

The plants on the left he started from seeds, given to him by one of Loving Garland Green members, Nancy Seaberg back in March. In Garland, neighbors share. The plants on the right were purchased at Garland's great locally-owned nursery, Rohdes. They were tiny plants in 2 1/2 inch pots that Charlie purchased for 79 cents a plant.  Your best and cheapest tomato plants will come from a local nursery--not from a big box store that carries Bonnie Plants for $3.78 a plant.  Don't be lazy, seek out a local nursery and you'll see what I mean. Not only will you get better quality plants, they will be cheaper.

Life Goes On in My Garden--With or without Me

My blackberries ripen and my artichoke goes to flower before I have the time to harvest it.  

THE MAGICAL GARLAND COMMUNITY GARDEN IS MORE BEAUTIFUL THAN EVER!

Like our local community, the Garland Community Garden is a patchwork of diversity--we planned it that way.  There is beauty in the symmetrical layout of gardens with their raised beds, encased in wooden borders equidistant, one from the other.  We can appreciate the precision and orderliness of it all.  However, homogeneity can quickly become a tiresome affair.  Besides, homogeneity is a standard that few can consistently apply to their lives.  To expect it is to invite disappointment. 

If it's diversity you seek, you won't be disappointed when you visit the Garland Community Garden. We intentionally have plants growing in all kinds of beds--from square foot gardens to hugelkulturs; and in all kinds of containers--from 55 gallon food-grade barrels to IBC totes. Like life, our garden does not contain many right angles.

One of the reasons I was so excited to assist in building a hugelkultur for the Watson schoolyard garden this week was the opportunity the hugelkultur offers to demonstrate to the students that looks can sometimes be deceiving.  At first appearance, the hugelkultur appears messy--especially when compared to their lovely raised beds that are encased in wood and are all neatly lined up.  However the hugelkultur is eco-friendly while the other beds are not.  The hugelkultur follows closely with permaculture ethics by setting up a micro-eco system that is self-sustaining. After a year, the plants in the hugelkultur, except in cases of extreme drought, will never need watering.  On the other hand, the plants in the raised bed will need watering at least once a week.  

  

Last year we cut a 55-gallon food grade barrel in half and planted Hops rhizomes in them.  We inserted bamboo poles for the bines to climb.  This year the hops (Cascade variety) came back. (Photo May 2016)

"Pollinator Heaven" - A new garden plot added this spring.  It is filled with native plants--all beloved by pollinators. Among the native plants, we have about 25 native milkweeds growing in this plot.  Sunflowers form its back border.

 

We are proud of this sign in our Butterfly Garden (which also was a new addition this spring).  This sign shows the names and photos of all the common butterflies in the North Texas area.  Thus, if you are visiting the garden and see a butterfly that you don't recognize, take a photo of it with your phone and then see if you can locate it on our sign.  Please be sure to contact us on our site Lovinggarlandgreen.org and share with us.  We are the official stewards of the Garland Community Garden.

 

We have organic, stringless green beans--pole and bush varieties growing all over the garden.  The trellis shown in the photo was handmade with bamboo poles and twine. (Photo taken May 20, 2016)

In addition to the green beans, we have all kinds of fruits, vegetables and herbs growing in the garden:  watermelon, cantaloupe, sweet asian melons, pigeon peas, tomatoes, peanuts, Romanian cucumbers, blackberries, loofah, tarragon, rosemary, mint of many varieties, Malabar spinach, basil of many varieties, sweet potatoes, eggplant, horehound, hops, oregano of many varieties, chamomile, borage, comfrey, kale, and more.

Our garden is open to visitors 24/7 from sunup to sundown. Unlike many community gardens we are located right beside a main thoroughfare and we have no fences.  We are located at 4022 Naaman School Road in Garland Texas 75040. The land is owned by the city and the garden area is stewarded by Loving Garland Green.

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Loving Garland Green members Charlie Bevilacqua and Liz Berry assisted in the installation of a hugelkultur at Watson Tech here in Garland. If you don't know what a hugelkultur is, visit our site at lovinggarlandgreen.org.  Hugelkultur translates mound or hill culture from the German. This name is descriptive of the shape of the bed when it is completed--it's a small mound (although some hugelkulturs can have mounds as high as four feet.)

1.  In the beginning, it was dig dig dig:  about two hours, 15 minutes of hard labor

Two students, second grade teacher Jennifer Clements, a parent, and Charlie and I dug a pit approximately four feet wide, twenty feet long and a foot deep.  If you want to know how long that takes, it's about 2 hours--with six people digging.  It's tough to dig through the clay of our Blackland Prairie soil.

 

2. Then came the rotten wood: about 10 minutes of easy work.  (Rotten wood is not heavy.)  Rotten wood is the bottom layer of the hugelkultur.

 

3. Next we piled organic matter on top of the rotten wood.  In addition to that we scattered two 40 pound bags of chicken manure over this mixture.  Spreading the organic matter (shrub cuttings, grass clippings, compost, watermelon rinds, banana peels, etc.) took less than 10 minutes.

 4.  Here are Jennifer and I, standing in front of our almost finished hugelkultur (I'm the one whose eyes are closed on the right.  Apparently, I didn't realize how tired I was.).  The part of the process you don't see is what it took to put the soil back on top of the rotten wood and organic matter.  That process was almost as difficult as digging the pit. (Jennifer thought more so.)  Initially when digging the soil out of the bed, we placed it on top of a tarp we had spread along the edge of the bed.  Once the wood and organic matter were placed in the bed, we shoveled and raked the soil back on top of the logs.  After moving about five inches of soil into the bed, we then spread a forty pound bag of expanded shale over the top of the soil and mixed it in.  

Next we shoveled another five inches soil onto the mound, spread another bag of expanded shale and mixed that in.  All total we added five 40-pound bags of expanded shale to the North Texas Blackland Prairie soil. Our north Texas soil is great in terms of its nutrient value, however its clay texture leaves much to be desired as it often smothers plants to death as they are not able to derive nutrients due to the density of the soil.   Moving the soil back into the bed took about 2 hours, but it seemed a lot longer because we were tired.

5.  Here is our finished hugelkultur.  As the final step we spread two bales of straw over the mound. This mulch will protect the organisms in the soil from the heat of summer.   I pushed aside some of the straw today and planted a Turks Cap that I had grown from a cutting. It's that little green spot you can see on the straw pile. This plant is just an experiment to see how/if it will survive the summer.  The hugelkultur will not be planted by the second grade students until fall.  Over the summer the straw will decompose and in the fall a layer of compost and garden soil will be spread over it. At that point plants will be installed and seeds planted.  This garden is intended to be used for vegetables as well as a few plants for pollinators.

It usually takes about a year for the micro ecosystem of the hugelkultur to kick in. (The decaying wood holds water and other nutrients and makes them available to the plants on a natural time release.  This micro ecosystem emulates what happens on the forest floor where trees and leaves fall, decay, and subsequently provide nourishment for new trees and plants.)

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LOTS OF INTERESTING BOTANICAL EVENTS ARE HAPPENING IN THE WATSON TECH GARDEN

Four new raised beds were built today while we were building the hugelkultur.  For the next few months the two unplanted beds in the foreground will be used for a scientific study on milkweeds that is being conducted by a graduate student from Midwestern University.  The other two beds will be used by students at Watson Tech. (Note: there are already several existing beds and a greenhouse in this great schoolyard garden area.)   One of the fun things that happens at Watson is that at the end of the growing season a meal is prepared for the gardener students and they have the opportunity to reap the rewards of their harvest and eat what they have grown.

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 Yesterday we successfully registered the Garland Community Garden and its surrounding riparian area as a certified wildlife habitat with the National Wildlife Federation.

Loving Garland Green (LGG) co-stewards this area with the Garland Parks and Recreation Department.  LGG manages the garden area where we raise edibles and native plants that provide habitat for pollinators.  Our Garland Parks and Recreation Department look after the riparian area that borders the creek as well as the grassy meadow in front of the garden area.  [NOTE:  We do not encourage people to wander in the riparian area as it is overgrown for a purpose—to provide habitat for many varieties of wildlife.  It is not safe to walk in this brush.] 

We do encourage you to visit the garden and take note of the wildlife that wanders into that area.  Some of the critters that we’ve seen coming out of the riparian area include a large owl; a chaparral; opossum; armadillo; numerous bluebirds and other species of birds; and of course, many species of butterflies including Monarchs, Gulf Fritillaries, and Blue Swallowtails to name a few.

If you spot a creature down at the park we would love for you to go to our website and report your sighting—insects or animals.  It would be even better if you can take a photo of what you see. If you have a question about the garden and what you’ve seen, CONTACT US.

http://www.lovinggarlandgreen.org/index.php/about/contact-us

To further enhance our ability to attract native pollinators, Loving Garland Green has installed a butterfly garden plot in the front area of the garden.  It is stocked with native plants such as Texas Rock Rose; Echinacea; Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca)—seeds have just sprouted; Turks Cap; sunflowers; Blue Salvia, Coreopsis; Blackfoot Daisy; Texas Lantana; etc. 

We have also ordered a native bee house, which we will install (along with a small mud reservoir) on the trellis of our loofah tunnel. We plan to install this bee house on Sunday, April 24 when we celebrate our second anniversary (3-5PM) down at the garden.  At this time we will also put up our metal habitat sign.

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Bumblebee buzz pollinating a blackberry blossom down at the Garland Community Garden April 13, 2016

I've been thinking about joining some citizen's pollinator watch group for a while--ever since I spotted a bumble bee on a comfrey plant in my front yard about a week ago.  Then yesterday when I saw a bumblebee bee buzz pollinating a blackberry flower down at the garden, I decided to it was time to start reporting.

Last night I came across a great citizen science project:  BUMBLEBEE WATCH.  I signed up and sent them the photo I took yesterday of the bumblebee.

A great citizen science project and a great adventure in nature for you and your children or grandchildren:  BUMBLEBEE WATCH

 What is Bumble Bee Watch?

Bumble Bee Watch is a collaborative effort to track and conserve North America’s bumble bees. This citizen science project allows for individuals to:

  • Upload photos of bumble bees to start a virtual bumble bee collection;
  • Identify the bumble bees in your photos and have your identifications verified by experts;
  • Help researchers determine the status and conservation needs of bumble bees;
  • Help locate rare or endangered populations of bumble bees;
  • Learn about bumble bees, their ecology, and ongoing conservation efforts; and
  • Connect with other citizen scientists.

Because these animals are widely distributed the best way to keep track of them is with an army of volunteers across the country armed with cameras. With any luck, you might help find remnant populations of rare species before they go extinct. Participating in Bumble Bee Watch is simple and you can get started now by creating an account via the “sign in” tab at the top of the page. Once you have an account, go out and check your garden, in parks, or any other natural areas you frequent for bumble bees. Be sure to snap a pho and then sign in and submit your data to the Bumble Bee Sightings form at www.bumblebeewatch.org. Have fun while learning more about bumble bees and the vital role they play in our environment!

Other ways you can help:

  • Create habitat! You can find more information about how to create bumble bee habitat at www.xerces.org/bumblebees.
  • Support local and organic agriculture. Many pesticides are harmful to bumblebee colonies and many vegetable and fruit plants provide great food sources for bees.
  • Spread the word! Many people are afraid of bumble bees and other insects. Let your friends and family know how important they are and encourage them to take photos too!

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Male Monarch in my hand October 2016

SPEAKING OF POLLINATORS . . .

Let us remember the Monarch butterflies.  Soon we will be seeing them in the Garland Community Garden.  The Monarch, because of its beauty and whimsical grace, is the flagship species, the poster child, to remind us of the importance of all pollinators who are responsible for at least one of every three bites of food that we eat.

There are many Monarch monitoring projects that you can join as well.  For example, check out the Monarch Larva Monitoring Project (www.mlmp.org ) and learn how volunteers and scientists are working together to understand monarch butterfly populations across North America.  Anyone can join the MLMP.  Kids, adults, youth groups, or families--monitoring monarchs provides a fun learning experience for all.