The Garden Guide
- The Garden Guide
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Edgecombe Garden Club learns about downtown trees and Tarboro improvements
President Marilyn Douglass welcomed everyone to the March 7 luncheon meeting at the Fountains of the Albemarle.
Alan Thornton, Tarboro town manager, spoke to the club about “Trees in Downtown Tarboro” and included ways to help improve the community.
Prior to Thornton’s arrival, downtown merchants had expressed concern of a leaf litter problem and store fronts not seen well because of tree sizes. -
A splash of late winter color
Most folks recognize that spring is the time for tulips and daffodils, but have you noticed that splash of purple across your turf or throughout your landscape beds? The glowing lavender flowers of henbit, along with the white flowers of hairy bittercress will soon yield seed, resulting in an entirely new crop of problems starting next fall. Henbit and hairy bittercress are two of our common winter annual weeds in the Coastal Plains of North Carolina.
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Recommendation for damage trees after a storm
Twisted trunks, splintered branches and upswept roots are images etched in my mind compliments of hurricane Irene. A casual observer passing through Edgecombe County might be inclined to reason that high winds and aging trees were largely to blame for the mess that resulted from last weekend’s disasterous storm.
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Local Roots – A New Farmers Market Model
As many of you know, my family and I recently traveled to Ohio for a family wedding. In between church decorating, reception hall set-up and rehearsal dinners, we managed to slip away to check out the local farmers market.
At this point, I should clarify the significance of this “side trip” and emphasize its relevance to recent developments at the Tarboro-Edgecombe Farmers Market. -
Master Gardener’s hint: Pinch, pinch and pinch some more
Well, it is time to decide once and for all. Is that tall, stately stem with the bulging bud at the crown the promised returning perennial you planted last year or is it just another weed. You’ve been mulching and nourishing it for a couple of months, and now it’s time to commit.
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Honey bees & the allure of flowers
Honey bees & the allure of flowers
Spring is such an exciting time of year; vegetation begins to “green-up”
all around us and flowers magically appear. -
Q and A with the master Gardeners
Hello again. I don’t know about your garden, but the weeds are already winning in mine. They must feed on moonbeams or some stardust fertilizer formula, the way they get an overnight jump on me. I am considering an 11-3 shift on my knees to close the gap. Don’t get me wrong. I’m not puling, not yet anyway, just pointing out the obvious. No one has dropped a “Garden of the Month” sign in my yard, not even by mistake!
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Time for Cool Season Crops
What signs do you look for to indicate the beginning of spring – golden daffodils dancing in the breeze, spring peepers filling the air with music, or maybe the sight of honey bees visiting the fragrant winter honeysuckle in your neighbor’s yard?
For me, the vibrant splash of red along our roadway and ditch banks give me the first indication that spring is near. Contrary to what many might think, that amazing burst of life is not new foliage, but instead is an abundance of delicate red maple flowers.
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Edgecombe Garden Club learns about downtown trees and Tarboro improvements

