Sunday, March 7, 2010

“Who's Hiring In Your Area? - WPTZ The Champlain Valley”

“Who's Hiring In Your Area? - WPTZ The Champlain Valley”


Who's Hiring In Your Area? - WPTZ The Champlain Valley

Posted: 15 Feb 2010 03:43 PM PST

POSTED: 5:41 pm EST February 15, 2010
UPDATED: 6:33 pm EST February 15, 2010

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Thursday, March 4, 2010

“Go To A Flower Show - PerishableNews (press release)”

“Go To A Flower Show - PerishableNews (press release)”


Go To A Flower Show - PerishableNews (press release)

Posted: 03 Mar 2010 01:44 PM PST

by Charlie Nardozzi, The Examiner
Posted: Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 4:38PM EST

I recently returned from the granddaddy of all indoor flower shows, the Philadelphia Flower Show. I was speaking about my new book Vegetable Gardening for Dummies on behalf of the Gardener's Supply Company. It was a packed house and the show was amazing. The theme of the show is Passport to the World and it features more than 30 show gardens from countries such as India, China, Singapore, Netherlands, Brazil, and South Africa. The artistic expression and breath of flowers that were forced into bloom was amazing. Just to see colors and greenery this time of year was a treat!

So, what's a cabin fevered Vermonter to do? You could hop a flight to Philadelphia. The show goes through March 7th. Or visit one of the closer shows. The Boston Flower and Garden Show is back! After a one-year hiatus, the show will be held from March 24 to 28, 2010 at the Seaport World Trade Center. The theme this year is a Feast for Your Senses, with show gardens, exhibits, and talks throughout the 5-day run.

Even closer to home is the Gorgeous Gardens and Green Living Show hosted by the Vermont Nursery and Landscape Association. The show is held on Saturday and Sunday, March 13 and 14th, at the Riley Rink in Manchester, Vermont. It features display gardens and talks on horticulture, agriculture, and sustainable homes and gardens by local and national gardeners, such as Julie Moir Meservy.

To read the rest of this story please go to: The Examiner

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Wednesday, March 3, 2010

“Campaign targets lawn weedkillers, pesticides - BurlingtonFreePress.com”

“Campaign targets lawn weedkillers, pesticides - BurlingtonFreePress.com”


Campaign targets lawn weedkillers, pesticides - BurlingtonFreePress.com

Posted: 28 Feb 2010 03:06 AM PST

Although snow blanketed Vermont last week, a working group of the Burlington Board of Health is about to issue this call: Wanted — two Burlington property owners willing this spring to swear off the stew of manmade chemicals many people feed their lawns to keep them as weed- and pest-free as AstroTurf.

Abandoning pesticides won't mean going it alone. The two property owners will be part of the "Truly Healthy Lawn Lab," a two-year Board of Health project to demonstrate chemical-free routes to growing grass.

The Lawn Lab — along with a recent, abortive attempt to toughen the Burlington's pesticide ordinance — reflects a growing concern in some circles that lawn chemicals, singly or together, can affect human health, particularly children's health.

"There is so much evidence that chemicals in the environment are affecting our long-term health," said Jean Markey-Duncan, a New North End resident and one of those who pressed the Board of Health to address lawn pesticide use. "Pesticides have been linked to cancer, to Parkinson's disease, to autism and attention deficit disorder.

"Do we want to take a chance we are wrong about this?"

Americans spread an estimated 70 million pounds of pesticides on their lawns each year, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. That's 10 times more per acre than farmers use on their crops.

Although the toxic ingredients in weedkillers and pesticides must be registered with the EPA, that stamp does not mean lawn chemicals are safe, critics say. By definition, pesticides are toxic to some forms of life. Fresh concerns about the cumulative effects of environmental chemicals have arisen in recent years.

Critics cite examples like diazinon, once the most widely used lawn pesticide in the country. In 2000 the EPA ordered the phase-out of the insecticide, citing evidence it could affect the nervous system.

Last year, the agency ordered pesticide manufacturers to test 67 chemicals — including glyphosate, imidacloprid, 2,4-d and others used in lawn care — to determine whether they interfere with the action of hormones that regulate metabolism, reproduction and growth in humans and animals.

Pesticide manufacturers and lawn-care companies defend the safety of their products.

"In many cases, our approval standards for lawn-care products we use are even tougher than the government," said Heather Wilson, a spokesperson for TruGreen-ChemLawn, a national lawn-care service that operates in Vermont.

Not all homeowners are reassured.

"There are so many chemicals in our environment, it is just prudent to eliminate unnecessary ones," Markey-Duncan said.

And that's the point, she and others say: Routine use of lawn chemicals isn't necessary.

"You can have a really nice lawn without total reliance on herbicides and insecticides," said Sid Bosworth, University of Vermont Extension agronomist, turf expert and Lawn Lab's technical advisor.

The Board of Health's pesticide education working group believes Lawn Lab will prove Bosworth right.

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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

“Maintaining your plants using self-watering window boxes, drip systems - Washington Post”

“Maintaining your plants using self-watering window boxes, drip systems - Washington Post”


Maintaining your plants using self-watering window boxes, drip systems - Washington Post

Posted: 03 Feb 2010 06:57 AM PST

Fairfax

A: Keeping a window box going at a second home on the Eastern Shore will be difficult given the heat and winds. To solve the watering issue, you might use so-called self-watering boxes, which have a reservoir that needs filling only periodically. Gardener's Supply Co. (http://www.gardeners.com) sells one about two feet long that stores five quarts of water. Customers have commented on the company's Web site that they've been able to go a week or more without irrigating.

If you expect to be at the house less frequently, you can install a drip watering system with electronic controls, including a sensor so the system shuts off in the rain. Home centers and garden-supply companies sell drip-irrigation kits sized for specific numbers of pots, which work well when planters are clustered. To irrigate window boxes, you'd probably need to rig your own system using tubing that you buy by the reel or foot.

A third alternative is to use plants that can go long periods without watering, such as succulents. Plants suitable for non-irrigated green roofs, especially low-growing sedums, work especially well. Taller sedums suitable for perennial beds, such as Autumn Joy, are probably too floppy. Emory Knoll Farms, a nursery in Street, Md., that specializes in plants for green roofs, has a list of especially good choices on its Web site (http://www.greenroofplants.com). "Green Roof Plants," a 2006 Timber Press book written by the nursery's owners, Ed and Lucie Snodgrass, shows an even wider array.

Cliff Lowe at Lowe's Bayshore Nursery & Garden Center (http://www.lowesbayshore.com) in Stevensville, Md., suggests incorporating ice plants, which have almost neon-red or pink flowers.

All of these plants need fast-draining soil, so add some gravel into the potting mix. Even though the plants can go for long periods without watering once established, they still need care at first. You should consider starting them at home in relatively large pots and move them into the window boxes once they are established. (Just make sure the initial soil depth isn't more than what the window boxes offer.) Or plan an extended stay at the cottage early in the season. What a great excuse.

Have a problem in your home? Send questions to localliving@washpost.com. Please put "How To" in the subject line and tell us where you live.

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