- Author: Janet Hartin
Happy New Year!
I hope that your holidays were all that you had hoped for and that you had time to reflect, relax, and enjoy family and friends and appreciate and embrace all that you are thankful for. Many of us make New Year’s resolutions and contemplate the direction we’d like our lives to take in the coming year.
I want you to know that Master Gardener Coordinators Joseph Salib, Dona Jenkins, and I truly appreciate your participation in our UC Master Gardener program here in San Bernardino County and that the coming year offers a wide array of opportunities we hope you will be interested in participating in.
A major goal for 2014 is to heighten the awareness of our program and increase our visibility by:
- Offering Spring and Fall workshops on sustainable and edible landscapes for the public that are taught by Master Gardeners in the inland, desert, and mountain regions of San Bernardino County (scheduled and available for your signup on VMS!).
- Promoting our educational services to a greater extent through traditional and social electronic media - Networking with Healthy Communities and other like-minded efforts in support of community gardens and sustainable landscaping principles and practices. Your input and suggestions are important in this process. Please contact Joseph (jsalib@ucdavis.edu) and Dona (djenkins@ucanr.edu) via email or by attending monthly meetings or signing up as a committee chair or as a member of our speaker’s bureau.
---
One of the many joys of my UC position is a renewed appointment as the statewide Associate Editor for Environmental Horticulture for UC ANR. In this role, I am privy to all new proposed publications and responsible for the peer review process. I am excited to share with you a new free publication on community gardens that just became available on our UC ANR website as a free download: www.anrcatalog.ucdavis.edu/pdf/8499.pdf.
In closing, I’d like to reflect on the fact that community gardens offer a wide range of rewards beyond producing fresh organic produce for gardeners and recipients. Examples of these benefits include: a heightened sense of stewardship and community identity and spirit; increased interaction and understanding among people from diverse backgrounds, cultures, and generations; greater sustainability and healthfulness of communities; and improved physical, mental, and emotional health of all involved.
(Note: The American Community Gardening Association's website is also a great resource for learning more about the many positive benefits of community gardening in the U.S. and Canada. http://communitygarden.org)
Have a wonderful week!
Janet
- Author: Janet Hartin
Dear UCCE San Bernardino County Master Gardeners,
This will be the last Weekly Update I write in 2013. In it, I want to express gratitude and appreciation to all of you for your time, commitment, and community service as Master Gardeners. You play a central role in the University of California’s goal of providing research-based, objective information to home horticulturists through your service answering telephone and email helpline calls; assisting home horticulturists save water, recycle greenwaste, and reduce the use of pesticides; promoting community and school gardens across the county, and much more.
There will be no class next Saturday and our office will be closed until Thursday, January 2 to allow employees and volunteers alike to spend time with family and friends.
Happy and Safe Holidays to All!
Janet
- Author: Janet Hartin
Did you know that a colony of Palmer's Oak (Quercus palmeri) in the Jurupa Hills has been around 13,000 years old, about 8,000 years older than bristlecone pines and 10,000 years older than California redwoods? Patience has undoubtedly helped its survival; it grows an average of 1/20th of an inch a year!
The planting appears to be a remnant of a woody vegetation growing in the inland valley at the hay day of the Ice Age. The Jurupa Oak lives a humble wind-stunted life in the Jurupa hills sandwiched between granite boulders. Since the species is ordinarily found in higher elevations in wetter, cooler regions, it raised the eyebrows of scientists trying to piece together its path to success. A team of UC Davis researchers discovered that this specific planting did not produce fertile acorns; genetic testing determined that the tangled cluster of stems originated from a single plant. New growth arises from the base of burned stems following fire forming a hodgepodge of stems.
--
Please watch for regular updates regarding how you can help out at Spring Edible and Sustainable Landscaping workshops our MG program is presenting in the valley, mountain, and desert areas of San Bernardino County. We have numerous powerpoint presentations ready to go or be amended to fit your needs on all topics we'll be covering. If your skillbase is in areas rather than serving as a presenter, we can use your help with promotion, greeting attendees and helping with coffee breaks. This is truly an exciting time for our program! And, we'll have an especially good reason to celebrate in 2014 since it is UC Cooperative Extension's 100 anniversary!
--
Consider supporting our MG program by purchasing UCCE San Bernardino County MG mugs ($7), t-shirts ($12), and grocery bags ($5) for friends and family members. They will be for sale in our UCCE office located at 777 E. Rialto Avenue from noon - 3 pm this Thursday December 19th and at our meeting at 2000 Founders Drive in Chino Hills at 1:00-4:00 pm this Saturday December 21.
----
Have a great week!
Janet
- Author: Janet Hartin
Dear UCCE San Bernardino County Master Gardeners,
Phytophthora root rot is at it again! This time it is infesting thousands of would-be Christmas trees, particularly in the Pacific Northeast and North Carolina, major Christmas tree growing ranges. Many growers of Douglas and Noble fir – which are especially vulnerable - are looking for viable alternatives. Likely replacement species include Turkish and Nordmann fir which might fit the bill for the Oregon market although they are both native to Eurasia. Both species appear to be resistant to Phytophthora, a particularly deadly root rot.
Nearly seven million Christmas trees are grown in Oregon, leading the nation with more than twice as many trees produced as the runner-up, North Carolina. If Phytophthora is not properly contained or alternative species planted, Oregon alone could lose over $300 million in a single year. Currently there are no effective fungicidal controls. Water-logged soils with poor aeration and drainage are largely responsible. (Remember the disease triangle: disease-causing pathogen, susceptible host plant, and a favorable environment for the pathogen to negatively impact the host.)
Over the past decade, Northeastern growers have planted about half a million Nordmann and Turkish firs each years per year. Recent research by scientists at WSU in Puyallup has resulted in the development of seed orchards for those species which will help supply future needs.
--
Thank you for signing up to help out at the Dec. 11, 2013 Turf and Landscape Institute in Rancho Cucamonga. I sent out an email earlier this evening with further details. If you did not get the email and signed up to help, please email me and I’ll make sure you get a copy. -- We have reusable grocery bags and mugs for sale with the UC MG San Bernardino County logo. Consider selling them at upcoming events; contact Joseph or Dona for more details.
--
We are excited about our Spring Edible/Sustainable Landscape workshops we will be conducting in March at three locations throughout the County (Montclair, mountain venue and high elevation desert venue). If you are interested in hosting and/or speaking a fourth one in the Redlands/Highland area during the work week or on a Sunday (rather than a Saturday when the others will be held), please let Dona know.
Stay warm!
Janet
- Author: Janet Hartin
BY JANET HARTIN -
Dear UCCE San Bernardino County Master Gardeners,
While many of you are still exercising off some extra Thanksgiving calories, I thought you might like an excuse to take five or six minutes off to read about the fare at the original harvest festival at Plymouth Colony. It only mildly resembles our modern Thanksgiving menu!
While both the Wampanoag and Plymouth colonists were known to hunt and eat wild turkey, there is no proof that turkey was actually served at the 'First Thanksgiving.' The original description penned by Edward Winslow reported that “four men went hunting and brought back large amounts of fowl” which could have been ducks or geese rather than turkey. He also mentioned that in addition to fowl the Wampanoag presented venison to key Englishmen. (Note: Edward Winslow (October 18, 1595 – May 8, 1655) was a senior leader on the Mayflower and at Plymouth Colony where he served as governor. He authored many important documents including Good Newes from New England and co-wrote Mourt's Relation which ends with an account of the First Thanksgiving and the abundance of the New World.)
But what about the rest of our typical Thanksgiving menu? Were other foods we feast on nowadays even available way back then? We are on the right track with stuffing since the Wampanoag and English were known to stuff both birds and fish with herbs and oats. Cranberries were available but not prepared with sugar like today’s traditional sweetened sauce but were used to add tartness to various dishes. What about white potatoes and sweet potatoes? They had not yet made it into the Wampanoag diet. The white potato was not well known to Englishmen aside from a handful of botanist and gardeners. The sweet potato originated in the Caribbean and some years after was grown in Spain and finally imported in England. However, it was largely available only to wealthy aristocrats who believed rumors of its aphrodisiac properties.
Indian corn was most certainly part of the original celebration and was a staple for the Wampanoag. The story goes that the English helped themselves to their first seed corn from a Native storage pit on one of their early trips to Cape Cod. (They later paid up for the “borrowed” corn.) One colonist described use of Indian corn as follows: “Our Indian corn, even the coarsest, maketh as pleasant a meat as rice.” Apparently, corn was added to traditional English dishes including porridge, pancakes and later bread. In September and October, a variety of both dried and fresh vegetables were available. The produce from New Plymouth gardens included what referred to as “herbs:” parsnips, collards, carrots, parsley, turnips, spinach, cabbages, sage, thyme, marjoram and onions. Very likely dried cultivated beans, dried wild blueberries, cranberries, pumpkins, grapes and nuts were also widely available.
What else did Mr. Winslow hunt, grow and gather back then? By his own account: “Our bay is full of lobsters all the summer and affordeth variety of other fish; in September we can take a hogshead of eels in a night, with small labor, and can dig them out of their beds all the winter. We have mussels ... at our doors. Oysters we have none near, but we can have them brought by the Indians when we will; all the spring-time the earth sendeth forth naturally very good sallet herbs. Here are grapes, white and red, and very sweet and strong also. Strawberries, gooseberries, raspas, etc. Plums of tree sorts, with black and red, being almost as good as a damson; abundance of roses, white, red, and damask; single, but very sweet indeed.”
In actuality, today’s traditional Thanksgiving dinner came to be in the early to mid 1800’s rather than 1621. While many elements of our modern holiday Thanksgiving menu scarcely resemble the foods eaten in 1621, the bounty of the New England harvest then and now played a central role.
-----
I could still use 2 or 3 additional volunteers on Wednesday, December 11 at the annual Turf and landscape Institute held at Etiwanda Gardens Conference Center in Rancho Cucamonga from 7am-noon or 1-5pm to help hand out name badges and sell UC ANR books. Volunteers are welcome to attend one of the three sessions (Arboriculture, Sustainable Landscapes, or IPM (presented in Spanish) and join us for an onsite buffet lunch from 12noon – 1pm as well. A copy of the day’s agenda is attached. Please email me directly or sign up on VMS if you haven’t already and can help out.
---
Please check out all the wonderful changes and improvements MG Coordinators Joseph and Dona have made to our website! http://cesanbernardino.ucdavis.edu/.
----
Remember that beginning classes resume again Saturday Dec. 7 at 2000 Founders Drive in Chino Hills at 1:15. Yvonne Savio will be our speaker; she is a real expert on vegetable and herb gardening and I'm sure you will enjoy her practical and informative talk. And, a gentle kick in the seat of the pants: If you haven't turned in your botanic garden write-up or paid your tuition you're late. Please do so immediately. Your first take-home open notes test is due by 1pm this Saturday as well. I know, I'm such a nag :)
Happy Gardening!
Janet