Hello Friends, Neighbors, Fellow Gardeners,
We wish you and your family a Happy, Healthy, Prosperous and Peaceful New Year! Here are some garden tips, educational opportunities, and videos for January. Some upcoming events/resources include RainScapes Portal, Master Gardener Lectures – Growing and Using Cooking Herbs, Winter Native Plant Sowing, Birding Events, Brookside Gardens Winter Tour, Socials for 55+: Green Dreams Vision Board, 55+ Nature Book Club – Book Discussion, GreenScapes Symposium, Montgomery College Lifelong Learning Home and Garden Classes – Spring 2025, and more! A lot of gardening events are announced on Facebook as well as on our website. These events will be hosted as online or in-person events.
Planning Tips
- Evaluate gardening year, make notes of desired changes.
- Start reading those seed catalogs!
- Clean, sharpen, store, and replace your garden tools as needed.
- Repair your shed and repair/paint your fences.
- Attend a local garden club meeting or plant exchange.
- Start or update your garden journals.
- Read a good gardening book or magazine.
- Volunteer at a local public or historic garden.
- Plan for 2025 with these Free resources: Landscaping with Native Plants by the Maryland Native Plant Society, Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas by the National Park Service, Master Gardeners of Northern Virginia Reading Room. Visit our Online Gardening Resources page for more helpful online resources.
- Buy a good gardening book or magazine subscription for a gift for your favorite gardener.
- Have a question about gardening? Check the University of Maryland Extension’s New Maryland Grows blog for garden tips.
Happy New Year from Mill Creek Towne Garden Club!
Dear friends and neighbors,
We wish you and your family a Happy, Healthy, Prosperous and Peaceful New Year!
Mill Creek Towne Garden Club
www.mctgardenclub.org
Join Mill Creek Towne Garden Club!
- Are you interested in gardening? Perhaps you’re a beginner, looking to learn more, or an experienced gardener interested in sharing your experiences and learning from others?
- Are you interested in making your home and community a more beautiful place to live?
- Are you interested in getting more involved in your community and getting to know your neighbors better?
Visit Our MCT Garden Club Website for Gardening Resources
- Local Gardening Resources: Looking for a Master Gardener as a guest speaker, need gardening advice, or want to learn about resources in or near Mill Creek Towne? Visit our Resources page for details.
- MCTGC Blog: Check our monthly blog for garden tips and local/online garden-related events.
- Gardening Books: Looking for a gift for your favorite gardener? Visit our Gardening Books Resources page for holiday gift ideas.
- Local Gardens: Visit our Local Gardens page to learn about local gardens in our area.
- Montgomery County Farmers’ Markets: Support our local farmers. Check this page to learn about local farmers markets in our area or join a CSA and get fresh local produce year-round!
- Online Gardening Resources: Looking for gardening apps or online resources to help with your gardening? Check out our Online Gardening Resources page for some apps for your smartphone and online gardening resources focused on the DMV area.
- Recipes: Looking for a recipe for your home-grown veggies and fruit? Check our Recipes page for ideas.
Maryland Grows Blog
In weekly posts on MD HGIC’s blog, learn about pollinator conservation, growing native plants and food, and how to solve plant pest and disease problems.
MD HGIC Video Tips
Our Extension experts are sharing one-minute video tips to help you in the garden this summer. We’re talking about pest management in the vegetable garden, tree and lawn diseases, native plants, mowing lawns, and more!
For more information, please visit:
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What can Master Gardeners do for you?
- Help you select and care for annual and perennial plants, shrubs and trees.
- Determine if you need to test your soil.
- Provide you with information on lawn care.
- Identify weeds, beneficial and noxious insects, and plant diseases and remedies.
- Teach you how to use pesticides, mulch and compost.
- Guide you in pruning trees and shrubs.
- Provide you with options for managing wildlife.
- Provide you with gardening resources.
- Help you submit a plant sample for diagnosis
Plant Clinics are held at several sites in the county on a weekly basis and at special events such as garden festivals and the county fair. Regularly scheduled Plant Clinics are located at public libraries and farmers’ markets throughout the county as well as at the Audubon Naturalist Society in Chevy Chase. There are also clinics three days per week at Brookside Gardens. The busiest season is April through September, but some clinics are open year-round. Bring your plant samples and questions to one of these locations in Montgomery County, MD (see link below to find a location near you):
https://extension.umd.edu/mg/locations/plant-clinics
UMD Home and Garden Information Center: Ask a Master Gardener
Do you have a gardening question? Our Certified Professional Horticulturists, faculty, and Master Gardener Volunteers are ready to answer – year-round!
See below to ask a master gardener a question on the UMD Extension website:
Check out the revised list of Mid-Atlantic native plants for pollinators and beneficial insects, from the Xerces Society.
Flowers and Groundcovers
- Start seeds for: Petunia, Dwarf snapdragons. Check daily for moisture.
- Check any tropical or summer-blooming bulbs corms, tubers, and bare root plants in storage for rot or dessication.
- Store your fertilizer and seeds in a rodent-proof container.
- Plant bulbs you forgot to plant last fall!
- Pot up any leftover bulbs that did not make it into the ground by now and force them for indoor blooms.
- Provide some special protection to tender or early flowering plants like Camellias.
- Leave seedheads on Black-eyed Susans, Echinacea, Goldenrod, Sunflowers, and Thistles for the birds to enjoy over the winter.
- Check that all vines are securely tied against winter’s cold winds.
- Rake up weeds and their seedlings.
- After hard frost, sow seeds of spring-blooming hardy annuals and perennials, then mark beds!
- Collect plant seeds for next year’s planting and for trading at the annual Washington Gardener Magazine Seed Exchanges.
- Gather seeds and carefully label them. Store in dry location.
- Gently clean up the garden.
- Weed. Especially look for fast-growing vines such as honeysuckle, autumn clematis, bittersweet, wild grape, Virginia creeper, and poison ivy.
- Pests to watch for: Aphids, spider mites, whiteflies, deer, voles.
- Diseases to watch for: Powdery mildew, Rust
- See UMD’s HGIC Garden Tips for more details.
- For a list of native plant resources, visit: https://extension.umd.edu/hgic/topics/native-plant-resources
5 Million Trees Initiative
Maryland’s goal is to plant and maintain 5 million native trees by 2031. There are various ways you can get involved – plant trees and register them — or volunteer! A number of tree-planting assistance programs are available at the municipal, county, and state levels.
THIS is the SUPERPOWER of YOUR KEYSTONE NATIVE PLANTS.
- No exotic plant could ever achieve this.
- Want butterflies? Feed the caterpillars with keystone plants!
- Exotic plants will never support as many different species of caterpillars as the Keystone Natives can.
- Find your keystone native plants here by zip code.
If your zip code doesn’t give you enough information try zip codes of the nearest larger town or city. LINK: https://www.nwf.org/NativePlantFinder/
Trees and Shrubs
- Prune damaged branches.
- Prune summer bloomers such as Hydrangeas, Rose of Sharon, Crepe Myrtles, and Butterfly Bushes.
- Set out your live potted evergreens from holiday decorating in a protected outdoor space to harden them off in advance of planting them.
- Remove dead and dying trees.
- Cut a few branches of flowering shrubs to force into bloom inside.
- Root prune trees and shrubs to be transplanted next year.
- If we do get more snow in the DC area, gently dislodge snow from trees and shrubs with a broom to prevent damage to branches.
- Plant frost-tolerant trees.
- Check that newly planted trees, shrubs, and perennials have not been heaved out of the ground due to freezing and thawing cycles.
- Take hardwood cuttings from willow and dogwood to propagate them.
- Clean your gutters.
- Prune maples, dogwoods, birch, elm, walnut, and yellowwood to prevent “bleeding”.
- Water slowly and deeply if weather is very dry and ground is not frozen.
- Prune out Fireblight damage Malus and Pyrus when very cold.
- Use branches from your Christmas tree as bedding mulch or as a windbreak.
- Stake newly planted large trees or shrubs to protect them from winter winds.
- Keep an eye out for bark damage from rabbits or deer.
- Gently remove layers of snow from your outdoor evergreens with a broom.
- Check often and water newly planted trees if they don’t pass the finger test (stick your finger deep into soil – dry? Water!)
- Keep an eye out for bark damage from rabbits and deer.
- Check for vole problems and set out traps.
- Spray broadleaf evergreens with anti-desiccant to prevent dehydration.
- Use fallen leaves for mulch or compost.
- Look out for any Poison Ivy vines, which will turn crimson in the late fall and be easy to distinguish from other vines.
- Remove Ivy, Pachysandra, and other vine-like groundcover from under shrubs.
- Mulch or compost healthy leaves.
- Continue to remove fallen, diseased leaves.
- Put diseased leaves, pesticide-laden grass clippings and weed seeds in your trash — not your compost pile.
- Turn your compost pile weekly and don’t let it dry out. Work compost into your planting beds.
- Apply scale and dormant oil treatment to evergreens to decrease pest infestations.
- Remove dead and dying trees.
- Pests to watch for: adelgids, aphids, azalea lacebug, borers, bagworms, caterpillars, deer, leafminers, Gypsy moths, sawfly, webworm, spidermites, scale, and Japanese beetles, and voles.
- Diseases to watch for: Wood decay/rot, Fireblight.
- For more tips, see UMD’s HGIC Garden Tips for more details.
Herbs, Veggies, and Fruit
- Cover garlic plants with straw or leaf mulch.
- Prune dead bramble canes.
- Till and add organic matter to annual/vegetable beds.
- Start hardy herbs, onions, and cabbage.
- Clean and tidy up pots and seed trays to get a good start in February.
- Prune out Fireblight damage on apples and pears when very cold.
- Spread ashes from wood fires on your vegetable beds.
- Avoid walking on frozen planting beds.
- Clean out your cold frame or build a new one.
- Vent cold frames on sunny days.
- Remove finished plants.
- Cover strawberry beds with straw or pine needles.
- Thin seedlings.
- Apply dormant oil spray to fruit trees.
- Pests to watch for: Asparagus beetle, aphids, cabbage worms, corn borer, corn earworm, cutworms, Japanese beetles, squash vine borer, and tomato hornworm.
- Diseases to watch for: Powdery mildew, fungal, bacterial, viral diseases, Fireblight.
- Here are some more UMD’s HGIC Garden Tips.
Lawns
- Shovel walks and drive before applying ice melt or you’ll damage lawn.
- Get your lawnmower serviced.
- Avoid walking on frozen grass to avoid damaging the crowns.
- Some alternatives to de-icing salts include sand, beet juice sugars, light gravel, or non-clumping kitty litter. Using de-icing salts around driveways and sidewalks can harm your garden plants and turf.
- Keep newly seeded lawns well watered.
- Apply fertilizer and lime to turfgrass based on soil tests and UME recommendations.
- Sharpen your lawnmower blade.
- Clean yard of all leaves and other debris.
- Turn your compost pile.
- Diseases to watch for: brown patch, and red thread
- Pests to watch for: Grubs
- See UMD’s HGIC Garden Tips for more details.
Indoors/Houseplants
- Cut off flower stalk on your amaryllis once flowers fade. Leave foliage to grow.
- Keep poinsettias in a well-lit area – but out of direct sun and away from drafts.
- Buy a few new houseplants.
- Fertilize only your winter-blooming houseplants, such as violets.
- Change water cuttings started last fall and add 2-3 pieces of fish tank charcoal.
- Pinch back leggy plants.
- Maintain moisture in pots, but do not overwater!
- Set up humidifier for indoor plants or at least place them in pebble trays.
- Start new indoor plants from cuttings – try an easy one such as violets.
- Vacuum any ladybugs that come into the house.
- Clean the leaves of your indoor houseplants to prevent dust and film build-up.
- Give your houseplants a quarter turn every few weeks.
- Keep all houseplants out of drafts and away from heat vents.
- Keep succulents and cacti on the dry side.
- Repot root-bound houseplants and start fertilizing them.
- Check on your container plants daily and keep them well-watered.
- Remove old leaves, damaged stems.
- Pinch out growing tips of leggy cuttings and plants that are overwintering.
- Clean the leaves of your indoor houseplants to prevent dust and film build-up.
- Pests to watch for: aphids, spider mites, mealybug, scale, and whitefly.
- See UMD’s HGIC Garden Tips for more information.
Read and follow label instructions on all pesticides and herbicides.
Start the year off by minimizing your #risk to #pesticides and always #ReadTheLabel! Learn more here: http://npic.orst.edu/health/readlabel.html
Questions about your label? Call us! 800-858-7378 M-F 8am-12pm PST
Indoor/Outdoor Insect and Wildlife Tips
- Check indoors for termites and winter ants.
- Caulk and seal your home to prevent wildlife from coming indoors.
- Put suet out for birds.
- Keep bird feeders clean and filled.
- Wash out birdbaths weekly with diluted bleach solution.
- Switch your deer deterrent spray.
- Set out traps for mice, moles, and voles.
- Remove and destroy gypsy moth egg masses.
- Watch for: eggs, larvae, overwintering stage of many species, carpenter ants, flies, stink bugs, termites, rabbits, raccoons, groundhogs, deer, mice, moles, snakes, squirrels, and voles.
- For more information, see UMD’s HGIC Garden Tips.
Source: University of Maryland’s Home and Garden Information Center (HGIC) and the Washington Gardener.
See more tips from HGIC:
RainScapes Portal Now Open; Rebates Up to $7,500 for Residents and $20,000 for Businesses Available to Prevent Stormwater Runoff
The Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is now accepting RainScapes Reward Rebate applications for residents and businesses who take measures to reduce stormwater runoff from individual properties. County residents and companies may be eligible for refunds of up to $7,500 for residential properties and $20,000 for businesses. A Rainscape is a landscape or design technique that helps reduce stormwater runoff from individual properties and that prevents pollutants, chemicals, oils and heavy metals from washing directly into the local waterways.
Master Gardener Lectures – Growing and Using Cooking Herbs
Saturday, January 11: 2:00pm – 3:00pm
Rockville Memorial Library – 1st Floor Meeting Room
21 Maryland Avenue
Rockville, MD 20850
AGE GROUP: TEENS, OLDER ADULTS, ADULT
EVENT TYPE: LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS ENVIRONMENT
Master Gardener Pat Kenny will talk about topics such as the different types of culinary herbs, their cultivation, and use them in your kitchen.
Montgomery Parks – Events
Winter Native Plant Sowing
January 4 and 5
Saturday 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm | Sunday 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Black Hill Discovery Center
20926 Lake Ridge Drive
Boyds, Maryland 20841
Are you interested in starting your own native plants, even if you don’t have a greenhouse? Then join us to make your own native seed winter sowing containers. We will provide the materials, and you choose the seeds to try. Stop in any time during the program. Supplies are limited.
Birding Events
FeederWatch Thursdays and Fridays
Every Thursday and Friday
11 am to 12 pm | Ages 5 and up | FREE
Locust Grove Nature Center
Are you interested in birding? Do you want to be part of a national community science project? Then, join us at Locust Grove Nature Center for Project FeederWatch.
Project FeederWatch is a seasonal community science project, where participants count the different species of birds that flock to a bird feeder. All levels of birders are welcome
Wednesday, January 8 | 7 to 7:45 | Ages 16+ | $10 | Virtual Session through Meadowside Nature Center
Brookside Gardens Winter Tour
Thu – Fri, January 23 and 24 | 1‒2:30 p.m. (1/23); 10:30 a.m.‒12 p.m. (1/24)
Brookside Gardens, 1800 Glenallan Avenue, Wheaton
Winter brings a different dimension to the gardens that is sometimes overlooked by visitors. Walk and talk with Brookside Gardens expert, Kristin Davey, to uncover the “bones of the garden” without the distraction of leaves or flowers. Explore the architectural elements that shape the gardens including woody plants, hardscape, and other components of design. Ages 18 and older. $12 per person. Register for Brookside Gardens Winter Tour.
Socials for 55+: Green Dreams Vision Board
Friday, January 17, 2025
11:00AM – 12:30PM
Ages 55+ | FREE
Meadowside Nature Center
5100 Meadowside Lane
Rockville, Maryland 20855
Turn your dreams and goals into a tangible vision while staying kind to the planet! This sustainable dream board workshop invites you to create personalized vision boards using recycled and eco-friendly materials. All materials are provided. No crafting experience is necessary. Register yourself and bring a friend for free!
55+ Nature Book Club – Book Discussion
Tuesday, January 21, 2025
6:00PM – 7:30PM
Ages 55+ | FREE
Meadowside Nature Center
5100 Meadowside Lane
Rockville, Maryland 20855
We will discuss The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating by Elisabeth Tova Bailey.
GreenScapes Symposium
Friday, February 14, 2025
9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
*Live Zoom Event
Early Bird fee ends Friday, January 10
Join us for a fascinating day of presentations offering practical strategies to design sustainable and resilient landscapes. Don’t miss out on the Early Bird fee of $50 that ends Friday, January 10. To learn more and register for this live Zoom event, click on this link: www.brooksidegreen.org.
Montgomery College Lifelong Learning Home and Garden Classes – Spring 2025
See Schedule of Spring Classes below:
CRN# | Class ID | Course | Course Name | Start Date | End Date | Days | Times | Location |
33853 | 18212 | LLP152 | Annuals and Perennials for Mid-Atlantic Landscape | 4/29/2025 | 5/6/2025 | Tue | 10:30 AM – 1:00 PM | R-MK-Mannakee Building |
33822 | 18216 | LLI519 | Garden Design | 2/18/2025 | 3/11/2025 | Tue | 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM | R-MK-Mannakee Building |
33821 | 18214 | LLI022 | Orchids:How to Grow and Bloom | 1/28/2025 | 1/28/2025 | Tue | 6:30 PM – 9:30 PM | A-DL-WD&CE Virtual-Remote |
34067 | 18215 | LLP153 | Woody Ornamentals for the Mid-Atlantic Region | 4/1/2025 | 4/8/2025 | Tue | 6:30 PM – 9:00 PM | A-DL-WD&CE Virtual-Remote |
Let’s Talk Gardens
Thursdays 12 to 1 p.m.
Smithsonian Gardens