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September Gardening Tips

Hello Friends, Neighbors, Fellow Gardeners,

The weather is finally getting cooler and fall will be starting this month! It’s time to enjoy applesthe fall harvest of apples and pumpkins!  Here are some gardening tips, educational opportunities, and events for September. Events include the Pawpaw Festival at Meadowside Nature Center, Friends of Brookside Garden’s 20th Anniversary Plant Sale, Children’s Day: Honey Harvest Festival, Monarch Fiesta at Black Hill Visitor Center, Bluegrass on the Farm at Agricultural History Farm Park, Apple Festival and Campfire at Meadowside Nature Center, and our special Community Event on Tuesday, September 27th featuring the “Growing Legacy” award-winning film on Montgomery County’s Agricultural Reserve with special guest speakers from the Montgomery Countryside Alliance!

Planning:

  • Check your local garden center for end-of-summer bargains.
  • Order spring-flowering bulbs to arrive for planting this fall.

    crocus flower
    crocus
  • Keep an eye out for the first frost date. In Zone 6, it is expected between September 30 and October 30.  In Zone 7, it is predicted to be between October 15 and November 15.
  • Attend a local garden club meeting or plant exchange.
  • Set aside a few hours each weekend for attending garden shows and tours. | DC Gardens
  • Go on a local house or garden tour to see what plants are thriving in other’s area home gardens: http://www.visitmaryland.org/list/gardens-maryland

Flowers and Groundcovers:mums

  • Begin replanting pots with hardy annuals.
  • Plant hardy mums and fall season annuals.
  • Start bulb plantings of early spring bloomers at the end of the month.
  • Divide and transplant perennials, in particular, peony and iris.
  • Asters are deer-resistant and bloom around the end of September. Aster_UME
  • Plant newly purchased plants.
  • Continue to deadhead.
  • Divide ornamental grass.
  • Remove spent annuals replacing with fall annuals. Water deeply.
  • Dig up bulbs from your Gladiolus, Canna, Caladiums, and other tender bulbs; cut off foliage; let dry for a week; and store for the winter.
  • Cut fully yellow lily stalks.
  • Look out for any Poison Ivy vines, which will turn crimson in the fall and be easy to distinguish between other vines.
  • Fertilize established bulb beds in the end of the month.
  • Pests to watch for: Aphids, spidermites, whiteflies
  • Diseases to watch for:  powdery mildew, fungal leaf spot
  • See UMD’s HGIC’s September Flower tips for more details.

Trees and Shrubs:

  • Fertilize if necessary for last time.
  • Avoid late summer pruning.
  • Remove fallen, diseased leaves.
  • Mulch or compost healthy leaves.composting
  • Transplant trees and shrubs.
  • If your conifers start shedding their needles, don’t worry. This is normal for our autumn cycle.
  • Plant evergreens for winter interest.
  • Water slowly and deeply if summer is very dry.
  • Pests to watch for: sawfly, adelgids, webworm, spidermites, leafminers, caterpillars, scale, aphids, borers, and bagworms.
  • Diseases to watch for: Powdery mildew.
  • See HGIC’s September Trees and Shrubs Tips for more details.

Herbs, Veggies, and Fruit:

  • The first week in September is the last week to plant lettuce in an open garden.
  • The third week in September is the last week to plant radishes in an open garden.
  • Remove rotting fruits from fruit trees and compost them.vegetable_garden
  • Continue planting cool-season vegetables (turnips, carrots, beets, broccoli, Brussel sprouts, Chinese cabbage,  cauliflower, kale, lettuce, mustard, radish, and spinach ).
  • Plant garlic now through the end of October.
  • Pick mature tomatoes and peppers to ripen in your window sills.
  • Watch your pumpkins/squash. Harvest them when their rinds are dull and hard.
  • Pick apples at a local pick-your-own farm or visit a local farmer’s market.
  • Cut herbs and flowers for drying indoors.
  • Pot up rosemary and chives for over-wintering indoors.
  • Video: How to Grow Microgreens: A Beginner’s 101 Guide | Gardening Channel

 

  • Plant cover crops in vegetable gardens and annual beds (for example, rye, clover, hairy fetch, and winter peas).
  • Plant strawberries in a site with good drainage for harvest next spring.
  • This is a good time to have your vegetable garden and landscape soils tested.
  • Look out for slug eggs grouped under sticks and stones. They are the size of BBs and pale in color.
  • Pests to watch for: Squash vine borer, slugs.
  • Diseases to watch for: Powdery mildew, fungal, bacterial, viral diseases.
  • Here are some more fruit and vegetable gardening tips for September from UMD’s HGIC.

Lawns:

  • Labor Day weekend — the perfect time for seeding the lawn.
  • Apply fertilizer and lime to turfgrass based on soil tests and UME recommendations.
  • Watch the video to learn how to collect a soil hgic_banner_logo
  • Over seeding may be done now through October.
    • Keep newly-seeded lawns well watered!

Lawn Renovation | University of Maryland Extension

  • Plug aerate when soil is moist.
  • Begin mowing leaves into turf to add organic matter and nutrients.
  • Fertilize tall fescue and bluegrass with 1 lb. Nitrogen per 1000 square feet.
  • Check for mosquito breeding grounds. Dump out any water that sits stagnant for more than three days.
  • Cool season lawns go dormant in hot, dry weather – Do Not Water.
  • Turn your compost pile weekly and don’t let it dry out. Work compost into your planting beds.
  • Diseases to watch for: dollar spot, brown patch and red thread
  • Pests to watch for: Grubs
  • See HGIC’s September Lawn Tips for more details.

Indoors/Houseplants:

  • Bring in tender plants before night temperatures dip to 60 degrees.amaryllis
  • Bring Amaryllis indoors before a hard freeze. Repot every other year at this time. Store in a cool, dark place and do not water until flower buds or leaves emerge.
  • Take cuttings of plants you want to overwinter inside and place in water.
  • Begin conditioning the  Christmas cactus and poinsettias to get them ready for the holiday season.
  • Monitor for insect problems.
  • Pests to watch for: Spidermites, mealybug, scale, aphids, squirrels, whitefly
  • See HGIC’s September Houseplants Tips for more tips.

Indoor/Outdoor Insect and Wildlife Tips:

  • Leave hummingbird feeders out until October 15.
  • Start feeding birds to get them in the habit for this winter.birdbath
  • Keep birdfeeders and baths cleaned and replenished. Change water frequently to avoid mosquitoes.
  • See HGIC’s September Insect Tips for more details.
  • Watch for: rabbits, groundhogs, deer, moles, snakes, squirrels, and voles.
  • For more information on wildlife management and attracting wildlife see HGIC’s September Wildlife tips.

Source: University of Maryland’s Home and Garden Information Center (HGIC) and the Washington Gardener.

September

See below for upcoming local events in September.


Montgomery Parks Special Events & Festivals

More events are being added regularly. Please check back often!

Additional information on Fall Festivals: Montgomery Parks Announces 2016 Fall Festivals

fall-leafSave the date for these upcoming Fall events! Events include the Pawpaw Festival at Meadowside Nature Center, Friends of Brookside Garden’s 20th Anniversary Plant Sale, Children’s Day: Honey Harvest Festival, Monarch Fiesta at Black Hill Visitor Center, Bluegrass on the Farm at Agricultural History Farm Park, and the Apple Festival and Campfire at Meadowside Nature Center!

Wings of Fancy

Wednesday, April 27 – Sunday, September 25wof_butterflies_015
10 a.m.-4:00 p.m. | Brookside Gardens, Wheaton
$8 ages 13 and up | $5 ages 3-12 | Free ages 0-2

Brookside Gardens is happy to announce the return of its premier Wings of Fancy Live Butterfly and Caterpillar Exhibit. The seasonal display features hundreds of live butterflies from all over the world. Families, students, nature lovers, and everyone in between can get an up close experience of these brilliant butterflies from North America, Costa Rica, Africa and Asia as they soar among colorful flowers. Visitors can learn about their amazing metamorphosis, the important role butterflies play in having healthy ecosystems, and how to ensure these beautiful insects thrive in our own gardens.

More Info

 

Winter Wonders – Winter Squash cooking demo class

Monday, October 17, 12:00-1:30pmwinter_squash

Brookside Gardens

1800 Glenallan Avenue
Wheaton, MD 20902

Adrienne Cook, Garden and Cooking Writer
Danielle Cook, Holistic Nutritionist and Cooking Instructor

Those hard-shelled beauties of all color and shape – is one of the great comfort foods of fall and winter. Whether you go for pumpkins, butternut, acorn, delicata or any of the myriad varieties, Let The Cook Sisters show you new ways to prepare the delicious meat of these meaty vegetables. Sample three new recipes and enjoy a short presentation on the botany of squashes and how to grow them from a Brookside Gardens staffer.
Course # 23603

Fee: $35 FOBG: $31; registration required
Visitors Center Auditorium

 2016 Trees Matter Symposium

treesmatterbanner2016

Wednesday, October 19, 7:30am-4:00pm
Silver Spring Civic Center, Silver Spring, MD

Take advantage of our early bird registration from July 18th until September 17th only $75 (regular rate $90).

Montgomery Parks, a leader in urban arboriculture and landscaping hosts its 5th Annual Trees Matter Symposium. Learn from respected industry professionals about the most recent and innovative trends in urban and suburban landscaping while connecting with colleagues.

The fifth annual Trees Matter Symposium focuses on the health and welfare of trees in our increasingly developed landscapes. Learn from some of the country’s leading experts about innovative efforts to plant, protect and preserve trees in urban and suburban settings.

Trees provide many benefits: they cleanse and cool our air, stabilize our soils, provide wildlife habitat and beautify our urban and suburban areas. We encourage all arborists, landscape industry and environmental/green industry professionals, engineers, designers, housing developers and interested citizens to take advantage of this opportunity to learn new techniques and concepts on what can be done to ensure the survival of trees in our built environment.

 

 

April Gardening Tips

Hello Friends, Neighbors, Fellow Gardeners,

April showers bring May flowers! Here are some gardening tips, educational opportunities, and events to prepare for Spring in April. April is Earth Month as Rockville celebrates the 46th Earth Day, on Friday, April 22; it’s just one event in a month full of free activities promoting environmental sustainability. Events for April include the History in the Parks Night Hikes on the Underground Railroad trail, the Agricultural History Farm Park’s 20th Annual Gas & Steam Engine Show, Green Matters Symposium at Brookside Garden, Earth Day events, and more!  Don’t miss our meeting on Tuesday, April 26th, starting at 7:30 pm with Master Gardener Les Rucker, who will provide tips on shade perennials!

Planning:

Flowers and Groundcovers:

  • Transplant seedlings into individual 3″–4″ pots when crowded. Water when dry to the touch.
  • Pinch out growing tips of leggy transplants.
  • Transplant spring flowering bulbs after flowering.
  • Begin hardening off hardier transplants. Sow seeds outdoors of hardier annuals.
  • Dividing Herbaceous Perennials (HG99) | University of Maryland Extension
    Dividing an herbaceous perennial is an easy way to produce more plants.
  • Butterfly weed, California poppies, gaillardia, cleome, bachelor’s buttons, strawflowers, chamomile, alyssum, nigella, and annual phlox can be directly sown into the garden at this time.
  • Diseases to watch for: Botrytis on peonies, Volutella blight on pachysandra.
  • See UMD’s HGIC’s April Flower tips for more details.

Trees and Shrubs:

Herbs, Veggies, and Fruit:

Lawns:

Indoors/Houseplants:

  • Repot and fertilize houseplants when new growth begins.
  • Remove old leaves, damaged stems.
  • Pests to watch for: Spidermites, mealybug, scale, aphids
  • See HGIC’s April Houseplants Tips for more tips.

Indoor/Outdoor Insect and Wildlife Tips:

Source: University of Maryland’s Home and Garden Information Center (HGIC).

April

See below for upcoming local events in April. Don’t miss our meeting on Tuesday, April 26th, starting at 7:30 pm with Master Gardener Les Rucker provide tips on shade perennials!

MCT Garden Club April Meeting Topic: Shade Perennialshillwood_estates_perennials

Hi Fellow Gardeners and Neighbors!
In April, the Mill Creek Towne Garden Club will have Master Gardener Les Rucker provide tips on shade perennials.  Below are the details.

  • Date: Tuesday, April 26, 2016 @ 7:30 pm
  • Topic: Shade Perennials
  • Speaker: Les Rucker, Master Gardener
  • Location: C. Peterson’s house (for details, please RSVP by Monday, April 25th)
  • Hostesses: Carol Hyland

 

Mill Creek Towne Garden Club Spring Fundraiser 2016
Mill Creek Towne Garden Club Spring Fundraiser 2016

Dear MCT Friends, Neighbors,

We need your help!  Please help support the Mill Creek Towne Garden Club by participating in our Spring Flower Power Fundraiser. For every purchase made on this website , Flower Power Fundraising will give 50% back to Mill Creek Towne Garden Club. Flower Power offers top-quality flower bulbs with an absolutely exciting Spring product line-up, which includes Mixed Coneflowers, Stargazer lilies, and many others. All orders ship directly to your home and come with a 100% money-back guarantee. The deadline for orders is Friday, April 15, 2016.

Funds will help defray the costs for landscaping/maintenance of Mill Creek Towne’s main entrances and garden-related educational programs for the Derwood community!

Thank you for all your help and contributions!

Mill Creek Towne Garden Club 

www.mctgardenclub.org

Flower Power Page link:

http://www.flowerpowerfundraising.com/campaign?campaign_id=22502

Montgomery Parks Special Events & Festivals

Be “Park Kind” and Celebrate April Earth Month with Montgomery Parks!

Help celebrate our parks and park users during Earth Month by being #ParkKind! parkkind

Share stories with Montgomery Parks about how you are #ParkKind on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram (use the hashtag #ParkKind) and look out for our #ParkKind bridgade on trails, at dog parks and at events during the month of April!

More events are being added regularly. Please check back often!

 

Orchids in Focus February 27 – April 17, 2016 yellow_orchids

US Botanical Garden, Washington, DC
Conservatory Garden Court and East Gallery Orchids in Focus, in partnership with Smithsonian Gardens, highlights the world’s largest plant family and the USBG’s most extensive plant collection. Found on every continent except Antarctica, orchids amaze with their diversity of forms and colors. Come see for yourself why these exotic beauties have inspired artists and photographers for centuries. Immerse yourself in a floral paradise of orchids from the forest canopy down to the ground, and focus your own camera on these unique and beautiful plants. Learn more » – See more at: https://www.usbg.gov/exhibits#sthash.DrlBIZSz.dpuf
  • Spring is approaching! ?Save the date for these upcoming Spring events! Events include activities at Butler’s Orchards, Sugarloaf Crafts Festival (Montgomery County Fairgrounds, Gaithersburg, MD, April 15-17), Paws in the Parks on Sunday, April 24 at Bohrer Park at Summit Hall Farm, Montgomery County GreenFest to celebrate Earth Day on Saturday, April 30th, and more!

 

History in the Parks Season Opening Celebrations: Special Night Hikes on the Underground Railroad Experience Trail

Friday, April 1
2015_season_opener_000

 

5:00 pm & 7:30 pm | Woodlawn Manor Cultural Park $5 | Appropriate for ages 10 and up
Register at ActiveMONTGOMERY.org Journey back to the 1800s during this special night hike and meet persons of the past.5:00pm Registration | 7:30pm Registration

History in the Parks Season Opening Celebrations

Saturday, April 2 and Sunday, April 3
Various Times & Locations Free. Montgomery Parks invites you to welcome back spring and join in the celebration of the reopening of our History in the Parks season at our Season Opener Celebrations. Join us for free guided tours and children’s programming at Woodlawn Manor Cultural Park, Josiah Henson Park, Kingsley Schoolhouse and Oakley Cabin.
More Info

GreenMattersInteriorWebBanner

Green Matters Symposium 2016: A Garden Gateway

Join us for the 2016 Green Matters Symposium: A Garden Gateway! Brookside Gardens will host this annual educational event on Friday, April 8 from 8:30AM-4:00PM. From thorough planning to hardscape materials, native plants, and local artistry, the Symposium will inspire and offer practical suggestions on how landscape projects can be designed and constructed in an environmentally beneficial way. Speakers include:

  • Lori Arguelles, Executive Director of the Alice Ferguson Foundation
  • Gennadyi Gurman, Head of Interpretation at the Queens Botanical Garden
  • Mary Pat Matheson, The Anna and Hays Mershon President & Chief Executive Officer at the Atlanta Botanical Garden
  • Stephanie Oberle, Director of Brookside Gardens
  • Thomas Ranier, Landscape Architect & Author of “Planting in a Post-Wild World”

Register at ActiveMONTGOMERY.org (Course #14881). Fees: $85 before March 1st; $99 from March 1st onward. Friday, April 8, 2016 8:30am-4:00pm Fee: $85 before March 1st, $99 from March 1st onward Register online at ActiveMONTGOMERY.org (COURSE #14881) or call 301-962-1451

Learn more about the conference and speakers at www.BrooksideGreen.org

Guided Cabin Tours and “Celebrating African Rhythms through Dance & Song”

Sunday, April 9

Oakley Cabin African American Museum & Park, 3610 Brookeville Road, Olney, MD 20832
12:00 pm – 4:00 pm | FREE

Join us at Oakley Cabin for an African dance workshop, tours of the 19th century cabin, crafts and games for children. Explore an archaeology dig with Montgomery Parks archaeologists.

More information about all our historic ongoing and special events is online at HistoryInTheParks.org along with information about Group Tours and School Fieldtrips offered throughout the year.

20th Annual Gas & Steam Engine Show

Saturday, April 9 and Sunday, April 10
SteamandGas_000

10am-3pm Free. Montgomery Parks and Friends of The Agricultural History Farm Park invite you to the 20th annual Gas & Steam Engine Show. See gas engines, tractors, antique cars, trucks and steam tractors. The event will feature live country music, hay wagon rides, kiddie tractor pull, crafts and much more! Rain or Shine event! Free parking and plenty of food vendors so you can stay all day!

More Info


Brookside Gardens Garden Gateway Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony

Friday, April 22

9-10:45am: Volunteer planting project
Call 301-962-1429 to get more information and volunteer.

11am: Ribbon-cutting, remarks and light refreshments

Come see all the beautiful (and environmentally friendly) changes at Brookside Gardens, and help us celebrate the work completed on this major project. There’s a redesigned main entrance, new Aquatic Overlook, new South Terrace just outside the Visitor Center, lovely new features like the Ginkgo Canopy and Fern Gate, a new parking garden, and much more.

Free and open to the public.

Meet at the Visitors Center Entrance:
Brookside Gardens
1800 Glenallan Avenue
Wheaton, MD 20902
301-962-1400

 More info…

Earth Day Festival

Sunday, April 24

Noon – 4:00 p.m. | Brookside Gardens & Brookside Nature Center
FREE | All Ages

Celebrate Earth Day at one of Montgomery County’s most sustainable and treasured gardens.  At Brookside Gardens and Brookside Nature Center you will discover how small changes in your everyday habits can make a big impact on improving our environment and our local community. Enjoy family-friendly activities, “green” craft fair, food vendors and live music.

More info…

Wings of Fancy

Wednesday, April 27 – Sunday, September 25

10 a.m.-4:00 p.m. | Brookside Gardens

$8 ages 13 and up | $5 ages 3-12 | Free ages 0-2wof_butterflies_015

Brookside Gardens is happy to announce the return of its premier Wings of Fancy Live Butterfly and Caterpillar Exhibit. The seasonal display features hundreds of live butterflies from all over the world. Families, students, nature lovers, and everyone in between can get an up close experience of these brilliant butterflies from North America, Costa Rica, Africa and Asia as they soar among colorful flowers. Visitors can learn about their amazing metamorphosis, the important role butterflies play in having healthy ecosystems, and how to ensure these beautiful insects thrive in our own gardens.

 

Grow Anywhere Gardening Expo, Saturday, April 30th, 10 AM – 2 PM, Silver Spring Civic Building, Veterans Plaza.

Coming April 30 to Silver Spring: the Grow Anywhere Gardening Expo, 10 AM – 2 PM, Silver Spring Civic Building, Veterans Plaza.

growanywhere_gardenexpo

The Urban Gardening initiative of the Montgomery County Master Gardeners invites you to our free demonstrations and hands-on activities, including take-home projects. Join us and learn all about container gardens, making self-watering containers (just for kids!), growing herbs, vegetables and microgreens, vertical gardening, creating water gardens for small spaces, sustainable garden design, and healthy houseplants.

2nd Annual Montgomery County GreenFest to Take Place April 30 in Takoma Park

happy_earth_day_2013__by_dragofyre-d62levm

The Montgomery County GreenFest is committed to helping everyone in the County explore their path to a greener life. It is a one-day event focused on education and outreach, entertainment and facilitating interactions between residents, businesses and community leaders. The 2nd annual Montgomery County GreenFest is April 30, 2016 from 11am-4pm at the Takoma Park Community Center.

May

Grow It Eat It Open House, May 1, 9:30am-4:00pm at Derwood, MD.

growit_eatit_May2016

There will be many gardening classes and activities for adults and children.

Adult classes: https://extension.umd.edu/events/sun-2016-05-01-1200-grow-it-eat-it-spring-open-house

Click here for the full children’s programs flyer: https://extension.umd.edu/…/grow_it_eat_it/childrens%20prog….

The following programs are $12 each:
Discover Bugs, grades 2-3, http://discoverbugs2016.eventbrite.com,
Discover Gardening, grades 2-3, http://discovergardening2016.eventbrite.com,
Discover Flowers, grades 4-5, http://discoverflowers2016.eventbrite.com,
Discover Trees, grades 6-8, http://discovertrees2016.eventbrite.com .