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Vol. 12, No.1 January/February 2008 University of Illinois Extension, Pike County Horticulture Newsletter Pike County 1301 E. Washington St. Pittsfield, IL 62363 Phone: (217) 285-5543 If you need a reasonable accommodation to participate in any program we offer, please contact University of Illinois Extension, Pike County at 217-285-5543. Articles In This Issue: Upcoming Events ..................................................1 Conference Set for Vegetable Gardeners.............2 Websites for Home Gardeners..............................2 Not Just Birds Go After Birdseed.........................2 Repairing Storm Damaged Trees.........................3 Tree Appraisal .......................................................3 Solving Garden Dilemmas....................................4 It’s the Berries.......................................................5 Spice Up Your Life................................................6 Plants in Honor of Valentines Day ......................6 Handling Foliage Plants in Low Light................7 How Do Insects Survive Winter ...........................8 Demystifying Botanic Language..........................8 The Master Gardener’s Plot .................................9 Upcoming Events Program costs for each telenet is $2 (due by deadline dates for each) or $5 if you would like color handouts. If you would like a CD of the program there is a $2 charge for each CD. All telenets will be held at the Pike County Extension office beginning at 1:00 p.m. The presentations will be via the University of Illinois telenet system and local computer. Horticulture Programs Offered during Winter 2008: January 29 - Healthy Soil = Healthy Plants will cover the importance of building healthy soils to grow healthy plants in landscape and home garden settings. An in-depth look at soils, their characteristics, fertilizer management and the important physical, chemical and biological aspects of soil and biology will be looked at. How we can improve our soils through appropriate fertilizer, organic matter and pH amendments will be discussed, along with meeting the challenges of urban soil management. The importance of soil sampling and properly taking and interpreting soil tests will also be covered. Plan on attending this informative program and learn how our actions can impact the health of our landscape offered on Tuesday January 29 at 1:00 p.m. Deadline to register is January 25, 2008. February 12 - Carnivorous Plants is a topic not often offered at your local gardening events. Most people are only familiar with Venus Fly Trap, but did you know that the Venus Fly Trap is only one of over six-hundred species of carnivorous plants? Do you know why these plants have a unique appetite for bugs? Have you really looked at these plants and realized their beauty as well as their function in our environment? Matt Kostelnick, Horticulture Educator, University of Illinois Extension will give you a glimpse into the world of carnivorous plants. Learn about and view the vast assortment growing all over the world including Pitcher Plants, Sticky Traps, and Trigger Traps. This program will be offered on Tuesday, February 12 at 1:00 – 2:30 p.m. Matthew will also give tips on how you can grow your own Carnivorous Plants. Registration deadline is February 8, 2008. February 26 - Climbers and Twiners: Vines for the Home Garden will be presented on Tuesday, Feb 26 at 1:00-2:30 p.m. Vines offer exciting diversity to the garden with their leaves, flowers, fruit and structure that can add another dimension to the garden. Join Greg Stack, Horticulture Educator, University of Illinois Extension as he explains how these versatile plants can add a whole different look to even small space gardens. You’ll leave knowing what to look for in vines, how to care for them and most of all take a look at some interesting choices that you can add to your garden this spring. Both perennial and annual vines will be discussed. Take your garden to new heights! Plan on attending Climbers & Twiners; Perennial and Annual Vines for the Garden. Deadline to register is February 22, 2008. University of Illinois Extension provides educational programs and research-based information to help Illinois residents improve their quality of life, develop skills and solve problems Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter 2 Conference Set for Vegetable Growers Not Just Birds Go after Bird Seed Growers from across the region will gather for the Southern Illinois Vegetable School on February 13. The program, sponsored by University of Illinois Extension, will be held at the Mt. Vernon Holiday Inn. Registration starts at 8 a.m., and the program runs 8:40 a.m. to 4:05 p.m. When you try to provide food for the birds, the rest of nature considers itself invited to the feast that you have provided. Here are some suggestions for reducing problems from squirrels, mice and other creatures that can be a problem to people feeding birds. The program includes presenters from University of Illinois, Southern Illinois University and University of Kentucky. Probably the biggest problem that you are likely to face when trying to feed the birds is squirrels trying to take the birdseed. Although squirrels are also part of nature, and many people feel that their feeding at the bird feeder is natural and acceptable, other people get very upset when squirrels arrive at the feeder. Topics include onions and potatoes for direct markets; insect and disease management using pesticides formulated for home gardens; major Illinois vegetable diseases; using drip irrigation to deliver fertility needs; managing corn earworm and European corn borer; winter high tunnel production of cold hardy salad greens; and an update on research being conducted at the U of I Dixon Springs Agricultural Center. Advance registration by February 6 is $25 per farm. Late and at-door registration is $30. The registration fee includes the 2008 Midwest Vegetable Production Guide for Commercial Growers. For more details and online registration, visit http://web.extension.uiuc.edu/regions/hort. Or, contact Elizabeth Wahle by phone at 618-692-9434 or email [email protected]. If you need disability accommodations to participate in this program, please call her by February 6. Websites for Home Gardeners To help home gardeners decide what colorful foliage will look best in their garden, U of I Extension has launched "Fabulous Foliage": http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/foliage/ “Hortanswers" is designed to provide basic information about the disease and pest problems of plants plus determine the right plant for the right place in the garden: http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/hortanswers/ Squirrels are capable of tearing apart many feeders and carrying all of the seed away to be stored for later use, just as they do with acorns and other seeds in the fall. Squirrels can be kept out of the feeder by mounting it on a slender metal pole that they are unable to climb. The feeder should be at least 6 or 7 feet off of the ground so that the squirrels will not be able to jump onto the feeder from the ground. Locate the bird feeder so that it is at least 20 feet from the nearest tree branch, house roof or other object that the squirrels may use to jump down onto the feeder. If this isn't feasible, then using sheet metal or smooth plastic around a wooden post will usually keep off the squirrels. Smooth plastic or metal baffles beneath or above the bird feeder will probably keep away most of the squirrels. Realize, however, that sooner or later a squirrel that is agile enough or ingenious enough to get to the seed anyway may arrive at your feeder. With this in mind, many people decide that if you can’t beat them, join them. They end up resigning themselves to the fact that squirrels need to eat as well. Going with this notion, consider feeding corn to the squirrels so that they are less likely to attack the bird feeder. This bribery not only helps protect the feeder, but also helps another of nature's creatures make it through the winter. Ear corn or corn-on-the-cob usually occupies the squirrels longer than loose corn or seed. These ears can be mounted on nails on boards or fence posts for Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter 3 support. Locate your feeder at least 15 feet from shrubbery or other cover so that ground feeding birds can see a prowling house cat or other predator and have time to escape. throughout the split section. Wound treatments are no longer recommended. Research has shown the trees own defensive mechanisms will protect it more effectively than wound dressings. Mice and rats may feed on the spilled seed around the feeder. Locating the feeder over a smooth surface such as a patio allows you to sweep up the seed each evening to reduce this problem. Because many birds prefer to feed on the ground, spilled seed should not be removed during the day. Trees such as silver maple, poplars and ornamental pears are particularly susceptible to storm damage. In choosing a replacement tree for those removed, take into account the mature size of the replacement, location of overhead utility lines and how the tree will look when it reaches its mature height and width. Repairing Storm Damaged Trees Tree Appraisal Trees that have been damaged by ice may be worth trying to save if a substantial portion of the tree remains intact and the repair will keep the tree attractive and of value to the property owner. Appraisal of trees that are damaged or lost due to storms must be done in some cases dealing with insurance claims or litigation. While not totally precise, it will usually provide a fairly accurate value for the tree or trees. Three different methods may be used to determine value. These are either done by assessed value of real estate, replacement cost or a formula. Pruning should not be attempted while ice is still on the tree or while electrical lines still have damage. For larger trees, it is recommended that a professional do the work, especially when electrical lines and property is within the fall range. Damaged branches should be removed at the nearest lateral branch, and not in the middle of a branch. Careless pruning will result in additional branch dieback, or excessive sprouting, causing more problems down the road. Pruning cuts should be made just outside of the branch collar—where the branch attaches to another branch or trunk. For large branches, a three-cut procedure is best. From the underside, saw approximately 12 to 18 inches from the main stem or branch where it is attached. Make the cut 1 to 1 ½ inches. For the second cut, saw approximately 2 to 3 inches beyond the undercut until the branch is removed. The third cut is made to remove the remaining stub, just outside the branch collar. If there are large areas of torn bark on a tree, remove loose, dry bark with a sharp knife or wood chisel in and around the wound. Some forks and main branches, which are split or partially broken, may be repaired without removing one or both branches. This type of work is usually beyond the capability of most homeowners and should be done by professionals. Repairs are usually accomplished with the use of large diameter steel bolts or threaded screw rods placed For assessed value changes, ask a realtor or land appraiser to assess the property with and without the trees. A good recent photograph may be needed to establish property value before the loss occurred. Small trees may be appraised by determining their cost of replacement. Replacement cost should include removal of the destroyed tree, cost of the new tree, installation and a post-survival guarantee. For large trees, a formula method may be needed. The formula is based on an arbitrary monetary value for tree size and is subject to economic conditions. This basic value is then modified based on the following factors: cross section area, species, condition and location. In most cases, the base value of trees is determined by a group or association of arborists. The Illinois Arborist Association does this for Illinois. Species ratings are based on species characteristics, such as environmental adaptability, biological traits and aesthetic characteristics. Values are reviewed and updated periodically. Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter Several factors, including legal precedents resulting from court cases involving tree appraisals, have made appraisals quite complex. It is very unlikely that an untrained individual would be able to accurately appraise tree damage or loss and be able to defend the appraisal in court. If the damage or loss is significant, it is a job for a professional. If the loss is not major, a formal appraisal may not be recommended. 4 • Need quick temporary shade for newly planted plant? Upend a plastic laundry basket. • Use a bread bag over your hand to pluck out small poison ivy seedlings. Then pull bag over seedling and toss in garbage. • Use colored golf tees to mark locations of spring bulbs. • How about a nice berber? Carpet pieces can be used to cover paths in the vegetable garden. • Too busy during planting time to write down plant locations? Just file plant tags in photo albums. The plastic pages for 4 x 6 inch photos work well. Place labels in different pockets according to garden location. • Small step-on cylinder waste baskets make great temporary containers for vegetable scraps. The interior pail can be easily removed for a trip to the compost pile. Solving Garden Dilemmas If necessity is the mother of invention then gardens are necessity's playground. Gardeners are known for going beyond duct tape for solutions to problems. Here are some creative ideas for solving garden dilemmas. Tools from Unlikely Places • Slice foam pipe insulation and place on the handles of hoes and rakes for a more comfortable grip. • Plastic net onion bags make great scrubbers for cleaning tools. • Cut slits in garden gloves at the base of thumb and index finger. If delicate handling of plants is needed, just pop thumb and finger out the holes. No need to take gloves off. • Old serving spoons make great tools for moving small volunteer plant seedlings early in the season. • Old serrated knives easily cut through roots when transplanting houseplants. • • • • Plant Support Groups • Heavy fishing line can be used to help clematis grow up a structure or arbor. String it every 6 inches either horizontally or vertically and the clematis can easily climb without constant attention. • Need a quick plant tie? Use Siberian iris leaves. • Use a grain shovel to move containers. Just slip shovel under container and drag it to new location. Plastic "pound in" edging pieces that hook together can be used to contain spreading plants such as yarrow. These also work well to hold up short but floppy plants. • What the best dressed gardeners are wearing fishing vests to hold labels, pens, gloves, plant ties, and chocolate. Baby gates secured to metal stakes can be used in the vegetable garden as a quick trellis for peas. • Use dark green spray paint on inexpensive wire tomato cages for use as peony supports. Old ironing boards make great portable potting benches. Who wants to use them for ironing anyway? Plastic mini blinds can be cut to any length to use as plant labels. Plant Protection Possibilities • Use dark green spray paint on wire baskets made for closet shelves. Set over plants to protect from rabbits. Baskets can be easily moved as plants mature and are "less tasty". Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter • Place 1-2 foot squares of bird netting over plants to prevent rabbit damage. Use "U" shaped landscape stakes to secure netting. Dizzy over Garden Design? First take digital photos of area set for redesign. Print photos in black and white (this also reveals a good mix of form and size of plants, and leaf textures). Then use transparent paper on top of the prints. Sketch new design ideas over the present plantings and structures. Weird but Wonderful When flowers with sturdy stalks such as yarrow, astilbe or allium have dried, enjoy them longer by spray painting the flower an appropriate color. Protect stalks from spray for a more "realistic" look. It’s the Berries No other food spells fun like a berry. Which would you rather party with - zucchini or a farkleberry? Yes, there really is a farkleberry. There are also buffalo berries, bogberries, bilberries, whortleberries, cloudberries, gooseberries, huckleberries, jostaberries, dewberries, mulberries, elderberries, June berries, loganberries and lignonberries. Except for the occasional local jam or jelly most of these party animals go about their berry way largely ignored. Farkleberry also known as sparkleberry, Vaccinium arboreum, is a relative of blueberry. Although birds enjoy the black fruit, it is relatively and disappointingly tasteless. Farkleberries are native to rocky slopes and woodlands of southern Illinois. Farkleberry bark is used in leather tanning and the wood is made into tool handles. Lignonberry, Vaccinium vitis-idaea, is a tastier blueberry relative. It is grown in the northwestern U.S. and Europe. Lignonberries are berry particular to their growing requirements and need an acidic soil similar to blueberries. Buffalo berries, Shepherdia argentea, are scarlet grape-sized fruits. It has been listed as a potential commercial fruit crop for the last 100 years. Maybe 5 buffalo berry sounds too much like horse apple. Buffalo berry can be dried and stored or used to make jelly or eaten fresh. The 1 to 2 inch long thorns make harvesting a challenge. As natives to the Great Plains of the U.S., buffalo berries are berry winter hardy and drought tolerant. Mulberry was once called "King of the Tree Crops". Its weediness and messiness have led to its decline in popularity. That's a nice way of saying mulberries are often cussed for their part in the purple splotches on cars and driveways. Red mulberries, Morus rubra, are native to North America in bottomlands and along streams. A hybrid named 'Illinois Everbearing' originated in White County, Illinois and reportedly has a large almost seedless sweet fruit. White mulberry, Morus alba, is native to China. It was introduced into the U.S. for silkworm production. It's now escaped into backyards thanks to the greedy eating and generous droppings of birds. As a fruit crop they have a great deal going for them. Mulberries are very cold hardy and bear abundant fruit. They tolerate difficult conditions from dry to wet and even salty areas. In the right place and with some judicious pruning mulberry might be worth a spot in a fruit orchard. Huckleberry is not just Tom Sawyer's ingenious friend. Garden huckleberries are an edible relative of the common nightshade weed. Their flavor is similar to a bitter tomato. Be sure you know what you are eating since many members of the tomato family are poisonous. Loganberry is a cross between a red raspberry and a blackberry. Although they look like red raspberries, their flavor is distinct. Loganberry is used in processing as drie d, juiced or canned products. They were once berry popular in the late 1800's and early 1900's, but have dwindled to some acreage of commercial production in Oregon. Boysenberries are an interesting mix between blackberries, red raspberries and loganberries. The story goes in the 1920's in California Rudolf Boysen was experimenting with different berries. His many berry progenies would have remained in obscurity had it not been for George Darrow of the USDA and a local farmer Walter Knott . The straggly vines were taken to Knott's farm. Once he got the berries into production he found his farm stand customers continually asked for those large purple berries. Knott Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter started calling them boysenberries. Mrs. Knott made preserves from the boysenberries and that's how, you guessed it, Knott's Berry Farm became famous. With the interest in natural food colorings and healthy phytochemicals we may see a wider array of berries. The following websites may be of interest: Midwest Fruit Explorers http://www.midfex.org California Rare Fruit Growers http://www.crfg.org Spice up Your Life Wars have been fought over them. Men traveled to distant lands to find them. Some owe their fortunes to them. We all have them, yet we wouldn't think to lock them up in a vault nowadays. Spices have been used for centuries in food, medicines and even sacred ceremonies. So just what is a spice and what is an herb? Spices come from the root, bark, fruit or berry of perennial plants. Most spices come from tropical plants that are not hardy here. Herbs are the leaves of annual and perennial low growing shrubs. Many herbs can be grown here. Listed are just a few of the common spices available to us. Allspice is the dried, unripened pea-sized berry of a small evergreen tree, Pimenta dioica. It is only one spice, but its name reflects its flavor combination of cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg. Throughout South America allspice is known as Jamaican pepper. Most allspice comes from Jamaica but also Honduras, Mexico and Guatemala. Ground allspice is used in mincemeat, pumpkin pie, plum pudding, fruit cake, cakes and cookies. Jerk seasoning popular in Caribbean dishes uses allspice as the main ingredient. Cinnamon is the dried inner bark of various evergreen trees belonging to the genus Cinnamomum. The bark is stripped off and laid in the sun to dry. As it dries, it curls into the familiar cinnamon sticks. Cinnamomum burmannii is primarily imported from Indonesia and is the most common form of cinnamon in the United States. Vietnam is the source for the finest cinnamon, Cinnamomun loureirii, also known as Saigon Cinnamon. Cinnamon has many uses such as in baked goods, coffee, chewing gum. Stick cinnamon can be used as a stirrer for mulled cider. Cloves are the dried, unopened, nail-shaped flower buds of the evergreen tree, Syzygium aromaticum, native to 6 Indonesia. Indonesia remains one of the biggest producers of cloves. Cloves are used in pickling and preserving, catsup, baked goods, ham and chocolate. The flavor is pungently sweet. Clove oil is used to flavor chewing gum and candy, in soap and perfume and pharmaceutical preparations. Coriander is the dried ripe fruit of an herb in the parsley family. Eat the leaves and the plant is known as the herb cilantro. This is one spice/herb that can be grown in our gardens. Saffron is the most expensive spice. Saffron comes from the dried stigma (the female part) of a crocus flower. The stigmas must be harvested by hand and it takes 225,000 of them to make one pound of saffron. No wonder it's so expensive. Spain is considered the prime spot for saffron production. Saffron is prized for both its color and flavor. Luckily it only takes a very small amount of saffron to add flavor and color to food. It is used in breads, cakes, rice and saffron tea. Paprika is made by grinding the dry pods of a sweet red pepper. It has a bright red color and mild flavor. It is often used to garnish foods. It's used in meat processing and in many condiments including catsup and chili sauce. Many dishes from Hungary where the best paprika is grown owe their flavor to paprika. Pepper is a ground dried berry. White pepper is made from refined berries with the hulls removed. Most pepper is imported from Indonesia, Brazil and India. Pepper is used as additive to many condiments. The dry berries are known as peppercorns Thanks to the McCormick people, well known for their spices, for some of the information listed. Plants in Honor of Valentine’s Day Leafing through a garden book recently, I was amazed at the number of plants with love or heart in their names. In honor of Valentine's Day I have listed a few plant selections to add to any passionate gardener's plant list. Heartleaf is a common name since many plant leaves are heart shaped. The houseplant, heartleaf philodendron tolerates a lot of abuse such as low light and forgetting to water it while you are on vacation for a month. Another houseplant is Lovejoy, Episcia. A relative of African Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter violets, Lovejoy has very attractive dark green or coppery colored leaves with reddish flowers. Outdoor plants include heartleaf bergenia, Bergenia cordifolia, that has beautiful shiny evergreen leaves for the partial shaded flower garden. Bergenia looks great in combination with Fringed bleeding heart, Dicentra eximia. Fringed bleeding heart grows to 18 inches and has blue green finely dissected leaves with long lasting pink heart shaped flowers. A larger two to three feet tall version is the Old fashioned bleeding heart, Dicentra spectabilis. Their rosy red heart shaped flowers are on delicate arching stems. It is also called "the living Valentine." Bleeding heart vine, Clerodendrum thomsonae, is a greenhouse vine with very showy flowers of white and crimson. There seem to be a lot of bleeding heart plants. I don't think it has anything to do with their political persuasion, although I did see a bleeding heart liberal plant listed in a seed catalog once. For the truly adventuresome Valentine, there is exotic love, Mina lobata, a vigorous annual vine. Its dark green fleur-de-lis shaped leaves are practically hidden by the scarlet to creamy yellow tubular flowers held on arching stems. Another attractive annual vine is Love-in-a-puff, Cardiospermum halicacabum. Its white flowers are followed by papery globe shaped seedpods that look like little green balloons. The pods contain black seeds with a heart shaped spot. One of my favorites is Love-in-a-mist, Nigella damascena. Love-in-a-mist is an annual flower often grown for its delicate seedpods used in everlasting flower arrangements. The blue or pink flowers seem to float above the fine feathery foliage, hence its name. It reseeds like crazy so maybe it should be love-in-afoggy-field. In the "not so great a name" category is Love-liesbleeding, Amaranthus caudatus. It has long red tassel flowers which droop to the ground and are very long lasting. Supposedly the flowers were worn by Swedish knights as emblems of incorruptibility during medieval times. A truly great Valentine name is Hearts-a-burstin, Euonymus americanus. It's a native burning bush relative with scarlet seeds enveloped by a papery coat. 7 Purple love grass, Eragrostis spectabilis, is a native American grass 12 to 18 inches high with airy reddish purple seed heads in late summer. Herbs are not left out of the love list with the five feet tall lovage, an attractive celery substitute. Another herb, southernwood, is also known as lover's plant or lad's love. At one time it was thought to stimulate not only a young man's passion, but also the growth of beards so young men would rub the aromatic lacy leaves on their faces. A plant with questionable ornamental appeal is Love Leaves also known to most of us as burdock or "those stickery things that get on our dogs." Supposedly eating the raw stems of Love Leaves will stir up lust and was used as a love potion. It's hard to find a good recipe for a love potion anymore. Handling Foliage Plants in Low Light Conditions Foliage houseplants have requirements for light, heat and water. The heat and water are easily supplied by a homeowner, but light is often a problem. In the decorating scheme, foliage plants could often be useful in a corner, an entry area or almost anywhere away from good light—where they may grow long and spindly. Success is possible, however, and since green growing plants have a place in every décor—use them. Some foliage plants can be acclimated to low light intensities. Three practices help ensure the plant adapting: watering only often enough to prevent wilting, reducing the amount of fertilizer applied to the plants and keeping the air temperatures on the cool side. Double pot plants that are to be grown under reduced light. This makes soil-moisture control easier than leaving the pot exposed to the air. Begin watering as frequently as you would if the plant had sufficient light. Then gradually lengthen the intervals between waterings. A few of the oldest leaves may die while you are adapting the plant to dry-soil conditions; this is part of the readjustment of the new environment. Do not let the plant wilt at any time. Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter Fertilize the plants more sparingly than normal. Use only about one-third as much fertilizer as is recommended for plants growing vigorously. Apply less fertilizer each time, but still apply it on a regular basis. Maintain an air temperature that is as low as human occupants can comfortably tolerate. Most plants thrive at temperatures of 60 to 75 degrees F. In general, weakly lighted plants do best in the lower limits of this range, while brightly lighted plants do best in the upper limits. If you can add moisture to the air, do so. Plants will grow under conditions of low humidity, but they need more attention to watering than they do under moderate humidity. Sometimes it is not possible to reduce temperatures adequately or the light is just too dim. Supplementary lighting with fluorescent bulbs works quite well. The required lighting intensity for a plant varies ac cording to the time the plant is lighted; the dimmer the light, the longer the plant must be lighted. If you use a fixture containing two 40-watt fluorescent tubes and light the plants for 16 hours a day, the minimum lighting intensity for growing foliage plants can be supplied by placing the fixture two to three feet above the plants. These are maximum distances for satisfactory plant growth. All the plants grow best if they are no farther than 36 inches from the lighting fixture. If plants become leggy and weak, the lights are too far away and should be moved closer. There are no real secrets to growing houseplants successfully. When the plants' requirements are known and then fulfilled, their performance will be a pleasure. Dim light isn't a problem if you know what to do about it. How Do Insects Survive Winter? During the winter months, gardeners hoping that extremes in weather will reduce the number of their most hated insect foes. However, such hope is often unwarranted due to the insect's ability to adapt to many different weather-related challenges. In order to survive winter, insects push the pause button, actually the diapause button. The definition of diapause (and coincidently also the definition of an evening spent 8 watching TV) is "an inactive state of arrested development." The shorter daylight lengths of fall trigger insects to enter diapause. During diapause an insect's metabolic rate drops to one-tenth or less, so it can use stored body fat to survive winter. Also, many insects produce alcohols for antifreeze. Their bodies can supercool (reach temperatures below freezing) without forming cell-damaging ice. Insects spend the winter in various life stages: egg, nymph, larvae, pupae, or adult. Many overwinter as eggs. Aphid eggs can be found in the bud scales of woody plants. Bagworms hang out as eggs inside this year's bags. Tent caterpillars spend the winter as egg masses on branches. Many insects, such as mourning cloak butterflies and bean leaf beetles, spend the winter as adults in protected areas such as under loose tree bark and in fallen leaves. Native ladybugs overwinter in herds under fallen tree bark or firewood. Asian multicolored lady beetles look for a warm spot in our homes to wait for spring. Other insects overwinter in the larval or immature stage. Turf feeding grubs overwinter deep in the soil as beetle larvae. European corn borers survive as full grown larvae. Others, such as cecropia moths and swallowtail butterflies, overwinter as pupae in cocoons or chrysalis. In order for insects to continue to the next life stage, diapause has to be terminated. The "play button" is generally warm temperatures. However, it would be a deadly mistake for an insect to "wake up" too soon. Therefore, most insects do not come out of diapause unless a long period of cold precedes the warm temperatures. Insects are certainly adaptive, but winter conditions can affect their survival. Cold temperatures, fluctuations in temperatures, how long cold temperatures continue, how protected the overwintering location is, and if any snow cover is available all affect an insect's survival. Demystifying Botanic Language Every leisure, hobby, or sport gardener quickly learns the language of gardening such as: • Annual – plant that lives for one year, or one day if the price tag exceeds gardener's budget. Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter • Bed – horizontal area often worked in outdoors and seldom slept in indoors. • Deadhead – process of removing old flowers to keep weedy plants from reseeding in the flower bed instead dispersing a trail of wayward seeds from the garden to the compost pile. • Debug – process of whacking Japanese beetles off roses. • Sucker – indeed born every minute from tree roots. • Water - verb "to water" as in "I can't believe I have to water these plants again"; also noun as in "Will it ever start (or stop) falling from the sky"? Certain gardening language, however, can induce stuttering and stammering even in the most gifted gardeners; the scientific language of plant names, also called botanical language. We owe a lot to Carolus Linnaeus who back in 1753 got fed up with the old plant naming system. Necessity shmessity. I'm convinced frustration is the mother of invention. Before Linnaeus, species names were long and tedious: Rosa carolina fragrans foliis medio tenus serratis. Just rolls right off your tongue. Doesn't it? Linnaeus in his infinite wisdom came up with the binomial system where plants would have two names combined to make their distinct species name. Now before your eyes start glossing over and you wonder if there is more coffee in the coffeepot, botanic names are significant to the novice gardener as well as the seasoned professional. Botanic names show plant relationships throughout the world and are internationally recognized. When purchasing plants it's a guarantee of sorts as to what you are getting. Botanic names are often descriptive so they can reveal clues to plant characteristics or growing conditions. Common names such as daisy and sunflower have an inherent problem. They vary wildly from place to place. For example Black-eyed Susan is a common name for many different plants. Some are annuals. Some are biennials. Some are perennial. Some have 2-inch flowers and some have 4-inch flowers. There is even a Blackeyed Susan vine. Without the botanic name you have no idea what to expect. 9 The binomial (two name) system of species identification consists of the genus and the specific epithet. For example Red Maple, also known as Scarlet Maple and Swamp Maple, are common names of a popular tree. The species name is Acer rubrum with Acer as the genus and rubrum as the specific epithet. Rubrum means red. Other maples would share the same genus name, but would have a different specific epithet such as Silver Maple, Acer saccharinum, and Sugar Maple, Acer saccharum. The authority or person first describing the plant is also listed as in Acer rubrum L. for Linnaeus. Botanic names should always be in italics or underlined if written. The genus name is always capitalized. The specific epithet is always correctly written in lower case. Since Mother Nature loves variety there are subspecies, forms, and varieties of some species. For instance Thornless Honey Locust is Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis. Inermis means thornless and can refer to many thornless versions of typically thorny plants. Horticulturists love to monkey around with plant characteristics so there are also cultivated varieties known as cultivars. These are listed after the species name and are capitalized and in single quotes or proceeded by "cv." as in Acer rubrum 'October Brilliance'. Horticulture companies sometimes trademark different names for cultivars as in the ever popular Knockout™ rose. Knockout™ is the trademark name but the cultivar name is 'Radrazz'. If you know Rhododendron, Aster, Magnolia, and Iris you are already on your way to recognizing botanic names. “In the bleak mid-winter, frosty wind made moan, “Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone...” Christina G. Rossetti The Master Gardener’s Plot by Duane Lanchester So what does the mid-winter gardener do during this bleak and frosty time? I still have some toys. I still have a garden out there. Under the blanket of leaves something is going on. Maybe it’s good nutrients being added to the soil and helpful insects Pike County Down To Earth Newsletter and organisms growing. Maybe it’s bad - plant diseases and lurking insect pests preparing to spring into action when the weather warms. But right now there isn’t much I can do to help the good guys or thwart the bad guys. I still have some vegetables growing in my garden. There’s garlic. I planted the cloves in the fall to give the crop a head start this spring. The plants looked healthy in October, but right now they, too, look pretty bleak. But I have faith that without my aid by the miracle of plant regeneration my garlic will look great by April Fools Day. And the Walla Walla sweet onions which I planted about the time I should have been harvesting them, survived the July and August heat. Most of them never formed bulbs, but grew marvelous tops that looked like bunches of fat green onions. I might still be able to harvest some - they could be sautéed for soups and things - but I think I’ll leave them alone and see what they do in the spring. 10 (Naturally!) superior to spinach. Maybe, if we can find that seed catalogue again, we’ll try it. But to be honest, my recommendation for the midwinter gardener is to stay inside with a puzzle or a good book and a plate of non-fattening munches. If you’ve never read anything by Ann Patchett, try Bel Canto. (In the first few pages she tells what’s going to happen, but I was shocked when it did.) Or read The Kite Runner or Atonement before you go see the movie. I enjoyed Kingsle y Amis’ Lucky Jim but it may not seem funny if you are not familiar with the machinations of college faculties. Or just reread an Agatha Christie. (I had a friend who said it would be wonderful to still be able to read The Murder of Roger Ackroyd for the first time.) Spring will be here soon enough with all those holes to dig and weeds to pull. Enjoy yourself! I have a potting shed full of tools and hoses and “stuff” which all needs to be sorted, reconditioned, and stowed neatly away for the next growing season. Did you know rusty old shovels can be soaked in Coca-Cola and will emerge shiny clean and ready to be sharpened? I’ve seen it done, although I am too cheap to buy all that coke. Now is a great time to prune those dormant fruit trees. In our mini-orchard the Asian pear looks like something from Jack-and-the-beanstalk. Now is my chance to bring it back to a more desirable height. Some folks suggest peach trees should be left untrimmed until the fruit sets; then you can see how much of the new crop you need to thin. (I tried that last year and the frost killed everything; now I have two years’ worth of excess branches.) When the temperature gets above 32 degrees and the sun comes out, I may frolic or freeze among the fruit trees. But I seem to have other obligations on days when the weather is good. (N.B., Don’ prune flowering bushes until after the bloom in the spring! You’ll lose a year’s worth of flowers.) The articles in this newsletter have been provided for you by University of Illinois Extension, Pike County office. The following have contributed articles to this newsletter: Duane Lanchester David Robson Martha Smith Sandra Mason Duane Friend Elizabeth Wahle Pike Co. Master Gardener Horticulture Educator Horticulture Educator Horticulture Educator Natural Resources Educator Ext. Specialist, Horticulture Compiled and Designed by Cheryl Westfall, Secretary If you have any questions or comments regarding the issue of “Down To Earth”, please contact University of Illinois Extension, Pike County, at (217) 285-5543. Jennifer Mowen, County Extension Director And I can spend time with all those seed catalogues. In less than a month some people will be scattering lettuce seed - on top of the snow if necessary - to get an early crop. And my wife found something we’ve never tried that is advertised as spinach-like but University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences United States Department of Agriculture • Local Extension Councils Cooperating University of Illinois Extension provides equal opportunities in programs and employment.